As the carriage continued its journey through the night. The carriage rattled down the paved highway that cut through the valley toward Solhaven. To anyone else, the smooth road represented speed and safety.
To Ray, it looked like they were leaving footprints that leads to them.
Inside the carriage, the heavy silence was broken by a loud, confused sniff.
Rina lifted her arm, burying her nose in the fabric of her cloak. She blinked, then sniffed again, harder.
“Captain,”
Rina whispered, poking Svane’s arm.
“Why are we clean and do I smell… expensive?”
The massive Captain, just suddenly realized when Rina asked, he looked down and inspected his leather armor with a deeply furrowed brow, he looked up. He ran a gloved finger over where there was supposed to be blood that had dried. His finger came away perfectly clean. His armor gleamed as if it had just been polished by a squire for a parade.
“The sewer muck, the blood, the soot. It’s all gone.”
Svane rumbled, sounding genuinely disturbed.
Svane then also noticed that the whole cabin is clean and smell pristine.
“Did you do it? You used a high level magic right?”
Rina asked, looking at him suspiciously.
Svane snorted, looking offended.
“I’m a Spellsword, Rina, not a laundry maid. I use Prestidigitation to warm up my tea or clean a wine stain. To scrub three people and an entire carriage interior?”
He shook his head, looking at his pristine boots.
“That requires a level of mana control that is frankly insulting to use on dirt.”
Rina patted her now-spotless clothes, grinning as she leaned back.
“Well, remind me to tip the Janitor. I was ready to burn this outfit.”
Ray ignored them. He sat by the window, watching the mile markers blur past. His mind was racing, planning for contingencies. The events at the Thorne Manor and later on in Iron-Wake City was a beacon; by now, the smoke would be visible for miles. The Argent Hand wouldn’t just send firefighters; they would send interceptors. They would track down the main roads, bribe the toll collectors, and check every carriage moving away from the blast zone.
If we stay on this road, we lead them right to our front door.
Ray realized.
They will track all incoming and outgoing traffic in the domain.
Ray reached into his bag of holding and pulled out a map of the Southern Province. He spread it out on his knees, the dim light of the carriage lamp illuminating the ink.
He traced the main artery they were currently on. It was a straight shot, but it passed through three major toll checkpoints, all prime spots for our presence to be recorded. He needed a bypass.
His finger slid west, finding a faint, jagged line cutting through the heavy timber.
“There.”
Ray whispered.
He made a decision.
Ray reached up and rapped his knuckles hard against the wooden partition separating the cabin from the driver’s seat. He slid the small viewing hatch open.
“Driver! Change of plans,”
Ray commanded, his voice cutting over the wind.
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The driver, a nervous man who kept glancing back at the red glow on the horizon, looked down.
“My lord? The main road is the fastest way to Solhaven. We can make the gates by noon if we…”
“We aren’t going to Solhaven,”
Ray interrupted sharply.
“Get off the main road at the next fork. Take the Old Furrier’s Route.”
The driver balked.
“The Furrier’s Route? That’s a dirt track, sir! It winds through the heavy timber. It’ll add a full day to the trip!”
“That is fine,”
Ray said calmly.
“we need to make a stop atBriar’s Crossing. We have some business there.””
The driver had no choice but to follow as he has been paid a premium for this whole excursion.
“Y-yes, my lord. The Furrier’s Route. Understood.”
The carriage lurched as the driver hauled on the reins, veering them off the smooth cobblestones and onto a rutted, overgrown track that disappeared into the treeline.
The carriage vanished from the main road like it was never there.
The sudden transition was jarring. The carriage hit a deep rut, causing the cabin to violently shake. Svane, who had been dozing with one eye open, straightened up, bracing his hand against the ceiling to steady himself.
“What happened? Did we change routes?”
Svane grunted, looking out at the thick, encroaching forest.
“The main road is paved. This goat path will double our travel time. Is the detour necessary?”
