I Can Create Clones Chapter 96

Novel: I Can Create Clones Author: Taleseeker Updated:
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After days of biting cold, Starfall felt like a fortress isolated from the world beyond its glass and stone. Council debates and exhausted compromise had kept most dangers at bay, but the threat of factional rupture lingered everywhere. That tenuous security shattered the mont Lysander failed to return from the river patrol.

It had been routine—a circuit through snow-laden villages, a check on border markets and town watches. Lysander rode ahead, joking about boots swallowed by mud and the curse of winter rations. Kaelan warned him to avoid the northern bends where unrest simred near the old vaults, but Lysander’s pride was irrepressible. The weather darkened, and by dusk, the riders returned without him.

Two guards were poisoned, their minds thick and slow. The remaining advisors arrived battered, their arms marked by wiry bruises. The wagon was lost, winter goods scattered down the icy ravine. Lysander’s na echoed in every frantic question.

The council quickly collapsed into chaos. Rumors galloped through city and keep: Lysander taken for ransom, for vengeance, perhaps for secrets he refused to share. Ironwood whispered of Phoenix moles, Phoenix accused border brigands. Kaelan’s efforts to keep order grew desperate. He spent the night tracing rumors, interrogating guards, listening to terrified witnesses who spoke of a party masked and wordless—moving with the coordination of professionals, not common thieves.

Ethan, anwhile, withdrew to his chamber. There he mapped the last hours with an eye sharpened by the system he’d sworn not to reveal. The world beyond the keep beca a grid: aura traces, psychic echo, the subtle pressure that magic leaves when violence erupts. He followed the smoky trail through council reports, then through senses no scholar understood, tracking not just what had been taken, but why.

At dawn, a ssenger arrived. Ethan read the note by candlelight:

"He bleeds for your secrets. Give up the Heart, or he is lost. Border woods, the old vault by dawn."

No ransom, no trade—just a demand for power and proof that the artifact was more than symbol. Ethan sent soldiers and agents to all the likely approaches, keeping his council ignorant of the true depth of his own prowess.

Kaelan refused to wait behind. "We must find him," he said, anxiety sharpening each word. "Lysander won’t be broken, but he isn’t immortal."

Ethan nodded, letting trust flicker into focus. "Stay in the city. Calm the council. They must not see weakness—nor what I’m willing to do."

Ethan slipped from Starfall before sunrise, every sense expanded by both cultivation and the system’s hidden aid. In the frost-hushed woods, he threaded through the ancient pines toward the vault. The site—a forgotten crypt shrouded in icy fog—marked the intersection of ancient trails and new peril. Life energies shimred: three guards alert and anxious; a warlock’s presence, hot but unstable; and Lysander himself—pain flaring, but his will burning as fiercely as ever.

Inside, Lysander was chained to a pillar, blood dried on his cheek, eyes blazing with defiance. The warlock—the true enemy, hired from across the mountains—chanted a ritual over him, aid at levering the Heart’s power by ans of blood and pain. Around them, rcenaries circled. Fear and calculation warred in every face.

Ethan stepped forward, letting the full scope of his cultivation manifest—not the system’s inhuman vastness, but enough to turn the vault’s icy air electric. Winds shook the stone, lanterns stuttered, and the warlock’s spell faltered. Guards panicked as Ethan’s voice cut through, low and intent:

"Release him or fall."

The warlock summoned shields of rune-light, but Ethan crashed through with fla and cutting wind. rcenaries fled, leaving their leader exposed. The warlock tried curses, psychic blades, wordless threats—but Ethan stripped each away with clarity and force. The chains around Lysander shattered. Ethan’s presence was a storm; his intent, implacable.

Lysander half-collapsed, shivering. Ethan caught him, passing the restorative vial. "Easy—let clear the poison," he murmured, channeling a healing pulse and seeing fresh color return to Lysander’s cheeks.

The rescue, though fast, left scars on both. Lysander was silent as Ethan carried him out, more haunted by what he’d witnessed than any wound. Soldiers found them in the woods, speechless at Ethan’s power and command.

News raced ahead. By noon, Starfall’s city squares were alive with tales—Ethan had burned through spells, scattered bandits, shattered chains with single words. It was magic, or madness, or legend. The council gathered in awe and fear, crowding around Lysander. His mother embraced him, shaking uncontrollably.

Council inquiry began imdiately. So demanded explanation; others praised Ethan for saving their hopes. Mira’s eyes t Ethan’s, laden with both gratitude and warning. Kaelan, sleepless and aged by the ordeal, spoke quietly: "Once the doors are opened, they do not close."

Ethan assembled the council by evening, Lysander pale but present beside him. He explained, not the system, but the power he had long kept guarded.

