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Now reading: Book 2: Chapter 61: The Morning After from Path of Dragons, a Action novel by Infancy.

Sunlight filtered through the curtains, illuminating the dancing dust motes in the air. For a mont, Carn had no idea where she was, and she reached for a partner that wasn’t there. Then, everything ca crashing down on her like a tidal wave, and she suddenly felt very alone.

That lasted right up until she saw Miguel curled up in a chair, his mother’s old spear leaning against the wall next to him. That brought all sorts of mixed feelings, but the most prevalent was that she couldn’t afford to lose herself in the still-poignant grief that ca every ti she thought of Alyssa. She had a responsibility to the living, including Miguel and all the people of Silverado who’d entrusted her with their safety as well as their potential prosperity.

She shifted, and her muscles scread at her for the mistake. Groaning, she persisted, propping herself up on the pillow. That noise woke Miguel, whose eyes fluttered open sleepily. Just like his mother, he took a mont to rember where he was, but when his eyes found Carn, they widened in surprise.

“Mom! You’re awake!” he shouted, launching himself from the chair. In less than a second, he crashed into her, burying his face in her shoulder as he hugged her as tightly as his little arms could allow. He’d put on a bit of muscle since he’d started training, but he still wasn’t strong enough to really affect Carn.

Physically, at least. Emotionally, he had all the power in the world.

Even though it caused so degree of pain, Carn wrapped her arms around her son and returned his hug with one of her own. She didn’t even realize she was crying until her tears started to drip onto his mop of black hair. She sniffed loudly, then said, “I’m sorry, sweetie. I’m so sorry.”

“For what?” he asked, pulling away. Carn didn’t want to release him, but she also didn’t want to smother him. When they locked eyes, she saw the evident confusion implied by his question.

“I made a dumb decision. I shouldn’t have gone into that mine,” she said. “But I know my limits, now. I won’t leave you ever again.”

Then, she hugged him again.

“But mom, you saved all those people,” he said, his voice muffled by its close proximity to her chest. “Everybody says you’re a hero.”

Hero.

People had called Alyssa that, too. But that had gotten her killed. Carn didn’t care what people thought of her. In fact, a sudden epiphany told her that, in the grand sche of things, she didn’t care about anything nearly as much as providing Miguel with an opportunity to grow up in a safe environnt. That ant that she couldn’t just throw herself into dangerous situations, regardless of what she saw as her responsibility.

Not only did that put her in unnecessary danger, which in turn increased the odds of turning Miguel into an orphan, but it was also a waste of her talents. She was strong, and she could hold her own in battle. Yet, if she had been focusing on the things she did best, then the people who’d followed her into that mine would have been far better equipped to et the dangers therein.

As a result, as Carn had fought what she thought was a fruitless battle, she’d made the choice that, if she managed to survive, she would devote herself to giving her people the tools they needed to do the jobs for which they were suited. They were the Warriors. She was the crafter. And as much as she wanted to do her part as a fighter, she needed to rember that she’d chosen her path long ago, and now she needed to walk it.

All of that flitted through her mind as she held Miguel, and in that mont, she had to admit that her own selfish desire to protect her son played a part in that resolution as well.

Before she could respond to her son’s remarks, the door to the room – which Carn belatedly recognized as the town’s infirmary – to admit a familiar face.

Verin looked much the sa as she had when she’d fetched Carn so Roman could deliver the news of Alyssa’s death, which ant that she was an older, matronly woman with a thick, gray braid and a stout figure. She was unarmored, and the morningstar she normally wore at her waist was nowhere to be seen.

The woman gave Carn a tight smile that didn’t touch her eyes as she asked, “How are you feeling?”

“Like I was in an eighteen-car pileup,” Carn admitted. “I’m sore all over.”

“That’s normal.”

“Is everyone else okay?” Carn asked, rather than talk about her own condition. She was alive, which ant that she would recover. In any case, she was far more worried about whether or not everyone had made it out alive.

Verin shook her head. “We saved as many as we could, but…”

“Who?”

“Brett Thomas,” she said. “He fought until the very end, but by the ti we arrived, he was already dead.”

Carn’s heart jumped into her throat. Over the course of the battle, the Vigilante had proven himself a dozen tis over. He was a talented fighter, and Carn had thought he would be the last to succumb. Perhaps he wouldn’t have died if he’d had proper armor.

“Anyone else?” she asked.

“Nora Lassiter and Misha Addison.”

“I rember Nora, but the other…”

“She ca with ,” Verin said. “We were in such a hurry that so of my people were caught off-guard by the number of monsters. Misha was our Knight, and she’s the only reason we arrived in ti to save everyone else.”

“Oh. I’m sorry,” Carn said, shaking her head. To Miguel, she said, “Sweetie, why don’t you go get sothing to drink?”