“Speed is irrelevant if we are tracked,”
Ray answered, folding the map and tucking it back away.
“The Argent Hand controls the Iron-Wake Domain; they will have eyes on the toll booths and the watchtowers on the highway. If we stay on that road, the Hand can easily track us once they start investigating.”
Ray looked out into the dark woods.
“On the highway, we are targets. Out here, in the weeds? We are ghosts.”
Svane understood what Ray wanted to do, they needed to clear their traces.
They arrived at Briar’s Crossing just as the sun was struggling to burn through the morning mist.
It wasn’t much of a town. It was a trade waypoint, a cluster of timber buildings clinging to the side of a river, existing solely to feed, bed, and shoe the horses of travelers passing through. The air smelled of woodsmoke, damp moss, and river mud.
“We stop here for now.”
Ray announced, signaling the driver.
They pulled up to an inn that looked like it had been leaning to the left for the last fifty years. It wasn’t luxurious, but it was busy enough to be anonymous.
Ray went inside and booked three rooms. One for himself, one for the women, and one for Svane. Then, he booked a fourth room under a fake name at the other end of the hall, a dummy target, just in case anyone was asking questions.
“Let us rest,”
Ray ordered them as they hauled their gear upstairs.
“We sleep until dusk. Then we will continue our journey.”
The adrenaline of the escape had long since faded, replaced by a heavy, bone-deep exhaustion that made their limbs feel like lead.
By late afternoon, the inn’s common room was beginning to fill up with merchants and farmhands.
Rina couldn’t sleep. The silence of the room was too loud. The memories of the burning manor and the people that were captured which she had set free. She kept thinking about those people at the back of her mind. She decided to take her mind off it. She needed noise. She needed life.
She went downstairs, bought a cheap ale, and started doing what she did best: blending in. She moved from table to table, talking to people, listening to their stories and their complaints, and absorbing the local gossip like a sponge.
Svane was there, too. But he wasn’t socializing.
The massive Captain sat in a high-backed chair near the door, nursing a single mug of cider he hadn’t touched in an hour. He wasn’t relaxing; he was posting guard. His eyes tracked every person who entered or left the inn, his hand resting casually near the hilt of his sword hidden under his cloak.
Rina flopped down into the chair opposite him, looking flushed and slightly more alive.
“You’re going to scare the customers looking like that, Captain,”
Rina teased, taking a sip of her ale.
“Relax. Nobody here knows us.”
Svane grunted.
“Complacency kills.”
“You’re no fun,”
Rina sighed, leaning back.
“You know, this town is a mess. I just listened to a wool merchant. Apparently, the blacksmith’s daughter ran off with a traveler that stopped by this town, and the Mayor is sleeping with the Baker’s wife to get free pastries. The farmer down the road? He swears a goblin stole his prize pig, but everyone knows he just ate it himself in a drunken stupor.”
She rattled on, unloading the trivial, mundane drama of Briar’s Crossing. It was her way of decompressing, filling her head with other people’s small problems so she didn’t have to think about the giant ones waiting for them in Solhaven.
Svane stared at the door, his face unmoving. He looked like a statue carved from granite. Rina assumed he was tuning her out, but she kept talking anyway, just glad for the company.
“And get this,”
Rina laughed,
“The Baker apparently thinks the Mayor is just a really good customer. Can you believe the obliviousness?”
“The Mayor is not sleeping with the Baker’s wife.”
Svane said, his voice a low rumble.
Rina paused, her mug halfway to her mouth.
“What?”
Svane took a slow sip of his cider, his eyes never leaving the entrance.
“The Baker is the Mayor’s cousin,”
Svane corrected flatly.
“I heard the innkeeper complaining about it when we checked in. It’s not an affair; it’s nepotism. He’s diverting the town’s grain subsidy to the bakery to cut costs.”
Rina stared at him. The stoic, stone-faced wall of a man had been listening to every word of the gossip in the room while simultaneously guarding the door.