"We shield lives with what we have. My skills were given to protect, not to rule by fear. Lysander risked all for our peace. I risked all for his return."

The council splintered then re-ford—trust commingling with anxiety. So saw Ethan’s revealed power as reassurance, a bulwark against greater dangers. A few—older, shrewder—sensed potential imbalance, wondering if Starfall’s king might himself beco the very threat he’d faced.

Kaelan voiced what others would not: "This council cannot rest on secrets. If you keep more than power hidden, distrust will fester."

Ethan agreed, his resolve threaded with sorrow. "You will see no rule born from force—only from necessity. I will share what I can, but trust must be earned in both directions."

After the drama, Lysander’s recovery beca a symbol—a rally, but also a warning. The realm now knew Ethan was more than negotiator and planner; he was savior and last fortress. Lysander recounted the mont in private to Kaelan:

"He ca—like the storm itself. The warlock’s magic didn’t matter; Ethan unraveled him. I saw sothing I was ant never to see—what the world would be if justice were always that swift."

Kaelan considered this, troubled. "Sotis swift justice is only the beginning of tyranny. We must watch for what cos next."

Public reaction was mixed—relief, awe, fear. Rumors spread, from court to market to distant valley: tales of Ethan’s secret ntor, of old blood fighting new corruption, of a king wrestling with fate not just for his own people but for every heart in Starfall’s reach.

So councilors celebrated:

"With Ethan as shield, the old threats cannot best us; let our enemies tremble at his na."

Others whispered doubt:

"No one should rule alone with power no council can check. If magic breaks, who will save us then?"

Ethan spent days visiting survivors, listening to their losses, promising safety not rely through strength, but through steady, open governance. Mira walked the city’s edge with him, murmuring stories of leaders broken by their own gifts; histories of humility and trust rebuilt in the wake of terror, not conquest.

Lysander, returning slowly to duty, beca not just hero but judge—reminding all that rescue had a cost. At his advice, Ethan established a new oversight: a council of witnesses, tasked to observe the use of extraordinary power and record its impact for all the realm to review.

Kaelan’s role beca even more complex. He traveled to border towns, calming fear, challenging both loyalty and skepticism, reminding all that one man alone could never bear the weight of peace or survival.

For the first ti, Ethan found himself vulnerable—not to enemy spell or blade, but to seeing the world’s hopes and suspicions swing on his lightest gesture.

At night, he would visit the Heart of Maelius, watching its slow, patient glow. He would recall the past week’s whirlwind: the helplessness of learning Lysander was gone, the terrible clarity of wielding secret power, the price paid in trust and unity.

He wrote late, alone, by lamplight:

"Strength serves only when wielded as shield, not as chain. Lysander’s pain is my own, and every rescue must be paid for in new vigilance, new humility. The council knows now—more and less than they fear."

New risks erged. Ambitious councilors argued for greater shows of power, invoking Ethan’s actions as excuse for hard justice and swift conquest. Reforms slowed; debates grew sharper. Border towns called for more transparency. Even Mira struggled at tis to calm the council’s growing anxiety.

Ethan, Lysander, and Kaelan t secretly to chart the next moves. Lysander’s voice—strong, yet tempered by suffering—warned, "You waged peace and won rescue, but the legacy will be doubt. You must invite them to see you not as ruler but as partner—let the world share in the guardianship of power."

Kaelan nodded, advising a new era of councils—more open, more contentious, more subject to review. He pressed Ethan to spend less ti alone, more among the people, more bearing witness to both wounds and dreams.

Ethan listened, and resolved. He established new forums, shared more findings, even offered to limit his magical responses unless the council itself called upon him.

Weeks passed. Lysander healed. Kaelan’s voice in assembly gained in weight and resonance. Stories of the rescue mixed with stories of loss and hope.

Through it all, Ethan continued to rule—changed, challenged, but aware now of the true extent of price and peril in every secret kept, every power revealed.

And as the snow lted into the first thaw of spring, Starfall found itself not unbroken but newly forged—ambitious, wounded, resilient.

In those last quiet hours before dawn, Ethan walked the ramparts, watching the world flicker with candles in a thousand distant windows. Every fla a life, every shadow a possibility, every wind a signal: peace and trust remain, but will never rest easy. They must be fought for, earned, and—when night returns and danger rises—risked for the ones who truly matter.

He closed his eyes, speaking not to the system, but to the legacy he would leave.

"If I am legend, let it be for rcy, not for might. If I am feared, let it be for the courage to rescue, not for the power to command."

And in the silence before daybreak, Ethan felt the world answer—a fragile, uncertain, hopeful echo.

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