Raka's soul crashed into the commander's body like a hammer striking an anvil. Heat seared his lungs. Smoke choked the air. The ground bucked beneath him as a nearby explosion hurled debris skyward. He was on his knees, gauntleted hands pressed into the blood-slick cobblestones, the metallic tang of war thick on his tongue.
"Commander Varrus! Move!"
A soldier yanked him backward just as a chunk of smoldering masonry smashed into the spot where he'd knelt. Raka blinked through the haze, his new body's instincts flaring. Plate armor. Scarred hands. A sword's weight at his hip. This was no frail villager, no chained prisoner—this was a warrior forged in fire.
"Status!" Raka barked, the commander's voice a thunderclap of authority.
The soldier—a young man with a gash across his brow—saluted, trembling. "South wall's gone, sir! Enemy mages—they cracked the barrier like glass. The 5th Company tried to hold the inner gatehouse, but…" He faltered, blood dripping from his chin. "Lieutenant Kaelen… your son… he stayed behind to buy time. They're all… gone, sir."
A phantom ache tore through Raka's chest. Not my grief. His. The commander's memories surged—a boy's laughter, a sparring match in a sunlit courtyard, a final salute before the battle. Raka clenched his jaw. "Retreat?"
"The Iron Legion's already in the streets! They've got Juggernauts—and a gods-damned wyvern—"
A deafening roar split the sky. Raka craned his neck. Above the burning rooftops, a winged monstrosity circled, its serpentine neck twisting as it scanned the carnage. Fire glowed in its gullet.
"Fall back to the Citadel Bridge!" Raka roared, shoving the soldier toward a cluster of archers. "Burn the bridge if you must! Save whoever's left in the west quarter!"
"Sir—!"
"GO!"
The soldier sprinted off, shouting orders. Raka drew his sword—a blade etched with fading runes—and charged into the maelstrom.
---
Hell unfolded in layers.
The main avenue was a charnel house. Iron-clad soldiers bearing the wolf sigil of the Legion hacked through defenders, their faces twisted into snarls. A Juggernaut—a mountain of scales and muscle—crashed into a barricade, reducing it to splinters. Men screamed as its spiked tail whipped sideways, painting the walls red.
Raka lunged at the nearest Legionnaire, his blade slicing through a gap in the man's armor. "Reform the line!" he bellowed at a group of retreating spearmen. "Shields up! Hold this street!"
"They're flanking us!" a defender screamed, pointing as a dozen Legionnaires emerged from an alley, crossbows raised.
Thwack. Thwack. Thwack.
Bolts punched into shields. One found a spearman's throat. He crumpled, gurgling.
"You! Archers!" Raka grabbed a fleeing soldier by his collar. "Take the high ground! Rain hell on those crossbowmen!"
The man nodded, rallying his unit to a crumbling balcony. Raka turned—and froze.
A Juggernaut loomed ahead, its jaws clamped around a horse's torso. The beast shook its head, flinging the carcass into a building. Its faceted eyes locked onto Raka.
"Commander! Down!"
Raka dove as a ballista bolt whistled past, slamming into the Juggernaut's shoulder. The beast staggered, roaring, but didn't fall.
"Again!" Raka snarled, scrambling to his feet.
The ballista crew reloaded frantically. Too slow. The Juggernaut charged, its claws gouging furrows in the stone. Raka met it head-on, sword raised.
Clang!
The blade glanced off its armored skull. The impact numbed Raka's arm. The Juggernaut swiped—he rolled, the claw missing his helm by inches.
"Sir! The wyvern—!"
Raka looked up. The winged horror banked sharply, fire building in its maw. Its target: the command tower.
"Clear the tower! NOW!"
Men scattered. Raka sprinted, his armor clanking, as the wyvern unleashed its breath.
WHOOSH!
A river of liquid fire engulfed the tower. Stone melted. Men vaporized mid-scream. The shockwave hurled Raka into a wall. His head cracked against stone; blood trickled into his eye.
Gasping, he staggered upright. The wyvern circled, triumphant. Below, the Legion advanced, slaughtering the fleeing defenders.
"Commander!" A grizzled captain limped toward him, clutching a broken arm. "The bridge—we can't hold it! They've got mages with them!"
Raka spat blood. "Burn it. Now."
The captain hesitated. "But the civilians—!"
"Burn it!"
Nodding, the captain signaled a mage in tattered robes. The man raised his staff, chanting. Flames erupted across the bridge's span, swallowing Legion soldiers and buying precious seconds for the fleeing crowd.
---
The last stand.