“But mom…”

Carn knew he wanted to stay and listen in, but she didn’t think it was appropriate for a boy his age to hear a casualty report. So, she gave him her best “mom look,” cutting off any further objections. He did move extra slowly on his way out, though, just to make sure everyone knew he wasn’t happy about being excluded.

Once Miguel was out of the room, Carn got the full report of the injured. A few people had lost limbs, but aside from Brett, Nora, and Misha, everyone else had survived. Verin credited Keith, the other Healer, for that. And Carn herself, of course. The story of how she’d single-handedly held the entrance had already begun to make the rounds. It was made even more plausible by the tales of how, despite only being a crafter, she’d fought side-by-side with the combatants on the trip from Easton to Silverado. That had done wonders for her reputation, and her status as a hero had been cented by her exploits in the mine.

And Carn hated it.

Unauthorized duplication: this tale has been taken without consent. Report sightings.

To move on, she asked Verin for the whole story of how she had co to arrive in the mines. And to her surprise, it was only partially as she expected. Apparently, the ssenger she’d sent back to Easton had never actually made it to the city. Instead, he had been intercepted by Verin’s patrol, and the older woman had taken it upon herself to respond. After that, they’d co as quickly as possible, and when they had arrived, they had found a town in disarray and a few warriors holding off a tide of critters who were trying to spill out into Silverado.

“Then we fought our way through until we found you. We would have gotten there sooner, but Devin had to stop a few tis to recover his Ethera,” Verin explained.

“So, Roman doesn’t know what happened here?”

Verin shook her head. “I think it’s best he doesn’t know you and I t,” she said, looking away.

“Why?”

“I can’t talk about it here. But if I asked, would you et and so other people back in Easton? In a month or two, I an. There are so things you need to know,” Verin said.

“What kinds of things?” Carn asked.

“The kinds of things that will explain why Alyssa had to die.”

At first, Carn didn’t react. But then, she threw herself from the bed with all the Strength she could muster. It was considerable, and as a result, she moved so quickly that Verin couldn’t react before Carn ramd into her, clamping her hand around the older woman’s throat.

Carn didn’t stop until she’d slamd Verin against the wall hard enough to shake the building. Leaning in, she growled, “What did you just say?”

The sound of a glass hitting the floor jerked Carn’s attention towards the door, where she saw Miguel staring at her, wide-eyed and in shock. “Mom?” he breathed.

“Miguel, go get Colt. Now.”

“But mom, why –”

“Don’t ask questions. Just go. Now.”

Miguel clearly wanted to disobey, but when he saw his mother’s face, he thought better of it. The mont he raced from the room, Carn turned her attention back to Verin, who’d started to turn blue from lack of oxygen.

“I’m not letting you go until Colt’s here to back up,” she hissed. “But if you know what’s good for you, you’d better think long and hard about telling absolutely everything. You don’t know , so I’ll explain it to you in the clearest way possible. I am usually an easygoing person. I don’t get angry very quickly. But one thing sure to set off is my family. So, if you know anything about how my wife died that you haven’t told , then I suggest you tell the mont I let you go. Got it?”

Verin tried to nod, but Carn’s vice-like grip prevented her head from moving more than an inch or two.

Just then, Colt arrived, wearing a hospital gown, his hat, and with his sheathed sword in one hand. Miguel followed after him, out of breath. Colt took less than a mont to take stock of the situation before saying, “Miggy, I’m going to need you to do a huge favor. You good with that, boss?”

Miguel nodded, saying, “Yes, sir!”

“Close that door and guard it with your life,” he said. “Anybody tries to co in here, I want you to scream bloody murder. Got that?”

Miguel said that he understood, then hastened to obey the Samurai’s orders. When the door slamd shut, Carn said, “Colt. If she tries anything, I want you to use Blade Storm and cut her into a hundred pieces.”

He unsheathed his sword, saying, “Yes, ma’am.”

Carn released Verin, and the older woman fell to the ground, gasping for air. Clearly, she hadn’t worked on her Constitution very much. A mistake, but an understandable one for soone who could heal herself from any injury. In any case, Carn wasn’t concerned with the woman’s deficiencies. Instead, she’d latched onto her words.

Ever since the world had been transford, Carn had mistrusted Roman. She’d tried to give him the benefit of the doubt, but the combination of his questionable policies as well as the way he’d treated his wife had always left a bad taste in Carn’s mouth. Then, he’d taken a hardline stance against Scholars, which, while better in the short run, was a surefire way to create a regressive society that would never et its potential.

But with monsters knocking on the door and issues like starvation becoming a real threat, standing up for people who couldn’t really pull their weight wasn’t on anyone’s mind. It wasn’t until Easton had moved past the imdiate survival stage that she’d begun to advocate for the Scholars. It had been t with little success, and that only because of Alyssa.

