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Chapter 2: 'Tear' them apart

If only Argon had known about the Coreā€™s ego before swearing his oath, heā€™d have sworn nothing less than to ā€˜tearā€™ his enemies apart.

The rows of the colosseum were reminiscent of a vineyard, reaching so high they couldā€™ve housed an entire cityā€”yet the seats remained mostly empty.

Despite the crowd's unpleasant reaction, Argon walked into the arena with his head held high. Not even an Oathspawn itself could have drawn such dismayed applause as he did.

Angry shouts echoed, calling him a traitor, a disgrace to their race, and all the other usual parols. Argon shed a hollow smile at their phrases; he couldnā€™t even deny them. He really was the scum of this world. So, in a way, he was even happy they cheered him on like that. It alleviated some of his guilt, though heā€™d never let himself forget the burden he carried. The pain remained; the guilt; the shame. Those kinds of wounds didnā€™t heal, and you couldnā€™t run from them either. It was cruel. Heā€™d only been a child, after all, just wanting to do the right thing.

When he reached the center of the arena, he stopped and looked up at the king. Cavroyn Lyrengard, the man heā€™d have to conquer in a duel to regain his honor, to become king himself. Once he'd fought his way up in the tournament.

Cavroyn finally rose from his throne to deliver the usual speech.

ā€œLadies and gentlemen, Iā€™m honored to see us all gathered again," he began, reading from an endlessly long paper scroll. "It has been three years, three long years, but nowā€¦ Ah, you know what? Scrap that.ā€

He tossed the scroll off his podium, someone below whimpering in pain when it hit them.

Murmurs rose among the few but overly talkative spectators. All of them belonged to the Oath Keepers, a race that considered themselves above humans while simultaneously trying to place themselves on equal footingā€”or rather, stooping to their level. The present level of ego was correspondingly high, and the outraged cries at the kingā€™s unfitting behavior were entirely predictable and unsurprising to Argon.

The king, rolling his eyes at the crowdā€™s political correctness, raised his hands in a placating gesture. ā€œNow, now. Can you please shush?ā€

Surprisingly, that only fueled their anger.

The king, however, wasnā€™t bothered.

ā€œWell, before anyone has the audacity to ask that question again: no, we wonā€™t be allowing humans in the audience this year. We have learned from our past mistakes, havenā€™t we?ā€ He smiled, and Argon could have sworn the king shot him an inconspicuous but intense glare.

ā€œRightā€¦ where was I? Oh, yes!ā€

Cavroyn raised a hand, gesturing to one side of the colosseum. ā€œAnd in the left cornerā€¦ā€ he began jubilantly, as if trying to stir some excitement, ā€œThe now only son of the Aschenbrenner House of Phoenix and upcoming prodigy swordsman: Argon Aschenbrenner!ā€

A moment of silence followed. Apparently, the crowd didnā€™t bother to boo him again; theyā€™d done that thoroughly enough when he entered.

ā€œWoohoo,ā€ The king cheered with feigned enthusiasm. ā€œAnd for his opponentā€¦ā€ he gestured toward the other tunnel leading into the arena. ā€œKathalona Telunaā€¦ Telanaā€¦? No, wait, what was her name again?ā€ Hesitating, he looked to both his guards until the red-haired one handed him a note. ā€œAh, right! In the right cornerā€¦ Katherine Theresa Ambertrix!ā€

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Unlike with Argon, the audience didnā€™t boo immediately, though they didnā€™t cheer either. Murmurs rose.

ā€œPretty lively crowd, huh?ā€ Cavroyn said, scratching his cheek. ā€œTo be honest, I havenā€™t really heard much about her either,ā€ he admitted with a shrug.

Argon cracked his knuckles, shaking his body. Heā€™d been preparing for this tournament for the last four years. Now, he finally had the chance to redeem himself. But not only thatā€”heā€™d make sure to fulfill his oath too.

The entrance still remained empty and the murmurs grew louder; the crowd became restless. And even Argon, with all his honor on the line, couldnā€™t stop his muscles from tensing.

ā€œUhmā€¦ā€ The king began, frowning as his second guard, a young man with green, spiky hair, whispered something in his ear. Cavroyn cleared his throat. ā€œIā€™m sorry to inform you, but it seems dear Katherine hasnā€™t shown up today.ā€

The murmurs swelled into accusations.

Some complained that something was fishy, that this wasnā€™t right. Others, however, found amusement in it, suspecting that it was beneath her dignity to fight someone like Argon. Oh, how funny.

Argon, standing between all these sneers, felt powerless. Was this how it would always be? Would people avoid him, even on the battlefield? Would they never even give him a chance to make up for his mistakes. To clear his name?

Desperately, he scanned the rows of the colosseum, searching for someoneā€”just one personā€”whoā€™d side with him. There, eventually, he met her gaze, a woman with dark skin, curly orange hair, and eyes of deep red. Amyra Aschenbrenner, his mother.

Sitting alone, no one even willing to share the same row as her, she stared down at Argon as if she wished heā€™d never been born. He was to blame for everything. The reason the colosseum remained empty, the reason Amyra sat there alone; all her children, her husband, their servantsā€”gone.

Why is she even here? Argon thought bitterly.

ā€œThen, letā€™s move on to the next fight, shall we?ā€ Cavroyn said, ignoring the cacophony of outrage.

ā€œMoveā€¦ on?ā€ Argon repeated silently, staring at the king, unable to process those words.

Argon didnā€™t even consider that an option. He would stay. Fight anyone.

Cavroyn, noticing his stare, waved a hand dismissively. ā€œClear the arena, boy.ā€ Then, turning to his two guards again, he spoke to them as if he had no care in the world.

This ridiculous behavior of the kingā€”his complete lack of accountabilityā€”once again reminded Argon why heā€™d sworn his oath in the first place. Because the war had to end, and this joke of a king certainly wouldnā€™t do the job!

Someone had to kill him; sacrifices were necessary to achieve peace. Sacrifices no one was willing to make. No one but him.

The oath heā€™d sworn four years ago was supposed to grant him the strength to claim the throne. More specifically, the oath bound him to become king by age twenty. In return, the Core owed him immense power, for the harder it was to meet an oathā€™s conditions, and the severer the punishment upon failure, the stronger the powers one would be granted.

Argonā€™s jaw tightened. There was a chance here.

ā€œCome down and fight me!ā€ he shouted up at the king, one of his twin blades poised towards him.

Cavroyn kept talking with his guards, the red-haired one glancing over at Argon for just a moment.

Argon stood silent, his blade trembling in the air from his excitement.

People started laughing, pointing at him, slapping their thighs in amusement. A fledgling like himā€”no, a disgraced warrior challenging the kingā€”how pathetic.

ā€œDonā€™t act like you donā€™t care!ā€ Argon screamed, this time not only addressing the king but everyone around. ā€œIf youā€™re really that great, why donā€™t you prove it?! Fight me! Iā€™ll take you all on! Are you too scared of losing your meaningless honor?!ā€

Cavroyn lay his head back, letting out a deep sigh. ā€œListen, boy, if you donā€™t leave now, youā€™ll be eliminated from the tournament. So just crawl back into your tunnel, will you?ā€

ā€œYouā€™ll have to drag me there yourself!ā€