Font Size
15px

The room was dimly lit, the only illumination coming from the flickering torch flas embedded in the ancient stone walls. Dust hung in the air like mist, catching the golden hues of firelight and turning them into dancing shadows. Silence reigned, heavy and suffocating, broken only by the slow, asured footsteps of the man who had remade empires with his mind.

Kael.

He stood at the heart of the chamber like a god cloaked in mortal flesh, his golden eyes reflecting not light, but dominion. His hands were clasped behind his back, his posture serene—too serene. Every inch of his bearing scread mastery, as if even the air moved at his command. This was not the calm of a man at peace, but the stillness of a storm preparing to erase everything in its path.

Before him were gathered the remnants of an empire. Nobles, lords, and rchant kings—those who had once held power in their clenched fists and ruled with inherited arrogance. But now they stood diminished, humbled, and uncertain before the one who had outmaneuvered them all.

So had once opposed him openly, others secretly. So had offered support only when it benefited them. But now, none of that mattered. Their masks had been stripped away, and all that remained were desperate n and won faced with the only constant truth left in their shattered world:

Kael ruled everything.

"Do you see it?" Kael’s voice rang out, low and asured, yet it resonated through the chamber like a blade across stone. “The kingdom you once bled for, deceived for… the crown you worshipped. All of it lies in ruin.”

He paced slowly between them, the sound of his boots echoing like the tolling of a bell before an execution. None dared interrupt. His presence was too heavy, his authority absolute.

“You fed it corruption,” he continued. “You nurtured it with lies and bathed it in blood. You made yourselves kings beneath kings… and now you wonder why the gods have turned their faces.”

His words were not rely accusations. They were truths carved into stone.

So nobles lowered their gazes. Others dared to glance at each other, looking for strength in the familiar—but they found none. Kael had ensured that trust among them had long since been destroyed.

“But I… I will not rebuild your kingdom,” Kael said, turning to face them fully. “I will unmake it. I will strip it to its bones and raise sothing greater. Not from tradition. Not from bloodline. But from will.”

A trembling voice erged from the crowd. “And if we serve you… will we survive this new world?”

Kael’s lips curled slightly, more a smirk than a smile. “Survival is for those who earn it. Allegiance is rely the beginning.”

He stepped closer to the speaker, a once-proud duke whose lineage stretched back generations.

“You see,” Kael continued, his voice softer now, almost intimate, “I am not like the rulers you served before. I don’t need loyalty. I own it. I don’t demand obedience. I instill it.”

The duke fell to his knees with a thud, eyes wide with realization. Kael’s gaze lingered on him for a breath, then swept over the others.

“You are not here to negotiate,” Kael said. “You are here to kneel—or fall.”

From the shadows at the far end of the chamber, Selene stepped into view, her crimson eyes gleaming beneath her hood. Her presence was both quiet and lethal, the very embodint of Kael’s unseen reach. The nobles flinched.

And then ca Seraphina—beautiful, ruthless, and utterly loyal to the man at the center of it all. She stood at Kael’s side like an empress who needed no crown. Her voice carried across the chamber, sharp and cold:

“You forget whose world you live in now. Kael doesn’t offer second chances.”

One by one, the nobles began to drop to their knees, swearing their fealty. So whispered it. Others sobbed it. A few hesitated—but all submitted.

Yet Kael wasn’t watching them.

He was watching the one who hadn’t knelt.

A woman at the edge of the gathering, dressed in silver and black. Lady Mireya, the last noble who still commanded whispers in the shadows of the court. Her loyalty had always been uncertain. Her defiance wasn’t loud—but it was there, in her stillness.

Kael tilted his head.

“You remain standing,” he said quietly.

Mireya’s chin lifted. “I swore my loyalty to the crown. Not to a man who wears it like a trophy.”

Kael’s eyes glead with interest. Not anger. Interest.

“Good,” he said. “The crown is aningless. Loyalty to is the only truth that matters.”

“I serve ideals,” she said.

Kael stepped forward. “Then you are obsolete.”

The room froze. Magic surged in the air like static before a storm. Kael’s aura expanded, pressing against reality itself, and for a heartbeat, ti trembled.

Selene’s fingers touched her weapon. Seraphina narrowed her eyes.

But Kael raised a hand.

“No,” he said calmly. “Let her be. If she is still useful, I will decide when.”

Mireya held his gaze a mont longer before turning away without kneeling. It was a risk few would take. But Kael allowed it.

Not because he respected it.

Because he had already begun working on her mind. Doubt was the seed of obedience.

And Mireya had already been touched by it.

Kael turned back to the others.

“You have made your choice,” he said. “You will serve not as rulers, but as instrunts. The age of bloodlines is over. The age of control has begun.”

The torches flared behind him as if in agreent, casting shadows that danced like serpents. Kael’s silhouette seed to stretch, a towering presence against the flickering walls of history.

Then, from the far end of the hall—a ripple.

Not magical. Not divine.

Sothing else.

The walls darkened. The air turned cold. A shiver passed through even the bravest of n.

Kael turned slowly, his expression unreadable.

And there, erging from the gloom, was the one presence none of them expected.

His mother.

The Queen of the Abyss.

She appeared not with sound, but absence—a void in the air, as if reality itself rejected her arrival. Her form was tall, regal, clad in a dress spun from shadows and wrath. Her eyes, twin pools of obsidian fla, fixed on her son with possessive intensity.

“My darling,” she said, her voice a velvet caress wrapped around blades. “How delightful it is to watch you break them.”

The nobles collapsed to their knees again, this ti not from choice, but instinct. The sheer pressure of her presence was too much to bear.

Kael did not bow.

He turned his head, just slightly. “You weren’t invited.”

“And yet I ca,” she purred. “A mother must watch her child’s coronation.”

“This isn’t a coronation,” Kael replied coldly. “It’s a purge.”

She smiled, stepping closer. “So much like your father. But so much more… mine.”

Selene stiffened. Seraphina moved protectively to Kael’s side. But he raised a hand again.

“Leave us,” he said to the room.

The nobles fled. Even Mireya.

Selene and Seraphina hesitated—then obeyed.

When the chamber was empty, Kael faced the Queen of the Abyss fully.

“You enjoy toying with them,” he said.

“They’re insects,” she said. “But I enjoy watching you crush them more.”

“What do you want?”

She stepped close, her hand brushing his cheek. “You. All of you. Every thought, every conquest, every dark intention. You were always ant to rise above gods and kings. Let the world burn for it.”

Kael didn’t move.

“You’ll interfere, won’t you?” he asked.

“Only if they hurt you,” she replied. “And I will rip the heavens apart if they try.”

He looked past her—through her.

And he smiled.

“Then let them try.”

To be continued...

You are reading Lord of Deception Chapter 163: The Shattered Veil on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Death Notice cover
Trending now

Death Notice

Gluttonous Monk ·Horror

Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoysthebloodshed.He...Readmore Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoystheblo...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.