Chapter 143: Chapter 142: Journey to the Imperial City Again
Morning sunlight spilled across the academy like molten gold, washing over ancient stone towers, polished courtyards, and banners newly raised for the occasion. The light clung to every surface, catching on tal edges and silk threads, transforming the entire campus into sothing brighter, sharper, and more alive than it had been in days.
There was movent everywhere.
Students crowded along stairways, leaned dangerously from balconies, climbed low rooftops, and pressed against walls despite repeated warnings from instructors. So had arrived before dawn to secure better vantage points, while others forced their way forward through sheer persistence, unwilling to accept anything less than a clear view.
The usual discipline of the academy had loosened—not out of neglect, but by design.
Because today was not a day for restraint.
Today was ant to be seen.
Today was ant to be rembered.
The official team representing the academy at the National Championship would depart.
And no one—not even the most indifferent observer—wanted to miss it.
The main plaza near the academy gates had been transford into sothing closer to a ceremonial stage than a simple departure point. A grand stone platform had been constructed overnight, its surface polished smooth and edged with engraved insignias that reflected the academy’s long-standing legacy.
Three armored travel beasts stood at attention beside reinforced carriages, their massive forms radiating quiet strength. Their hides were plated with protective gear, their harnesses decorated in blue and silver—the academy’s colors—while their steady breathing carried a low, rhythmic presence that grounded the atmosphere in sothing tangible.
Behind them, supply wagons stood aligned with military precision, each one packed, sealed, and guarded.
Academy guards wore ceremonial cloaks draped over functional armor, their expressions composed but alert. Though the display carried a sense of grandeur, none of them forgot their purpose.
Beyond the gates, even more people had gathered.
Local rchants, nearby citizens, wandering traders—drawn not only by curiosity, but by opportunity. A departure like this was not rely a mont of pride for the academy. It was a spectacle. And spectacle drew attention, and attention drew profit, influence, and mory.
The academy had chosen to make this mont visible.
Because visibility created montum.
And montum, once built, was difficult to stop.
Valen was the first to step into the plaza.
He didn’t rush.
He didn’t attempt to command attention.
He simply walked.
Heavy boots struck the stone with steady, deliberate rhythm. His broad shoulders carried themselves naturally, his arms folded across his chest in a posture that conveyed both readiness and disinterest in unnecessary theatrics.
But the mont he appeared—
The crowd reacted.
Cheers rose quickly, loud and unfiltered. There was sothing simple about Valen’s presence, sothing direct and easy to understand. Strength radiated from him in a way that required no explanation, no interpretation.
Many admired power more easily than strategy.
Valen snorted faintly at the noise, the sound almost lost beneath the growing cheers, but the slight upward twitch at the corner of his mouth betrayed him.
He enjoyed it.
More than he would ever admit.
Then Aether entered the plaza.
There was no announcent.
No dramatic shift in lighting.
No deliberate pause.
He simply walked forward.
A simple black travel coat hung from his shoulders, unadorned and functional. His steps were quiet, asured, and completely unhurried. His expression carried no trace of pride, no hint of acknowledgnt toward the crowd that had gathered to watch him.
And yet—
The atmosphere changed.
Not gradually.
Not subtly.
Sharply.
Whispers spread through the crowd like wildfire.
"That’s him."
"The academy champion."
"He’s the one who survived the road attacks."
"I heard he fought off entire squads."
"They said he burned a cliff apart."
"I heard it was more than that."
Stories overlapped, contradicted, exaggerated, and evolved in real ti. So were absurd, inflated beyond reason by imagination and distance.
So, however—
Were not entirely false.
The truth, scattered across rumors, had already begun to reshape itself into legend.
Beside him, unseen by all others, the Fallen Succubus drifted effortlessly through the air, her presence as light as shadow and twice as unsettling.
"You’ve beco sothing interesting," she murmured, her voice threaded with amusent. "A story people tell before they understand it."
Aether didn’t look at her.
"Inconvenient."
"Is it?" she asked softly, tilting her head as she observed the crowd’s reaction. "Stories have power. They travel faster than truth. They shape expectation before reality arrives."
"They also distort it," Aether replied.
She smiled.
"That depends on whether you intend to correct them... or use them."
The reactions around him were varied.
So students cheered openly, caught up in the growing myth.
Others—particularly those of noble background—watched with cold, asured expressions, their eyes calculating rather than admiring.
First-year students stood almost trembling with excitent, their imaginations already turning what they saw into sothing larger than life.
Aether ignored all of it.
Noise.
Observation.
Irrelevant variables.
The Headmaster stepped onto the platform.
Silence followed instantly.
He did not raise his voice.
He did not need to.
"Our academy goes to win," he said.
The words were simple.
Direct.
Uncompromising.
"Our academy returns stronger than it leaves."
A pause followed, brief but deliberate.
"Anyone embarrassed by failure may stay ho."
Then he stepped back.
No flourish.
No speech.
No attempt at inspiration.
And yet—
The crowd erupted anyway.
Because conviction did not require decoration.
Nearby, Rowan exhaled slowly, rubbing a hand across his face as he watched the Headmaster step down.
"He sohow manages to say less every year," he muttered.
One of the guards beside him smirked faintly.
"Still gets the job done."
Rowan snorted.
"That’s what worries ."
The departure lineup ford quickly.
There was no hesitation, no confusion. Each mber of the travel group stepped into position with practiced efficiency, their movents reflecting both preparation and understanding of their roles.
Aether stood at the front.
Valen took position beside him.
