Journey to Become the Zenith-Chapter 128: Mercy That Cuts Deeper Than Steel

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Chapter 128: Mercy That Cuts Deeper Than Steel

Mercy That Cuts Deeper Than Steel

But now—

There was not single goblin left to kill.

Only women to save.

And anger—

Still burning quietly inside her chest.

The cave had fallen into a suffocating silence.

Not peaceful.

Never that.

After the worst had passed, a quiet settled in - the sort that follows wreckage, heavy with what can’t be undone. Echoes of harm hung there, soaked into cold stone, unwilling to let go. The air stayed thick, like it remembered every blow. Walls held their breath, slick with memory. Nothing moved, yet everything trembled beneath stillness.

For a second, Clara did not shift. Still as stone, she stayed rooted where she was.

Each breath lifted her ribs a little. Then let them settle again.

Once.

Twice.

She closed her eyes.

"...Calm down."

A quiet breath slipped past her lips.

Again.

She inhaled deeper this time, forcing the heat inside her chest to settle. The anger didn’t disappear—it never really did—but it lowered, sinking beneath the surface where it wouldn’t cloud her judgment.

Not now.

Not when they needed her.

Her grip on her sword loosened just slightly.

Then—

She turned.

The women flinched.

Even now.

Long past the finish line. When all was already gone. Not a thing remained standing. Though silence took its place. After every last echo faded.

Footsteps echoed, sharp on stone. That noise alone sent them jerking back in their body, muscles tight, arms folding close like they might vanish into their own skin.

Clara saw it.

Of course she did.

And something inside her tightened.

"...Relax," she said, her voice quieter now.

Softer.

"...You’re safe."

The words didn’t land immediately.

Safety wasn’t something that returned with a sentence.

It had to be learned again.

Slowly.

Painfully.

Clara stopped a few steps away, giving them space.

Her gaze softened—not visibly, not in a way most would notice, but enough.

"...I’m here to free you."

A pause.

"...No one’s going to hurt you anymore."

One of the women looked up.

Just slightly.

Eyes red.

Unfocused.

As if she wasn’t sure if this was real.

Clara didn’t rush them.

Didn’t force them.

She simply stood there.

Waiting.

After a while—

One of them finally spoke.

"...You... killed them?"

Her voice was barely above a whisper.

Clara nodded once.

"...All of them."

Silence followed.

Then—

Something shifted.

Not relief.

Not yet.

But something close.

Clara stepped forward slowly.

Carefully.

Then began cutting the bindings that held them.

One by one.

Her movements were precise, controlled—gentle, even, despite the blade in her hand.

"...It’s over," she murmured as she worked.

"...You’re going home."

That was when it changed.

The atmosphere.

Subtle.

But sharp.

One of the older women lowered her gaze.

Her hands clenched weakly in her lap.

"...Home..."

She repeated the word like it didn’t belong to her anymore.

Another woman shook her head slowly.

"...No..."

Clara’s hand paused mid-motion.

She looked up.

"...What do you mean?"

No one answered immediately.

Then—

A quiet voice.

"...We can’t go back."

Clara’s expression stilled.

"...Why?"

She already knew the answer.

But she still asked.

Because sometimes—

People needed to say it out loud.

One of the women looked at her.

Tears slipped silently down her face.

"...Look at us."

Her voice cracked.

"...What do you think will happen if we go back?"

No anger.

No accusation.

Just... truth.

Raw and unbearable.

Another woman spoke, her voice hollow.

"...We’re already dead."

Clara’s fingers tightened slightly around the hilt of her sword.

Not visibly.

But enough.

Then—

The words that settled everything.

"...Kill us."

Silence.

Heavy.

Unmoving.

Clara didn’t speak.

Not right away.

Because this—

This wasn’t something you answered quickly.

"...Please..."

Another voice joined.

"...We don’t want to live like this."

One of them covered her face, her shoulders trembling.

"...I don’t want them to look at me like that..."

"...I don’t want to hear it..."

"...I don’t want to live like this..."

The voices overlapped.

Quiet.

Breaking.

Clara closed her eyes again.

And for a moment—

She wasn’t here.

She remembered.

A different village.

A different time.

The same situation.

She had saved them.

Brought them back.

Believed that was enough.

It wasn’t.

The villagers had looked at them like they were something broken.

Something dirty.

Something that shouldn’t have come back.

Some parents had embraced their daughters.

Cried.

Held them.

Others...

Turned away.

The whispers.

The looks.

The silence at gatherings.

The isolation.

Some of them had left.

Unable to endure it.

Some had sold themselves just to survive.

Others...

Couldn’t take it at all.

Clara’s fingers tightened.

Her nails digging slightly into her palm.

"...I know."

A quiet thought.

Not spoken.

Just felt.

She opened her eyes.

And this time—

There was no hesitation in them.

Only something heavier.

Something resolute.

"...Alright."

Her voice was calm.

Steady.

Final.

She stood up slowly.

Then looked toward the others—the ones who still held onto the idea of going back.

"...Those who want to return to your village..."

She paused.

"...Wait outside."

No force.

No pressure.

Just a choice.

A few hesitated.

Then stood.

Unsteady.

Silent.

They moved past her slowly, like ghosts unsure of where to go.

Clara didn’t stop them.

Didn’t look back.

When the last of them left—

Only a few remained.

The cave felt quieter now.

Smaller.

Heavier.

Clara stepped forward.

Standing before them.

Her shadow stretching long against the cave floor.

"...Do you guys have any last words."

The question hung in the air.

Simple.

But carrying everything.

For a moment—

No one spoke.

Then—

One of them smiled.

Faint.

Fragile.

"...Thank you."

Another followed.

"...Thank you..."

Then another.

"...Thank you..."

Clara’s grip tightened.

Just slightly.

Her breath caught—

For a fraction of a second.

Because they weren’t begging.

They weren’t afraid.

They were relieved.

And that—

That was the part that hurt the most.

She stepped forward.

Slowly.

Gently.

Like approaching something fragile.

Her blade rose.

Clean.

Steady.

There was no hesitation.

No second guessing.

One strike.

Clean.

Precise.

Another.

Another.

Each one—

Merciful.

The cave fell silent again.

But this time—

It was different.

Clara stood there for a long moment.

Her sword lowered.

Her expression unreadable.

"These women..."

A quiet thought.

"They had lives."

Families.

Dreams.

Futures that never had the chance to unfold.

And in the end—

They had thanked the one who ended it.

Clara closed her eyes.

Then—

Slowly—

She knelt.

Placing her sword beside her.

Her hands came together.

Not in ritual.

Not in formality.

But in something simple.

Something human.

"...If there is another life..."

Her voice was barely a whisper.

"...Then be happy."

A pause.

"...Wherever you go." 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺

The cave didn’t answer.

But for the first time since she entered—

Clara felt something ease.

Not disappear.

Never that.

But... ease.

Just a little.

Then—

She stood.

Picked up her blade.

And walked toward the exit.

Because outside—

There were still people waiting.

And a world that—

Whether she liked it or not—

Kept moving forward.