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Chapter 309: Plans in motion

"Because the alternative was staying weak," Jack replied. "Staying vulnerable. Watching this family get threatened by people like Marcus Thorne and not having the power to stop it. I made the choice that gave us the best chance of survival. And I’d make it again. I refuse to be weak in a world where power determines where you sit on the food chain."

Annabelle’s small voice cut through the tension. "Are you okay, Jack? Really okay?"

Jack’s expression softened as he looked at his youngest sister. "I’m fine, Annabelle. I promise. Everything is going to work out in the end."

He let the reassurance hang for a mont, then his deanor shifted completely. The vulnerable honesty disappeared, replaced by the commanding presence they’d seen when he returned from war.

"But that’s not why I called this eting," Jack said, his tone flipping to sothing closer to business. "I have plans for Sorne. Significant improvents that need to start imdiately."

The sudden topic change caught everyone off guard. Octavia blinked, her strategic mind struggling to pivot from existential horror to civic planning.

Celeste looked almost grateful for the shift to more practical matters.

Jack reached into the air beside him. His hand disappeared into nothing, then reerged holding a stack of rolled parchnts. He set them on the table with careful precision, the blueprints spreading across the surface.

The family stared at the docunts that had appeared from nowhere.

"What..." Octavia started, then stopped. "How did you do that?"

"Storage magic," Jack said dismissively. "Not important right now. What’s important is what these plans represent."

He unrolled the first blueprint, revealing detailed diagrams of what appeared to be a massive stone structure. "This is a garrison. Professional military housing for soldiers who will serve House Kaiser directly."

He unrolled another. "Magical sensors. A network that will detect threats before they reach Sorne’s borders. No more enemies getting close enough to threaten the manor."

Another blueprint joined the others. "Magic towers. Defensive fortifications that will make Sorne’s walls nearly impregnable. Combined with the sensors, we’ll see enemies coming and have the firepower to stop them before they beco a problem."

The plans kept coming. Sewage systems. Sanitation improvents. Castle upgrades. Each one is more ambitious than the last.

Alaric finally spoke, his voice carrying a hint of curiosity beneath the stoicism. "This level of construction will take months. Years, possibly. And the cost..."

"Will be manageable," Jack interrupted. "I have resources. And I have workers who can complete these projects faster than normal construction would allow."

He rolled out a final blueprint, this one depicting what appeared to be religious architecture. "And we’ll be building shrines. Two of them. One to Draven, my patron god. One to Dreknar, the God of Demons, who’s helping

maintain control."

Lady Genevieve’s eyes widened. "Shrines? Jack, building a shrine to the God of Demons will—"

"Yes, but it will be underground, so no one will have access to it but ."

Octavia was studying the blueprints with intense focus, her analytical mind processing the implications. "This isn’t just improvent. You’re turning Sorne into a fortress."

"Yes," Jack agreed.

He leaned back in his chair, his golden eyes sweeping across his family. "Construction starts tomorrow. We’ll have guests arriving. Within a month, possibly sooner."

"I take it you have no issues with this, Father."

Alaric’s gaze bore into Jack’s soul. He stared endlessly for what felt like an eternity. "I approve of your choices."

Jack smiled and turned his head.

His gaze settled on Annabelle. "Which brings

to your assignnt."

Annabelle’s eyes went wide. Her finger rose slowly, pointing at herself with apparent confusion. "?"

Jack’s lips curved into a small smile. "Yes, you. I have an essential job for you, little one. One that only you can handle properly."

Annabelle stared at him, equal parts curious and terrified about what her brother might ask of her.

The rest of the family watched this exchange with varying expressions of confusion. What possible role could their youngest mber play in Jack’s ambitious plans?

Jack let the anticipation build for a mont, then leaned forward with purpose in his eyes.

-------

One day later

Jack stood before the crystal.

Blue light pulsed from within it like captured lightning, casting the underground chamber in shades of azure and shadow.

