Raya stood at the border of Embion, his eyes locked on the horizon where the land met the scarlet sky, as if it held the answers to everything he had endured. His fingers gripped the hilt of the blade at his side—a blade he had once called home, the cold steel that had guided him through the darkness of his past. It had been thirty years since he'd left this place, thirty years since he had failed his first mission, thirty years since Yuki's death had carved a hole in his soul so deep, he had become someone else. But now he was back, not as the nameless assassin who lurked in the shadows, but as something far more dangerous.
The wind tugged at his cloak, and with each gust, it felt as though the world itself was whispering in his ear, urging him to move forward, to face the fate that awaited him in the city of Embion. There was no turning back. Every step he took was a step toward a reckoning. The young beggar's face—the one who had smiled even as death drew near—haunted his mind. The warmth of his innocent smile. The kindness he had never known.
Raya clenched his fist around the blade's hilt, a promise to the past and a vow to the future. Revenge.
The streets of Embion were as he remembered—dirty, bustling with life, but beneath it all, a sense of rot clung to the air. The city was built on corruption, and its foundations were soaked in blood. The powerful elites controlled everything: the economy, the politics, the laws. But what they didn't control, what they could never have, was the spirit of a man who had nothing left to lose. They thought Raya was dead, forgotten, another casualty in the never-ending war of power. But they were wrong.
He moved through the alleys and darkened corners with the ease of a shadow. It had been years, but his skills had never dulled. His mind was sharp, his instincts razor-edged. He was still the nameless assassin—only now, his name was carved in the blood of those who had wronged him.
Raya's eyes scanned the crowds, picking out the high-ranking officials and merchants who walked with a sense of entitlement, their faces fat with greed. They didn't notice him, not yet. But they would. Soon, he thought.
He made his way toward the heart of Embion—the citadel where the most powerful of the corrupt resided. There, in the grand hall of the ruling class, was the man responsible for Yuki's death. Brammel, a fat, insidious politician whose reach extended through every dark corner of Embion. It was Brammel who had orchestrated the execution of Yuki, a child who had been nothing more than a pawn in the game of power.
He will die, Raya swore silently.
But as he approached the citadel, something unexpected stopped him. A young woman, dressed in tattered robes, stepped into his path. She was thin, gaunt, but there was something in her eyes—a spark of defiance. She looked up at him with a mixture of fear and curiosity, and for a moment, Raya froze. The look on her face reminded him of someone he had long buried in his past.
"Are you... an assassin?" Her voice was soft, barely above a whisper, but it cut through the air like a blade.
Raya stared at her for a moment, his eyes narrowing. He knew better than to speak to strangers, but there was something about this woman that intrigued him. She wasn't asking for help, nor was she pleading for mercy. She was simply observing him, as if she knew the depths of his darkness.
"Aren't you afraid?" she asked again, taking a step closer, her voice trembling.
Raya's jaw tightened. "Everyone's afraid of something," he muttered. "You should be, too."
The woman hesitated but then held her ground. "I'm not afraid of you. You're not the only one who has lost everything."
Her words hit him like a strike to the chest. For a fleeting moment, he saw the child, Yuki, in her face. He saw the smile, the innocent joy, and the pain that followed. It was as though the world had conspired to remind him of why he had come here.
"I lost my brother," she continued, her voice stronger now, "to the same people who took everything from you."
Raya's gaze softened. "You don't know anything about me."
"I don't need to," she replied, her eyes unwavering. "I've seen what happens to people who let revenge consume them. You lose yourself along the way."
Raya's grip on his sword tightened, but he didn't move. The woman's words gnawed at him, pulling at something deep inside. The vengeance that had driven him for so long now felt like a weight, an unbearable burden. Yet, he knew he couldn't stop. Not now.
"I'll be the one to end them," he said, his voice low and dangerous.
She studied him for a long moment before nodding slowly. "Then don't lose yourself in the process. You might find that in the end, the ones who truly pay are the ones who didn't need to be part of it."
Raya didn't answer her. He couldn't. Instead, he turned and continued toward the citadel, the weight of her words lingering in the air behind him.
The path ahead was clear. Brammel's blood would stain his blade, and the city would tremble beneath the fury of a man who had nothing left to lose. But deep within him, a voice whispered, uncertain, as though the world itself was asking: What if revenge is not the only thing you're capable of?
For now, Raya had no answers. But one thing was certain—Embion would burn, and he would be the one to set the flames alight.