Chapter 553: Mysteries of his Divine Bloodline
Max’s brows furrowed the instant her words sank in, a deep unease taking root in his chest. At the sa ti, a quiet alarm flared in his mind. This elven woman… she’d seen through the existence of his elven bloodline without even trying.
That was sothing even Instructor Virelia and Lord Harthorne—both powerhouses of the Divine Realm—had failed to detect. And yet, this woman pierced through it like she was flipping through a page in a book.
‘She must be able to see it because she’s an elf,’ Max reasoned, trying to compose himself, though his thoughts were already spiraling. Her question, though seemingly calm, had pierced right through to the root of sothing he hadn’t even fully processed himself. Two Royal Bloodlines? There was no way that was a coincidence.
“You an to ask,” Max said slowly, buying ti to gather his composure, “that I’ve co into contact with two individuals who possess the Royal Elven Bloodline… when only one is supposed to exist at a ti?”
The golden-haired elven woman nodded, her steps graceful as she circled him with a soft hum. “Yes. One of them had to be a being of great significance… likely a female, strong, pure in bloodline, perhaps of noble descent. Soone whose very essence once shaped the direction of the elven race.”
Max stayed silent for a mont, then spoke again, his tone casual but cautious. “I don’t know.” It was a lie—one he had to tell. If there were two candidates, they were undoubtedly his mother… and Lenavira.
He knew about Lenavira, and mories of his mother’s tragic fall—that tragic incident, that horrifying silence—flashed through his mind. Through that mory, he was sure that his mother carried a very special bloodline.
The elven woman chuckled softly, the sound like a breeze through rustling leaves. “Lying won’t get you anywhere with , little one,” she said, voice teasing but firm. “As I said, only one Royal Bloodline can exist at a ti. That is a fundantal rule of our race. Which ans…”
She paused before stepping directly in front of him, her golden eyes boring into his soul. “One of them has already… fallen or sothing had happened to them to cause the Royal Bloodline onto the other individual.
Max’s eyes widened, his fists clenched as a slow horror rose in his chest. “What do you an? What could have happened to them that caused this?”
His voice cracked slightly, and he hated it. But the implications of her words chilled him to the bone. If only one could exist… then that ant…
Was it his mother?
Had her bloodline been transferred to Lenavira… because she had—
His heart thundered in his ears.
Max clenched his fists and took a deep breath, pushing back the panic that had surged through his chest.
‘No,’ he thought firmly. ‘She isn’t dead She couldn’t be.’ He rembered it clearly—how his mother had restored his bloodline. That miracle, that gentle, golden warmth that flowed into him… sothing like that couldn’t co from soone who no longer existed.
His mother had to be alive. Maybe not safe, maybe not whole, but definitely alive.
His heartbeat slowly steadied as he clung to that belief.
“It seems you’re familiar with that person,” the elven woman observed with a knowing smile, her golden gaze sharp yet kind.
“Don’t worry,” she added, seeing the storm in his expression. “There are many reasons a Royal Bloodline can shift. Death isn’t the only one. Sotis the bearer willingly gives it up—either through sacrifice, inheritance, or duty. And sotis… the bloodline itself judges the host unworthy. In that case, it departs on its own and seeks out another more fit to carry its will.”
Max exhaled slowly, the tightness in his chest loosening just a little. His sister’s words echoed in his ears again—’they’re alive.’ She had been so sure. And he had felt his mother’s blessing before. It couldn’t have co from the dead.
“They’re alive,” he muttered to himself, his voice more certain now.
Then, finally, he lifted his head and t the elven woman’s gaze.
“It’s my mother,” he said, his tone firm, steady.
“I believe the Royal Bloodline belonged to her first. But… sothing happened in our family that caused the bloodline to reject her or maybe she gave it up. And now… it’s chosen soone else.”
He paused for a mont. “The second bearer is another woman. I t her recently, and… I’m sure of it now. The aura, the resonance—it matched. I think the Royal Bloodline has chosen her next.”
The elven woman tilted her head thoughtfully, her expression unreadable.
“I see,” she whispered, voice like leaves in the wind. “Do you know that woman?” She then asked.
Max nodded slowly, his voice calm but guarded. “She’s a friend.”
The elven woman’s expression shifted, a sly curve forming at the corners of her lips. “If I’m not mistaken,” she said in a tone laced with amusent, “you carry a bloodline known as the Heavenly Luminance Divine Bloodline, don’t you?”
At her words, Max’s expression hardened instantly. His eyes narrowed just slightly, but he didn’t respond. His silence wasn’t confirmation—but it wasn’t denial either. He was more interested in where she was going with this than offering her anything upfront.
The elven woman, as if reading the storm behind his calm eyes, continued smoothly. “Do you know the na of the Royal Bloodline I just ntioned? The one from your mother, the one passed to your… friend?”
Max tilted his head, slightly puzzled. “I never heard its full na. Only that it was so sort of high-tier elven royal bloodline.”
The elven woman smiled again, but this ti her eyes glead with aning. “It’s called the Heavenly Luminance Royal Bloodline.”
Max’s frown deepened. His thoughts churned at once. ‘Heavenly Luminance Royal Bloodline… and Heavenly Luminance Divine Bloodline.’ The nas echoed in his mind like twin bells ringing in succession. Too similar to be unrelated. Far too close to be coincidence.
“You wonder why the nas are so alike,” the elven woman said softly, as if she’d plucked the thought straight from his head. “It’s because these two bloodlines were ant for each other. Divine resonates with Royal and vice-versa. Once the resonification happen, both the host of the two bloodline would find their strength soaring to new heights.”
The elven woman’s gaze deepened, her golden eyes locking onto Max with an almost eerie clarity.
“But it isn’t just that,” she continued, her voice now heavy with sothing more than intrigue—reverence, perhaps. “There are far too many mysteries entwined with those two bloodlines. Since ti immorial, there have been only a handful of records noting the appearance of the Heavenly Luminance Divine Bloodline. And even then, the accounts are fragnted, veiled in contradictions and myths. The Royal Bloodline, despite its rarity, has always found a single host in each generation. It is constant. A royal marker that the Elven race holds sacred.”
She stepped closer to him, her voice quiet but sharp like a blade of moonlight. “But the Divine Bloodline… is different. Elusive. It appears for but a flicker of ti—once every several millennia—and then vanishes as if it were a dream that reality itself forgets. So claim it’s a curse; others call it a blessing that even the gods cannot understand. But one thing is certain—its existence has never lasted long enough to be fully studied, much less understood.”
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