The crystal humd—not audibly, but in a way that anyone present could feel it in their bones.

This was the dungeon anchor.

The artifact that allowed his father access to the claid dungeons.

He closed his eyes, reaching inward to the connections that were bound to his soul. The threads that tied a being to Jack.

’Loryn,’ Jack thought, his will flowing through those invisible threads. ’Pho. Co.’

Reality tore open. Jack summoned a portal, reality slash opened, and a circle ford.

Loryn stepped through first.

Shadows clung to him like they did his father, but his were less potent.

"Young master," Loryn said submissively. "You called."

Pho followed a mont later.

The temperature dropped ten degrees the instant he erged.

Frost spread across the stone floor as he walked.

His blank white eyes swept the chamber with predatory focus.

"Master Jack." Pho’s flat voice responded. "What requires our attention?"

Jack gestured, and blueprints materialized from his system storage. They unrolled across the chamber floor in a cascade of parchnt, dozens of detailed diagrams spreading like a map of ambition.

"Sorne is changing," Jack said, his voice echoing off stone walls. "We’re building defenses that will make this territory impregnable. But I can’t do it with normal construction crews. They’re too slow."

He knelt, spreading the blueprints so both demons could see. "This is where you co in."

Loryn’s black eyes tracked across the diagrams. A garrison layout. Magic tower foundations. Sewage systems that would make dieval sanitation a distant mory. Each blueprint is more ambitious than the last.

"Underground construction," Jack explained, tapping the garrison plans. "Everything gets built beneath the surface first. We have demon miners who can work faster than human crews, who don’t require light, air, or breaks. They carve out the foundations, raise the structures, complete everything while it’s still hidden."

His finger moved to another blueprint. "Then we use earth magic to raise the finished buildings. One day, Sorne had empty fields. The next day, a garrison stands fully built. I want everyone to believe it happened overnight."

Pho tilted his head slightly, the only indication he was interested. "Logistics?"

"That’s Loryn’s responsibility," Jack said, turning to the shadow demon. "You oversee the miners. Coordinate the construction. Make sure everything follows these plans exactly. And most importantly..." he t Loryn’s black eyes directly, "...you cloak the entire operation."

Loryn’s lips curved into sothing that might have been a smile if smiles could cut. "Dark magic. Shadows thick enough that human eyes slide past without registering what they’re seeing. Sounds muffled until silence replaces hamr strikes. An entire construction project happening in a pocket of reality most people won’t notice exists."

"Exactly," Jack confird. "Can you do it?"

"Can I?" Loryn’s face curved into a smile. "Young master, I’ve hidden armies for this glorified ice cube. Cloaking construction from mortals is insulting in its simplicity."

Jack’s attention shifted to Pho. "Your job is different. We need materials. Ore and rare monster materials. Fortunately, dungeons are filled with exactly what we need."

He pulled out a separate set of notes. "You’ll accompany

into multiple dungeons. We’ll bring demon teams, fighters and gatherers. The fighters clear paths, eliminate threats, and keep the dungeon from overwhelming us. The gatherers collect everything useful. Ore deposits. Magical crystals."

Pho’s blank white eyes studied the notes without visible emotion. But Jack had learned to read the subtle shifts in the Deathfrost demon’s posture.

The slight forward lean ant interest. The fingers flexing once ant he was already itching for a fight.

"You want to harvest everything in sight," Pho said with a smirk on his face.

"Yes," Jack agreed.

"Team sizes?" Pho asked inquisitively.

"Your discretion," Jack replied. "You know the demons available better than I do. You are familiar with their combat capabilities, endurance limits, and reliability under pressure. Build teams that can handle dungeon threats while gathering maximum materials."

Pho was silent for a long mont, his white eyes distant as he ran calculations only he could see. Finally, he nodded once. "Acceptable."

Loryn’s shadows rippled with delight. "When do we begin construction?"

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