Font Size
15px

The war council had dispersed, yet its echoes lingered in Kael’s mind like the taste of old blood—coppery, sharp, and persistent.

Night had fallen over the imperial capital, but the palace was not asleep. No place where power lived could ever be truly silent. The corridors murmured with the steps of unseen guards, the rustle of silks behind closed doors, the scratch of quills docunting agendas soaked in deception.

And yet, tonight, the air felt different.

Not quiet.

Tense.

As if the world itself held its breath.

Kael stood alone in his private chambers, tall windows casting moonlight across marble floors laced with imperial gold. The fireplace crackled softly, shadows dancing across the high walls, their movents too precise, too fluid—as though they were aware of their own presence.

He didn’t need to look over his shoulder.

He already knew.

It was not a presence like the Abyss—drenched in fire, lust, and ancient hunger. Nor was it celestial—there was no righteousness, no oppressive sanctity pressing down on his spine.

This was sothing else.

Sothing older.

The room chilled. Not from temperature, but from pressure. A soft whisper—not carried by air, but thought—brushed the edge of his mind.

"You are being watched, O Prince of Shadows."

The voice was soft, feminine yet formless—neither old nor young, yet saturated with eternity. It didn’t echo aloud. It echoed through existence.

Kael didn’t flinch. His posture remained composed, his gaze steady on the fire, though his senses sharpened to a blade’s edge.

This one is not testing . It’s... announcing itself.

He exhaled slowly, lips barely parting.

“You speak, yet you hide. If you wish to be acknowledged, then step into the light.”

A ripple of dark amusent spread through the chamber like spilled ink.

"The light is not where my kind dwell."

From the corners of the room, the shadows thickened—not cast by fire or form, but conjured by intention. They pooled like oil, slow and sinuous, refusing shape. No limbs. No faces.

Only eyes.

Dozens of them. All different. All watching.

So were vast and hollow, like stars dying in silence. Others were slit like serpents, or round like a child’s gaze—all wrong, all alien.

Kael turned toward them, unblinking.

“Then what is it you want?”

A pause.

And then pressure—a ntal gravity pressing on his thoughts, searching not for weakness, but depth. Testing.

But Kael’s will was sovereign.

He had broken angels with words. Outwitted emperors. Dismantled gods with logic alone.

He would not be asured like prey.

The thing noticed. Its presence... tilted. And when it spoke again, there was a shift.

Not mockery.

But reverence.

"Not what I want, Kael Valerius. What you are destined to claim."

The flas in the hearth scread briefly—rising tall and blue for a single breath—before dying back down to a pale glow.

Kael’s expression did not change, but his mind spun.

It knows my na. Not as title. Not as identity. As destiny.

The voice grew deeper, resonant, as if it now spoke through the foundations of the palace itself.

"The gods watch you with wary eyes. The Abyss clings to you like a lover, desperate to keep what it believes it owns."

The fire flickered violently again.

“But we... we have always seen you for what you truly are.”

Kael took a step forward.

His own shadow split beneath him—reaching in the opposite direction.

The air trembled.

“And what, precisely, do you think I am?”

The answer ca not in words—but in mory not his own.

For an instant—barely longer than a blink—Kael saw stars die. Planets collapse. Great wings of silver and void battling in realms beyond matter. He saw thrones atop non-existence.

And he saw a figure—not himself, but familiar—standing at the edge of everything, neither god nor devil, rewriting order itself.

Then it was gone.

The entity’s voice returned, no longer a whisper.

"You are the storm that will decide the fate of gods."

Silence fell.

Not the absence of sound.

The absence of certainty.

The shadows began to fade, retreating like respectful servants. The presence, too, lessened—pulling itself back from the edge of Kael’s reality.

But not before one final whisper brushed his ear, intimate and cold:

“When the final veil falls, rember this mont.”

Then it was gone.

No shimr. No exit.

Just absence.

And for the first ti in days, Kael was alone again.

The flas burned normally. The chamber returned to its proper stillness. No servants outside stirred. No alarms sounded.

It had left no trace.

Yet Kael stood there, still watching the fireplace, lost in thought.

Not demon. Not divine. Sothing else.

A third force.

One that did not fear gods.

One that did not kneel to the Abyss.

One that watched... and waited.

He slowly sat in his chair by the fire, fingers interlaced. His golden eyes narrowed, not with concern—

—but with curiosity.

A slow, quiet laugh escaped him.

“Interesting.”

He stood again and moved to his window, looking out over the silent, starlit city. Sowhere beyond the capital, beyond the stars, beyond the understanding of angels or fiends—

they were watching.

And they had chosen to whisper to him.

Kael did not feel fear.

He felt sothing else.

Opportunity.

The world had shifted again.

And Kael was already three moves ahead.

To be continued...

You are reading Lord of Deception Chapter 186 – Whispers of the Unseen 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

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