A grin spread across her face.
“Captain,”
she giggled.
“You big gossip.”
Svane grunted again, hiding a flicker of embarrassment behind his mug.
“Know your terrain, Rina. Even the small details.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 251: The Hammer vs. The Anvil
- Chapter 250: The Invisible Instructor
- Chapter 249: The Desperation of a Realist
- Chapter 248: The Butcher’s Deficit
- Chapter 247: The Tragedy of Incomplete Information
- Chapter 246: The Butcher of the Central Keep
- Chapter 245: The Currency of Commanders
- Chapter 244: The Preservation Protocol
- Chapter 243: Apex and Anchor
- Chapter 242: The Master Key
- Chapter 241: The Runic Gauntlet!
- Chapter 240: Perception Over Precision
- Chapter 239: Theater of the Mind
- Chapter 238: A Ghost in the Arena
- Chapter 237: A Symphony of Observation
- Chapter 236: The Wild and the Wall
- Chapter 235: The Static Turret Moves
- Chapter 234: A Symphony of One
- Chapter 233: How Do You Like Them Apples?
- Chapter 232: Archetype Evolution
- Chapter 231: The Dust of the Echo Chambers
- Chapter 230: The Purity of Betrayal
- Chapter 229: The Mind is the Battlefield
- Chapter 228: A Friendly Neighborhood Artificer
- Chapter 227: Team Chimera Reunited
- Chapter 226: Bleaching the Night
- Chapter 225: Taunts and Consequences
- Chapter 224: The Ghost General
- Chapter 223: The Nameless Grunt
- Chapter 222: The Command Flag
- Chapter 221: The Velvet Conspiracy
- Chapter 220: The Board is Set!
- Chapter 219: The Name of a Disaster
- Chapter 218: The Iron Rose Blooms
- Chapter 217: Let the Violence Begin!
- Chapter 216: The Undeclared Scholar Returns
- Chapter 215: Fireballs Win Duels, Logistics Win Wars
- Chapter 214: The One-Punch Artificer
- Chapter 213: Not a Single Spell
- Chapter 212: The Azure Cup
- Chapter 211: Belated Happy Birthday
- Chapter 210: Thirteen Today
- Chapter 209: A Knife for the King’s Throat
- Chapter 208: The Internal Security Review
- Chapter 207: Wasted Move, Appreciated Loyalty
- Chapter 206: Game Time
- Chapter 205: A King Does Not Need to Bleed
- Chapter 204: Buying the Future
- Chapter 203: Briar’s Crossing
- Chapter 202: A Tumor on the State
- Chapter 201: A Lord Protects His People
- Chapter 200: A Tide of Burning Legacy
- Chapter 199: The Finger and The Cleaner
- Chapter 198: The Dance of Attrition
- Chapter 197: An Ordinary Man
- Chapter 196: High Risk, High Reward
- Chapter 195: The Tactical Kill-Box
- Chapter 194: Smuggling the Void
- Chapter 193: Miscalculation of Interest
- Chapter 192: Eyes of the Void
- Chapter 191: The Risk of Professionals
- Chapter 190: The General and the Maid
- Chapter 189: No Heroics
- Chapter 188: The Blank Page
- Chapter 187: The Cover Story Becomes History
- Chapter 186: A Tired Mind is a Dull Blade
- ACT 4 CREDITS (Thank You All!)
