The morning of the Supre Mage Council began with silence inside the Asterion compound.
That silence did not an peace instead it was more of a calm before the storm.
Elarion soldiers stood beside the Warhounds in full discipline, their armor cleaned and weapons inspected. Engineers moved quietly around the machines, checking heat vents, mana-core cooling seals, track tension, cannon locks, and ammunition compartnts.
The Warhounds themselves stood still in the reinforced yard.
Faint heat shimred above their engine vents like invisible fla. Pale vapor occasionally slipped from the mana-core cooling channels and disappeared into the cold morning air.
The LEFH guns rested beneath covered shelters nearby.
Their barrels were hidden, but not forgotten.
Lucien stood near the lead Warhound, one hand resting lightly against its armored hull.
The tal was still warm.
Good.
Malen approached from behind.
"The machines are secured."
Lucien did not turn.
"Attempts?"
"Two before dawn."
Lucien finally looked at him.
"Only two?"
"One scrying spell from outside the western wall. One servant carrying a breakfast tray to the wrong courtyard."
"And?"
"The spell broke when it touched our ward line. The servant is now having breakfast elsewhere."
Lucien looked at him for a mont.
Malen’s face remained perfectly calm.
"Efficient."
A voice ca from the courtyard entrance.
"You both sound far too relaxed for n walking into the Supre Mage Council."
Princess Elena entered with Crown Prince Cassian.
Elena wore royal blue and silver, formal enough for the council but practical in cut. Cassian wore ceremonial military attire, though the stiffness in his shoulders suggested he would have preferred armor.
Lucien stepped away from the Warhound.
"Relaxed is not the word."
Cassian glanced toward the covered artillery.
"Prepared, then."
"Closer."
The Royal Guardian arrived last.
He walked slowly, cane in hand, his white-and-blue formal robes moving almost silently. The old man looked at the Warhounds, then at Lucien, and finally at the soldiers guarding them.
"Good."
Lucien raised an eyebrow.
"That is all?"
"If I praised you too much before the council, you might beco unbearable."
Malen looked toward the Guardian.
"Too late."
Lucien glanced at him.
The Royal Guardian laughed.
"Excellent. Everyone is awake."
His amusent faded a mont later.
"Listen carefully. Today, they will not simply ask what the Warhound is. They will try to decide what Elarion is."
Lucien’s expression remained calm.
The Guardian continued, "Aetheris will look for principles. Valdris will look for doctrine. Solaria will look for moral purpose. Ironpeak will look for craft. The Concord will look for survival. Nocthar will look for a reason to condemn you."
Cassian’s jaw tightened at the last na.
Elena looked toward Lucien.
"And you?"
Lucien looked at the Warhound.
"I will decide how much of the answer they deserve."
The Royal Guardian smiled faintly.
"Good. Then let us go."
The road to the Supre Hall had been cleared before dawn.
Caelrith guards lined the avenue in silver-and-white armor. Their faces remained blank, though their eyes missed nothing.
The Asterion delegation moved in asured order.
The Royal Guardian walked at the front.
Cassian and Elena followed.
Lucien walked behind them with Malen at his right.
Aurethar joined them near the central avenue, once again trapped in human form.
He looked deeply unhappy about it.
Lucien glanced at him.
"The sleeves remain difficult?"
Aurethar’s golden eyes narrowed.
"Do not begin."
Ironbreaker, walking nearby, grinned into his beard.
"I told them to make the cuffs tighter."
Aurethar turned slowly.
"Little hamr."
"Golden lizard."
The Royal Guardian did not stop walking.
"If either of you begins a fight before we enter the hall, I will make sure the record says the dwarf won."
Aurethar looked offended.
Ironbreaker looked pleased.
The Supre Hall rose ahead of them.
It was circular, pale, and enormous. Its roof shone like moonstone beneath the morning light. Nas were carved across the outer walls in hundreds of scripts—kings, archmages, dragon elders, saints, commanders, and heroes from past ages.
Lucien looked at the building.
It was beautiful.
More importantly, it was controlled.
Every entrance could be seen. Every balcony overlooked the central floor. Every delegation path curved inward without allowing easy ambush points.
A room built for diplomacy.
A room built by people who expected diplomacy to fail.
Malen’s voice was low.
"Too many angles."
"Too many observers."
"Both."
The Royal Guardian smiled without turning.
"Welco to Caelrith."
They entered.
The chamber inside was already alive with quiet tension.
Tiered seats curved around a central speaking floor marked by silver runes. Each major power had its own section, banners hanging above them.
Aetheris sat beneath silver-blue banners, mages arranged like a court of patient knives.
Valdris occupied the northern tier, every officer seated with military discipline.