It wasn’t the only thing the two had disagreed on. But Alyssa had always trusted Roman. After all, they’d been friends and coworkers for years before the apocalypse had reared its ugly head. So, while they were prone to animated disagreents, the two still trusted one another.

Carn had seen Roman in a different light, though, and she had even warned Alyssa of the dangers of going into the tower. Yet, when Roman had brought news of Alyssa’s death, she’d simply accepted the story due to shock and a desperate need to believe that her wife had died for a purpose.

In the back of her mind, though, she’d never quite abandoned the notion that Roman had engineered it sohow. That he had betrayed Alyssa. So, when Verin had uttered those words, “why Alyssa had to die”, sothing inside of Carn had snapped into place. Suddenly, Roman’s story didn’t seem so believable.

“Tell everything,” she spat, glaring down at the woman who she’d already found guilty by association.

And Verin did as she’d been ordered, spilling the story with a mix of eagerness and sha that Carn found repulsive. Or maybe that was due to what she had to say.

Verin explained how Roman had approached her just before the trip into the tower, promising that her people would be given a place in Easton if she went along with what he had planned. At the ti, Verin didn’t have any choice but to do it. She had more than a hundred people – so of whom were friends and family – depending on her. So, she went in, knowing that sothing bad would happen.

“I didn’t think he was going to kill her,” she mumbled. “I swear…I just thought…I don’t know…”

It was either a lie or naivete. “Go on. Tell how he did it.”

Verin continued, explaining in brutal detail how Trace had stabbed Alyssa in the back. “He had this dagger that we’d looted from the other level,” she said. “But that just made it easier. He already had another plan to make it happen. That dagger made her vulnerable, and then…then, Roman…did it.”

“How?”

“You…y-you don’t want to know…”

“Tell !” Carn roared, kicking Verin in the side. She didn’t hold back, either. In her state, she couldn’t have, even if she’d wanted to. And she did not want to.

Verin coughed, spitting up blood, but she didn’t dare embrace any skills. Not with Colt standing there ready to cut her to pieces. He would, too. Everyone knew how much he’d idolized Alyssa, and he had transferred much of that devotion to Carn in her stead.

“H-he…he beheaded her,” she said. Then, she looked up with tears in her eyes. “I’m sorry. I’m so…s-so sorry. I didn’t know he was going to…I thought…I thought I could maybe let him do it, then heal her, but…she…she was gone, and…”

“Kill her.”

“Ma’am?”

“Kill her, Colt. Do it, or I’m going to beat her to death with my bare hands. I don’t want Miguel to see like that.”

“With all due respect, ma’am, I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

“Fine,” Carn said. “If you can’t stomach it, I can.”

And then she embarked on a quest to do just that. She only got one good kick in before Colt wrapped his arms around her and pulled her away. Carn was incredibly strong, but he had all the leverage. Still, she could have broken free, and she would have if she hadn’t been interrupted by a garbled cry coming from the broken woman at her feet.

“I know how to get revenge on him!”

Carn tore free, but that sentence had torn a hole in her resolve. So, she growled, “How?”

She knew good and well that Roman’s position was nearly unassailable. Not only was he one of the highest levels in Easton – he wasn’t quite on the power ladder, but he was close – but he also had the weight of the entire governnt on his side. That ant that to get to him, one needed to either be prepared for a suicide run, or…

“There’s a resistance,” Verin said. “Mostly people who were loyal to your wife, but there are people who lost friends and loved ones to his policies. I can…I can put you in touch with them. I can help you! I’m sorry! I just wanted to save –”

Carn had heard enough. Or perhaps she’d finally lost whatever thread of civility she had left. Whatever the case, she suddenly had her summoned blacksmithing hamr in her hand. Even as it descended, Colt tried to stop her.

He wasn’t quick enough, though.

Just before the blow landed, Carn caught sight of Verin’s surprised face. Had she really expected to be forgiven? Had she truly thought Carn could ignore that confession? If so, then she didn’t know who she was dealing with.

The hamr crushed the healer’s skull with a sickening crunch that sent splatters of brain and fragnts of bone against the wall. Then, Carn hit her again. Roaring in inarticulate rage, she continued to puml the woman’s skull until it was little more than a slurry of blood, bone, and brain matter.

By the ti she’d finished, she was hoarse. Pushing a bloody lock of hair out of her face, she turned to a stunned Colt and said, “I need you to find out who these rebels are. I’d very much like to et them.”

Colt swallowed hard, then said, “Yes, ma’am.”

“And Colt.”

“Ma’am?”

“Don’t let Miggy in here, okay. He doesn’t need to see this.”

“Y-yes, ma’am.”

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