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Now reading: Chapter 141: The Promise from Rise of the Living Forge, a Martial arts novel by Actus.

Olive crept away from the treeline and toward the mixture of Wyrmlings and Iron Hounds in the center of the clearing, using the cloak of darkness that hung around Lillia as cover. And, with every step she took, her mind could only echo the sa thought over and over.

How did I end up here?

The journey to Milten wasn’t one that she cared to rember, and her ti after arriving at the city had sohow been nearly as bad. Just thinking about it made her stomach clench with anger – but it was nothing she hadn’t expected.

Adventurers with open groups had never been the most respectable folks. The only things they cared about was money and power. All the good ones joined the popular guilds or started their own, and they were careful with who they let in.

The people that were left over only let others join their party to fill in the empty spaces and hope that they would hold the attention of a monster long enough for them to escape if things went poorly.

She’d known that, but she’d still co to Milten with hopes of finding sothing more. The city was at the farthest reaches of the Kingdom. It was away from all the major guilds. It was away from the best dungeons and the strongest roaming monsters. There was no reason to co here – except for the fact that it was also away from all the things she wanted to leave behind.

Even still, it should have been easy enough to make a living out here. It should have been.

Olive’s jaw clenched as mories ground at her nerves. Muted laughter rang in the back of her head and her missing arm tingled, as if to remind her of just how much she’d lost. She ground out the noise and shoved it to the back of her mind.

The last thing she’d expected to find in Milten was anything even remotely interesting. But, as she grew closer to the Iron Hounds and their horde following the plans of a woman dressed up like a demon and a smith who hit n more than tal, she couldn’t help but wonder where things had gone wrong.

Or did they go wrong at all? What would I have done if I didn’t run into this lot? Just hide sowhere in the slums and let the months waste away? I’ve never fancied myself as a hero. I’ll leave that to people with more bravery than brain. But bringing a guild killing their own mbers crashing down… well, I’d do worse things for the amount they paid . A whole magic item, all to myself. I can’t believe it.

Olive couldn’t help but grin to herself. It wasn’t the first magic item she’d had, but it was the first one she’d fought to earn – and it was the only one she had left. Her hand tightened around the hilt of her new blade.

I don’t know why they were so willing to let soone new to their group have a magical item for such a low price, but I repay what I’ve been given. If they need to kill a few assholes and help cause chaos, then I’ll do my part.

The dark started to recede, and Olive squinted through it to make her surroundings out better. They’d arrived at the very edge of the crowd, in a gap between the torches. The ti for contemplation was over.

Olive stepped away from the cloak of shadows, the loud mutters and yells coming from the center of the clearing obscuring her movents. She didn’t try to sneak up or avoid anyone’s attention.

She was already in the midst of the Iron Hounds. They weren’t looking for assassins inside their own group. Nobody was going to suspect a person just casually walking alongside them.

Olive drew her sword and ca up behind a large man in heavy armor who was watching another warrior put up a pathetic fight against a Wyrmling. Energy coursed through her arm and she activated [Tenfold Blade].

Her weapon traced through the air casually, as if she were just studying the way the firelight reflected off its surface. It t the man’s neck and slipped through it effortlessly. Even though the strike wasn’t moving quickly, it was far from a crawl – and the blade was sharp enough that she had a mont before he even noticed what was happening.

The warrior started to turn. If Olive had used a slower skill, he likely would have been able to move out of the way in ti.

She hadn’t.

He didn’t.

Her sword slipped out the other side of his neck. The man stumbled, then pitched forward as his head rolled back, bouncing off his heels before hitting the ground and rolling to a stop. At the sa ti, a tendril of shadow whipped out and grabbed a nearby woman, yanking her off her feet.

She hit the grass with a surprised cry before getting yanked into the darkness at the edge of the campsite. An instant later, an imp burst from the shadows, its red skin rippling as it let out a scream and threw itself into the crowd.

For a monster made out of shadow, that thing is really damn realistic.

It only took seconds for chaos to break out. Screams rang out all around Olive as people spun in search of the source. So spotted the decapitated man, but she’d already moved deeper into the crowd, sheathing her sword once more.

The panic grew. Wyrmlings roared and guild officers hurried to try and figure out what was going on. Olive stuck her foot out, tripping a man in the chaos. He hit the ground with a pained grunt, only for her sword to drive through his ear and into his skull.

