When Clavell's encrypted dispatch finally cleared the periter of Valeria Hall, Lucia was positioned in the central courtyard, thodically conducting a structural refinent of his Dragon King's Body.
Guilel took the heavy bronze cylinder—its surface sealed with intricate alchemical matrix nodes—from the taciturn courier and jogged along the stone arcades toward the inner grounds. Reaching the grass, she noted the unexpected presence of Elder Atok, his hair half-white, relaxing under the shade of a massive, ancient oak.
The elder, having logged over seven hundred winters within the sky foundries, was currently resting in a wide wicker recliner, a heavy leather-bound manual detailing storm-combat arts balanced across his knee. His fingers, coarse and split like gnarled tree roots, turned the yellowed parchnt pages with deliberate care, his ancient eyes occasionally flashing with a sharp, predatory interest.
"Ah, Guilel has cleared the gate," Atok murmured, catching the rhythmic scuff of her leather boots. He gestured for her to approach with a slow, grandfatherly smile. "Maintain your position for a brief mont, child. His Highness is currently navigating a critical intersection in his breathing cycles."
This ancient drake, much like Guilel and Aegis, belonged to the elite, pure-blooded lineage of the Greater Drakes. Because the two younger captains were conford by blood to eventually occupy seats within the supre Council of Elders, Atok had consistently treated them as promising prodigies worthy of his direct guidance, and their relationship within the household was exceptionally tight.
"Elder," Guilel bowed, her red eyes shifting inquisitively toward the manual clutched in his roots. "That codex shouldn't even register as introductory reading for an operator of your tier. What has locked your focus so completely?"
Atok let out a rich, booming laugh that rattled the leaves above. He closed the thick manual, presenting the spine to her with a knowing look. "That is precisely where your tactical calculus fails you, girl. Open the margin. Read the hand, and your understanding will lock."
Guilel took the codex, her thumbs catching a random fold near the center. Her expression was initially flat and un-prompted, but as her eyes parsed the first three columns, her handso eyebrows lifted a fraction of an inch. Her fingers began to flip the yellowed pages with accelerating velocity, her indifference splintering into raw surprise—and by the ti her thumbs reached the final appendices, her face had settled into an expression of absolute, profound astonishnt.
She lowered the manual, her wide gaze shifting to the cross-legged, silent youth who sat insulated by a veil of white steam thirty paces away. "Are these marginal corrections... truly the work of His Highness over the last fortnight?"
"That particular volu represents his notes from a moon ago," the old drake chuckled, pointing a gnarled finger toward a secondary, monuntal stack of books resting against the oak trunk. The collection consisted entirely of forbidden high-tier battle scripts and ancient swordsmanship forms, each text vastly more esoteric and structurally volatile than the manual she held.
"Yesterday evening, while parsing the logistics lists with Old Muriel, I caught the old brawler claiming that His Highness is not rely gifted in our draconic bloodline inheritance—he possesses a unique, logic-breaking insight when evaluating external mortal combat forms. In less than three moons, he has systematically ingested and corrected nearly a thousand separate tactical manuals. Muriel stated under oath that the Prince's notes frequently contain conceptual breakthroughs that shake his own understanding."
Stroking his coarse white beard, Atok let out a soft, contemplative sigh. "My initial reflex was to dismiss the claim, reasoning that the old general was simply weaving sycophantic praise to flatter the crown. After all, our cohort has spent centuries bleeding over these exact scripts; it insults our legacy to suggest a child can master our life's work in a handful of afternoons. But witnessing the architecture of his corrections firsthand... I recognize I was rely a presumptuous old fool. The formulas he has outlined in those margins are insights that Muriel and I will burn weeks referencing—but for you and Aegis, they comprise an unparalleled, absolute standard to which your shields must conform."
"Unquestionably," Guilel whispered. Her capacity for macro-strategy was notoriously shallow, but her internal comprehension of raw violence was a highly refined instrunt; she mapped the elder's aning without requiring a translation. "His Highness possesses the ability to physically dissect the absolute, kinetic core of a sword form with the most concise syntax imaginable. More than that, he outlines training variables and physical paraters that multiply the raw voltage of the art. To engineer even one of these structural updates, a master who has spent forty winters swinging the sa blade would have to commit a decade of exhausting research to the forge."
She looked at the perfectly poised, silent silhouette of the Prince, her eyes burning with an intense, fanatical devotion. "Yet, for His Highness... he has executed this revolution a thousand tis over."
In that quiet afternoon, the two drakes—each recognized as a premier martial genius within their respective generational brackets—were seized by the exact sa chilling realization: Was this the baseline reality of an Empyrean? Was this the terrifying width of a Demigod's intellect?
In the dragons' imnse lifespans, their mories were thick with the nas of teoric heroes who had blazed across the continent—from the Full Moon Queen who commanded the magical spires of Raya Lucaria, to the terrifying shadow Maliketh who held Marika's black blade, down to peerless duelists like Moongrum and Ordovis. Though those entities lacked the divine bloodline of the outer heavens, their individual might approach or actively countered the gods.
