Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 139 from Awakening the Great Bloodline, a Action novel by IPPO.

Chapter 139: Who Is the Guilty One?

Anxiety was humanity's instinct.

Even with Calix and the Mountain Rabbits' renowned reputation, the shadows of defeat rose first in the hearts of the Imperial soldiers.

"……It's suffocating."

An aging knight muttered quietly. The comrade beside him nodded and bit his lip.

The moonlight illuminated the world as if it were midday. Yet hands wiping away sweat refused to stop. The sticky air, the humid wind, the noise pouring from the monster horde in the distance—every elent overlapped in an ominous way.

Perhaps that was why.

Soone summoned the courage to ask Master Imran Akran.

"……Were you acquainted with that old soldier?"

Near the campfire, the gazes of the Mountain Rabbits and the knights beneath him converged. Imran's expression was unexpectedly still. The hand tracing the edge of his blade did not waver, yet his eyes alone were subrged sowhere deep in the distant past.

He slowly opened his mouth.

"It was sixteen years ago, perhaps. No—nearly seventeen."

Calix's gaze rested on Gregor's face. The old man who had lost his mories was tilting his head in puzzlent.

"That ti…… I would have been in the Silver Shield Legion, wouldn't I?"

"You would."

Imran's voice was quiet. But those around him held their breath and, without realizing it, swallowed. Soon after, he closed his eyes.

"You and I were both in our pri. The hot blood of youth still remained, and we were blind to hollow honor……."

With those words, the tense air slowly eased. An old mory seeped into the center of the encampnt like morning fog.

***

On that day seventeen years ago, the moon hung in the sky as well. Where the golden hue of autumn had faded, the moonlight draped a veil of ash.

"Kill the traitors!"

The flas that blanketed the fields had not yet cooled. Human corpses flowed in layers down the river, and the enemies holed up in the mountain fortress were on the verge of starving to death.

Imran Akran silently watched the scene.

‘The remaining enemy is but a handful.’

The Imperial Army had surrounded the fortress in several encircling layers. But Emperor Caracal was not satisfied with this much.

"Knight Akran, these are orders to purge the entire region."

"……."

Imran's fingers suddenly gripped the scabbard.

‘This is not war. It has no honor.’

Sothing boiled within him.

The Emperor's intent was blatant. It went beyond crushing the rebellion—he wanted to make an example through dreadful terror.

Yet he could not, in the end, raise his sword against it. In his mind, the contents of the secret letter the Emperor had sent flashed through. It was a single line.

-The na of Caracal is eternal; offer him your loyalty.

Imran had understood the aning of those words precisely. It was a threat—that if he defied the Emperor's orders, the next in line would be House Akran.

And soon, forces at the scale of an entire legion began to move. The earth groaned under the weight of iron armor, and the countless torches lined up swallowed the night.

The orders were clear.

‘Sweep the entire domain clean.’

Flas erupted across the villages. As thatched rooftops blazed furiously, the residents scattered in every direction. The cries of children filled the alleyways, and won's screams whipped through the air.

Imran watched the carnage in silence.

A young man grasping a pickaxe resisted, then was run through by a spearhead and crumpled to the ground. Those who had hidden in the well were killed by thrown stones, and houses were broken into one by one, scattering the scent of iron throughout.

"……Silver Shield Legion."

They moved like precise machinery.

They silenced weeping, severed screams, and stopped hearts. Seasoned warriors, full of nothing but loyalty toward the Emperor. What lay within them was unknowable, but outwardly, they betrayed not a trace of emotion.

Even those who burst out of the burning grain storage were soon reduced to a pile of corpses.

But there was no one with the standing to condemn the Silver Shield Legion. Gritting his teeth, Imran took in every single scene before him.

‘Emperor, just how cruel do you intend to beco.’

Then suddenly, his gaze turned toward one old soldier. The fingertips clutching the sword trembled finely. Before him, an elderly woman had fallen to her knees.

A face covered in ash and dust.

She clung to the old soldier's ankles, her voice desperate, begging for rcy.

"Please…… Just spare these children!"

"……."

Oddly enough, Imran first examined the man's blade. It was far too clean—it seed he had not participated in the slaughter. Perhaps, he thought, the man might let them go.

His arm muscles had stiffened rigid, and his two legs had not delivered a single kick. From the hesitant movents, Imran read the man's wavering.

In that gap, the elderly woman scread at the children at the top of her lungs.

"Run now! Get to the forest!"

She thrust a bundle carrying an infant into the arms of her ten-year-old grandchild, shoved the child away, and thrashed about. Yet even so, she never released the hands gripping those ankles.