Liora’s absence was noted—but not questioned.
She would join them later, at the Imperial City itself.
Behind them stood the support structure that would carry the team through the journey: Rowan, two tactical elders, a dical unit, and a carefully selected guard escort.
Two reserve mbers stood slightly apart, their expressions controlled but clearly strained. They had been chosen—but not chosen enough.
It was a distinction that carried weight.
Valen stepped closer to Aether as they approached the lead carriage.
"Try not to outshine
too much," he said, his tone casual but edged with challenge.
Aether kept his gaze forward.
"Then improve faster."
Valen laughed, the sound loud enough for those nearby to hear.
"Good," he said, his grin widening. "I was worried this trip might be boring."
The gates opened.
Slowly at first, then fully, revealing the road beyond.
The convoy began to move.
Carriages rolled forward.
Travel beasts shifted into motion.
The academy banner led the way, carried high and visible.
Outside the walls, the reaction continued.
Crowds clapped, shouted blessings, called out encouragent.
Children ran alongside the convoy for as long as they could, laughing and shouting before being pulled back by concerned parents.
rchants stepped forward offering food, supplies, small tokens—each one hoping their contribution might be rembered, or at least seen.
The academy had beco more than an institution in that mont.
It had beco a symbol.
And symbols attracted attention.
The road beyond the academy differed greatly from the one they had traveled before.
Where once there had been isolation, danger, and uncertainty—
Now there was structure.
Imperial patrols monitored key intersections.
rchant guild caravans moved in coordinated groups.
Checkpoint guards stood ready, recognizing and saluting official championship teams as they passed.
The journey was no longer hidden.
It was acknowledged.
Even so—
Aether noticed the watchers.
They were not obvious.
They did not approach.
But they were there.
So observed openly, curious and unguarded.
Others watched from distance, their attention sharper, more deliberate.
A few remained entirely concealed.
But not enough.
The Heaven Eye artifact beneath Aether’s clothing pulsed faintly more than once, subtle signals brushing against his awareness like distant ripples across still water.
Rowan, riding alongside the lead carriage, glanced toward him.
"You feel that too, don’t you?" he asked quietly.
"Yes."
Rowan’s expression tightened slightly.
"Threat?"
Aether shook his head once.
"Interest."
Rowan exhaled slowly.
"Sotis that’s worse."
Far ahead, within the Imperial City’s wealthiest district, Liora stood alone within a private moon garden.
Silver flowers blood along carefully arranged paths, their petals catching soft light even in daylight, reflecting it in faint shimring hues. Water channels ran quietly through carved stone, their surfaces smooth enough to mirror the sky above.
Ancient guards moved along the periter, their presence subtle but absolute.
This was not rely a residence.
It was a legacy.
Old power.
Old wealth.
Older secrets.
Liora stood at the center of the garden, her posture calm, her expression composed.
The Celestial Fate Butterfly hovered before her, its wings releasing delicate golden threads that wove through the air with precise intent. Floating crystal targets drifted in slow, unpredictable patterns around it.
With a single, gentle motion—
The threads shifted.
The targets altered course.
Collided.
Shattered.
The sound of breaking crystal echoed softly through the garden.
Behind her, the Moondream Hare flickered into existence, reappearing without sound just steps away.
Perfect control.
Perfect timing.
"You’re distracted," a voice said.
Liora did not turn.
"I am focused."
Her aunt stood within a shaded pavilion, watching with calm, asuring eyes.
"On what?" the older woman asked.
"The tournant."
A pause.
"Lying is unattractive," her aunt replied evenly.
Liora said nothing.
"We investigated him," the woman continued.
"That was unnecessary."
"We found little."
Liora’s hand paused for the briefest mont.
"That," her aunt said softly, "is what concerns ."
Elsewhere, far beneath the visible layers of the Imperial City, within a concealed chamber hidden beneath an abandoned guildhouse, figures gathered around a circular table illuminated by cold blue artifact light.
No nas were spoken.
No identities revealed.
A projection hovered above the table.
A white-gold beam striking stone.
A cliff exploding outward.
Aftermath.
Impact.
Power.
"Target has developed a new combination attack," one voice reported.
"Growth rate exceeds projections."
"Humanoid contract remains unverified."
"Psychological resistance—high."
Silence followed.
Then—
"Eliminate him before the finals," one figure suggested.
"Wasteful," another countered. "Talent like this can be used."
"If contamination exists, capture."
"If he wins publicly, removal becos complicated."
At the head of the table, a figure remained entirely still.
Then spoke.
"Do not rush."
The room quieted completely.
"Assess temperant."
"If controllable—invite."
"If not—erase."
No one argued.
The decision was final.
That evening, the academy convoy rested at a secured trade post.
Valen trained without restraint, reducing a reinforced dummy to splintered remains through sheer force.
Rowan shouted corrections at exhausted reserve mbers.
Guards relaxed in controlled rotation, so gambling quietly, others maintaining watch.
Aether sat alone beneath a lantern.
Maps of the Imperial City lay spread before him, marked and studied with quiet precision.
The Succubus leaned close, her presence almost casual.
"Many people want sothing from you now," she said.
Aether didn’t look up.
"Then many people will fail."
She smiled.
"That answer," she whispered, "is why I remain interested."
As night deepened, the horizon shifted.
Far in the distance—
Faint lights appeared.
The Imperial City.
Liora prepared within her estate.
Lion prepared within the palace.
Hidden factions moved in silence.
And the academy team continued forward.
This ti—
Not as travelers.
Not as survivors.
But as contenders.
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