Because the next generation of demigods had not yet unleashed the cataclysmic civil wars that would shatter the foundations of the world, the common populace and the ancient dragon lords still calculated that the gap between a supre mortal hero and a demigod was a bridgeable distance.
They had not yet witnessed General Radahn single-handedly locking the gravity lines of the stars; they had not seen Rykard dissolve his house into the ancient sorceries of Mt. Gelmir's prival serpent, nor Malenia carving empires to pieces with a peerless, un-blockable blade. And the last king, Morgott, had not yet mounted the steps of the throne room to pile the corpses of a thousand heroes along the capital gates.
This was a pristine, fragile era before legends had claid their nas. The mortal world did not yet comprehend what manner of world-dominating, tyrannical monsters these youthful demigods would grow into.
If an observer looked down from the high rafters of history, parsing this final, glittering twilight of the Erdtree's absolute zenith on the very eve of the Night of the Black Knives, they would realize that while the Lands Between stood at the absolute precipice of a centuries-long decline, it was also the absolute summit of mortal power for a millennium.
"Elder Atok, Guilel," Lucia's smooth voice cut through the rustle of the leaves. His eyes blinked open, the white mist around his shoulders snapping back into his skin. "Has the dispatch from the south cleared the wall?"
Guilel stepped forward, presenting the bronze alchemical cylinder with both hands. Lucia took the tal, his finger channeling a sharp spark of draconic Faith into the runic locks. The security pins dropped with a series of heavy tallic clicks, allowing the end cap to slide away, revealing three rolls of dense parchnt.
Lucia extracted the letters, his silver eyes scanning the ink from top to bottom.
Clavell had utilized a complex alchemical matrix cipher they had structured before his departure. To an imperial auditor or a Fundantalist spy, the parchnt appeared to be filled with the nonsensical, rambling inventory list of an eccentric apothecary; only Lucia possessed the ntal filter required to translate the true text.
The open sections of the scroll thodically detailed the entire historical record of the broken slave. Though Clavell lacked a registry na for the artisan, every physical scar and surgical tracking note Lucia had provided matched his clinical archives perfectly. The identity of the Misbegotten was a mathematical certainty.
Clavell listed three hyper-specific clinical secrets known only to himself and the blacksmith during their weeks in the hidden dispensary. Lucia could use these specific mory keys to dissolve Shugo's defensive shell and anchor his absolute trust. But whether an opportunity would manifest to pull a master smith capable of hamring god-slaying armants under his own banner depended entirely on the silent maneuvers of Queen Marika.
However, the final third of the scroll was where the Regent's ink turned sharp and hurried. Clavell reported that the long-frozen Carian Delegation had abruptly broken their camp along the northern highways, crossed the Caelid border checkpoints, and were currently marching at maximum speed toward the Grand Lift of Dectus. The dispatch included detailed intelligence regarding their vanguard numbers, closing with an explicit, urgent warning for Lucia to monitor the roads.
At this stage of the ga, any administrator with functioning eyes could deduce that for Liurnia to freeze its diplomatic approach for months, only to launch their carriages toward the capital with such sudden velocity, ant the Full Moon was moving an extraordinarily heavy piece across the board.
Lucia, intimately versed in the profound, bitter blood-feud separating the current Elden Lord, Radagon, and Rennala of the Full Moon, was naturally twice as sensitive to the tiline. The mont his fingers smoothed the intelligence, his tactical engine began drafting five separate defensive contingency plans.
Yet, as his mind turned the gears, his usually cold, calculating focus was suddenly derailed by an unexpected, violent rush of mories and phantom emotions. What surfaced within his mind wasn't a list of counter-maneuvers or troop numbers—it was the faces of long-unseen companions from his past life behind the screen.
He saw the tragic figure of the Last Carian Knight, standing as a solitary vanguard before the grand library doors until his steel failed, shielding his broken Queen with his final breath. He saw the monstrous, broken silhouette of the General, his mind utterly consud by the rot, yet still holding the stars back from the earth while hacking his own legs away to ensure his hunger didn't violate his own soldiers. He saw the ambitious Lord, swallowed whole by the golden coils of the Blasphemous Serpent.
And finally, his mind locked onto the image of the Moon Princess, who had torn her own flesh away to carry the Law beyond the frozen limits of the sky, offering the shivering mortals of the world a cold, dark, yet beautifully free and hopeful future.
Within the gaplay loops of his past, he had held out that dark moon ring—the artifact sealed within the deepest, forbidden vaults of the Grand Library—countless tis. Disregarding every warning of the fingers, he had taken her hand to march toward an endless, beautiful solitude beyond the frozen horizon.
Lucia's fingers tightened against the parchnt, a silent, burning murmur rippling through his core.
"Finally... the board brings us back together, Ranni."
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