Solaria sat close to the presiding dais, white and gold robes bright beneath the hall’s enchanted light.
The Sylvan Dominion’s section had living branches woven into its seating, green leaves shifting gently despite the lack of wind.
Ironpeak’s tables looked reinforced enough to survive a siege.
The Beastman Clans had chosen fewer chairs and more open space.
The Mariti League had brought scribes, maps, ledgers, and smiling envoys who looked ready to sell air if soone expressed interest in breathing.
The Concord of Free States sat beneath its circle of twelve emblems.
Nocthar sat in black and violet.
Lucien’s gaze paused there.
The narrow-faced priest from yesterday watched him without blinking.
Lucien moved on.
Above the main tiers sat observers.
rcenary captains.
Guild envoys.
Neutral scholars.
The Free Cities of Marrowind.
The Eternal Enclave.
Silent Order representatives in dark grey.
And higher still, in the dragon section, stood the three representatives of the Draconic Conclave.
Valeris sat in human form, silver-haired and bright-eyed, already watching Lucien as if collecting questions before he even spoke.
Tharok remained in dragon form, bronze scales dull and dignified beneath the hall light.
Lady Pyraxis sat in red and black, elegant, still, and smiling faintly.
Aurethar glanced upward.
"They gave Tharok the larger seat."
Ironbreaker muttered, "Maybe he complains less."
Aurethar’s expression turned dangerous.
The Royal Guardian raised one finger.
"Council first. Insults later."
They took their seats in Asterion’s section.
Lucien sat beside the Royal Guardian.
Malen stood behind him.
He refused the offered chair with the sa expression one might use to refuse poison.
The final bell sounded.
The hall fell silent.
At the presiding dais stood a silver-haired man in white-and-gold robes. His sunburst dallion caught the light, and three paladins stood behind him with ceremonial spears.
The Royal Guardian leaned toward Lucien.
"Cardinal Aurelian of Solaria. This session is under Solarian presidency."
Lucien nodded.
So the church led the council today.
That mattered.
Cardinal Aurelian raised his hand.
"Honored representatives, rulers, envoys, scholars, commanders, guardians, and witnesses. By treaty of Caelrith and rotation of presidency, the Holy Kingdom of Solaria opens this session of the Supre Mage Council."
His voice carried across the entire hall without strain.
"The Great Tear remains sealed, but its warning signs sharpen. Border disturbances have increased. Abyssal relics have been found in places they should not exist. Forbidden circles have appeared in abandoned shrines. Monsters migrate from scarlands earlier than expected."
The hall remained silent.
Aurelian continued, "The council will discuss unity among the great powers, border restraint, forbidden worship, defensive readiness, evacuation networks, healer coordination, and military preparation."
Lucien watched the hall.
So faces tightened at "forbidden worship."
Nocthar did not move.
Aurelian’s gaze shifted toward Asterion’s section.
"Before those matters, however, the presidency places one subject at the beginning of this session."
The hall changed.
Quiet beca attention.
"Reports have reached every delegation concerning the territory of Elarion. Armored vehicles. Rapid-fire weapons. Long-range artillery. Hybrid magical-chanical engines. Production thods unlike existing runic machinery."
Aetheris beca very still at the last phrase.
The cardinal’s voice remained steady.
"Because these developnts may affect military balance and defensive planning before the next Great Tear, the council requests a preliminary explanation from Lord Lucien of Elarion."
Hundreds of eyes turned toward him.
The Royal Guardian did not look at Lucien.
He only spoke softly.
"Define yourself."
Lucien rose.
The hall followed his movent.
He descended from the Asterion section and crossed the polished floor toward the central speaking circle.
Silver runes lit beneath his feet when he stepped inside.
A recording crystal pulsed beside a neutral clerk.
Cardinal Aurelian looked at him.
"Lord Lucien, you may begin."
Lucien looked across the council.
He did not bow too low.
He did not smile.
"Then I will begin by removing several wrong assumptions."
A quiet ripple passed through the hall.
Good.
Now they were listening.
"The Warhound is neither a golem nor a summoned creature bound inside steel, and last but not least definitely not an enchanted carriage."
Aetheris murmured.
Ironpeak leaned forward.
Valdris did not move, but their attention sharpened.
Lucien continued.
"The easiest way to misunderstand the Warhound is to look at one part and mistake it for the whole."
Valeris smiled in the dragon section.
She liked that sentence.
Lucien pointed toward the outer hall, where everyone knew the machines rested beyond the compound.
"The Warhound is an armored fighting vehicle built around integration. A controlled mana-core engine provides energy. chanical transmission systems regulate and apply that energy. Armor protects the crew. Tracks allow movent across rough terrain. Weapons provide firepower. Training allows n to use all of it as one battlefield system."
