The Anomaly's Path-Chapter 70: The Duke’s Gambit

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Chapter 70: The Duke’s Gambit

In the heart of the North, the Ducal Estate of Stormcrest stood like a mountain of grey stone. Inside the solar, Duke Vane sat behind a heavy oak desk. He was a man built like a fortress, but today, his shoulders were heavy.

A fire crackled in the hearth, casting shadows that danced across the floor.

Beyond the window, the land stretched toward a horizon that had once been green but was now scarred by years of war. The Duke read through reports that all said the same thing. His face was tired, his jaw tight.

The weight of this war had settled into his bones long ago.

Beside him stood his chief aide, a thin man named Silas, who handled the many secrets of the domain.

"...How many villages have we lost?" the Duke asked without looking up.

"Seven in the last month alone," Silas said. "The monsters are coming in waves now. We cannot hold them all."

The Duke set the report down and pressed his fingers against his eyes. "Is there no help coming from the other noble houses?" he asked, his voice a low rumble. "The monster waves are growing. My son is out there right now, bleeding to hold the line, but we cannot stop a Great Migration alone."

Silas shook his head. "The Royal Family remains quiet, my Lord. They have ignored our last three letters. It seems they have a new crisis in the capital."

The Duke frowned. "What kind of crisis could be more important than a monster wave threatening the northern border?"

Silas hesitated for a moment. "You know of Doctor Voss? The Royal Physician?"

The Duke leaned back in his chair. "Every noble knows that name. He is the most famous healer and scientist in the Empire. What about him?"

"He was caught," Silas continued, his voice dropping lower. "Two other doctors found proof that he had been working with slavers. He was buying children—orphans, refugees, anyone who would not be missed—and using them for experiments. There are rumors that he was trading information to the demons in exchange for forbidden knowledge. He fled before they could arrest him. The Royal Family has been pouring resources into the hunt. They are desperate to find him before the scandal destroys their reputation."

The Duke was quiet for a moment, letting the weight of the words settle. "So the King is chasing a traitor while my people are being eaten by monsters. We need manpower, Silas. We need someone who knows how to kill demons without asking for a royal decree."

Silas said nothing. There was nothing to say.

The Duke stood and walked to the window, looking out at the grey horizon. Beyond the walls, beyond the town, beyond the last farms and the last watchtowers, the wilds stretched on forever. And in those wilds, something was stirring.

He had seen the reports, read the accounts from the patrols that still came back. The monsters were moving. Not just the scattered packs that had always been a danger to travelers and farmers, but something larger, something organized.

"I need men, Silas," he said quietly. "Someone who can fight. Someone who can lead. Someone who does not need a royal decree to save a village."

Silas was quiet for a moment, his sharp eyes studying the Duke’s face. Then he spoke, and there was something in his voice that made the Duke turn from the window.

"...There is something else, my Lord. Something you should hear."

The Duke looked at him. "Oh?"

"I do not know if the rumors are true," Silas said carefully, "but there is a mercenary group that has been making a name for themselves in the eastern territories. They call themselves the Iron Hounds."

The Duke straightened. The name was unfamiliar, but the tone in Silas’s voice suggested it should not be. "Go on."

"They say the leader is young. Not yet thirty. But he has never lost a battle. He has been hunting demons for years, clearing villages, saving people who had no one else to turn to. His mission success rate is perfect, and his people are fiercely loyal. His name is Roran. They call him the Iron Hound. His group has grown from a handful of soldiers to nearly a hundred, and their reputation spreads with every village they save."

The Duke leaned forward, his fatigue forgotten. "Tell me more about them."

"In the south, they have started calling his group the Iron Vanguard. Some call him the Storm of the South. Others call him the Unbroken Captain. His second-in-command is a man named Aldric, a veteran strategist who has been with him from the beginning. They are faster and more efficient than any Imperial legion. They have cleared nests that seasoned regiments could not touch."

The Duke was silent for a moment, turning the words over in his head. "...And what do the common folk say about him?"

"They say he fights for villages that cannot pay him," Silas said. "That he has turned down every offer from the great houses. There are rumors that he came from nothing—an orphan, maybe, or a refugee—and that he has no love for those who were born with everything."

The Duke smiled. It was a thin smile, tired, but there was something sharp behind it. "A man who hates nobles and fights like a demon. How very useful."

He stood and walked to the window again, watching the sun set over his dying domain. "I am going to write him a letter. I am going to offer him something no other noble has offered."

Silas frowned. "What could we possibly give him that the other houses have not? He has turned down gold. He has turned down land."

The Duke did not answer immediately. He stared at the horizon, at the smoke rising from distant fires, at the fields that would not be planted this year.

"Think, Silas," he said finally. "What does a group like this lack? They have strength. They have reputation. They have loyalty. But what do they not have?"

Silas thought for a moment. "Backing," he said slowly. "A name. A place in the world that no one can take from them."

