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https://www.patréon.com/emperordragon
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Chapter Seventeen: The Axe and the Mask
I woke at exactly 7:00 a.m.
No alarm. No sound. Just my eyes snapping open, alert and sharp, as if something inside me had decided it was time. There was no grogginess, no lingering fog of sleep. One moment I was dreaming, and the next, I was present—fully, completely. Like I hadn't just woken up, but returned to something I'd only briefly stepped away from.
I didn't need to check a clock. I knew.
Even my body ran more precisely than most machines. My internal rhythm didn't miss beats. It was hardwired now—sharper, faster, more exact than anything I used to be. Better than human.
Some people need coffee or a splash of cold water. I just need to exist.
The shower was quick. Efficient. Nothing indulgent. In under five minutes, I was dry and dressed, stepping out of the steamy bathroom and into the kitchen, where the smell of black coffee and something sizzling on the stove greeted me like familiar ghosts. Emily was already there, standing like a statue with purpose, stirring a pan with casual precision. She didn't look at me when I entered. Didn't speak. But when I sat down at the small wooden table, she slid a plate in my direction with a motion so smooth it seemed rehearsed.
Eggs, perfectly scrambled. Toast—just the right level of golden brown. Sausage links piled high, like she was challenging me to eat them all. It wasn't just breakfast; it was fuel. A spread designed for someone expected to do more than just survive the day.
"Morning," I said, picking up my fork.
"Morning," she replied, voice calm, eyes never leaving her coffee.
We ate in silence, but not the kind that grows heavy or awkward. This was the silence of familiarity. Of two people who didn't feel the need to fill every second with noise. It wasn't cold—it was comfortable. A shared understanding. Some people talk to avoid tension. We didn't have any.
At exactly 8:00 a.m.—not a second before or after—Emily turned the TV off, reached into a canvas bag by the couch, and pulled out a few books. She placed them on the table and looked me in the eye with that steady, unreadable expression she wore like a uniform.
"Let's begin," she said.
What followed was a kind of school—that was mostly normal. Math, reading comprehension, history—nothing extraordinary, but that was the point. But the lesson wasn't just about knowledge. It was also about fitting in. About knowing just enough of the right things so that no one asked the wrong questions.
It didn't take long. An hour, maybe a little less. When we finished, Emily closed the book with a definitive snap and leaned back in her chair. She didn't offer a compliment. Didn't smile or nod. But something shifted in her eyes—something small. A flicker. A brief glint of acknowledgment. Like she had expected less and was quietly recalibrating her assumptions.
"Not bad," she said at last.
I gave a noncommittal shrug. I wasn't looking for praise.
She stood, walked to the couch, and dropped onto it with a dramatic sigh, like a teacher clocking out after a long lecture. The transformation was almost comical. Strict professor one moment, exasperated old roommate the next. She pointed lazily toward the fireplace, her arm draped over the armrest.
"Go chop some firewood."
I blinked. "It's summer."
She didn't even glance in my direction. "Just get the firewood."
No further explanation. No justification. Just a command dressed in the clothes of suggestion. I hesitated for only a second before nodding.
Of course, it wasn't about the firewood. It was about something else.
Out back, the air was warm and still. A stack of unchopped logs sat beside a weathered chopping block. I took a breath, stepped forward, and grabbed a log. Positioned it carefully. Then, extending only my right index finger, I let the claw slide out with a sound that was half metal, half instinct. It clicked into place like it belonged there—like it had always belonged there.
One clean strike. The wood split without resistance.
Another. Split again.
I wasn't chopping—I was slicing. The logs weren't obstacles. They were targets. Obedient. Predictable. Each one falling apart with mechanical ease. I barely broke a sweat. Within minutes, I had a stack so neatly arranged it looked like it had been prepackaged by a lumberjack with OCD.
I carried the load back into the cabin without effort, dropping it gently by the fireplace. That's when Emily finally turned to face me.
"I'm going to play a part now," she said evenly. "An ordinary person."
I frowned. "Okay…"
Her face transformed. Not in a supernatural way, but in the way a great actor can wear a new skin. Her eyes went wide with fake innocence. Her voice softened into something childlike and curious.
"Lucas, how did you chop that wood without the axe?"
I followed her gaze to the fireplace. There was indeed an axe innocently sitting next to the fireplace untouched.
I didn't answer. There wasn't anything I could say.
She dropped the act in an instant, her features hardening back into their usual sharpness. "You realize your mistake?"
I nodded, slower this time.
She gestured toward the axe. "I could turn a tree into a pile of firewood with a flick of my hand. But I still keep the axe. I still have the block. Not because I need them—because they make sense. Because people see them and don't ask questions. Do you understand?"
Her voice wasn't raised, but it cut deeper than shouting ever could.
"This is your first real lesson. We don't just live in this world—we hide in it. We blend in. Disappear when we have to."
I swallowed hard, the words sinking deeper than I wanted them to.
"Take the axe," she continued, "even if you don't need it. Drive a car even if your legs could outrun it. Order a burger even if you can go without food for a week. The smallest things can unravel everything. You don't want to be noticed, Lucas. Because once someone notices you… it's already too late."
I didn't argue. Didn't push back. Just stood there, letting it settle over me like a blanket made of lead.
"I understand," I said quietly.
Emily leaned back again, her gaze still on me. Evaluating.
"Good," she said at last. "You've got power, kid. More than you can even begin to grasp. But power without control? That's not strength. That's a liability. That's how people get hurt. Or worse… find out."
I looked at the logs by the fireplace. Ordinary things. Chopped in an extraordinary way.
I nodded once more—slower this time, and with purpose.
"I've got a lot to learn."
Emily gave a single approving nod.
"You're damn right."