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Soul Digger-Chapter 46: The Weight of a Word
The words were a brand, searing into the quiet corners of his mind where he kept his carefully constructed solitude. "Thank you my lord." ๐๐โฏ๐ฆ๐๐ฆ๐ฃ๐๐๐๐๐.๐โด๐
Each time the broken man wheezed the phrase, Coleโs grip tightened on the manโs tattered shirt. It wasnโt a grip of anger, but of a desperate, internal recoil. The title felt like a physical weight, heavier than the limp body he carried. A โlordโ was a protector, a figure of hope, a symbol. Cole was none of those things. He was a mercenary, a ruthless killer of women and children, a dog to the highest bidder. He was a shadow that observed and, when necessary, erased. He was not, and had never been, a savior.
He moved through the darkened streets of the Rose District, his earlier spring-like leaps replaced by a heavy, earthbound scuffle. The journey back was a blur of cracked pavement and the scent of night-blooming jasmine mixed with the coppery tang of the manโs blood. The man himself had fallen into a semi-conscious state, his muttering fading into ragged, shallow breaths.
It was a small mercy. Cole wasnโt sure how many more โmy lordsโ he could stomach. โI wish this guy could quit this already.โ
He couldnโt take the man to the rooftop where he was, at the same time it wouldnโt exactly make sense to take him to a hospital. At least thatโs what he thought, based off his previous experiences Cole had developed a certain thought pattern.
The man needed a place of healing, a place that dealt in mending, not breaking. His mind sifted through the limited knowledge heโd gathered of Sant Flores. Unfortunately, he concluded nothing.
Condescending thoughts spawned in his mind, Coleโs only option was to drop the man in a hospital. If not the manโs last breathes would be wasted in his arms, something Cole wouldnโt allow.
Apart from saving his life, Cole had questions of his own which needed answering. There was a possibility laundas companions would save her in the end yet Cole left her almost unharmed in a not so secluded area.
Was it a sort of pity? Far from it. Cole had very devious intentions behind his actions.
"Stop here my lord..... donโt take me to the hospital." The man wheezed as he forced the words out. "I know someone..... thatโll treat me in that small house....by the left."
He lost conscious as he weighed heavier on Coleโs sturdy arms. Cole saw the horrendous looking shack by the left and wore a perplexed expression, the building resembled a rotting jail house with itโs only redeeming features a furnished yet slanting window.
Cole walked towards it, knocked and waited for a response. He was greeted by the insides silence, as much as he didnโt want to intrude Cole pushed the door open as he gently held the man like a new Born baby.
Upon entering, the inside looked abandoned, similar to majority of the homes heโd seen that night. The furniture and walls were partly illuminated by the moonlight sneaking through every opening and crack in the structure.
He laid the man gently on a long wooden table that dominated the center of the room. A soft groan escaped the manโs lips.
"Whoโs there?" A voice, sharp and clear, cut through the darkness from a back room. There was no fear in it, only the weariness of someone who was used to being disturbed.
A lamp flickered to life, and a woman emerged, holding it high. She wore a simple linen nightgown, her severe bun slightly loosened, framing a face etched with lines of concentration. Her eyes swept the room, taking in Coleโs imposing figure, the open door, and finally, the broken man on her table. She didnโt gasp or cry out. Her gaze simply sharpened, her lips thinning into a firm line.
"Frederick, is that you?" She blurted in a concerned whisper.
"You," she said, her voice flat. She placed the lamp on a nearby shelf, illuminating the gruesome extent of the manโs injuries. " youโre Cole Raden, The neforious psycho who saved sant Flore. Did you save my friend here too?"
"He needs help," Cole stated, his voice a low rumble. He felt out of place, like a weed in a rose garden.
The woman rushed to the manโs side, her fingers probing his neck for a pulse, her touch surprisingly gentle. "He needs a hospital, heโs in pretty bad shape. What happened to him?" She began cleaning a deep gash on his forehead with a cloth dipped in a basin of water that seemed to appear from nowhere.
"Ran into some trouble at the old baking factory," Cole said, deliberately vague.
"was he kidnapped like the others?" Elara asked without looking up. Her tone suggested it wasnโt the first time sheโd heard the name. "Theyโve been snatching people for weeks. Causing whispers. Fear. This is the first one Iโve seen returned." Her eyes flicked up to meet his, and they were like chips of flint. "Thanks to you, I guess."
Cole bristled. "I was clearing my head. He was in the way."
A dry, humorless chuckle escaped her. "Always the excuse. You drift through this town like a ghost, pretending youโre not a part of it, yet the lives of its people seem to keep getting tangled in your path." She moved to the manโs hands, her expression grim as she examined the mangled fingers. "They revere you, you know. The people in the districts. They say youโre a guardian spirit. A protector sent to watch over them."
Coleโs jaw tightened. "Thatโs their foolishness."
"Is it?" she countered, her voice dangerously soft as she began splinting a finger with practiced efficiency. "My name is Elara by the way."
Cole had no response for her. Her words were scalpels, expertly dissecting the lie he told himself. He wasnโt just a passerby. He was involved, deeply and irrevocably. The realization was suffocating.
He watched her work for several minutes in silence. Her movements were economical and precise. She was a different kind of professional, one who pieced things back together. He was her opposite in every way.
"Heโll live," she finally announced, wiping her bloody hands on a rag. "Heโll be scarred, and heโll never have full use of this hand again, but heโll live. His name is Frederick. He has a wife and two daughters." She looked at Cole, her gaze unwavering. "They will see this as a miracle. They will thank their โlordโ for it."
The word again. It landed like a punch.
"I donโt want their thanks," Cole growled, turning toward the window. "Or their reverence."
โ Iโll be leaving this place tomorrow any way.โ
"You donโt get to choose," Elara said, her voice stopping him in his tracks. "Thatโs the price of power, Cole. You canโt wield it without changing the world around you. You canโt save a manโs life and expect his family to ignore it. Youโve made a choice, whether you admit it to yourself or not. You are a part of Sant Flores now. Their struggles are your struggles. Their enemies are your enemies."
He stood frozen, his back to her, the cool night air from the open window doing nothing to quench the fire in his gut. She was right. The shimmering light heโd followed out of desperation hadnโt been a trap for his body, but for his soul. It had dragged him out of the shadows and into the light, and now everyone was looking at him.
"The people of sant Flores, arenโt any of my business."
Without another word, he slipped back out the window and into the night. He scaled the nearest building, needing the familiar solitude of the rooftops. But when he looked out over the city, the view had changed. The dazzling lights no longer looked like a beautiful, distant scenery. They looked like a thousand tiny windows, and behind each one were people like Frederick, with families and fears. People who were starting to look to him for protection.
The weight of their hope was a heavier burden than any he had ever carried.
โIโm a killer of men, this is nothing.โ He kept a weak gaze pasted at the sky. โFrom vanity, to Arthur, then gothel and now the people of sant Flores.... Iโve been getting over my head lately.โ