The word system spread through the hall like a small spark.
A dwarf forge-lord raised his hand.
Cardinal Aurelian looked toward Lucien.
"Do you accept questions during explanation?"
Lucien nodded.
"If they are brief and relevant."
The dwarf stood.
"Forge-Lord Brakka of Ironpeak. You say mana-core engine. Is the core doing the movent, or is it only feeding power to chanical drive?"
"Feeding power," Lucien replied. "The core is the source. The machine moves because of regulated conversion through chanical assemblies."
Brakka’s beard shifted as he frowned.
"So if the drive fails, the core is useless for movent."
"Correct."
The dwarf sat down slowly.
Several Aetheris mages exchanged glances.
That answer had pleased Ironpeak and annoyed Aetheris.
Good.
Archmage Selvar raised his hand next.
"Then the mana core is not an enchantnt?"
"No."
"What distinguishes it?"
Lucien looked toward him.
"An enchantnt modifies an object to perform a function. The Warhound’s engine is a controlled power source inside a larger chanical structure. Remove the transmission, cooling, controls, and drive system, and the core alone does not make a fighting vehicle."
Magister Vaelora’s eyes glead.
"Then is it interchangeable?"
Lucien paused at hearing this.
A little too direct.
"Partially."
Vaelora smiled.
She knew he had avoided the deeper answer.
Lucien continued before she could press.
"The current Warhound model weighs approximately twenty-eight tons. It requires a crew of four: commander, driver, gunner, and loader. Each role is trained separately, then combined through drills."
A murmur ca from the Concord section.
Marshal Odran Vale raised his hand.
"Ordinary soldiers?"
Lucien looked at him.
"Disciplined ordinary soldiers."
The old marshal’s expression changed.
Not much.
Just enough to notice.
Lucien continued, "The commander observes, chooses targets, and coordinates with infantry or other vehicles. The driver handles movent. The gunner operates the main cannon and coaxial machine gun. The loader manages ammunition and keeps the cannon firing."
Prince Kael of Valdris leaned forward.
"How long to train a crew?"
Lucien looked toward him.
"Basic operation can be taught faster than mastery. Effective battlefield use requires repeated drills, maintenance familiarity, and command training."
Kael nodded.
He understood the difference.
A Nocthar priest spoke before the cardinal could choose another question.
"So common n are placed inside tal shells and taught to kill from safety."
The hall grew colder.
The narrow-faced priest stood in the black-violet section.
His voice was smooth.
"How noble."
Malen’s eyes hardened.
Cassian’s jaw tightened.
The Royal Guardian did not move.
Lucien looked at the priest calmly.
"Common n are placed inside armor so they do not die helplessly before creatures stronger than them."
The priest’s eyes narrowed.
Lucien continued, "If your objection is that soldiers should be easier to kill, then say it plainly."
A sharp silence followed.
Sowhere in the Beastman section, soone gave a low laugh.
The Nocthar priest’s mouth tightened.
Cardinal Aurelian raised a hand.
"Order."
Lucien did not look away first.
The priest sat.
The hall had changed again.
Now the explanation had a pulse.
Lucien resud.
"The Warhound’s armor is not absolute. The frontal plate is strongest. Side and rear armor are thinner. Heavy artillery, powerful siege magic, deep terrain traps, or large monsters can disable or destroy it."
Valeris raised a hand.
"Why admit weakness?"
Lucien looked up toward the dragon section.
"Because anyone claiming invincibility is either lying or inexperienced."
Tharok gave a low rumble.
It sounded like approval.
Valeris smiled.
"Acceptable answer."
Lucien continued.
"The value of armor is not to make death impossible. It increases survival long enough for training, tactics, and firepower to matter."
Solaria listened carefully.
The Concord listened even more carefully.
Lucien moved to armant.
"The main weapon is a fifty-seven milliter rifled cannon. Effective engagent range is approximately two thousand five hundred ters under proper conditions. Ammunition includes armor-piercing rounds, high-explosive rounds, and fragntation rounds."
A Valdris officer raised his hand.
"Against fortifications?"
"High-explosive rounds can damage light and dium fortifications. Heavier walls require artillery support."
The officer imdiately looked toward the covered LEFH outside the hall, though it was not visible from here.
Lucien noticed.
So did half the council.
"The Warhound also carries two MG-34 machine guns. One is mounted beside the main cannon. The other is hull-mounted. They are belt-fed rapid-fire weapons designed for infantry suppression."
High Prelate Marcellian spoke from Solaria’s section.
"Suppression?"
Lucien turned slightly.
"Preventing enemy movent by making exposed advance extrely costly."
"Costly," the prelate repeated.
"Yes."
"To living beings."
