The Arcane Guild had never known silence.
Even at dawn, when the city still yawned itself awake, the guildâs central plaza usually rang with noiseâsteel on stone, laughter, the low hum of spellwork, healers calling triage numbers, portal rings chiming as sky-dungeon parties returned.
Today, that noise curdled into something sharper.
Alarm sigils burned along the outer spires. Not blaringâcontrolled, disciplinedâbut unmistakably urgent. The air smelled of copper and ozone, healing mana layered thick enough to sting the back of the throat.
Blood traced thin lines across the marble where adventurers had stumbled through portals half-conscious, dragged by comrades who refused to let them die.
Healers moved like ghosts in white and indigo, hands glowing, voices steady.
"Pulse stable."
"Spinal integrity restored."
"Nextâbring the next one."
The system held.
It always did.
At the center balcony overlooking the plaza, Aiden rested one hand on the cold stone rail, his expression unreadable. Amber stood a step behind him, braid tight, eyes flicking from portal to portal, calculating losses with a precision born of trust in numbers rather than faith.
"Theyâre pushing us," she said quietly. "Not directly. Pressure. Disruption. Trying to overload the healers."
Aiden nodded once. He had felt it hours agoâthe tension in the cityâs mana lines, the way rumors moved faster than runners. This wasnât chaos.
It was intent.
"They donât understand the point," he said.
Amber glanced at him. "Most of them think they do."
Aidenâs gaze drifted downward, to an adventurer laughing weakly as a healer sealed a wound that should have killed him. A man who would have died anywhere else. A woman beside him, missing half her armor, breathing because someone decided healing should not be a privilege.
"I didnât build this to reward talent," Aiden continued, voice low. "Or genius. Or bloodlines."
Amber waited. She had heard pieces of this before. Never all at once.
"I built it to find miracles," he said. "People who survive what they shouldnât. Again. And again. And again."
Below them, a young mage sat up after treatment, disbelief on his face, then gratitude so sharp it almost hurt to see.
"Death filters too much," Aiden went on. "It removes variables before they can become something... inconvenient."
Amber exhaled slowly. "And now the ones who benefited from that filter are angry."
"As expected."
The plaza gates slammed open.
Black-and-red cloaks spilled in like a wound reopening.
The Slayer Guild did not announce itself with banners or horns. It announced itself with postureâshoulders squared, weapons bare, eyes already judging which lives were worth the air they consumed.
Jealousy clung to them like smoke.
At their head walked a young man with a scar running from temple to jaw, expression calm, almost respectful. He wore no helmet. He didnât need one. The city knew his face.
The Slayer Guild Master Heir and his son.
The boy fate liked. Aegon
Conversation died in waves as eyes turned toward him.
"So," the guild leader said, projecting easily. "This is where adventurers come to stop dying."
Aiden descended the stairs alone.
He didnât summon guards. He didnât raise wards. The guildâs defenders were already in position, unobtrusive, waiting for a thought that never came.
"Welcome," Aiden said mildly. "Youâre obstructing triage."
The leaderâs mouth twitched. "You make it sound like charity."
"Efficiency," Aiden replied. "Charity wastes resources."
A murmur rippled through the Slayer ranks. Their ideology was clear: hardship made strength. Mercy diluted it. Death was the ledger that kept the world honest.
"Youâve broken the balance," heir said. "Adventurers grow careless. They rely on your healers. Your marginsâeighty to twenty? Youâre buying loyalty."
Aiden tilted his head. "Iâm buying survival."
"And ruining selection."
Aiden smiled faintly. "Selection by corpse is lazy."
The heirâs eyes sharpened. "Your system makes gods out of cowards."
Aidenâs gaze didnât move. "No. It reveals who canât be erased..and why are you lot here in the first place..too much free time?"
Before heir could respond, another presence stepped forwardâvelvet-clad, rings heavy on his fingers, expression smooth with practiced disdain.
A duke.
Not an archduke. Not powerful enough to command fear outright. Powerful enough to gamble.
"You operate on imperial land," the duke said. "With imperial charters. There are concerns about monopolization. Sky-dungeon access. Resource hoarding."
Amber stiffened.
Aiden didnât look at her. He looked at the duke. Really looked.
"You fund them," Aiden said. Not a question.
The duke smiled thinly. "I invest in stability."
"You invest in leverage..and now that you donât see leverage, you are saying we are hoarding? Laughable...."
A pause. A miscalculation.
Behind the Slayer heir, one of his men shifted as a healer refused him entry, guiding an injured Arcane adventurer past instead. No shouting. No confrontation. Just policy, applied evenly.
Aiden lifted his voiceânot loud, but carrying.
"Effective immediately," he said, "Slayer Guild members are suspended from Arcane services."
Outrage erupted.
"You canâtâ"
"Thatâs murderâ"
"This is warâ"
Aiden raised one finger.
Silence followed, thick and immediate.
"Arcane contracts are voluntary," he said. "So is our generosity."
The dukeâs smile faltered. "Youâll face seizure."
Aiden nodded once. "Invoke it."
Then, gently: "Church law supersedes imperial charters in matters of healing during crisis."
The duke went pale.
"And the Church," Aiden added, "answers to our benefactor, the prophet Lucifer."
That was when it landed.
Not the threat.
The inevitability.
heir watched it ripple through his menâthe doubt, the fear, the sudden realization that no blade could cut a policy already in motion.
