Rebirth of the Disgraced Noble-Chapter 119: Black-Stripe Gorge
The South Gate of Grey-Rock was a maw of iron and weeping stone, choked with the frantic energy of a doomed migration.
Thick plumes of dust kicked up by heavy, reinforced wagon wheels swirled into the air, mixing with the acrid scent of nervous horses and the metallic tang of unsheathed steel. This wasn’t a caravan; it was a fortress on wheels. Six massive wagons, armored with plates of cold-iron and etched with flickering protective runes, sat like squat beetles in the center of a hollow square formed by nearly fifty mercenaries.
Aden walked into the center of the chaos, his hood pulled low. Behind him, the three boys moved in a tight, silent formation, their eyes darting between the towering armored carriages and the scarred veterans who looked at them with a mixture of pity and irritation. Lorelei drifted at the rear, her spectral form so thin she appeared as nothing more than a trick of the heat haze, yet her presence was a cold anchor in the sweltering noon.
"Make way! Vanguard coming through!" a voice bellowed.
The crowd of low-ranked sell-swords parted like a curtain before a blade. The scout leader from that morning stood atop the lead wagon, his slate-grey leather stained with fresh oil. He pointed a gauntleted hand toward Aden.
"You’re late," the man grunted, his eyes immediately dropping to Eren. "The boy looks like he’s seen a ghost. Can he hold a blade, or is he just extra weight for the Creepers?"
Eren’s hand twitched toward his hilt, his red irises sparking with a sudden, dangerous heat. Aden placed a heavy hand on the boy’s shoulder, a silent command that carried the weight of a mountain.
"He can hold his own," Aden said, his voice a low, vibrating hum that cut through the surrounding din. "Worry about your own men. Half of them are shaking so hard they’ll drop their spears before we hit the tree line."
The scout leader’s jaw tightened, but he didn’t argue. He knew the truth. The air around the gate was brittle, charged with the kind of static that only preceded a slaughter.
"Vanguard position is the ’Point,’" the leader shouted, tossing a heavy, grease-stained map toward Aden. "You’re fifty paces ahead of the lead horse. If you see a shadow move in the gorge, you scream. If you see a Gloom-Creeper, you kill it. If you die, we keep rolling. Understand?"
Aden caught the map in one hand and didn’t look at it. He looked at the horizon—at the jagged, tooth-like silhouette of the Black-Stripe Gorge. It looked like a wound in the earth, bleeding shadows even in the full light of day.
"I understand," Aden said.
A horn blasted, a mournful, brassy sound that echoed off the city walls. The heavy iron chains of the portcullis began to groan, the massive gate rising with a slow, agonizing shriek.
"Move out!"
The caravan groaned into motion. The sound of a hundred boots hitting the dirt in unison was a rhythmic, funeral drum. Aden stepped out past the threshold of the gate, leaving the relative safety of Grey-Rock behind. He didn’t look back. He couldn’t.
The fifty paces between him and the lead wagon felt like an ocean. He was alone in the "dead zone," a silhouette in a grey cloak walking toward a canyon that seemed to breathe.
*’Look at them,’* the Entity whispered, its voice a jagged glass shard in his mind. *’The sheep are lined up, and they’ve put the wolf at the front to lead them to the butcher. How many miles until the first drop of blood, Aden? I can smell the Gorge from here. It’s hungry. It remembers the taste of your kind.’*
Aden gripped the hilt of his dark steel blade beneath his cloak. *I’m not ’my kind’ anymore,* he thought back. *I’m the thing they should be afraid of.*
As they neared the entrance of the Gorge, the temperature plummeted. The sunlight didn’t seem to reach the floor of the canyon; it was swallowed by a persistent, oily fog that clung to the jagged obsidian walls. The silence was absolute, save for the rhythmic *clack-clack* of the wagons behind him.
Suddenly, Aden stopped.
His sapphire eyes narrowed, the faint mist within them swirling into a localized storm. He didn’t turn around. He didn’t shout. He simply raised his left hand, signaling the caravan to halt.
Fifty paces back, the horses whinnied in terror, their eyes rolling back in their heads. The mercenaries leveled their spears, their breathing coming in short, panicked gasps.
"What is it?" the scout leader screamed from the wagon. "What do you see?"
Aden stared into the black maw of the gorge. In the depths of the fog, hundreds of tiny, bioluminescent pale-blue eyes flickered into existence. They weren’t at eye level. They were on the walls. They were on the ceiling. They were everywhere.
The sound began then—a wet, clicking chittering that sounded like a thousand knives scraping against bone.
"Gloom-Creepers," Aden whispered, his voice carrying back to the caravan with unnatural clarity. "And they aren’t scavenging."
A massive, pale shape detached itself from the ceiling and dropped toward the center of the path, its multi-limbed form unfolding like a grotesque umbrella. It was a Callow-Walker, its skin the color of a drowned corpse, its mouth a vertical slit lined with rows of needle-teeth.
"Eren," Aden called out, his voice as cold as the Void. "Remember the anvil."
The boy didn’t hesitate. He stepped forward from the flank, his red Resonance exploding outward in a jagged flare that cut through the oily fog like a torch.
"Contact!" the scout leader roared.
The silence was gone. The Gorge screamed back.
The Callow-Walker hit the ground with a wet, heavy thud, its spider-like limbs skittering across the obsidian glass of the gorge floor. It hissed—a sound like steam escaping a ruptured pipe—and lunged.
Eren moved before the creature could fully extend its claws. He didn’t use a refined stance or a textbook strike; he used the raw, explosive momentum of his new Attuned core. He blurred, a streak of jagged carmine light that met the pale horror mid-air. His short-sword, now sheathed in a vibrating edge of red Resonance, sheared through the creature’s primary limb with a sickening shink.
The beast shrieked, black ichor spraying across the grey silt, but Eren didn’t stop. He stepped into the creature’s guard, his elbow slamming into its vertical mouth-slit, silencing the scream with the crunch of cartilage.
"Behind you, kid!" a mercenary screamed from the wagons.




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