- Chapter 185: The Inner Circle (END OF ACT 4)
- Chapter 184: The Rust and the Fire
- Chapter 183: Dismantling Perfection
- Chapter 182: The Interception
- Chapter 181: Fighting a War Without Being Caught
- Chapter 180: The Bone to Chew On
- Chapter 179: Strength of the Fortress
- Chapter 178: A Beautiful Lie
- Chapter 177: Approval of the Void
- Chapter 176: Hiding a Sun in a Lightbulb
- Chapter 175: It’s a Feature, Not a Bug
- Chapter 174: The Desperation Threshold
- Chapter 173: The Smiling Guillotine
- Chapter 172: Relief Over Domination
- Chapter 171: The Bear Votes No
- Chapter 170: The Primal Naturalist
- Chapter 169: The Spire of Hubris
- Chapter 168: The Artificer's Arrival
- Chapter 167: Smarter, Not Harder
- Chapter 166: The Hidden Room
- Chapter 165: The Conductor of Chaos
- Chapter 164: The Fury of the Indebted
- Chapter 163: The Chamber of Perspective
- Chapter 162: The Trap of Zero
- Chapter 161: Five Words to Victory
- Chapter 160: Truth and Lies
- Chapter 159: Only the Selfless
- Chapter 158: The Ten Percent
- Chapter 157: The Engineer's Execution
- Chapter 156: The Art of the Design
- Chapter 155: The Silver Aegis Declaration
- Chapter 154: The Engineer Lives!
- [SYSTEM NOTIFICATION: HOLIDAY EVENT DETECTED]
- Chapter 153: Wire, Smoke, and Chisel
- Chapter 152: Override Protocol
- Chapter 151: Reality 101
- Chapter 150: The Switch Dance
- Chapter 149: Teaching by Feeling
- Chapter 148: The Gold and the Shadow
- Chapter 147: The Umbral Revelation
- Chapter 146: The Wrong Time Bomb
- Chapter 145: Smoke, Sound, and Strike
- Chapter 144: Damage Control 101
- Chapter 143: The Unlit Circuit
- Chapter 142: To Create Potential
- Chapter 141: The Engineer's Narrative
- Chapter 140: The Universal Solvent
- Chapter 139: The Perfect Failure
- Chapter 138: 6th-Circle 101
- Chapter 137: The Promotion Trials
- Chapter 136: The Break is Over
- Act-3 Credits (A Huge Thank You!)
- Chapter 135: The Master's New Leash
- Chapter 134: A New School of Magic
- Chapter 133: Balance Over Numbness
- Chapter 132: The Scourge of Shame
- Chapter 131: The Third Link is Forged
- Chapter 130: The Perfect Paradox
- Chapter 129: Service and Silence
- Chapter 128: The Debt of Loyalty
- Chapter 127: The New Capstone
- Chapter 126: The Golden Fire
- Chapter 125: The Art of Disruption
- Chapter 124: The Price of Genius
- Chapter 123: The Breaching Point
- Chapter 122: The Interrogation
- Chapter 121: The Master's Concession
- Chapter 120: A Test of the Alliance
- Chapter 119: The Strategist's Choice
- Chapter 118: The Shadow's Strike
- Chapter 117: Command and Crisis
- Chapter 116: The Third Way
- Chapter 115: The Invisible Web
- Chapter 114: The Quartermaster's Surprise
- Chapter 113: The Boogeyman's Name
- Chapter 112: The Shadow War Begins
- Chapter 111: The Confession of Failure
- Chapter 110: The Perfect Copy
- Chapter 109: The Classified Core
- Chapter 108: The Second Understudy’s First Lesson
- Chapter 107: Informed Consent
- Chapter 106: The Silent Harvest
- Chapter 105: The Golden Reveal
- Chapter 104: The Fulcrum Principle
- Chapter 103: The Internal Curriculum
- Chapter 102: The Living Arsenal
- Chapter 101: The Hunter's Gaze
- Chapter 100: The Courtier's Duel
- Chapter 99: The Fulcrum Shift
- Chapter 98: The Long Game
- Chapter 97: The Private Victory