Raka fought like a man possessed. He carved through Legionnaires, his blade a silver blur. A spearman lunged—he severed the weapon's shaft and gutted the man. An axeman swung—he sidestepped, driving his sword through the man's spine.
But the Legion was endless.
A crossbow bolt ripped into his thigh. He fell, cursing. Another pierced his shoulder. Agony blurred his vision.
"Finish him!" a Legion officer sneered.
Soldiers closed in. Raka gripped his sword, knuckles white—
SCREEEEEE!
The wyvern dove, scattering the Legion. It landed atop a nearby building, rubble cascading into the street. Its head swiveled toward Raka, eyes gleaming with cruel intelligence.
Fire bloomed in its throat.
Raka grinned, blood staining his teeth. "Come on, you bastard!"
The inferno hit.
White. Pain.
---
Everything went white.
This time, the void felt different. Not just empty or silent, but… colder. Sharper. Like shards of ice pressed against his very essence. It felt less like a transition, more like a punishment. A confirmation of failure.
Three bodies. Three chances, if they could even be called that. Three brutal, violent deaths. All within the span of mere days. How long could a soul endure this? This constant, jarring displacement, this cycle of agony and loss?
Raka's consciousness drifted, a spark of awareness in the crushing, infinite dark. Would it ever stabilize? Would he ever land somewhere, anywhere, long enough to understand, to plan, to live?
Or was this his eternal fate – to be tossed from one dying vessel to another, a helpless witness to endless endings?
"Where am I going now?" he muttered, the thought dissolving into the profound emptiness before it was fully formed.
"What fresh hell? What broken, bleeding mess will I wake up in next?"
He braced for the inevitable return of pain, the shock of a new, damaged body, the prelude to another swift demise.
But then—he felt it. Something utterly unexpected.
Warmth.
Not the searing heat of battle, but a gentle, pervasive warmth. Steady, rhythmic breathing – slow, calm, deep. The feeling of youth, of untapped potential, of… peace? The chaotic static that had accompanied the
Commander's body was gone, replaced by a quiet hum.
And then—
Light. Soft, diffused, gentle.
He woke up slowly, blinking against the mellow light filtering through what looked like a high, arched window.
He was lying on a narrow but comfortable cot, under a soft, wool blanket. The air smelled… clean.
Beneath the expected scents of antiseptic herbs and healing salves, there were notes of old parchment, drying ink, and the faint, intriguing tang of complex alchemical oils.
Someone was humming nearby, a quiet, melodic tune.
Raka blinked again, letting his eyes adjust. He tested his limbs cautiously beneath the blanket. They responded without the agonizing protest of his previous two vessels. This body felt young – sixteen, maybe seventeen standard years, he guessed.
Lean, but with the underlying tone of nascent strength. More importantly, the air itself seemed to thrum faintly around him, a low-level resonance he hadn't felt since… well, since before Arlen. Latent mana. Ki potential, the term surfaced from some deep recess of his original memory. Dormant, untrained, but undeniably present. This boy was not a warrior, not yet.
But he was alive. And seemingly, for the first time in what felt like an eternity, safe.
For now.
"Ah, you're up," said a calm voice.
A young girl looked up from a table full of notes. She wore a student robe, the sigil of a magic academy stitched into her collar.
"You collapsed outside the gates three days ago," she said, standing. "Lucky the healers got to you in time."
Three days? He'd been unconscious that long? This transition felt… different. Less abrupt.
This was it. Maybe. A real chance? Not amidst the carnage of a battlefield. Not chained in a lightless dungeon. Not dying beside a shattered caravan. But here. In a place that smelled of knowledge and potential.
A place of learning.
Raka inhaled deeply, the clean air feeling alien and wonderful in lungs that weren't pierced or filled with smoke.
"Where… where am I?" he asked. His voice was higher than the Commander's gruff baritone, slightly hoarse from disuse but clear. Young.
"Vel'Thara Academy. Eastern branch," she replied. "It's entrance season. You must've been one of the wandering applicants."
A small lie. A new life.
Raka nodded. "Right… I'm Raka."
She raised an eyebrow. "Strange name. I'm Clair."
She smiled.
"For now, welcome to the academy, Raka. Hope you survive orientation."
Raka didn't smile back.
He couldn't quite bring himself to. The ghosts of the Commander, the prisoner, and Arlen felt too close, the memory of fire and agony too fresh.
But inside… deep within the core of his weary soul… a fragile flicker ignited.
He had landed somewhere stable. Somewhere with resources.
Somewhere that valued learning and potential.
Somewhere with purpose.
Maybe, just maybe, this time would be different.