Blood. Screams. Blades clashing.
Raka stumbled forward, his left arm hanging limp as a sack of stones. A serrated gash on his shoulder pulsed with every heartbeat, the metallic tang of his own blood mixing with the stench of charred earth. Around him, the battlefield was a writhing hellscape—soldiers in shattered armor fought back-to-back against hulking beasts with obsidian scales, their roars drowning out the dying moans of fallen comrades. A wyvern's shadow blotted out the sun as it dive-bombed a cluster of archers, reducing them to ash.
This isn't a war. It's a slaughter.
"Fall back!" someone screamed—a red-haired mage dragging a wounded knight by the collar. But the command was futile. The frontlines had dissolved into panicked clusters, their formations devoured by the encroaching tide of fangs and claws. Raka's sword trembled in his grip, its edge chipped from parrying a monster's tusks moments earlier. His vision swam, the edges darkening as blood loss gnawed at his consciousness.
A serpentine creature lunged at him, its six milky eyes unblinking. Raka swung on instinct. The blade glanced off its armored neck.
Too slow.
Acidic saliva sprayed his face as the beast's maw yawned wide—
A spear of crimson flame erupted beside him, punching through the monster's skull. It collapsed, twitching, as Zareth—a Flame Guild mage with a bloodied cheek and singed robes—grabbed Raka's arm. "You're dead if you stay! The eastern flank's gone!"
Raka shook his head, teeth gritted. "If we break, they'll reach the valley villages by nightfall."
"You think this"—Zareth gestured at the carnage—"is holding anything back? Look around! We're carrion!"
A thunderous crash split the air as a siege tower toppled, crushing a dozen soldiers. Raka's knees buckled. His body had crossed its limits hours ago—every muscle screamed, every scar from past battles burned like fresh brands. Yet he straightened, hefting his sword. "Then we die as shields, not cowards."
Zareth cursed but raised his staff, its gemstone crackling. "Stubborn bastard. Fine. Let's buy them a few more breaths."
They fought side by side, blade and flame carving a fleeting pocket of resistance. But Raka's movements grew sluggish. When the claw came—a blurred strike from his blind spot—he barely registered the pain. Only the cold as it pierced his ribs, lifting him off the ground.
So this is it.
He stared at the smoke-choked sky as his body hit the mud. Distantly, he heard Zareth's roar, felt the earth shake... Then, a sensation like falling through ice—cold slicing his soul—before a sudden, searing warmth bloomed in his chest.
Light flickered at the edges of his vision, faint and golden, like sunlight through closed eyelids. Voices murmured—not Zareth's, not the battlefield's—but distant, echoing as if underwater. A woman's voice: "Arlen? Arlen, wake up."
Warmth.
Raka gasped, bolting upright. His hands—slim, unmarked—clutched a woolen blanket. The room was small, lit by a single oil lamp. Clay pots lined shelves, their herbal reeks stinging his nose. A mirror hung crookedly on the wall, reflecting a gaunt face he didn't recognize: a boy of seventeen with shadowed eyes and a crescent scar on his jaw.
No. No, no, no—
He scrambled to the mirror, fingers probing the unfamiliar angles of his cheeks, the softness of untrained arms. Fragmented memories surfaced—a cramped attic, a bottle shattering against a tavern wall, a knife pressed to his own wrist—
Arlen Veyr. That's the name.
The door creaked open. An elderly woman entered, her hands cradling a steaming bowl. "You've been out three days," she said, setting the broth on a stool. Her voice was gentle but strained, as if each word cost her. "The fever finally broke. Can you speak?"
Raka's throat tightened. She thinks I'm him. A boy who… gave up. "I… yes."
Mira—her name surfaced like a half-remembered dream—studied him. "You look different. Less… hollow."
He flinched. Arlen's memories crystallized: a funeral pyre for his parents, villagers whispering cursed, nights spent clawing at his own skin to feel something. Mira had taken him in when even the orphanage turned him away.
"I died," Raka whispered, more to himself.
Mira stiffened. "What?"
"Nothing." He forced a sip of broth. It scalded his tongue, grounding him. "Thank you. For… this."
She lingered, her gaze piercing. "The scars on your neck. They've faded."
Raka touched his throat. Arlen had tried to hang himself a year ago. The rope marks were now faint silvery lines. This body is healing. Or… being rewritten?
—
Over the next week, Raka probed the limits of his stolen form. Arlen's body was frail, yes, but beneath the surface hummed a flicker of magic—wild and untapped, like a buried stream. In the forest behind Mira's cottage, Raka practiced channeling it, clawing at memories of his past life's training.
Focus. Draw the mana upward—
A spark ignited in his palm, then fizzled. Sweat dripped down his brow. Without the muscle memory of spellwork, even basic conjuring was agony.
"What're you doing?"
Raka whirled. A girl stood at the tree line—Kara, the blacksmith's daughter. At fifteen, she had her father's broad shoulders and a permanent scowl.
"Practicing," Raka said curtly.
She snorted. "Since when does Arlen Veyr practice anything but wallowing?"
He stiffened. The disdain in her voice mirrored the village's view of Arlen: a burden, a ghost. "People change."
"Not you." She kicked a pebble. "Heard you're leaving. Finally doing everyone a favor?"
Raka's fist clenched. This body's resentment isn't mine. Let it go. But the words spilled out: "Why do you care? You've never spoken three words to me before."
"Because you're weird." She crossed her arms. "Always hiding. Jumping at shadows. Now you're out here muttering to yourself like a hedge witch. People are talking."
"Let them." He turned away.
"Wait." She hesitated. "If you're really… different now… Thom needs help repairing the mill wheel. Pays two coppers a day."
Raka blinked. A peace offering? "Why?"
"Because Mira's too old to keep feeding you for free." Kara shrugged, already walking off. "Be there at dawn. Don't faint."
—
That night, Mira found him sharpening a stolen kitchen knife. "You'll need better steel if you're heading into the wilds," she said quietly.
Raka froze. "How did you—?"
"I've buried three sons." She placed a leather pack by his feet. Inside: dried meat, a tinderbox, and a bone-handled dagger. "The living don't sharpen blades in the dark."
He met her gaze. "You know I'm not him."
"I know the boy I loved died in that alley." Her voice cracked. "But whatever you are… don't let his death be meaningless."
"I won't. Because I don't want to die either."