- Chapter 96: A Confrontation with the Void
- Chapter 95: Intellectual Hegemony
- Chapter 94: The New Command
- Chapter 93: A Private Audience
- Chapter 92: The Sole Broker
- Chapter 91: The Gardener or the Gatekeeper
- Chapter 90: Andrade's Compromise
- Chapter 89: The Price of Freedom
- Chapter 88: A Shared Path
- Chapter 87: The Seeds of Restoration
- Chapter 86: The Fortress
- Chapter 85: Andrade's Visit
- Chapter 84: Echoes and Agendas
- Chapter 83: The Stolen Secret
- Chapter 82: The Crimson Weaver
- Chapter 81: A Glimmer of Mana
- Chapter 80: The Art of the Deal
- Chapter 79: The First Tutor
- Chapter 78: The Gilded Cage
- Chapter 77: The Secret Contract
- Chapter 76: Andrade's Verdict
- Act-2 Credits
- Chapter 75: A New Dawn
- Chapter 74: The Reforging
- Chapter 73: A Desperate Gambit
- Chapter 72: The Genesis Crystal Chamber
- Chapter 71: The Sunken Vaults
- Chapter 70: Navigating Chaos
- Chapter 69: The Perilous Path
- Chapter 68: Andrade's Judgment
- Chapter 67: The Harmonic Concordance Ward
- Chapter 66: The Herald of Old Magic
- Chapter 65: The Custodian's Coaster
- Chapter 64: The Lyceum of Secrets
- Chapter 63: Gateway to the Capital
- Chapter 62: The Nexus Gambit
- Chapter 61: The Ashvane Method
- Chapter 60: The Fraying Crystal
- Chapter 59: The Midnight Infiltration
- Chapter 58: The Contamination Hypothesis
- Chapter 57: Echoes of Decay
- Chapter 56: Echoes in the Archive
- Chapter 55: The Currency of Secrets
- Chapter 54: The Weight of Whispers
- Chapter 53: A Different Light
- Chapter 52: The Arcane Scribe
- Chapter 51: The Crucible and the Clay
- Chapter 50: A Scholar's Contract
- Chapter 49: A Scholar's Wage
- Chapter 48: The Commission Board
- Chapter 47: The First Bell
- Chapter 46: The Trials of Solhaven
- Chapter 45: The Understudy's First Lesson
- Chapter 44: The Registrar's Riddle
- Chapter 43: The Gates of Solhaven Academy
- Chapter 42: Scars and Thresholds
- Chapter 41: The Weight of Command
- Chapter 40: The Battle of the King's Road
- Chapter 39: The King's Road
- Chapter 38: An Offer of Oblivion
- Chapter 37: The Serpent's Confession Part-2
- Chapter 36: The Serpent's Confession Part-1
- Chapter 35: The Serpent Unmasked
- Chapter 34: The Oracle Box
- Chapter 33: A Wolf in Scholar's Robes
- Chapter 32: The Quiet Years
- Chapter 31: A Lord's Debt
- Chapter 30: The Crucible Path
- Chapter 29: The Price of Deception (END OF ACT-1)
- Chapter 28: The Magus's Herald
- Chapter 27: The Ghost's Script
- Chapter 26: The Second Echo
- Chapter 25: A Weave of Light
- Chapter 24: A Whisper of Gold
- Chapter 23: The Fletcher's Mark
- Chapter 22: The Gilded Lie
- Chapter 21: A Game of Shadows
- Chapter 20: The Silent Assessor
- Chapter 19: The Poison and the Palliative
- Chapter 18: A Cure and a Conspiracy
- Chapter 17: The Unwitting Accomplice
- Chapter 16: The Healer's Burden
- Chapter 15: Ledgers and Lies
- Chapter 14: The Inkgall Spoil
- Chapter 13: Archives and Obstacles
- Chapter 12: The Quiet Work
- Chapter 11: Cognitive Aegis
- Chapter 10: The Actor Alone
- Chapter 9: The Cost of a Scene
- Chapter 8: A Child's Gambit
- Chapter 7: The Curtain Rises
- Chapter 6: A Lesson in Control
- Chapter 5: A Brother’s Cruelty
- Chapter 4: The Price of a Life
- Chapter 3: Whispers in the Stone
- Chapter 2: The First Performance
- Chapter 1: The Final Curtain