[Dawn crept across the dark sands with merciless precision.]
[The training grounds sprawled before them—an expanse of black volcanic earth and sun-bleached stone. Nothing grew here. Nothing survived the heat.]
Earl Bruts— "Strip."
[Abaksa's breath caught.]
Abaksa Einsro— "I'm sorry?"
Earl Bruts— "Your shirt. Off."
[Earl Bruts peeled away his own tunic without ceremony, revealing flesh carved by decades of war. Scars painted his torso in silver lines—each one a story of survival.]
[Abaksa hesitated, then complied.]
[When his shirt fell to the dark sand, Earl Bruts went completely still.]
Earl Bruts— "Jesus Christ."
[Ribs jutted against translucent skin. Arms that had never known labor. A chest that had never carried armor or shield.]
Earl Bruts— "You're not weak, boy."
[The sand crunched beneath his boots as he stepped closer.]
Earl Bruts— "You're dying."
[The words struck like a blade between ribs.]
Butler Kael— "My lord, perhaps we should—"
Earl Bruts— "No."
[He lifted a wooden practice sword from the weapon rack. Tossed it.]
[Abaksa's hands moved before his mind could catch up. The grip settled into his palms with disturbing familiarity.]
Earl Bruts— "Swing it."
Abaksa Einsro— "At what?"
Earl Bruts— "Air. Stone. Me. Doesn't matter."
[Abaksa raised the blade. His stance shifted automatically—feet apart, weight centered, shoulders—]
Earl Bruts— "Stop."
[Authority cracked like a whip in his voice.]
Earl Bruts— "That's not how a pampered duke's son holds a sword."
[Ice spread through Abaksa's veins.]
Abaksa Einsro— "I don't know what you—"
Earl Bruts— "Your hands remember steel."
[He circled Abaksa like a predator.]
Earl Bruts— "Your feet find balance without thought. Your shoulders carry weight they've never lifted."
[Each word was an accusation.]
Earl Bruts— "Most telling of all—"
[He stopped directly in front of Abaksa.]
Earl Bruts— "Your eyes have seen men die."
[The dark sands seemed to absorb all sound. All breath.]
[In his previous life, Abaksa had watched kingdoms burn. Had felt the spray of arterial blood across his face. Had killed until his arms ached and his soul went numb.]
[Now this scarred warrior saw through every lie.]
Abaksa Einsro— "Does it matter who I was?"
Earl Bruts— "Everything matters when I'm deciding whether to train you or execute you."
[The wooden sword trembled in Abaksa's grip.]
Earl Bruts— "Again. Show me what those hands remember."
[Abaksa lifted the blade. This time, he didn't fight the muscle memory.]
[The swing came natural. Controlled. Deadly despite the practice weapon.]
Earl Bruts— "There."
[Something dangerous glinted in the Earl's eyes.]
Earl Bruts— "That's not the swing of a boy learning to fight."
[He hefted his own practice sword.]
Earl Bruts— "That's the swing of someone who's already killed."
[Not a question. A statement carved in stone.]
[Abaksa met his gaze, feeling the weight of two lifetimes pressing down.]
Abaksa Einsro— "Maybe I have."
Earl Bruts— "Maybe doesn't explain why you flinch from shadows but stand firm against steel."
[He raised his sword without warning.]
Earl Bruts— "Block this."
[The strike came fast—a diagonal cut meant to end the exchange immediately.]
[Abaksa's body moved on instinct. The wooden blades met with a sharp CRACK that sent vibrations through both their arms.]
[Earl Bruts stared at the locked swords, then at Abaksa's face.]
Earl Bruts— "Impossible."
[Abaksa's knees shook from the impact, his starved muscles screaming protest. But he hadn't been cut down.]
Butler Kael— "My lord?"
Earl Bruts— "A duke's son who's supposedly never held a real weapon just parried a killing blow."
[He stepped back, sword still raised.]
Earl Bruts— "So I'll ask you once more—who are you really?"
[The question shattered every careful deception. Every practiced lie.]
[Abaksa felt the weight of his past life bleeding through the cracks.]
Abaksa Einsro— "Someone who refuses to die the same death twice."
[The words escaped before he could stop them.]
[Too honest. Too raw. Too revealing.]
Earl Bruts— "Twice?"
[Silence stretched between them like a blade's edge.]
[Then Earl Bruts smiled—not with kindness, but with the recognition of a kindred predator.]
Earl Bruts— "Good."
[He settled into a combat stance.]
Earl Bruts— "Then let's see how far that refusal can carry you when your body catches up to your instincts."
[The real training began—brutal, methodical, unforgiving.]
[And in the shadow of the castle's eastern tower, pale fingers traced patterns in the air while ancient eyes watched every movement with calculating interest.]
[Something had awakened.]
[Something had plans.]
