The crossroads appeared at dusk on the seventh day of exile. Four paths met beneath an ancient gibbet, its iron cage still occupied by whoever had last offended local authority. The corpse was too decayed to identify. It could have been highwayman, heretic, or simply someone who'd asked the wrong questions.
Kaelen studied his options. North led deeper into the disputed lands between kingdoms, where law held little sway. South curved back toward civilization and the Church's reach. East would take him to the coast and possible escape by sea. West aimed at the Blighted Forest, where even Inquisitors feared to tread.
None appealed. He'd been wandering without true purpose since leaving the estate, killing three more Inquisitors who'd had the misfortune to cross his path. Each death brought momentary satisfaction but no lasting peace. The rage still burned, demanding greater payment for what had been taken.
"Difficult choice, isn't it?"
The voice came from shadows beneath the gibbet. Kaelen's hand found his knife hilt; he'd acquired a proper sword from the second group of Inquisitors, but the blade felt wrong in his grip. The knife had become more natural, more honest in its simplicity.
"Show yourself," he commanded.
A figure emerged: elderly merchant by appearance, though something in his movements suggested that age was costume rather than truth. His cart stood half-hidden in roadside brush, loaded with bundles that could have contained anything.
"Just a humble trader, good sir. Making my way between markets, offering exotic goods to discerning customers." The merchant's smile revealed too many teeth. "Though I sense you're not in the market for common wares."
"I seek nothing from you, old man. Be on your way."
"Nothing?" The merchant laughed, a sound like winter wind through empty houses. "Not even direction? Purpose? Power to match the hatred burning in your chest?"
Kaelen's eyes narrowed. "You know who I am."
"I know who you were. Kaelen Dawnblade, Knight-Captain, defender of the Light. I know who you are: exile, kinslayer, heretic by decree if not by nature. But who you might become... ah, that's the interesting question."
"Speak plainly or not at all."
The merchant produced a leather map case from his robes. "There are powers older than the Church, young lord. Older than the Light itself. Powers that care nothing for the Council's politics or the Grand Inquisitor's schemes. Powers that might interest a man with nothing left to lose."
"Shadow sorcery? Demon pacts?" Kaelen spat. "The very crimes they accused me of?"
"Labels. Categories. The Church names anything it cannot control as evil, anything that threatens its monopoly as heretical." The merchant unrolled a map unlike any Kaelen had seen. It was marked with symbols that seemed to writhe, paths that shifted even as he watched. "But power is simply power. It's the wielder who determines its nature."
Despite himself, Kaelen looked closer. The map showed the Blighted Forest in detail impossible for normal cartography. At its heart, a mark that pulled at his vision: a black star that promised... something.
"What is this?"
"A guide to the Soulstone. An artifact from before the Light's dominion, when mankind understood that shadow and radiance were two faces of the same truth." The merchant's voice dropped to whisper. "They say it can grant power to rival the blessed champions. Power enough to topple thrones. Power enough for revenge."
"And you offer this freely? What's your price, merchant?"
"Price?" Another unsettling laugh. "Consider it investment in future entertainment. The Council has grown boring in its certainty. A little chaos might prove... amusing."
The word 'chaos' triggered memory: something from old texts, warnings about entities that fed on disorder and change. But those were Church teachings, and the Church had proven itself built on lies.
"Why me?" Kaelen asked finally.
"Because you're balanced perfectly on the edge. Still human enough to act, but broken enough to embrace what's necessary. Because the Council created you through their cruelty, and irony has its own power." The merchant rolled up the map, pressed it into Kaelen's hands. "Because someone needs to remind the Light that casting shadows is dangerous when darkness learns to bite back."
The map felt warm against his palms, pulsing like a living thing. Part of him, the remnant of the knight, wanted to cast it aside. But that part grew quieter each day, drowned by Marcus's absence and Lyanna's screams.
"This Soulstone," he said carefully. "What exactly does it do?"
"Whatever the bearer wills, if they're strong enough to claim it. The weak it consumes. The strong it transforms. The desperate... well, they tend to surprise everyone, including themselves."
"And you think I'm desperate enough?"
The merchant smiled that too-wide smile. "I think you're desperate enough to do what even the ancient shadow cultists feared to try. I think hatred has carved you hollow, and nature abhors a vacuum. Something will fill that space, young lord. Better to choose what than let chance decide."
Before Kaelen could respond, hoofbeats thundered from the south. Riders approaching fast; too fast for merchants or common travellers. The old man glanced that direction and chuckled.
"Ah, your admirers arrive. The Church does so hate loose ends." He stepped backward, seeming to fold into shadows that shouldn't have been deep enough to hide him. "Follow the map if you dare. Ignore it if you prefer simpler forms of death. Either way, the entertainment begins."
He vanished completely, cart and all, as if he'd never existed. Only the map remained, solid proof of the encounter. Kaelen tucked it inside his shirt as riders burst into view.
