His brotherâs face twisted into a sneer, voice dripping with sleaze. "Once youâre rotting in that corrupted wasteland, youâll never come back. If I donât get to savor the look on your face right now, Iâll regret it forever."
Phieldâs nails dug deep into his palms; his fists cracked from the strain. He asked coldly, "Iâve never wronged you. Why target me?"
"Because of that damned magic potion you so generously âgaveâ me." His brother spat the word like poison. "After I took it, I couldnât break through to first-tier knight. Everyone calls me trash behind my backâand itâs all your fault. You must have poisoned it!"
Phield felt bile rise in his throat. "Thatâs because your talent was garbage."
"Heh. Doesnât matter. If you ever find someone you love, Iâll drag her away and let every filthy vagrant in the streets have their way with herâruin her slowly, deliciously." He pulled a triumphant, grotesque face. "Too bad you wonât have a future for that, mongrel."
"Fuck you, you piece of scum!" Rage exploded in Phield like never before. The original owner had been too much of a saint.
It was true: do good deeds and you earn enemies; build roads and bridges and no one remembers your name; burn, kill, and plunder and your coffers overflow with gold.
These honorless curs only understood the language of fists.
"Youâre begging to die!"
Phieldâs knee strike launched his brother backward through the air. He followed in a blur, driving a savage kick into the bastardâs face. Blood sprayed across that ugly, sneering mouth.
The entire hall froze. Phieldâthe perpetual doormatâhad turned feral.
"I despise threats more than anything," he growled.
Before the guards could react, Phield seized a fistful of golden curls and yanked his brotherâs head down toward the stone floor.
Suddenly, an iron grip clamped around his throat. He was hoisted into the air, feet dangling.
Agonizing asphyxiation hit instantly; death crept close in seconds.
"What do you think youâre doing to my lord?" The voice belonged to a strikingly beautiful woman with long wine-red hair. Most arresting of all was the arcane rune glowing on her forehead.
"A Divine Chosen?" Phield choked out, stunned.
In this world, transcendent power belonged to the Divine Chosenâextraordinary beings who stood far above ordinary magic and mana, wielding all manner of incomprehensible gifts: combat, support, creation, and more.
The most absurd part? Only women could become Divine Chosen.
Perhaps every god in this world was female.
Just as darkness edged his vision, the world spun. His spine slammed against the wall with bone-jarring force.
"Heh. Of course you didnât dare kill him," his brother wheezed.
"Iâll murder you!" The boy coughed violently and drew his belt dagger.
Phield wiped blood from his split lip. He was no match for a Divine Chosenânot even close. There was no point lingering. Swallowing the pain, he turned and strode away.
To think his brother, not yet formally enfeoffed, already had a Divine Chosen bodyguard. The realization only deepened the danger Phield felt.
He had no luxury of sitting idle. Now that heâd made an enemy of his brother, he knew he had to move fastâor tonight he might be dragged off for whatever twisted torments the little monster could devise.
"When Iâve grown strong enough," Phield muttered, eyes lowered, fury blazing unmasked, "Iâll come back and beat every last one of you to death."
If he didnât get his revenge, he swore heâd never get hard again.
"So what the hell is this annoying green dot that keeps buzzing around like a fly?" Phield stared at the translucent map only he could see. "It appeared the day I transmigrated. Probably tied to some lord talent."
Opposite the Divine Chosen stood the Lords. By forming a contract with a Divine Chosen, both parties fed strength to each other and grew together.
Lords possessed unique talents, usually linked to their contracted Chosen and their territory. But rare innate talents existedâones that manifested even without land or contract.
The original Phield had none. The transmigrated Phield, however, did.
Of course, it could just be floaters or early cataracts. Heâd find out soon enoughâthe dot wasnât far, just outside Golden Eagle City.
He packed lightly. The steward had already collected the gold coins and now waited with the servants, their faces pale with despair.
Learning they were bound for the cursed domain, the steward had briefly contemplated suicideâonly to remember that self-murder barred one from paradise. So he steeled himself for death instead.
"Letâs go," Phield said grimly, in no mood to console anyone.
The moment he opened the manor gates, a ragged troop of cavalry in mismatched armor appeared. From their midst stepped a man in a red cloak, a long lance slung across his shoulder.
"Honored Baron Phield," the man said with a bow. "I am Captain Connor of the cavalry. Iâve been assigned as your escort. Iâm certain weâll enjoy a pleasant journey together."
"Then I leave myself in your capable hands, Connor."
Phield returned the courtesy, but inwardly his guard shot up.
Escort, they called it. Yet the roguish glint in the troopersâ eyes offered no comfort. Phield half-suspected that once they left the city walls, theyâd simply murder him and take the gold.
Unlikely, though. Registered knights rarely risked their futures by assassinating nobility.
Phield shrugged inwardly. "More likely theyâre here to make sure I actually march to the gallows."
"First, we head to Golden Eagle City," he announced. "Developing the Nightfall Domain will require suppliesâmany supplies."
Truth was, he wanted to investigate that mysterious green dot.
Golden Eagle City, the second-largest holding of the Ross family, boasted unrivaled commercial might. It had been granted to Phieldâs second sister, and rumor held that its annual tax revenue alone reached six hundred thousand gold coinsâa staggering sum that made Phieldâs paltry five hundred feel like an insult carved in salt.
The carriage rattled along the road, and by late morning Phield reached the sprawling metropolis that covered forty square kilometers.
Unlike the orderly gates of a modern city, the guards here lounged indolently against the walls, trading crude jokes or hurling abuse at the commoners trying to enter. They extorted steep tolls from the lower classes with lazy cruelty.
Only when Phieldâs escort of cavalry clattered into view did an officer jolt upright from his chair.
"Clear the bloody road, you lot! Move those peasantsâ carts asideâa lord is passing through! Watch where your eyes are, idiots!"
The slouching soldiers snapped to attention, cursing and shoving merchants and commoners out of the way to open a wide path. Then they turned, faces plastered with fawning smiles, and saluted Phield as he rode past.
Unloved as he was within his own family, he remained a noble all the same. Common folk dared not risk offending him.
Phield slowed his horse, guiding it unhurriedly toward the direction indicated by the green dot.
At the gate, the officer let out a long breath of relief. As long as the noble hadnât taken issue with him, the day could still be counted a good one. He waved his men back to their toll-collecting and took another deep swig of olive wine before settling once more into his chair to bask in the sun.
Following the dotâs guidance, Phield arrived at the slave markets in the northern district of the city.
"Gods above," Captain Connor muttered, brow furrowed in disgust as he waved a hand in front of his face. "This damned stenchâlike pigweed steeped in shit. It burns the nose."
The gesture did nothing; the reek still wormed its way straight into the sinuses, thick and inescapable.
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