Chapter 19: chapter 19

Level One VillainWords: 10717

The night was quiet enough to hear the wind slip between the tents. Runa sat awake, legs drawn close, the candle beside her burned low. She’d tried to sleep, but every time she closed her eyes she saw him—taller, sharper, something old shining behind the eyes that used to look almost gentle.

The tent flap shifted.

He was already inside.

No weapon, no rope. Just there—still, as if he’d always been part of the dark.

“You don’t sleep either,” she said softly.

He shook his head. “No.”

She waited. When he didn’t speak, she asked, “Why are you here?”

“I don’t know,” he said. Then after a breath, “Maybe because I’m tired of pretending I do.”

Runa blinked. “Pretending?”

He sank to a crouch across from her, shadows catching the faint red sheen of his scales. “Before all this, I was weak. Couldn’t breathe without hurting. Couldn’t walk without shaking. I hated everyone who could. Then I changed. I don’t know why. I don’t know what gives me what I have. I don’t even know if it’s mine.”

His voice was quiet, almost human.

Weak. Pathetic. Nothing. I remember the sound of air catching in my throat like glass. Every step used to burn. Every breath was a mercy I didn’t deserve. I should have died. But I didn’t. And now… now I don’t know what I am becoming.

“I act like I understand it,” he went on. “Because if I don’t, they’ll see it. And once they see it, they’ll try to break it. I can’t let them.”

He looked down at his hands. “All I know is I’m not done. And that scares me.”

Runa wanted to answer, but the look on his face stopped her—raw, unguarded, fragile in a way she’d never seen.

Then he said, “Don’t tell anyone I said that. Don’t tell them I don’t know. If they think I’m uncertain, I lose what keeps me alive.”

“I won’t,” she said quietly.

He nodded once, eyes dim in the candlelight. “For what it’s worth, I do trust you. As much as I can trust anyone.”

He stood, the tent’s shadow stretching as he left.

When she stepped outside later, there was no sign of him—only the faint scent of rain on dust.

He didn’t go far.

Slink spent the rest of the night perched in a low tree near the ridge, the camp spread out below like a patient he didn’t trust. He slept little, dreams coiled tight behind his eyes.

Trust is leverage. Fear is distance. But honesty… honesty is dangerous. I shouldn’t have told her. But if I’m to stay alive among them, someone has to believe I’m still part of their story.

At dawn, the system’s hum woke him.

[NEW SKILL ACQUIRED] [DISGUISE SELF — LEVEL 1] [TYPE: ILLUSION] [DURATION: 00:13:45] [CONCENTRATION REQUIRED]

He flexed his claws and whispered, “Show me.”

The world shimmered. His scales dulled, smoothed; his shape blurred at the edges. When the haze cleared, a man stared back from the puddle below—skin burned and uneven, one eye clouded, features lost to old scars.

It wasn’t perfect. The mouth moved slightly out of sync. The eyes were still too bright. But the damage drew sympathy and gave excuse.

This works.

The illusion carried weight. It wasn’t beauty—it was camouflage. A man that others wouldn’t dare to look at for long. The kind of face that provoked both pity and fear.

People avert their eyes from pain. They pity it. They forgive it. They don’t question it.

And the cold voice? It sealed it all. Short, measured, too even to sound like a man entirely.

Combined with the burned face and the hood, it became something that fit.

A figure you pitied enough to ignore and feared enough not to provoke.

The perfect lie isn’t what they believe. It’s what they choose not to see.

He tugged the hood low and headed toward camp.

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Runa was up, tightening her cloak. When she turned, she froze. “Who—”

“It’s me.”

She looked closer, her breath catching. The air shimmered faintly around his outline. “What did you do?”

“Learned,” he said. “It’s only an illusion. Not flesh. But it’s enough to pass in a crowd.”

She frowned. “Why that face?”

“It hides the wrongness,” he said. “A scar explains what people don’t want to see.”

He brushed a gloved hand down his neck where the illusion flickered. “A hood hides the rest.”

Runa studied him for a moment, then nodded. “It’s smart.”

He almost smiled. “It’s necessary.”

Adra called them before the sun was fully up. Her voice carried through the chill air, even and sharp. “You two. South road. Supplies. A wagon and three days’ rations. Bring back what’s worth selling.”

Slink could feel the weight in her tone. A test—or a quiet execution.

He bowed his head slightly. “Understood.”

Runa hesitated. “That’s all? Just us?”

Adra didn’t look up from the fire. “You’ll manage.”

Slink met her gaze once. She didn’t flinch. Neither did he.

Outside the gate, Runa whispered, “She’s sending us to get killed.”

“Maybe,” Slink said. He pulled the hood forward, the illusion flaring faintly to life again. “Let’s see if they’re right.”

They started down the trail. The morning light bled across the hills.