Lillia had been right about the Iron Hounds being completely incompetent. They may have had power, but they had no idea how to use it.

“Infiltrators!” A man scread, drawing an axe from his back. Shimring motes of green light swirled off his hands as he charged toward her.

Guess it was too much to hope that I’d keep going unnoticed.

Olive stepped out of the way of his first swing. It carved through the air and slamd into the ground with enough force to drive a foot into the dirt, but the man pulled it free with such ease that it looked like he’d barely hit anything at all.

“To !” He roared, bracing to block Olive’s next attack. “There’s–”

A shimr of blue energy wrapped around his body. He locked in place and Olive slamd her sword through one of his eyes, ripping it out even as the light faded and he toppled to the ground, dead.

The tale has been illicitly lifted; should you spot it on Amazon, report the violation.

He couldn’t have been much higher in rank than , even if he was physically strong. Apprentice seven, maybe? Depends on how many Achievents or Titles he had.

There was no ti to ruminate on it. Reya had bailed her out from sowhere, but there were several people and a Wyrmling closing in on her. She’d been thoroughly spotted. She backed up, holding her sword before her as the screams continued to ring out throughout the camp.

“Who in the Nine Underlands are you?” a woman asked, summoning a ball of spinning wind to her palms and holding it before her. “What guild are you with?”

An imp leapt from the darkness, latching onto the woman’s face. She only had ti to let out a terrified scream before it started ripping into her flesh, tearing away large gory chunks and hurling them across the clearing.

A man ran to help her and swung his sword at the imp. It dropped at the last second and his blade slamd into her arm, severing it and cutting into her side. The woman let out an agonized cry while her ally spun in search of the imp, which had retreated back to the thick patch of darkness growing closer to them.

Another man ran at Olive. She knocked his sword to the side and darted forward, using the mont of the others distraction to close the distance between herself and the mage.

“Look,” Olive said as the mage clutched at the stump of her arm. Her sword fell, putting the woman out of her misery. “We match.”

“You bitch!” the man behind her yelled. “I’ll–”

The rest of his sentence was lost in a strangled scream as a shadow shot out, wrapping around his neck and dragging him into the dark. Olive spun, preparing to face her next opponent. There was nobody there.

All the Iron Hounds had backed away from her, making room for a tall man to approach. He bore a jagged sword in each hand and wore leather, battle-scarred armor. It only took one look at his gait to see that he knew how to carry himself. Olive’s eyes narrowed.

Easy to forget that the majority of this guild was just cannon fodder. This guy is different.

He didn’t waste any words on Olive. The mont they were close, the dual-wielder lunged forward. His blades flashed, sending two arcs of wind hurtling toward her. Olive dropped to the ground, letting them pass overhead, then brought her sword up just in ti to block a pair of overhead slashes.

They slamd down with imnse force, driving her arm out of the way. She threw herself to the side and the blades scraped against her armor, failing to find purchase in her skin. Hitting the ground in a roll, Olive shot to her feet – and was forced to dive once more as a Wyrmling snapped at her.

Its jaws slamd shut above her head and its hot breath washed over her back. She rolled to the side as a clawed paw smashed into the ground where she’d been seconds before. Olive scrambled to her feet, retreating toward the darkness and making sure the Wyrmling and the new man couldn’t flank her.

“You know how to fight,” the man said. “Who sent you?”

“The last one asked that too,” Olive said, taking the instant of reprieve to catch her breath.

I think I might have bit off a bit more than I can chew. The Iron Hounds had several people that already showed they could fight as well as this guy.

Lillia wasn’t in a position to help her. Several Wyrmlings and more than ten people had surrounded the patch of darkness. Many of them were firing spells blindly into it. Even with the imps jumping out and attacking them, they were going to land a lucky blow eventually.

A blur of movent was the only warning Olive got to raise her sword. One of the dual-wielding man’s swords slamd against hers and she staggered, trying to keep her balance. The other one shot out from the opposite direction on a direct course for her gut.

Olive jumped to the side, but she wasn’t fast enough to keep the sword from cutting into her armor once more. The man grinned at her and spun his blades as he advanced.

