The warrior left the village a changed man. He watched, with a heart choked by guilt, as the grateful villagers rode away on the horses he'd liberated from his fallen comrades. Each hopeful face was a mirror reflecting his own betrayal, a stark reminder of the path he'd chosen.
His ride back to the castle was haunted by ghosts of the murdered and the whispers of his own conscience. Yet, the explanation he owed the King gnawed at him just as fiercely. He knew killing the General, once his mission, now his escape route, would be a perilous dance.
Arriving at the castle, the warrior was met with an unsettling stillness. The usual bustle of guards and archers had vanished, replaced by an eerie silence. His unease deepened as he crept through the empty corridors, the weight of war fatigue mingling with a nagging suspicion.
With each step, the warrior felt the castle's lifeblood slowing. He ascended the stairs, his footfalls echoing like whispers in the tomb-like quiet. As he approached the King's chamber, the door creaked open under his touch, revealing a chilling tableau.
The King sat rigid on his throne, his eyes glazed with an alien emptiness. The silence in the room pressed down on the warrior, a shroud of death confirming his worst fears.
From the shadows, the General emerged, his face etched with battle fatigue and a malicious glint in his eyes. "Welcome back, warrior," he drawled, a cruel smile twisting his lips. "No king to report to now, is there?"
The General, eyes narrowed, circled the warrior like a predator assessing its prey. "I understand why I had to do this," he rasped, "but your actions... they defy explanation. I've fought Bevois scum for years, and even I can see you bleed their colors. So, tell me, why are you their pawn?"
The warrior stood frozen, the General's words a blow that echoed with his own self-doubt. He gripped his sword, its hilt a burning reminder of his chosen path and the carnage it had carved.
"Why?" the General goaded, but the warrior remained silent, his eyes locked on the twisted visage before him. The tension in the chamber coiled tighter, a suffocating pressure punctuated only by the General's mocking laughter.
Suddenly, the chamber doors burst open, flooding the room with a tide of armed soldiers. The General, seizing the opportunity, turned to the crowd, his voice booming with false accusation. "Behold, the traitor! This Bevois dog skulked here to assassinate our King! We must eliminate him before he unleashes his venom on us all!"
The warrior knew words were futile. Fighting his way through this horde, with the General waiting as a final challenge, was suicide. So, he lowered his sword, a prisoner of circumstance and his own choices.
As the soldiers dragged him away, the General's triumphant smirk scraped against the warrior's spirit. "No need for explanations," he sneered. "Whatever twisted path led you here, your game is over."
Alone in the dungeon, the warrior surrendered to the cold stone and the oppressive darkness. He had chosen a path of vengeance, but it had led him not to triumph, but to a dead end, a prisoner in the very castle he sought to infiltrate.