At that mont, a torch illuminated the side of her face. The entire left half was covered in burn scars.

"……!"

The old soldier's lips sealed shut.

It could only be a coincidence. But fate, reviving a single mory—awakened the man behind the shield.

"……Go. It is not yet too late."

And.

Imran had only been half right.

Atop a wooden bridge over the river, one soldier clad in armor stood firm. It was the only passage leading to the forest.

Children, elders, and limping farrs—he let all of them pass.

"……Gregor."

But his comrades, he blocked. The color had drained entirely from his face, yet his two eyes ran deeper than the river.

***

The mist over the river scattered, and the woman fell to her knees, clutching the children to her. In Gregor's chest, mories from his childhood rose up vividly.

His mother, who had held her child tight within the flas. Scorched skin. A hold both firm and gentle.

He had sworn never to let that mont repeat itself.

The comrades were visibly flustered. Gregor had defied a grave order. Yet to call it treason seed unfit—there were no small number of n who owed him their lives.

That confusion only settled so ti later, when the legion commander arrived.

"Gregor! What is the aning of this!"

Erin Casapchak stood facing him atop the bridge. Between the two, there was nothing but a silver shield.

"We may stop any enemy, but we do not stain our blades with the blood of civilians."

The old soldiers lined up before the bridge looked to each other's faces. No one could bring themselves to step forward. As for who was right—on that alone, opinion was sharply divided.

At this, the commander's eyes narrowed.

"Those you've saved…… Will return one day with blades drawn."

She tried to persuade him, but Gregor did not reverse his choice.

"Then I'll fight them then. Not today."

A brief silence lingered. The river crashed furiously against the supports, and the air atop the bridge froze taut.

"Commander, what are your orders?"

"……Restrain him first."

Imran Akran took in the sight of the old soldiers rushing forward. Gregor held his ground and t the comrades charging at him.

Bang!

He shoved back Erdman Falter with his shield—a man no different from a blood brother.

Crunch, crack—thud!

He struck with the flat of his blade, then sent the man tumbling into the river with a kick. His ability was exceptional to begin with, and since neither side harbored killing intent, it was difficult to respond to.

"Guh—ck, hk—wheeze!"

He even extended his spear shaft to those flailing in the river to pull them out. He had made a choice that could be called wrong, yet his camaraderie had not wavered.

‘Was it truly the wrong choice?’

Imran's brow furrowed faintly. He was greatly moved by Gregor's actions, and yet felt an inescapable question he could not dispel.

Because of that, he stepped forward himself in the end.

Clip, clip.

As the sound of hoofbeats approached from behind, Legion Commander Erin's expression darkened. The one presence she had desperately hoped would overlook all this had inserted itself.

"Knight Akran, I will resolve this quickly. Allow to handle it."

"I have sothing to ask him."

"……Does it have to be now?"

If there were no witnesses, there would be no problem. But as misfortune would have it, the other man's na carried far too much weight. Even then, he was a top-rank knight who stood at the threshold of Master, known as the Emperor's shadow.

The mont Imran Akran demanded he clear the way, refusal was impossible.

And soon, two n faced each other. One stood atop the bridge catching his breath; the other let his sunken eyes gleam.

"You have made yourself a traitor."

From the very first words, a weight that was hard to bear was packed within them. Even the old soldiers who had lost their mories understood the aning of those words and stiffened their brows.

"This single choice will change everything. Your reputation and standing, your life, and perhaps even your family will be executed or exiled. For what reason do you bear so heavy a burden?"

Gregor gazed at the other man's face for a mont. His breathing gradually settled. Just as the man said, from this very mont onward, he stood to lose so much.

But—

"The pride of one's life is not sothing others place in your hands. Only what I have protected testifies to my days of glory."

He had sworn to beco a shield.

‘……Mother.’

Thinking of what lay ahead clouded his mind. Even so, he could not bring himself to commit an unjust act. Into his green eyes, a firm conviction gradually seeped out.

Imran acknowledged his words, but imdiately raised a counterargunt.

"A splendid aspiration for a man. Yet you are also a mber of the Silver Shield Legion."

He gazed at the young Gregor before him. Hair white as snow, though black strands still grew here and there throughout. Wrinkles had lined his face, but the shield in his hand was well-maintained and smooth.

The appearance of a man who had layered courage and stubbornness beneath conviction already belonged to a completed warrior.

Even the answer that followed confird it.

"That is precisely why I stood here. We offer loyalty to the Emperor—we are those who drive out evil and protect the Empire. Therefore, we must not kill fellow citizens of the sa Empire. Least of all those who do not even know how to grip a sword."

At this, a brief sigh escaped.

