Sothing strange was happening in the Capital of Vanadias.
To the visitors from foreign lands, everything seed as vibrant and lively as ever. The bustling streets, the glittering markets, and the towering tree-architectures held the sa charm that had always drawn outsiders to the city. But for the residents, those born and raised in Vanadias, there was an unsettling undercurrent rippling through the capital. It wasn't sothing easily seen, but rather felt—a growing tension, creeping beneath the surface.
Knights of the Teraquin army, more nurous than usual, began appearing in the streets, fully armored and ard, their eyes filled with cautiousness. Patrols beca more frequent, as if they were preparing for sothing unseen. So even took up positions around key parts of the city, as though encircling it, trapping sothing—or soone—within.
Among the outsiders, those who weren't of elven descent felt the tension the most. Whispers followed them wherever they went, eyes filled with suspicion and disdain trailed their movents. The Teraquin knights had always harbored a quiet disdain for non-elves, but today, the animosity was even more apparent. Foreign rchants and travelers had grown accustod to the usual undercurrents of elven superiority, but now, the hostility was too blatant to ignore. Still, many dismissed it as another expression of the Teraquin's notorious elitism.
But in the castle, the growing unease had fully manifested into confusion for so who didn't understand either.
"What is happening?" Neia asked.
She stood alongside her brother Glamir, and Allen Teraquin, the youngest of the Teraquin siblings. Before them stood Kendel, the eldest, his face impassive as he stared at the empty throne. Their mother, the Queen of Vanadias, had been seated there only a few hours ago, but now the grand seat was vacant.
"Where's mother?" Allen asked, his brow furrowed, sensing sothing was deeply amiss with Kendel.
"Safe," Kendel replied after a long pause. "Sowhere where she can't interfere with the plan."
Allen exchanged a confused glance with Glamir and Neia. "What plan?"
Glamir raised a brow, his usual cocky grin faltering slightly. "Kendel, what's going on?"
Kendel finally turned to face them. "I've allied with Utopia. We're taking Sancta Vedelia for ourselves. For the elves, and only the elves."
The shock hit them like a wave.
For a mont, there was only silence. Neia's lips parted in disbelief, while Allen looked as though he hadn't fully grasped what Kendel had said. The first to react was Glamir, whose shocked expression quickly twisted into excitent.
"Really?!" Glamir's grin returned, broader than ever. His eyes glead with a strange eagerness. "About ti!"
"Yes," Kendel confird. "The forces of Utopia will be here soon. The war to cleanse Sancta Vedelia has already begun."
"War?" Neia repeated, her voice trembling slightly. "Your Highness, what are you saying?"
Her cousin's words felt like a betrayal. Unlike Glamir, who seed thrilled by the news, Neia was deeply troubled. She wasn't naïve—she had always harbored disdain for the other races, for the humans, it wasn't like she harbored affections for the other races either who shared the lands with them. But war? An alliance with Utopia? It didn't make sense.
"Utopia is our enemy," she whispered, more to herself than to Kendel.
As much as she despised the other races, they were neighbors—ancient peoples who had shared these lands with the elves for centuries. Despite their differences, they had fought together through the ages, resisting invaders, preserving the lands they called ho. "Not anymore. It's ti the elves stop fighting among themselves and start helping one another to save Sancta Vedelia," Kendel declared.
"Save Sancta Vedelia from what, brother?" Allen asked.
Kendel's eyes flickered with surprise. He had expected Allen to share Glamir's enthusiasm, to be just as eager to join the cause. But his younger brother's reaction was different—there was no excitent, no support for Kendel's plan. Instead, Allen's gaze was calm, questioning. Ever since his humiliating defeat at the hands of Amael, Allen had undergone a transformation. He had beco quieter, more introspective, his once reckless nature tempered by a newfound sense of responsibility.
Kendel had noticed the change in him. The brother who once indulged in cruelty and power had started visiting the families he had torn apart, offering reparations, sotis even helping them rebuild their lives. The won whose lives he had ruined? He had offered them the choice to beco his official concubines if they wished to accept him to give them worthy of royals; for those who declined, he ensured they were compensated with enough wealth to live in comfort for the rest of their days. It was a profound and, frankly, unexpected shift in Allen's character.