To anyone watching from the ridge, it wasn’t a kobold and a bandit woman who left the camp that day—just a scarred, hooded traveler and his companion, walking toward the first town that might ever see Slink as something almost human.

The journey was quiet. The dirt road narrowed through stretches of old farmland gone to rot. A burned wagon lay half buried in weeds. The only sound was wind and the creak of Runa’s gear. Twice she looked back, as if expecting the bandits to follow. None did.

They want proof. Either I come back with supplies or I don’t come back at all. Simpler than loyalty. Simpler than mercy.

The first glimpse of Hollow Fen came with the smell. Tanners’ smoke and marsh rot, thick enough to taste. The town crouched low on stilts above black water, roofs sagging under years of damp. Wooden walkways ran between them like veins.

Runa kept her hood up. “You sure about this?”

“I’m sure enough.”

She gave a small sound that wasn’t quite a laugh. “You sound like someone who plans to live.”

“I always plan to.”

They reached the first gate—a simple chain and plank barrier, guarded by a single man with a pike. He looked Slink over, gaze catching on the scars. The illusion held. The man’s lip curled slightly in pity before he waved them through.

Perfect. Pity. Fear. Disgust. All the right shapes of distance.

Slink breathed slow, steady. The system pulsed faintly.

[DISGUISE SELF — REMAINING DURATION: 00:06:17]

They crossed into the market. The place was small, but alive. Fishmongers shouted half-heartedly over the sound of gulls. Smiths worked in open sheds, sparks jumping into the damp air.

Runa busied herself with supplies—salt, rope, dried meat. Slink watched everything else. The layout of the stalls. The spacing between guards. The way every second window faced the same direction.

She caught him staring. “What are you doing?”

“Learning,” he said.

“About what?”

“Patterns.”

“You think someone’s following us?”

He didn’t answer. He’d already seen them—two men in plain coats pretending to argue over fish, eyes never leaving Runa’s purse. Another across the walkway, whittling nothing into the same splinter over and over.

Slink shifted his stance, moving slightly between them and her. The hood hid his eyes.

One of the men finally stepped forward, too casual. “Bit far from the hills, aren’t you?”

Runa stiffened. “Just passing through.”

“Through’s a long way.” The man’s grin was thin. “How about we help lighten the load?”

Slink spoke before she could. “Not a good idea.”

The man blinked at the voice—low, steady, cold. Then he looked again at the scars, and whatever bravery he’d mustered faltered.

“Forget it,” his companion muttered. “He’s not worth it.”

They backed off, muttering, melting into the crowd.

Runa exhaled. “That… worked.”

Slink’s illusion shimmered faintly. “Fear is language. I just speak it better.”

Cold voice. Empty tone. You strip the warmth and it sounds like truth. Truth frightens them. That’s the secret.

He turned away before she could reply, scanning the edges of the square. Every muscle felt wound tight, waiting. The air here carried a strange vibration—something underneath, not sound but weight. The system whispered again, faint and distant.

[OBJECTIVE UPDATE: SURVIVE CONTACT] [ADDITIONAL SIGNATURES DETECTED — UNKNOWN]

He didn’t know what it meant yet, but he felt it in his bones—the same hum that came before every change.

“Let’s finish and leave,” he said.

Runa nodded, quick.

They moved through the stalls, shadows stretching behind them as clouds rolled in over Hollow Fen. The town smelled of rust and secrets. Every face looked carved from fear.

Slink adjusted the hood again, feeling the illusion tremble. He could already sense the duration thinning, the magic’s weight slipping.

He caught Runa’s glance, her eyes flicking between his covered face and the distant bridge where a handful of guards waited.

“Think we’ll make it back?” she asked quietly.

“Maybe,” he said. “If I’m careful.”

“And if you’re not?”

“Then they’ll learn I’m harder to kill than they thought.”

The words came calm, almost soft. But beneath them was that same quiet conviction, the one that had carried him through chains, through fire, through the first kill.

Not courage. Not hope. Just motion. Keep moving. Keep adapting. Until the next change finds me.

As they crossed the bridge out of Hollow Fen, the wind rose again. Somewhere behind them, a gull screamed over the water.

Runa adjusted her pack and glanced once more at the man beside her—scarred, hooded, walking like a ghost that hadn’t decided if it wanted to live.

The disguise shimmered once, faint as breath, before settling again.

Neither of them spoke the rest of the way.

[DISGUISE SELF — DURATION EXPIRED] [OBJECTIVE: RETURN] [STATUS: STABLE]

By the time the campfire light came back into view, Slink had already shed the illusion. Only the real face remained—muted red scales catching the last glow of dusk, eyes sharp and unreadable.

Runa glanced at him as they walked. “You really didn’t think it would work, did you?”

“No,” he said. “But sometimes that’s how I survive.”

The path curved upward toward the ridge. The air smelled of rain and old smoke.

And as they climbed, he felt the hum again—soft, patient, waiting.

I’m not done.