"……I see. You placed protection before loyalty. Because only by doing so could you stop this massacre and ease the burden on your comrades."

Hopelessly contradictory, yet not without reason. Imran felt sothing faintly aching in one corner of his heart.

‘I am bound by the Emperor's hand. Yet he looked only to his own belief, and put it into practice.’

Sha crept down the back of his neck. For a mont, the impulse to agree with the man's view arose. But he suppressed the feeling in the end, sealing his lips and burying his emotions under one final question.

"Will you not regret it?"

The answer that ca back was equally short.

"Of course not!"

At Gregor's radiant smile, Imran turned his back as if fleeing.

"……Knight Akran, would you not be willing to pretend you saw nothing? We shall pursue and annihilate the escaped traitors ourselves."

At that mont, Legion Commander Erin Casapchak spoke with evident anxiety. Before he knew it, hundreds of old soldiers had gathered near the bridge.

So bowed their heads and averted their gaze, and so stared at their comrade's form, on the verge of tears.

At this, Imran silently shook his head. There was no way he could help, even if he wanted to. The knights who had followed him numbered in the dozens alone, and the likelihood of the Emperor's spies being among them was high.

And from that day on, the na Gregor was erased from the Silver Shield Legion. He had fallen to the status of an exile, having barely kept his life.

The official record: failure to comply with orders.

However—

The guilty one was upright even in the mont of his departure, and those who remained fell silent so deep not a single breath could be heard.

***

Back to the present.

When Imran's story drew to a close, a long silence fell like a dying campfire. Knights and Mountain Rabbits alike did nothing but et each other's eyes and hold their breath.

Then a Knight, retracing mories, let out a sound of admiration.

"Ah, I had heard a rumor related to him as well. That Knight Akran had repeatedly petitioned His Majesty to spare a single old soldier."

"Hm? Did you really do that? You helped ?"

Gregor's eyes lit up wide.

He did not bother to deny it.

"It was my own…… Penance. It was also repaying the debt to the one who gave enlightennt."

"? What enlightennt?"

"I had placed my house first, and you had protected an innocent person in place of hollow honor. You had known instinctively that it was the act of protecting one's comrades, of protecting the Empire. That difference—it is what separated us."

How strange a thing is fate?

The question the old soldier had cast brought enormous change to Imran's life.

Two years after that, he crossed the wall and reached the realm of Master. He worked to free himself from the Emperor's grasp, and gradually, it ca to be.

Then, when ti had passed, he ca face to face with a certain young man.

"Calix. Perhaps this is why I let you go. Because what I could not do, soone else was willing to stake their life to carry out."

"……."

"The day I t that man, and the day I crossed paths with you…… I saw the sa thing in both."

The gazes of three n beca entangled as one. Calix did not understand imdiately what it ant, but within it, he read old guilt and hope together.

At the sa ti, he did not miss a small hint.

‘The comrade who fell into the river back then…… Was the current Silver Shield Legion Commander, Erdman Falter.’

Calix realized it belatedly, overlaying the image of the old soldier from the recollection. There was a reason the Silver Shield Legion had lent their ears to Gregor's words.

Fate.

It had once taken everything from Gregor, but had in return given him back just as much.

Soon after, Imran continued.

"And today, the situation we face is the sa as that ti."

Beneath the bright moonlight, only the sound of the fire crackling and snapping could be heard. The attention of Royce, Basim, and the rest of the Mountain Rabbits was drawn in, and the knights, without realizing it, straightened their backs.

"Legion Commander Kohtan is the strongest enemy any of us have ever faced. And yet, soone said sothing to ."

Calix followed Imran's gaze.

At its end stood Vice-captain Marik.

"If you wish to survive one more day, fleeing is the wise choice. If you wish to earn rit, going only to wars between n is right; and if you feared defeat, you should have taken up the plow instead of the sword."

At that instant, the air of the encampnt changed. A single sentence cast into the sll of wet grass pierced the hearts of every last person present head-on.

"……It is a speech that stirs the martial spirit of a warrior."

The Mountain Rabbits, the knights, and even Calix raised their heads sharply. Hands that had been hesitating gripped sword hilts, and eyes soaked with anxiety reclaid their original strength.

"Fear is washed away by courage and conviction. Tomorrow, we go to confirm that truth."

Imran's voice faded away. Yet the resonance of his words remained deeply embedded. Calix t the eyes of Gregor, Marik, and Royce one after another.

Roooaaaarr—!

Just then, from beyond, the cry of a monster shook the earth and split the night.

And they were now ready to advance onto the battlefield.

You are reading Awakening the Great Bloodline Chapter 139 on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

The Innkeeper cover
Trending now

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.