"Youâre redefining the field," he said quietly.
Aiden met his gaze. "Youâre welcome to adapt."
heir stepped back, eyes burning. "Iâll prove your miracles bleed."
Aiden inclined his head. "All miracles do. Thatâs how I find them."
The Slayer Guild withdrew, anger coiling tight, promises unspoken but heavy.
The duke lingered a heartbeat longer, then turned away, already calculating losses he couldnât undo.
The plaza breathed again.
Healers resumed. Portals stabilized. Laughterâstrained but realâreturned in fragments.
Amber released a breath she hadnât realized she was holding. "Was this always going to happen?"
Aiden watched an adventurer stand, unbroken, alive.
"Yes," he said. "The moment I made survival free."
But as they all went away. A single person remained. Aegon.
The young man sat on the side of the hall, legs dangling over nothing, white hair loose against the wind like unbound silk. His eyesâwhite as frost, not blind but
unattached
âreflected the sky without claiming it. A sword rested beside him, plain, worn, repaired too many times to count.
The protagonist of this world.
The one the story bent around.
The one Aiden had read about, died to, resurrected into, and quietly stepped
past
.
He had been sending letters to him after his first encounter.
"Youâre late," the white-haired man said calmly, without turning his head.
Aiden smiled faintly. "I had to conquer a church."
"Busy," the other replied, tone flat. "You always are."
Aiden stepped closer, stopping just short of the cliffâs edge. He followed the manâs gaze into the endless drop, where mist curled like unfinished thoughts.
For a moment, neither spoke.
This silence was different from cathedral silence.
No pressure.
No hierarchy.
Just two anomalies sharing air.
"You know who I am," Aiden said at last.
The white-haired man nodded once. "Youâre not from here...I think. Thatâs what your writing style says.."
A pause.
"And youâre not supposed to exist like
that
," the man added. "The world reacts to you wrong."
Aidenâs eyes sharpenedânot with hostility, but interest.
"You noticed."
"I notice things that try to own the road," the man replied. "They usually want me kneeling or dead."
Aiden chuckled quietly. "I want neither."
That finally earned him a glance.
The white eyes met hisânot curious, not afraid. Just assessing, the way a horizon might judge a traveler.
"What do you want then?" the protagonist asked.
Aiden didnât answer immediately.
He reached into his coat and produced a small sigil disk, tossing it lightly. It landed beside the sword with a soft metallic ring.
The Arcane Guild crest.
Open access.
Sky dungeon rights.
Free healing.
No soul-binding clauses.
No loyalty oaths.
And beneath itâan etched value rune that made reality itself hesitate.
A ridiculous amount of gold.
Enough to buy cities.
Enough to erase bloodlines.
Enough to make kings choke.
"Join my guild," Aiden said simply. "Arcane."
The white-haired man looked at the disk. Then at the rune. Then away again.
"No."
The refusal came too fast.
Too easy.
Aiden raised a brow. "You didnât even negotiate."
"I donât bargain with cages," the man replied.
Aiden leaned against a broken stone pillar, folding his arms. "Arcane isnât a cage. You keep your freedom. Your routes. Your pace."
"Youâre lying," the man said, not accusingly. "Not intentionally. But still."
Aiden didnât deny it.
"Everything you build bends toward you," the protagonist continued. "People rely on it. Systems depend on it. Even freedom becomes...
shaped
."
He picked up the sigil disk, turned it between his fingers, then placed it gently back on the stone.
"I donât want shaped freedom."
The wind picked up, tugging at white hair and dark cloth alike.
Aiden studied himânot as a rival, not as an asset, but as a variable that refused classification.
"Youâre the only one who ever turns this down," Aiden said.
"Thatâs why you came yourself," the man replied.
A beat.
"Yes," Aiden admitted.
The white-haired man stood, stretching like someone about to walk a very long road.
"I need an adventure," he said. "Not shelter. Not infrastructure. Not a future someone already calculated...same like I donât want to live under slayer guild, a place which my father is foolishly proud of."
He met Aidenâs gaze again, calm and unyielding.
"I want to go where the world hasnât decided what I am yet."
Aiden felt something then.
Not anger.
Not frustration.
Recognition.
"You know," Aiden said quietly, "in every version of this world Iâve seen... you die young."
The man smiledânot bitterly. Not bravely.
Just honestly.
"Good," he said. "Then I wonât be bored."
Silence fell again, heavier this time.
Aiden straightened, removing his hands from his coat.
"I wonât force you," he said. "But I will make you an offer anyway."
The man waited.
"When the road breaks you," Aiden continued, "when the world finally tries to grind you into a roleâArcane will be open."
He tapped the sigil disk lightly with his boot.
"No kneeling. No chains. No sermons."
The white-haired man nodded once.
"That," he said, "Iâll remember."
They stood there for a moment longer, two figures shaped by different rebellions.
Then the protagonist picked up his sword, slung it across his back, and turned away from the cliff.
"Try not to end the world before I get back," he said over his shoulder.
Aiden smiledâwide this time.
"No promises."
The man walked off into the mist, footsteps fading, unclaimed by fate for just a little longer.
Aiden watched until even his outline dissolved.
Then he looked down at the sigil disk still resting on the stone.
"So," he murmured to the wind, to the world, to the story that had lost its leashâ
"Even the main character chooses freedom over power."