The Duke nodded. "Indeed. A group like this rises slowly, builds a name for themselves, and then what? People start to notice. Other mercenary companies see them as a threat. Nobles see them as something that needs to be controlled or crushed. They have no allies, no protection, no one to speak for them when the great houses decide they have become too powerful."

He turned back to face Silas. "In the end, they are just a mercenary company. Commoners with swords. One day, someone will decide they have grown too large. Someone will crush them, and no one will remember their name." 𝚏𝕣𝐞𝗲𝐰𝕖𝐛𝐧𝕠𝕧𝚎𝚕.𝐜𝚘𝗺

Silas understood. "And you are offering them something more than gold."

"I am offering them a future," the Duke said. "A name that cannot be taken from them. A place in the world that will not disappear when the wars end. A noble house to call their own."

He picked up a quill and dipped it in ink. "I am going to offer him my daughter’s hand."

Silas’s eyes widened, but he did not argue. He knew the Duke would sell anything—even his own family—to save his domain.

_

The training yard behind Roran’s camp was nothing more than a cleared field with wooden posts hammered into the ground, but it was enough. For years, this had been their home—a moving camp that traveled where it was needed, that grew with every village saved, every demon killed, every life pulled from the brink of death.

Kael stood in the center of the yard with a wooden sword in his hands.

He was taller now, stronger, the bruises of Blackwood faded to scars that would never fully disappear. His hair was cut short, and his eyes had lost the hollow emptiness that had once made him look like a ghost.

There was something else in them now, something sharp and hungry.

"Again," Roran said from the edge of the yard.

Kael swung. The wooden blade cut through the air with a sound he had learned to love—a sharp hiss that meant his form was right, his weight was shifting correctly, his body was doing what he told it to do.

"Faster," Roran said.

Kael swung again. Then again. Each strike was harder, faster, more precise than the last. Years of training had carved the softness out of him. He was not the boy who had been left bleeding in the mud anymore.

Roran watched him with his arms crossed, his face unreadable. Kael had grown more than he expected. The boy who could barely lift a sword was now swinging one like he was born to hold it.

"Good," Roran said. "Take a break."

Kael lowered the sword and wiped the sweat from his forehead. His arms were shaking, but it was a good kind of shaking—the kind that meant he had pushed himself further than yesterday.

"Did I do it right?" he asked.

Roran walked over and took the sword from him. "You did it better than right. You did it like you meant it."

Kael smiled. It was a rare thing, that smile. He did not show it often, and when he did, it was like watching the sun break through clouds after a storm.

Six years had passed since Roran pulled him from the mud and gave him a name. In that time, the Iron Hounds had grown from a handful of desperate men to a company that people spoke of in taverns and villages, in the camps of soldiers who had given up hope.

They called Roran the Iron Hound—a man who never stopped hunting, never stopped fighting, never stopped saving people who had no one else to turn to.

"Come on," Roran said, ruffling Kael’s hair. "We have work to do."

They walked back toward the camp together. The tents were packed, the horses saddled, the men already mounted and waiting. They were leaving again. They were always leaving.

Roran was sitting in his tent, going over maps of the eastern territories, when Aldric burst through the flap without knocking. The canvas rustled, and a gust of cold air followed him in.

Roran did not look up from the map. "How many times do I have to tell you to knock before you enter?"

Aldric waved a hand like he was shooing away a fly. "Yeah, yeah. We got a letter."

Roran’s hand did not stop moving across the parchment. "A letter from where?"

"Guess."

"I am not guessing, Aldric. Just tell me."

Aldric walked over and dropped the folded parchment onto the map. It landed right on top of the pass Roran had been studying. "It is from Duke Vane."

Roran’s hand stopped moving. He looked at the parchment, then at Aldric, then back at the parchment. The seal was red wax, pressed with the crest of House Stormcrest—a storm cloud split by a bolt of lightning, the mark of a house that had weathered centuries of war.

"The Duke?" Roran said slowly.

"The Duke," Aldric confirmed. He was grinning now, that crooked grin he got whenever something interesting happened. "The one whose domain is getting torn apart by monsters. The one who has been begging the Royal Army for help for months. That Duke."

Roran picked up the letter and turned it over in his hands. The wax was unbroken, the parchment clean. Whatever was written inside, no one had seen it yet.

"He probably wants us to fight for him," Roran said.

Aldric shrugged. "Who knows."

Roran looked at the letter, then at Aldric. "Then why are you smiling?"

Aldric leaned against the tent pole and crossed his arms. "Because I am curious. A Duke does not write to a mercenary company unless he is desperate. And a desperate Duke might offer something worth taking."

Roran looked back at the letter. He thought about all the reasons he had started this company, all the reasons he had refused to work for nobles, all the reasons he had told himself that money did not matter.

He broke the seal and unfolded the parchment. His eyes moved across the words once, then twice, then a third time. The candlelight flickered, casting shadows across the page.

Aldric watched him, waiting. "Well? What does it say?"

Roran did not answer. His eyes widened.

"This..." he whispered. "He cannot be serious."

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