"To enemies trying to overrun your line."
The answer was calm, but it carried enough edge to stop further moral probing for the mont.
Lucien continued, "Rate of fire is approximately eight hundred to nine hundred rounds per minute depending on condition and configuration."
The hall erupted
But council discipline held.
whispers broke out across nearly every section.
Even several dragons shifted.
Cardinal Aurelian allowed the reaction for a few breaths.
Then his staff touched the floor.
Silence returned.
Lucien waited until the hall settled.
"The standard combat load is approximately sixty cannon rounds and roughly five thousand machine-gun rounds. Ammunition supply is therefore as important as the weapon itself."
A Mariti League admiral raised a hand.
"Transport burden?"
"Heavy."
The admiral smiled faintly.
"Honest."
"Necessary."
Lucien looked across the chamber.
"A Warhound without ammunition is armored weight. A Warhound without maintenance is future scrap. A Warhound without trained crew is a coffin with tracks."
That sentence hit harder than the numbers.
The Concord representatives exchanged looks.
Valdris looked satisfied.
Aetheris looked thoughtful.
Nocthar looked displeased.
Lucien continued.
"This is why Elarion does not treat the Warhound as a single invention. It requires steel production, machine tools, ammunition factories, repair teams, logistics officers, crew schools, and battlefield doctrine."
Ironpeak stirred at machine tools.
Valdris stirred at doctrine.
The Mariti League stirred at logistics.
Lucien let them.
"The machine is visible. The system behind it is what makes it useful."
Cardinal Aurelian watched him closely.
The Royal Guardian’s expression remained unreadable.
Lucien continued, "Existing runic machinery, especially what is sold by Aetheris, can perform simple tasks at great cost. Lifting, grinding, pumping, rotating, opening gates, powering limited workshops. Useful, but limited."
The Aetheris section cooled.
Lucien did not look away from them.
"The Warhound is different because it combines magical energy, chanical engineering, standardized parts, trained crews, and industrial production. It is not a luxury tool crafted one by one for the wealthy. It is designed to beco part of an army."
The hall fell silent.
There it was.
The real threat.
Not one Warhound.
Many.
Nocthar’s priest rose again.
"An army of tal beasts. Mass-produced killing. And this council is expected to applaud?"
Lucien turned toward him.
"No."
The priest paused.
Lucien’s voice remained even.
"You are expected to understand the scale of the next war."
The words moved through the hall like cold air.
Lucien looked toward Solaria, then Valdris, then the Beastman Clans, then the Concord.
"Against a hundred demons, heroes matter. Against a thousand, formations matter. Against hundreds of thousands, production, supply, training, and coordination decide whether cities survive."
The Beastman High Khan leaned back slowly.
Valdris beca still.
Solaria’s priests listened without blinking.
Lucien continued.
"The Great Tear will not ask whether our thods are elegant. It will ask whether our walls hold."
No one interrupted.
Even Nocthar remained silent this ti.
Lucien looked back to Cardinal Aurelian.
"That is the preliminary explanation of the Warhound."
The recording crystal pulsed.
For several seconds, the hall remained quiet.
Then Tharok spoke from the dragon section.
His voice was deep enough to vibrate through the stone.
"One machine is interesting."
Everyone looked up.
The bronze dragon’s eyes remained on Lucien.
"A force of them is a doctrine. A nation that can build them is a warning."
The hall absorbed the words.
Lucien inclined his head slightly.
"Correct."
Valeris smiled.
"Now I have more questions."
Aurethar muttered from Asterion’s section, "Of course you do."
Cardinal Aurelian raised his hand before the dragon could begin.
"The Warhound explanation will continue into formal questioning after the artillery briefing."
That caused another shift.
The LEFH had not even been discussed yet.
Several Valdris officers looked openly impatient now.
The dwarves whispered among themselves.
The Nocthar priest sat rigid, his face pale with controlled anger.
Aurelian turned toward Lucien.
"Lord Lucien, after a brief recess, this council requests your explanation of the long-range artillery system known as the LEFH."
Lucien stepped back from the speaking circle.
"As the council wishes."
The runes beneath his feet dimd.
He returned to the Asterion section under the weight of hundreds of eyes.
Malen leaned slightly toward him when he sat.
"You provoked Nocthar."
Lucien looked ahead.
"No."
Malen waited.
Lucien’s gaze remained on the black-violet section.
"They revealed themselves."
The Royal Guardian’s smile was faint.
And very satisfied.
Across the hall, the world had stopped looking at Elarion as a curiosity.
Now it looked at Elarion as a possibility.
A danger, a tool, a shield, and a threat.
The recess bell sounded.
And no one in the Supre Hall moved quickly.
They were all still thinking.
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