Kendel studied him now, wondering just how deep that change went.
"From the Halves, Hybrids, and everything else," Kendel finally answered.
Allen's brows furrowed slightly, and he muttered under his breath, "I suppose mother wasn't aware of this, so you restrained her…"
Kendel nodded slightly. "She would have interfered. This is for the future of the elves."
"And elder sister?" Allen asked.
"Freydis knows. She'll be joining us soon," Kendel replied curtly.
"I see…" Allen mumbled, his eyes downcast.
What could he do? What should he do?
"Sancta Vedelia will soon belong to the chosen ones, the Higher Races," Kendel said with an air of finality, as if the matter was already decided. "It's the only way forward."
Allen remained silent.
A war for Sancta Vedelia's future—a future ruled by the elves, by the so-called 'Higher Races.' Once, he would have welcod the idea without a second thought, wearing his typical smirk of superiority. But now…?
His mind flashed back to that day, the day Amael had beaten him rcilessly. In the aftermath of the battle, Amael's voice had rung in his ears despite the pain he had felt.
"How many girls he has assaulted under the pretext of being a higher race?"
"I'm rely avenging them."
The words had haunted him ever since.
'Higher race'
Was that truly a reason to act without conscience? To treat others as less than human simply because they weren't born with elven blood? His concubines, the won whose lives he had once destroyed… they weren't all elves. So were human, others vampire, and even werewolf. They were different races, different kinds, but they had chosen to stay with him, despite everything. And he—he had vowed to protect them. It had been only a few months, but in that ti, he had worked hard to earn their trust, to be a man worthy of their forgiveness though he knew his act was unforgivable. He had placed them in his palace, given them rooms of their own, ensuring they had everything they needed to live in peace and comfort. Slowly, they were recovering from the pain he had caused them, though the road was still long and filled with awkwardness.
And their children—he had promised to take care of them, too. He had made a solemn vow to himself that he would be there for them, that he would protect them as if they were his own flesh and blood. No matter their race.
Would these won—the concubines Allen had promised to protect—like the world Kendel was creating? Of course, Kendel would make exceptions for his family. Allen knew that much. His brother would allow him to keep his wives, the won who had sohow found it in themselves to stay by his side despite the horrors he had inflicted upon them. But that wasn't what was bothering Allen. This wasn't just about his personal exception, or even about his family. It was about the others—the ones who didn't have the luxury of being connected to the Teraquin bloodline.
"What will happen to the other races?" Allen asked sothing that wasn't like him again surprisingly Neia and Glamir.
Kendel t his gaze coldly. "They will be driven off from Sancta Vedelia."
But Allen knew better. He looked at his brother, and in that mont, he understood that it wasn't that simple. Kendel might claim they would be driven away, sent off peacefully, but the truth lay beneath the surface. Utopia, the ruthless force that had allied with his brother, had no such compassion. Allen had lived long enough to know what Utopia truly was—conquerors, destroyers, a power that would not stop at rely expelling the unwanted. They wouldn't just send the other races away with a kind farewell and boats to freedom. No, Utopia would take them, enslave them, use them to rebuild Sancta Vedelia in their image.
And for worse purposes.
Allen knew this because he had once been soone like them. Soone who didn't care for the suffering of others, soone who had used people for his own gain. So it wasn't hard for him to imagine what the leaders of Utopia were thinking—what they planned to do once they seized control. "You should get ready, Allen," Kendel said. "Utopia's nobles will arrive in a few hours. We should show them who we are."
With that, Kendel left the room.
A mont of silence passed, then Glamir's voice broke through the quiet. "Finally, it's happening! I'm mad Kendel didn't say anything to sooner, but finally!" he crowed, his eyes gleaming with anticipation. Glamir had always harbored hatred for the other races, and after being humiliated by Amael the day before, his rage had only grown. Now, with war on the horizon, he could hardly contain his excitent.
