They left the palace three hours later with imperial authorization docunts, a list of contacts, and the weight of an empire-sized problem resting on their shoulders.
The morning sun was fully up now, the Imperial Capital alive with activity. rchants hawking wares, bureaucrats hurrying to their posts, children playing in the fountains of the public squares.
All of them blissfully unaware that their Emperor had just tasked three people from a minor kingdom with saving the entire realm.
"Well," Seria said as they walked through the palace gardens toward the main thoroughfare, "that escalated."
Damien couldn’t help the slight laugh that escaped. "Understatent of the year, Commander."
"We went from consultation to covert military operation in under three hours," Elara added, adjusting her formal robes with visible relief now that they were out of the Emperor’s presence. "It seems like terrifying desperation on his part."
"Yes," Damien said. He paused at the garden’s edge, looking out over the sprawling city. "The Emperor is scared. He’s good at hiding it, but I saw it. Whatever intelligence he has that we don’t – it’s bad enough that he’s willing to trust three relative unknowns with this kind of authority."
They walked in silence for a mont, each processing the implications.
"The resources could be significant," Seria observed, ever the tactician. "Imperial authority ans access to military assets, intelligence networks, funding without the usual bureaucratic constraints. If we’re actually trying to track down whoever is orchestrating empire-wide demon attacks, we’ll need all of it."
"It also ans we’ve painted enormous targets on our backs," Elara countered. "Whoever is behind this – they’re powerful enough to coordinate attacks across seven kingdoms. They’re not going to take kindly to us investigating them."
"True," Damien agreed. "But we were already targets. The Demon General specifically knew about us. We were involved whether we accepted the Emperor’s mission or not. At least this way we have resources to work with."
They reached the main street, and the sheer scale of the Imperial Capital beca fully apparent.
Where their ho kingdom’s capital had perhaps thirty thousand residents, this city easily held ten tis that. Buildings rose four and five stories high, constructed from materials that would bankrupt lesser cities just for the foundation work.
"We should explore," Elara said suddenly. "Get familiar with the city layout, understand the territory. And honestly – " She pulled off the elaborate High Priestess headpiece with visible relief. " – I need to feel like a normal person for a few hours before my brain explodes from political pressure."
"Agreed," Seria said, already unfastening so of the ceremonial armor pieces that served no practical purpose. "If we’re going to be operating here, we need to understand more than just the palace."
Damien looked at both of them – Elara already looking younger without the formal regalia, Seria’s shoulders relaxing as she shifted into more comfortable gear. This was good. Necessary. They couldn’t operate at crisis intensity constantly without burning out.
"Alright," he said, loosening his own stiff collar. "Let’s see what the Imperial Capital actually looks like when you’re not being interrogated by the most powerful person alive."
---
They spent the next hour just walking, absorbing the city’s character.
The Imperial Capital was divided into distinct districts, each with its own flavor.
The rchant Quarter bustled with trade from across the known world – spices from the southern kingdoms, weapons from the eastern forges, books and scrolls from the western scholar cities. Seria stopped at a weapons rchant’s stall, examining blades with the critical eye of soone who knew quality when she saw it.
"Imperial steel," the rchant said, noting her interest. "Folded fifty tis, edge that’ll hold for years of hard use. You won’t find better outside the royal armory."
"How much?" Seria asked.
The price the rchant quoted made Damien wince – it was more than a guard captain’s monthly salary.
"I’ll think about it," Seria said diplomatically, setting down the blade. As they walked away, she muttered, "Everything here costs five tis what it does back ho."
"That’s what happens when you concentrate this much wealth in one place," Damien observed. "The prices adjust to match the clientele."
They passed through the Scholar’s District next, where universities and research institutes lined the streets. Students in academic robes debated philosophy in public squares. Libraries advertised collections of texts that most kingdoms couldn’t dream of assembling.
