The heavy door at the center of the conference room swung open without a sound.
No footsteps. No announcent. No ceremony.
Yet the mont that figure stepped through the threshold, every conversation in the hall ceased instantaneously — as though soone had severed the sound itself.
More than a thousand wizards held their breath.
The man who entered was not particularly tall. He wore a simple gray robe with no embellishnts, his silver hair swept neatly back, his face carrying the kind of calm that ca not from composure but from having long since transcended the need for it.
Dean Avery Knight.
The sole eighth-ring wizard of Noren Academy No. 147.
He walked without haste toward the central platform. The more than twenty sixth-ring wizards already seated there straightened almost imperceptibly — a reflexive response to the pressure radiating from his presence.
Jie Ming watched from his seat in the front row.
He had encountered high-tier wizards before. He had stood beside sixth-ring existences, studied under them, fought alongside them. He had even glimpsed the edge of seventh-ring power from a distance during past crises.
But an eighth-ring wizard standing in the sa room — that was a different matter entirely.
The air itself seed to compress slightly. Not violently, not dramatically. Just a quiet, absolute weight, like the mont before a storm breaks, pressing down on every surface and every mind with equal indifference.
So this is what the ceiling of Noren Workshop looks like, Jie Ming thought.
And yet — according to the intelligence they had just received — the enemy was fielding two of them.
Avery Knight stepped onto the platform. Behind him, a large light screen materialized, projecting a complex map of planar coordinates, force disposition markers, and projected engagent zones.
He did not sit.
He stood at the center of the platform, swept his gaze across the entire hall once — a single, unhurried survey that sohow managed to make every person present feel individually seen — and then began to speak.
His voice was not loud. It carried no particular weight of tone or theatrical gravity. It simply reached every corner of the hall with perfect clarity, as though the space itself had been configured to carry it.
"I will not waste your ti with pleasantries."
"You have all seen the summary reports. You know the situation. What you may not know — what I am here to tell you — is the full picture."
He turned slightly, and the light screen behind him shifted, displaying a broader strategic map.
"The Tower of Annihilation and the Chaos Secret Cult have been coordinating this offensive for longer than our intelligence initially suggested. Conservative estimates place their preparation window at no less than three hundred years."
A murmur ran through the hall. Quickly suppressed, but unmistakable.
Three hundred years of coordinated preparation between two major powers. The implications were staggering.
"Their objective is not rely territorial expansion or resource seizure." Avery's voice remained even. "Based on decrypted communications and the testimony of captured operatives, their ultimate goal is the complete dismantlent of Noren Workshop's core research infrastructure."
He paused briefly to allow that to settle.
"Specifically — the Primordial Fabrication Project."
This ti, the murmur was louder. Even among the sixth-ring wizards on the platform, Jie Ming noticed several exchanging glances.
He himself felt sothing sharpen in his mind.
The Primordial Fabrication Project. He had heard that na before, in passing — vague references in restricted docunts, a na spoken in careful tones by senior researchers. He had never known its precise nature.
Judging by the reaction in the hall, most of the wizards here were in the sa position.
"I will not elaborate on the project's specifics at this assembly," Avery continued. "What matters for your purposes is this: the project exists, it is real, and it represents sothing the enemy is willing to expend two eighth-ring wizards and their combined forces to destroy."
He let that implication hang in the air for a mont.
"And it is sothing worth defending at any cost."
The hall was absolutely silent.
"Their offensive tiline is already in motion. Forward elents have been detected at the outer planar boundaries. Full engagent is expected within seventy-two hours."
The light screen shifted again, now displaying detailed force disposition — friendly positions marked in blue, confird hostile positions in red, zones of uncertainty in gray. The gray covered a disturbingly large portion of the map.
"Our strategy has been determined at the highest level of the Workshop's command structure."
Avery turned back to face the hall directly.
"We are outnumbered. We are outmatched at the apex of combat power. Any tactical assessnt that pretends otherwise is wishful thinking, and I have no use for wishful thinking."
No softening. No reassurance. Just facts, delivered with the sa tone one might use to describe the weather.
"What we have," he continued, "is ti — or rather, the ability to create ti. The Workshop's research teams have reached a critical threshold. What they require is a window. A sufficiently long window during which the enemy's advance is slowed, disrupted, and denied the clean, decisive victory they are planning for."
His gaze swept the hall again.
"Your mission — every one of you, from the third-ring wizards in the upper tiers to the sixth-ring grand wizards on this platform — is to provide that window. By whatever ans available. At whatever cost necessary."
The word cost landed quietly, without drama.
But everyone in the hall understood exactly what it ant.
"Questions regarding specific tactical assignnts, unit groupings, and engagent protocols will be addressed by the staff officers following my remarks." He glanced briefly at the stern-faced wizard in black armor standing to one side of the platform. "I have one final thing to say before I yield the floor."
He paused.
When he spoke again, his voice carried sothing that had not been there before — not sentint exactly, but sothing adjacent to it. The acknowledgnt of one person to others who were about to face sothing genuinely difficult.
"Every wizard in this hall has reached their current rank through years, decades, centuries of cultivation and sacrifice. You did not co this far by accident, and you did not co this far to be spent carelessly."
"Fight smart. Protect each other where you can. And rember — the goal is not heroic annihilation. The goal is survival long enough for what cos next."
He said nothing further.
With a slight nod to the staff officer beside him, Dean Avery Knight stepped back from the center of the platform — and the war council of Noren Academy No. 147 officially began.
The staff officer in black armor stepped forward, his expression entirely unmoved by the weight of the mont. In a flat, precise voice, he began reading the enemy's confird combat strength figures from the light screen.
Jie Ming listened as the numbers were laid out one by one.
Eighth-ring: two. Seventh-ring: over five hundred confird. Sixth-ring: estimated exceeding ten thousand.
With each figure, the hall grew quieter.
Not panicked. Not despairing. Just the particular stillness of people who were processing the gap between what they faced and what they had — and were already, quietly, beginning to calculate how to close it.
Beside him, Jie Ming sensed Viola shift slightly in her seat. He glanced sideways. Her expression was composed, but the fingers resting on her armrest had curled inward — just slightly.
He said nothing. She said nothing.
They simply listened as the full weight of what was coming was placed, piece by piece, before them.
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