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Doom Route Breaker: Reborn as the Empire's Queen

Chapter 27 / 137

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Chapter 27

Doom Route Breaker: Reborn as the Empire's Queen

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The Back Alleys of the Market

The air here wasn’t merely heavy; it was

tangible

. The stench of rotting fish, human sweat, and refuse hung in the alley like a thick, sticky shroud. You could taste it, feel it crawl under your clothes, sink into your hair, brand itself into your skin. This was the world turned inside out, where life seeped slowly into the gutters.

It was here, beneath the sagging roof of a half-collapsed awning, that Amanda found what she had been looking for. Not people;

silhouettes

. Two grime-stained shadows fused to stone and filth.

The boy.

Fourteen, maybe, but with the eyes of an old man who’d walked every circle of hell. His face was a mask of dried mud and petrified stubbornness. He sat with his back to the wall, shaving a pitiful root vegetable with a thin, rust-eaten blade. Every motion was economical, honed to automatic perfection. Each millimeter of peel was precious food. It was the dance of hunger, perfected.

But that wasn’t what hooked Amanda.

It was his

eyes

. They flicked across the alley, scanning corners, figures, shadows. This wasn’t the wandering gaze of a survivor. It was deliberate, predatory;

threat assessment

. He wasn’t surviving. He was

guarding.

And then Amanda

saw.

Behind him, in a pile of moldering rags and splinters, sat

the girl

. Tiny, as though built from bird bones. Her face was a waxy mask. Huge, child-oversized eyes stared at nothing. There was nothing in them. No fear, no sorrow, no question. Only

absolute, glacial emptiness

. She wasn’t here. Her soul had slipped away long ago, leaving behind only a fragile, breathing shell.

***

Three days of watching.

The boy’s name was Leo; traders hissed it like a curse. Amanda watched the **system** of two bodies function in hell.

Leo

acted

. He gave the girl; Alice; the last crumbs of bread, claiming in a rasping voice, “I already ate.” The lie was so clumsy, so

transparent

, it made the heart clench.

A hulking drunk with a face melted by cheap wine reached for their single damp blanket. Leo struck

like lightning

. He was half the size, weaker. Yet something

feral, insane

lived in him; a refusal to yield a single inch. He wasn’t fighting for a rag. He was fighting for the

border of his world

, and that fury sent the man fleeing.

At night Leo sat beside Alice and

talked

. Whispered, coaxed, spun stupid stories from a “before” that felt like myth. He desperately tried to hook a spark, any response, any emotion. But Alice was silent. Her silence was louder than any scream. It was the silence of an abandoned house.

They were perfect.

Scorched earth

. In Leo only predator instinct remained, and a smoldering coal of rage. In Alice; absolute void, so complete you could pour anything into it.

Enough,

Amanda thought, and something like a smile twitched at her lips. Not joy. The satisfaction of a sculptor who has found flawless clay.

***

Fourth day. The approach.

She waited until Leo stepped away to the well. Then she entered their alley.

And froze.

An old crone with a face like a baked apple was poking Alice with a filthy stick.

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“Get out, ghost! This is my spot! You’re cursing the place!”

Amanda was already moving to intervene when

he

was there.

Leo returned

without sound

. No shout. Only a low, guttural

growl

rising from the depths of his throat. He wasn’t a boy in that moment. He was a

wolf cub

defending its den. He flew at the hag not with fists but with raw, primal hatred. She shrieked and vanished into the dark.

It was over in seconds. Breathing hard, legs planted wide, Leo

shielded

Alice with his body. His back was rigid, fists clenched. In that instant he was a

wall.

Then Amanda

stepped forward

. Not toward them. She tossed a fresh flatbread, bought from the baker, so it landed at Leo’s feet with a soft

thump

in the muck.

Leo flinched, spun; instinctively pivoting to keep Alice behind him. His gaze speared the bread, then

stabbed

into Amanda. Storm in his eyes: **hunger** (the bread smelled like heaven), **suspicion** (from where? why?), and hostility sharp as his knife.

“Go away,” his voice was torn, hoarse. Not a request. A

command.

“I’m not from the Mercy Guild,” Amanda’s voice was level, cold as steel in shadow. She didn’t take another step. “And I’m not here to pity you.”

“Then what do you want?” Exhaustion sloshed beneath the aggression. He was spent to the marrow.

“I’ve been watching you,” she said quietly, each word dropping like a stone. “You fight. But you’re

losing

. Cold is stronger than you. Hunger is stronger than you. They’re stronger than her.” A barely perceptible nod toward Alice.

“I’ll manage!” he

shouted

, and every month of despair tore loose in that cry.

“No.”

Her single word cut him like a guillotine; merciless, final. “In a week she’ll die of fever or starvation. You’ll either follow her or lose your mind. That’s not a threat, Leo. That’s the

weather forecast

in your personal hell.”

He fell

silent

. The silence weighed like lead. His fists opened, closed, opened again. He

knew

. She was telling the truth. He’d watched Alice melting away before his eyes.

“…What do you want from us?” he finally forced out, voice cracking, armor splitting.

“I’m not offering food. Not a warm bed,” her tone shifted; gained a hypnotic edge. “I’m offering

power

. Power to

never be helpless again

. Power to

make this world pay

for what it did to you.”

The word

pay

rang like a bell in the stillness. Leo

shuddered

as if electrocuted. His gaze glazed, turning inward to the festering images inside him.

“…Are you a witch?” His eyes snapped back, scanning her head to toe.

“No,” she answered simply. “I give weapons.

You

will wield them. Both of you.” Her gaze slid to Alice. “There’s a shadow sleeping inside her. I will teach you how to make it

walk

and

live

.”

Leo looked from the untouched bread to Amanda. The war inside him twisted his filthy face.

Hatred

of a world that offered handouts, against

hope

, which was more terrifying than despair. Minutes of silence stretched into eternity.

“Why us?” he asked at last, and for the first time there was no anger in his voice; only bottomless, bone-weary confusion.

“Because you have

nothing left to lose

, ” Amanda answered honestly. “In your eyes I see not fear. I see

rage

. In hers…” she looked again into Alice’s vacant stare, “…I see

nothing

. And do you know what’s most dangerous? A shadow that contains

nothing

. You can’t break what is already broken.”

Amanda turned on her heel, cloak flaring.

“Decide. I’ll return tomorrow, same time. If you change your mind… you can just eat the bread and forget my voice.”

She walked away without looking back, leaving him alone with the most agonizing choice of his life; between familiar death and terrifying, unknown hope.

***

The next day.

Amanda returned. They were still there.

The flatbread lay untouched. Their first, silent answer.

Leo sat with his arm around Alice’s shoulders. When his eyes met Amanda’s, there was no hesitation, no fear. Only

grim, iron resolve

, forged overnight from despair and fury.

“Let’s go,” his voice was low and hoarse. “But if you hurt her…”

“If I wanted to hurt you, you’d both already be dead,” Amanda cut in, ice-calm. Her eyes were still as a frozen lake. “As of today your old lives are over. You are no longer Leo and Alice from Fishmonger Alley. You will become **my shadows**. And the first thing you will learn… is how to

disappear

.”

She turned and walked. She didn’t check if they followed.

She

knew.

Behind her came soft, uncertain footsteps. Then another set; almost ghostly.

This was no triumphant march. It was the

first step into the abyss.

For Leo and Alice, it was the only narrow path stretched across the pitch blackness of their despair.

For Amanda, it was the

first confident brushstroke

on a still-blank canvas. A canvas on which she intended to paint the most convincing, most terrifying

illusion

this world had ever seen.

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