“Eyes over here, sweetheart. I’ll ask one more ti. Who are you with? Either tell now or tell while I make you scream.” He flicked two more blades of wind at Olive again. She rolled to the side, but one cut into the top of her thigh.

Olive repressed the flash of pain and shot to her feet, not letting anything show on her features. The cut was relatively deep, but it wasn’t life threatening. Olive tested her leg and winced. Putting pressure on it would be difficult.

What in the Nine Underlands is Reya doing? I could really use so help.

“Screaming it is,” the man said with a lecherous smile. Wind coursed down the length of his blades. “Fine with . I like it better that way.”

He flashed forward – and a wave of blue energy slamd into him. He locked in place, but only for a fraction of a second. Before Olive could even try to take advantage of his delay, he slid back into motion, only mildly disoriented.

The man’s blades finished their movent. Two huge blades of wind ripped out, heading straight for Olive. She tried to jump away from them, but the wound on her leg flared in pain and her lunge turned into a stumble.

The twin arcs of magic hurtled straight toward her, each large enough to split her from head to toe, and there wasn’t nearly enough ti to dodge out of the way.

Shit.

A shimr of silver and blue whipped past Olive. Particles of moisture pattered against her face. Rodrick skidded past her, streams of water swirling away from his armor as he arrived, arms braced before his face.

The water swirled before him, absorbing the arcs of wind that had been on a collision path for Olive. They still cut into his armor, but the damage they left behind was minimal. Rodrick dropped back into a sprint, drawing his sword.

“Another one? Co on then.” The dual-wielder smirked and moved to et Rodrick’s charge.

The Wyrmling moved beside him, preparing to snap at whoever drew near it. The monster wasn’t anywhere near as aggressive as Olive had expected it to be, but that was likely due to being mind controlled.

Water swirled around Rodrick’s blade as he brought it up beside him with a roar. The dual-wielder crossed his swords to block the strike, only for Rodrick’s blow to rip both of them out of his hands and send them tumbling to the floor.

His eyes opened, but Rodrick didn’t waste the montum of his charge. He drove his shoulder into the other man’s chest, hurling him to the ground. The Wyrm lunged at Rodrick, but a wave of shimring blue energy wrapped around the monster, locking it in place for a mont and buying the warrior ti to jump out of the way.

Rodrick brought his sword down on his opponent as he tried to rise, driving it through the other man’s eye and pinning his head to the ground before Rodrick ripped his blade free. He pointed it across the clearing at Jessen, who hadn’t moved once from his spot beside the two fully grown Wyrms.

“Hey, asshole!” Rodrick called, flicking the blood from his sword. “Co over here so I can stick my sword up where it doesn’t shine!”

Jessen tilted his head to the side. He looked more annoyed than anything else, as if the deaths of his n was nothing but a mild inconvenience. It struck Olive that an inconvenience was probably exactly how Jessen saw this.

If he was feeding all these idiots to his Wyrms and we kill them, then get fed to the Wyrms anyway, there’s almost no difference. We’ll be worth a lot more energy because we can put up a fight.

For an instant, it looked like he was about to say sothing. The firelight illuminated his cruel face as his mouth opened and his attention fully fell on Rodrick.

And, in that instant, a streak of green light flashed through the night. An earsplitting crack rang out in the light’s wake as it streaked through the air like a falling star. Jessen twisted his body, but not nearly fast enough.

At the head of the shimring light was a massive tal arrow. It drove into Jessen’s shoulder and pierced into him with such force that he spun in place. He staggered to keep his balance, his eyes wide in shock – and his concentration broke.

Roars split the air as every single Wyrm and Wyrmling scread as one. Jagged green crystals pushed up from the wound, trying to worm their way into Jessen’s armor. He slamd a hand against the crystal, shattering it and sending a wave of energy rippling across his body.

A dark blur passed above Olive’s head. Her eyes widened as Arwin passed above her, slamming down on top of an Iron Hound that had been near Jessen.

The man didn’t even get a chance to scream. Arwin’s montum and weight crushed him instantly. His helt ignited with burning red light and a wave of roiling energy rolled off his body. Even at the distance that Olive stood at, a shiver ran down her spine as Arwin raised his hamr and pointed it at Jessen.

“Four.”

Olive had no idea what Arwin ant, but it sounded like a promise.

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