Church soldiers: a full squad in blessed armour, led by an Inquisitor whose robes marked him as senior investigator. They spotted him immediately, wheeling their mounts to surround the crossroads.
"Kaelen Dawnblade," the Inquisitor called. "By order of the High Council, you are commanded to return for additional questioning."
"I was exiled," Kaelen replied calmly. "The sentence was quite specific."
"Circumstances have changed. Several of our brothers have been found dead, killed by someone matching your description. Exile is revoked pending investigation of these new crimes."
So, they'd found the bodies. Good. Let them know their servants weren't safe, that creating monsters carried consequences.
"I decline your invitation."
The Inquisitor's face flushed. "You don't have that option, heretic. Surrender peacefully or—"
Kaelen never let him finish. The knife flew from his hand, taking the man in the throat mid-word. Even as the Inquisitor toppled from his saddle, Kaelen rolled aside, avoiding the charge of two soldiers. His stolen sword cleared its sheath, finding the gap in one rider's armour as he passed.
Chaos erupted. Horses screamed, men shouted, steel rang against steel. The soldiers had advantage of numbers and armour, but they'd expected cowed exile, not someone who'd embraced violence as sacrament.
Kaelen fought without thought, muscle memory and killing instinct merging into deadly efficiency. The sword felt better now, its weight familiar as he carved through blessed steel and flesh beneath. When a mace caught his shoulder, spinning him around, he used the momentum to gut his attacker. When two came at once, he set them against each other, let their zeal create openings.
Blood painted the crossroads. Bodies fell like offerings beneath the gibbet. The last soldier, barely more than a boy, threw down his sword and raised empty hands.
"Please! Mercy! I yield!"
The knight would have accepted surrender. But the knight had believed in rules of war, codes of honour, the sanctity of submission. The man Kaelen had become saw only another servant of his enemies, another potential threat to eliminate.
The sword punched through the boy's chest. Surprise replaced relief in those young eyes as life fled. He fell forward, joining his brothers in death.
Kaelen stood among corpses, breathing hard. His shoulder throbbed where the mace had struck, and various cuts decorated his arms. But he lived while eight enemies didn't. The arithmetic of survival, stripped of moral complexity.
The horses had fled during the battle, except for the Inquisitor's mount: a magnificent black destrier trained for war. It stood calmly despite the carnage, evaluating Kaelen with intelligent eyes.
"Easy," he murmured, approaching slowly. The horse allowed him to take its reins, perhaps recognizing a fellow predator. Its saddlebags contained supplies, coins, and most importantly, sealed orders.
Reading them by the dying light revealed the full scope of the Church's response. Not just hunting him but expanding the purge. More eastern lords marked for arrest. Common folk who'd shown insufficient enthusiasm for new doctrines. Even children whose parents had asked questions.
The name at the bottom made his blood chill: Marcus Torven, age seven, son of a merchant who'd complained about tithes. Scheduled for "theological evaluation," the same euphemism they'd used before murdering his nephew.
Another Marcus. Another child condemned for the sins of asking why.
Rage burned through him, so pure it felt like revelation. The Council wouldn't stop. Having tasted blood, they'd gorge themselves on it. Every questioner silenced created two more. Every family destroyed planted seeds of resentment. They were creating their own opposition through cruelty and calling it divine justice.
The map pulsed against his chest, warm as fever. West, toward the Blighted Forest. Toward power the Church feared enough to name evil.
Kaelen mounted the destrier. The beast accepted him without protest, as if recognizing its new purpose. He left the bodies unburied, their blood soaking into crossroads dirt. Let travellers see what happened to the Council's hunters. Let fear spread among the faithful that their blessed protections weren't absolute.
As full dark fell, he turned west. Behind lay the ruins of his old life, ahead the promise of something else. Not redemption, that path had closed when Marcus died. Not justice, that required belief in higher authority.
Just power. Raw, absolute, sufficient to repay suffering with suffering.
The Blighted Forest swallowed him, its twisted trees reaching like desperate fingers toward stars the canopy hid. Somewhere in that darkness waited the Soulstone and whatever transformation it offered.
The knight was dead. The exile was dying. What emerged from that forest would be something else entirely: something the Council had created through their cruelty, shaped through their brutality, and aimed like a weapon at their hypocrite hearts.
As hoofbeats faded into darkness, the gibbet's occupant swayed in strengthening wind. Almost like nodding. Almost like approval.
The merchant stepped from shadows that had sheltered him throughout the battle. He studied the carnage with an artist's eye, noting the efficiency of violence, the abandoned mercy.
"Yes," he murmured to empty air. "This one will do nicely."
He vanished again, leaving only corpses and consequences. In the forest, something ancient stirred, sensing approach of one whose hatred might finally prove sufficient for its purposes.
The game deepened. The pieces moved. And somewhere in the capital, a Grand Inquisitor felt the first cold touch of a fear he couldn't quite name.