The Anomaly's Path-Chapter 76: The Ballad of Blood and Love
The two figures sat on the hill as the stars slowly faded from the sky. The willow tree stood behind them, its branches swaying gently in the morning breeze. The graves lay before them, silent and still.
Roran had finished his story.
Leo sat motionless, his back braced against a jagged rock and his sword resting heavily across his knees. He did not speak. His gaze was fixed on the name carved into the weather-worn stone and the wildflowers that clung to its base.
Roran watched him for a moment, wondering what was going through the boy’s head. Probably nothing good. Probably the same kind of dark thoughts that had been eating at Roran for years. He saw the way Leo’s hands remained perfectly still—too still.
It was the posture of a man realizing he was standing in the presence of a ruin much larger than himself.
Leo had not expected this.
Leo had known Roran was broken. He had known the man carried something heavy. But this... this was beyond anything the boy could have imagined.
A wife. A child. A student who had worshipped his master like a god and then destroyed... everything.
Leo thought about his own life. About Earth and this world. The parents he had ignored, the friends he had pushed away, the people he had hurt because he was too scared to face them. He thought about this world, about Leo von Celestial, the scum who had hurt everyone around him and never once tried to change.
He was not like Roran.
Roran had brought happiness to people. He had built something. He had loved and been loved in return.
Leo had only ever taken...
Roran chuckled, a dry, hollow sound. "Noticing your expression, you must be really shocked. Or maybe you don’t have anything to say."
Leo did not respond immediately.
"I did not tell you this for sympathy," Roran continued, his voice dropping. "Honestly, I am not sure why I spoke at all. But... you remind me so much of myself." He paused, the phantom weight of a name bitter on his tongue. "...And you remind me of him."
Kael.
The name hung in the air like an open wound.
"I am grateful you listened," Roran said, looking away toward the horizon. "No one has ever truly listened before."
The silence stretched thin, a taut wire between them, until Leo finally spoke. "You know what, Roran? You are an amazing person."
Roran blinked, the admission catching him off guard. "Huh? what?"
"You keep saying we are similar," Leo said his voice gaining a steady reslove. "But I must say, we are not. I am much worse than you think I am."
He let out a bitter laugh.
"They called me the worst noble. The Scum of the Human Domain. It is ironic, is it not? When you compare yourself to me..." He paused, his voice dropping. "I always hurt people around me. I ran from every shadow of responsibility. I pushed everyone away. I ignored my parents. I ran from everything. And..."
He thought about this life as Leo von celestial. The noble scum.
"I still did the same thing. Nothing... really changed."
He looked at his hands.
"Maybe things are starting to heal a little. But do the past wounds ever truly heal? No. They stay with you forever."
He looked at Roran.
"You are a person who brought happiness to everyone around you. You gave them hope. You gave them a home. But me? I can never do that. The people around me always get hurt because of me. I am the one who always runs. I am the one who always hurts them."
He took a slow, deliberate breath.
"But you know what, Roran? Not so long ago, I decided to change myself. I decided to face my worst. I decided to face myself and just keep pushing forward. That is why I am here." 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
He met Roran’s eyes.
"I know I cannot change anything from the past. But I can at least try. I can die trying. So I do not have an excuse to not try."
He stood up and stretched.
"When I listened to your story, the reason I did not say anything is because I have nothing to say. I am the last person who should inspire anyone or give advice to anyone. You are that kind of person. You bring happiness to everyone’s life."
He looked down at Roran.
"I have one last thing to say..."
Roran looked up.
"Were you really happy back then compared to now?" Leo asked. "Does she really want you to live like this? Look around yourself and find your answer. Look around and see if the people around you really care for you."
He turned to leave.
"Oh, and before I go... I must said, Elder Marta sent me here because she was worried about you. Mia still prepares extra soup for you. The kids ask about you every day. The other people in the village, the gambling king, asked for a rematch. That damn merchant, too."
He started walking.
"They all care about you, Roran. Maybe... you should start caring about yourself too."
He disappeared into the trees, leaving Roran alone.
_
Roran sat in silence, staring at the grave. Leo’s words echoed in his head, over and over.
Were you really happy back then compared to now?
Does she really want you to live like this?
Look around yourself. See if the people around you really care for you.
He thought of the drinking, the gambling, and the years spent in a gray stupor. She would have hated it. Clara, who found beauty in every dying petal, would have loathed the way he had let his soul wither.