"I could spend months here," Elara said wistfully, looking at one particularly impressive library. "Just reading, learning, exploring ideas without political constraints."
It was in the Military District that things got truly interesting.
The district was dominated by the Imperial Guard headquarters – a fortress within the city, complete with training yards, barracks, and what looked like a fully functional garrison capable of housing thousands.
They watched from a public observation area as Imperial Guards ran through training exercises.
The difference in skill level was imdiately apparent.
"They’re fast," Seria said, her voice carrying professional assessnt rather than intimidation. "Much faster than our kingdom’s guard. And their formation coordination is flawless – no wasted movent, everyone anticipating their squadmate’s positions."
As they watched, one of the guards raised a hand and fire erupted from his palm – controlled, focused, used to create a barrier that his teammates imdiately maneuvered around.
"Battle mage," Seria noted. "Probably B-class, could even be A-class given the control."
"Explain that to ," Damien said.
He already had an understanding of the worlds mage ranking from reading the original novel, but expected a more detailed explanation from Seria.
Seria settled against the railing, clearly pleased to discuss sothing in her area of expertise. "There are three types of mages: Divine, Battle, and Tech. Divine mages like Elara channel power from deities – healing, blessing, purification, that sort of thing. Tech mages are rare; they combine magic with chanical devices, creating constructs and enchanted items. Battle mages are the most common – we use magic directly for combat."
"You’re a battle mage?" Damien knew, but still confird.
"C-class, on the Imperial ranking scale." She gestured to the training grounds. "Which is different from kingdom ranking. Back ho, I’d be considered A-class. But Imperial standards are higher. Here, C-class ans my mana is at the 5th circle, I’m competent, dangerous in the right situations, but not exceptional."
"And they are?" He nodded toward the Imperial Guards below.
"Every Imperial Guard is minimum B-class. The ones you see demonstrating advanced techniques are probably higher. And sowhere in that headquarters, there are S-class battle mages who could level a city if they wanted to."
Damien processed that. "So we’re significantly outclassed if it cos to direct magical combat."
"Individually? Absolutely. But that’s not how real combat works." Seria’s smile was sharp. "I’ve seen you fight. Your shadow magic doesn’t fit the normal classification system – it’s part battle magic, part sothing else I’m not certain. And you’re C-rank at minimum, likely higher. Combined with Elara’s divine magic and my tactical coordination, we punch well above our individual weight classes."
"Speaking of divine magic," Elara said, "there isn’t really a ranking system for us. We don’t classify power levels the way battle mages do."
"Why not?" Damien asked.
"Because divine magic isn’t about personal power – it’s about connection to the deity. The closer your relationship with the Goddess, the more of her power you can channel. It’s spiritual rather than technical." Elara watched the training exercises with thoughtful expression. "So priests spend their entire lives in devotion and can barely produce a healing glow. Others have monts of genuine connection and can perform miracles. It’s not linear or predictable."
"So where do you fall on that spectrum?" Seria asked.
"Sowhere in the complicated middle," Elara said wryly. "I have strong connection to the Goddess – the whole ’hearing her voice’ thing puts in rare category. But I’m also a reforr who’s challenged Church doctrine, which theoretically should weaken that connection. Sohow it doesn’t. If anything, defying the corrupt elents of the Church seems to have strengthened my ability to channel divine power."
"The Goddess appreciates authenticity over obedience," Damien suggested.
"Apparently." Elara paused, then added, "There is one exception to the normal classification system. Extrely rare cases where soone can use both battle and divine magic."
"That’s possible?" Seria looked skeptical.
"It shouldn’t be. The two power sources are fundantally different – one is internal, cultivated through training and discipline. The other is external, granted through spiritual connection. Combining them should create interference, make both types weaker." Elara’s expression darkened slightly. "But once every few generations, soone appears who can do both at full strength."
"Like who?" Damien asked, though he already knew the answer.
"Like Aldric Brightblade."
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