Font Size
15px

The world was shifting.

Kael felt it in the air—the charged anticipation of an empire on the brink of collapse. The scent of war and rebellion had beco a constant presence, a perfu of fire and blood that wove itself through the city’s narrow alleys and marble boulevards. Towers stood tall but brittle, their banners tattered and blackened by soot. The cries of the hungry clashed with the march of iron-booted soldiers, and above it all, a silence lood—a silence before the fall.

He stood in his war chamber, surrounded by maps inked in red and gold, by correspondence stolen from trembling hands and dying nobles. The Empire’s veins were laid bare before him, twitching with every movent he made.

At his side, Seraphina scanned the latest reports, her fingers dancing across the surface of the table. Outside, the sky was darkening—not just with nightfall, but with sothing heavier. Ominous. Fated.

“The Emperor has summoned the Archons,” she said, her voice cool as the wind off a mountain peak.

Kael didn’t flinch.

“As expected,” he murmured.

“He’s acknowledging you now,” Seraphina continued. “Not as a nuisance. As a threat.”

A slow, calculating smile crept across Kael’s lips. “Not only did I know… I orchestrated it.”

Her eyes narrowed, admiration and suspicion mingling. “You forced his hand.”

Kael turned to her fully, his voice low and asured. “A ruler who acts out of necessity instead of will has already lost. The mont Castiel began reacting, he ceased being the player.”

His fingers hovered over the map, tracing the fragile borders of rebellion blooming in the Empire's eastern districts.

“He beca my pawn.”

Silence followed, heavy with the weight of the ga they played. The kind that shifted not only kingdoms, but belief itself.

“And our next move?” Seraphina asked.

Kael’s voice was almost a whisper. “The fall of an empire does not begin with war. It begins with doubt.”

Far across the city, within the sanctified halls of the Grand Cathedral, High Priestess Aurelia sat draped in gold and silence. The candlelight flickered against her polished armor, though her heart had never felt heavier.

The Council had gathered. Elders, cardinals, mystics. All speaking over one another, each defending crumbling traditions with frantic desperation.

“The riots have reached the holy districts,” an elder hissed. “The people burn the shrines. Our own paladins have refused orders.”

Aurelia’s eyes closed, pain clawing up her spine.

Kael.

His na echoed in her thoughts like the low toll of a funeral bell.

"Because he willed it," she murmured under her breath.

The others fell silent.

"That man is a heretic," another priest spat, rising to his feet. “A blaspher. A devil cloaked in reason.”

And yet…

Aurelia saw it in their eyes. Beneath their rage. Beneath their robes and rituals.

Doubt.

The people listened to Kael. They repeated his words—words that questioned faith, that asked dangerous questions with dangerous logic.

He was not a prophet.

He was worse.

He was believable.

Aurelia looked up, face unreadable. “The Empire has endured plagues, wars, and schisms. It will endure him.”

But even she could feel the truth peeling beneath her words.

And in the stillness, in the incense-filled air where prayers once held weight, only silence answered back.

In the marble heart of the Imperial Palace, Castiel stood alone before a gilded mirror.

He studied the reflection that once commanded nations.

The lines beneath his eyes had deepened. His shoulders no longer carried the armor of youth, but the burden of consequence. His crown—ancient, revered—felt heavier than ever.

Behind him, the chamber was silent but for the flicker of firelight.

Then ca the knock.

He didn’t turn.

“Enter.”

A figure cloaked in shadows stepped forward and knelt low.

“Your Majesty. It is confird.”

Castiel’s reflection didn’t move. “Confird… what?”

The spy swallowed. “Kael… is no ordinary enemy.”

The Emperor’s hand clenched around the hilt of the blade resting against the wall.

“Explain.”

“There are stories, buried deep in old records. Forbidden texts. ntions of a man who rose and fell before this empire was even born. A na… Kael, unchanged across centuries. So say he struck bargains with demons. Others… that he once walked with gods.”

The fire popped behind them.

Castiel turned slowly, his face pale with sothing he would never na: fear.

“Are you telling he’s immortal?”

“I’m telling you, sire,” the spy said carefully, “that Kael may not be playing to win this war. He may be playing for sothing far older. And far more permanent.”

Castiel’s voice was hoarse. “Then we are not facing a rebellion.”

“No, Your Majesty.” The spy bowed his head. “We’re facing a reckoning.”

In the war chamber, Kael stood again at the head of the table, gazing at the Empire through parchnt and shadow.

Seraphina poured him a goblet of wine, placing it beside him as her eyes traced his features.

He looked distant. Cold. Like a storm just before it breaks.

“The Emperor will act soon,” she said softly.

“Let him.”

She paused. “The Archons are no small matter. They’ve slain monsters, crushed rebellions that dared speak your na.”

Kael’s gaze sharpened.

“I am not a na,” he said. “I am a sentence.”

Seraphina’s breath caught.

He looked toward the east, where smoke rose from the noble estates and streets howled with unrest.

“They’ve awoken powers they don’t understand,” he continued. “They believe they’re summoning saviors. But the Archons will find that this ti… they are not standing on sacred ground. They are standing in my shadow.”

She stepped closer, her voice a whisper. “And what if they do not kneel?”

Kael smiled.

“Then they will break.”

Beneath the Cathedral, in the sacred vaults long hidden from even the High Council, Aurelia stood alone.

The ancient to in her hands vibrated faintly with divine resistance, as if it knew it was about to be defied.

Her hands trembled as she turned the pages.

Each line spoke of Kael. Of prophecy. Of the fall of fla to shadow.

Of the prince born from mortal blood, yet destined to wear a crown forged from faith and ash.

And there, scrawled in forgotten ink, were words that made her breath falter:

“When the Emperor begins to doubt, the fall shall begin.

And when the Priestess believes him, the Empire ends.”

Aurelia’s eyes widened.

She was already doubting.

In the highest tower of the palace, Castiel stood alone beneath a blood-red moon.

Below, the city burned.

The cries of his people rose to him like a dirge.

Kael had not co for war.

He had co to reshape belief.

To devour legacy.

The Emperor closed his eyes, his voice barely a whisper.

“Forgive … if I am too late.”

To be continued…

You are reading Lord of Deception Chapter 290 – The Weight of a Crown 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

Supreme Magus cover
Similar genre

Supreme Magus

Legion20 ·Action

DerekMcCoywasamanthatsincefromyoungagehadtofacemanyadversities.Oftenforcedtosettlewithsurvivingratherthaliving,hadfinallyfoundhisplaceintheworld,un...

Top-tier Unruly Master cover
Trending now

Top-tier Unruly Master

Be Qin Sanchi ·Other

WhenDingFanopenedhiseyesagain,everythingbeforehimhadchanged.ACultivatorrebornonEarth,hefoundhimselfinthedespisedbodyofadisgracedheir.Fistsstrikinga...

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