He thought of Marta’s quiet porch-side deliveries, Mia’s feigned irritation, and the children’s hopeful faces. He had been so busy staring at a grave that he had failed to see the living garden growing around him.
Does she really want you to live like this?
He bowed his head.
The tears came again, but this time, they were not just grief. They were something else. Something he had not felt in years.
Regret.
...And hope.
The sun began to rise over the ridge, casting golden light across the graves. The willow branches swayed in the breeze, and the wildflowers nodded their heads.
Roran felt a presence beside him. He looked up, his breath hitching in his chest.
She was there.
Clara knelt before him, her wheat-colored hair falling over her shoulders, her green eyes soft and warm. She was wearing the same white dress from their wedding, and there were wildflowers braided into her hair.
She was beautiful as always.
"Clara...?" Roran’s voice cracked.
She smiled, a gesture so familiar it made his heart ache. "What are you so worried about?"
He stared at her, unable to speak. "How... how are you—"
She placed a gentle finger against his lips. "Did I not tell you to always smile? You look so handsome when you do."
"I am... sorry," Roran sobbed, the weight of fourteen years crashing down. "I could not... I could not keep the promise. I am so sorry..."
Clara’s smile softened. She reached out and cupped his face in her hands, lifting his head so he could look into her eyes. "I never blamed you," she said. "Not once in my life. You gave me love. You gave me a home. You gave me happiness. Do not apologize for the happiness we shared."
Roran sobbed as tears were streaming down his face.
Clara leaned closer, her face inches from his. "I love you, Roran. I have always loved you. And I want you to live. Live for both of us."
She leaned in and kissed him—a sensation of pure, blinding light. The world seemed to hold its breath as the sun poured over them like a blessing. When she pulled back, she was already fading. Her body became translucent, her form dissolving into golden light.
"Let us meet again in the next life," she whispered, her voice a fading echo in the wind. "...I will always love you, my dearest."
She pressed something into his hand and then she was... gone.
Roran looked down. Resting in his palm was a single daffodil, its golden petals glowing in the morning light—a golden symbol of new beginnings.
He knelt there, tears streaming down his face, the flower clutched in his hand.
_
There was once a legend among the people of Aeitheirs—a tale whispered by elders to wide-eyed children, sung by drunken bards in candlelit taverns, and carved into the crumbling walls of forgotten temples.
They called it.
The Ballad of Blood and Love.
It was a song of a force more absolute than mana, more enduring than the sharpened edge of a sword, and more terrifying than the gods themselves. It spoke of a love so profound it could make the impossible a reality—a power that could raise a fallen warrior from the dirt or bring a tyrant to his knees.
It was described as the greatest curse and the most radiant blessing, two sides of a single, jagged coin.
The legend claimed that true love could shake the foundations of heaven and hell. That when two souls were truly bound, the universe itself lacked the strength to tear them apart. Neither the slow erosion of time, nor the vastness of distance, nor the cold finality of death could break the thread.
...And when one of them fell, the world was said to bleed in sympathy.
The sky would bruise into darkness, the earth would tremble in its foundations, and the wind would carry the weight of that grief across mountains and seas until every living thing felt the burden of the loss.
It was a melody with no beginning and no end—a whisper that echoed through the corridors of eternity.
Roran did not know if the legend was true.
The sky had not darkened when Clara died. The earth had not trembled under his feet. The world had remained cruelly, agonizingly indifferent.
But... his heart had shattered.
...And that was its own kind of earthquake.
He looked at the daffodil in his hand, its golden petals drinking in the morning light. It was a small, fragile thing, yet it felt heavier than his sword. It was a symbol of new beginnings—of light breaking through a year darkness, of hope rising from the ashes of despair.
He looked at the grave one last time. He saw the name carved into the stone and the wildflowers clinging to the base, swaying in a breeze he could finally feel on his skin.
He thought of Leo’s blunt honesty. He thought of Marta’s quiet kindness, Mia’s hidden care, and the children who still looked for his shadow in the village.
He looked up.
The sun was crowning over the ridge, bleeding gold into the sky.
A new day was beginning...
Slowly, his knees aching with the weight of the past, Roran stood up. He tucked the golden flower into his pocket, close to his heart, and turned away from the grave. He stepped out of the shadow of the weeping willow and began to walk.
He did not look back.
The warrior was gone; the man had finally come home.