Neia, however, said nothing. She stood in silence, her eyes drifting toward Allen. She had noticed the changes in him too. He wasn't the sa person he had been just months ago. The old Allen would never have questioned their brother, would never have hesitated to join in on Kendel's plans. But now? Now there was doubt in his eyes, and sothing deeper—sothing that looked a lot like guilt.
Allen, still staring at the empty throne where their mother had once sat, seed lost in thought. His expression was complicated. Neia couldn't make sense of it. She didn't understand what had caused this change in him, but it was there, undeniable.
After a long mont, Allen finally turned and left the room. Neia watched him go, unsure herself of what to think about the situation.
…
…
"Y–Your Highness!"
The echo of hurried footsteps reverberated through the grand corridors of Vanadias Palace as one of the knights approached Kendel, breathless.
Kendel stopped in his tracks, turning slowly to face the knight. "What is it?"
The knight, visibly shaken but holding himself upright, stamred as he delivered his report. "We have successfully captured Harvey Zestella, Your Highness... but Jas Raven has managed to escape!" A faint smile tugged at the corner of Kendel's lips. "This is good enough," he muttered, more to himself than to the knight.
Truth be told, Kendel hadn't truly expected them to apprehend either of those two strong figures. The fact that they managed to capture Harvey Zestella at all was a surprising victory. Harvey, the temporary head of House Zestella, since lfina was recovering. But now, with him captured, they had a critical bargaining chip—a ans to pressure the influential House Zestella and, more importantly, Celeste, the Prophetess, whose power and vision could sway nations.
"What of Alvara?" Kendel asked.
The knight's face paled slightly, his eyes darting nervously to the floor before eting Kendel's gaze. "T–that's... complicated, Your Highness. The Princess is still in the Forest of Ashenor. A massive barrier made from the highest-grade mana circles protects the area. It's... impossible to penetrate. We cannot retrieve Princess Alvara unless those who created the barrier cancel it, or she leaves of her own accord. Only those with a Life-Screen device can pass through the barrier. We've summoned our best specialists to dismantle it, but so far, it remains intact. They are still working tirelessly to bring it down."
Kendel's brows furrowed slightly, a wave of annoyance flashing across his otherwise composed features. 'Harvey Zestella... You were more cautious than I expected.' Harvey's foresight was proving to be more troubleso than Kendel had anticipated. The Life-Screen chanism—allowing only those with the device to move freely in and out of the forest—was sothing that didn't exist before so it was added recently. Kendel hadn't expected Zestella to have accounted for a potential assault on the students, but it seed Harvey had predicted the threat of enemies far in advance.
Yet despite all his caution, Harvey had not foreseen this betrayal.
Still, Kendel couldn't help but feel the man's paranoia was eating up valuable ti. Ti that Kendel couldn't afford to lose. Alvara's capture was important, but more than her, Kendel's real prize was the group of students—children of the Great Noble Houses—who were currently trapped in the forest. They were the future of Sancta Vedelia's elite, the heirs to powerful families. If Kendel could get his hands on them, they would serve as perfect hostages, speeding up his conquest of all the seven other kingdoms.
'Damn Zestella...'
The knight hesitated, shifting nervously before speaking again. "Also, Your Highness... regarding Princess Bryelle. She seems to have taken refuge in the VIP lounge, but it is protected by the sa mana circles. Unless she chooses to leave of her own will—"
Kendel cut him off with a dismissive wave of his hand. "Forget about Bryelle," he said coolly. "I want all of your attention focused on the Forest of Ashenor. Surround it completely. Tear down that barrier by any ans necessary. I want Alvara and every single one of those students in my custody. Understand?"
The knight bowed deeply. "Yes, Your Highness!" Without another word, he turned and rushed off.
Now alone, Kendel walked over to one of the massive windows lining the corridor. His gaze drifted beyond the glass, where the sprawling capital of Vanadias lay beneath him, bathed in the soft glow of twilight. The city seed peaceful, tranquil even.
But Kendel knew better.
The calm wouldn't last.
His fingers drumd idly against the windowsill as he whispered to himself, "Soon enough, Leena... soon enough."
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