Font Size
15px

The sacred bells of the High Temple tolled across the sleeping city, each chi solemn and lingering—as if mourning a loss the world hadn’t yet noticed. Their song was supposed to bring comfort. To call the faithful. To remind all that the gods watched over them still.

But tonight, their sound felt like a requiem.

Inside the towering spires of the Cathedral of Light, the sanctum shimred with divine runes etched into ancient marble. Angelic statues watched from the shadows, carved wings stretching upward like hands begging heaven for rcy.

And beneath their judgnt stood Elyndra.

She was once the symbol of unwavering faith. A beacon of divine purpose. A Saintess anointed by the High Gods themselves.

Now, she trembled.

Moonlight filtered through the stained glass, illuminating her golden hair and white ceremonial robes. Her erald eyes, once radiant with celestial fire, now glimred with conflict. Her hands, steady in battle and prayer alike, were clasped tight at her chest, fingers curled over a trembling heartbeat.

This place used to feel like ho.

Now it felt like a prison.

The altar before her glowed faintly, its divine glyphs pulsing with the heartbeat of the gods. It was here she had perford miracles, spoken prophecy, and led a thousand prayers. It was here she had promised to banish darkness.

But darkness had not co as a beast or demon.

It had co in the form of a man.

A whisper stirred behind her, soft as breath.

“Saintess Elyndra,” the voice murmured.

She spun, her breath catching.

From the far end of the sanctum, a shadow walked forward—slow, deliberate, elegant. Black cloak rippling behind him like liquid midnight, eyes glowing faintly crimson beneath the moon’s soft gaze.

Kael.

He should not have been able to cross this threshold. The temple was warded by ancient divine seals, blessed by Archons themselves. The purity of this place rejected all who bore the taint of the abyss.

And yet… he was here.

Not crawling in defiance. Not cloaked in illusion.

He walked like he belonged.

Her voice cracked. “How—how did you—”

“I didn’t break the wards,” he replied smoothly, voice calm as polished obsidian. “They simply didn’t stop .”

“That’s impossible,” she whispered, stepping back. “You’re... you’re darkness incarnate. This place should have burned you from existence.”

Kael tilted his head slightly, amused. “Perhaps it’s not I who’s changed... but the sanctum itself.”

The divine light dimd slightly, as if even the holy magic recoiled from him. The stained glass above flickered as shadows danced across the vaulted ceiling. The great statues of angels didn’t weep—but their stone expressions suddenly looked less resolute.

“Or maybe,” Kael continued, eyes locked onto hers, “this temple no longer considers you untouchable.”

Her breath caught.

“Lies,” she managed, though it sounded hollow.

Kael stepped closer. “Then tell , Elyndra—why haven’t the gods answered your prayers for weeks?”

She froze.

“I feel their silence in you,” he whispered. “The sa way I feel your guilt. The sa way I feel… your longing.”

“Stop,” she said, her voice shaking.

“Why?” He took another step. “You used to pray every night to silence the thoughts I left in your mind. Did it work?”

She clenched her fists. “I am the Saintess of Light. I was chosen.”

“And yet you hesitate,” he said, now only a few feet away. “When the High Priest ordered a purge, you didn’t speak. When the oracles called for holy war, you stayed your voice. And when I stood before you in chains, you didn’t condemn .”

Elyndra’s voice was barely audible. “I should have.”

“But you didn’t,” Kael replied, his tone softer now. “Because sowhere in that heart of yours, you knew the truth. Not all darkness is evil. Not all light is good. And not all gods are worth kneeling to.”

She felt her knees weaken. She hated him for knowing her so intimately. For exposing the rot she couldn’t speak aloud even to herself.

“I don’t know who I am anymore…”

Kael took her hand.

She should’ve pulled away. Scread. Run.

But her hand remained.

He drew her forward slowly until the divine sigils beneath them dimd to a cold gray. A long sliver of moonlight pierced the broken stained glass above, bathing them both in a cold glow. Elyndra’s robes fluttered, touched by a breeze that had no wind.

Her erald eyes searched his. “What are you doing to ?”

“Nothing,” he said. “I am only offering a choice. One your gods never gave you.”

“I can’t fall,” she whispered.

“You’re not falling,” Kael murmured. “You’re ascending. You were never ant to be a servant. You were ant to be sovereign.”

He brought her fingers to his lips and kissed them. Not lecherously. Reverently.

Elyndra gasped—but didn’t recoil.

He leaned closer, and she could feel his breath warm against her cheek.

“You have the power to beco more than a symbol,” he whispered. “But first, you must break free of your chains.”

Her voice trembled. “What if I can’t?”

Kael’s eyes softened. “Then I’ll break them for you.”

And in that mont, sothing snapped. Not physically. Not magically.

But spiritually.

It was the sound of belief unraveling.

She didn’t speak. She simply lowered her head—then slowly leaned into his touch.

No prayers.

No light.

Only silence and the sound of her heartbeat matching his.

Beneath the Sacred Citadel—hours later…

High Priest Corval slamd his hand on the marble table. “He was inside the sanctum!”

The High Council of Light stared in stunned silence.

“Impossible,” one of the robed elders murmured. “The seals were intact. The sacred sigils—”

“Failed!” Corval barked, voice cracking with fury. “He walked through the Temple like it was his throne room!”

Archbishop Vael frowned. “And the Saintess?”

Corval’s face twitched. “She... did not resist him.”

Murmurs rippled through the chamber like wind through dying leaves.

“She is faltering,” whispered one. “The divine favor is leaving her.”

“She is being corrupted,” said another.

Corval’s eyes burned with fanatic zeal. “Then we must act. Before the rot spreads.”

Vael glanced at the others. “You’re proposing we… remove her?”

“I propose we purge her,” Corval said coldly. “Saintess or not. If she has given herself to the heretic, then she is no longer the chosen of the gods.”

“But she is the pillar of the faithful. If we destroy her—”

“Then we destroy the foundation to rebuild it,” Corval said, eyes gleaming. “Better to burn the house down than let it beco his temple.”

A long, tense silence fell.

And in that silence, the war of gods and n edged one step closer.

Back in the sanctum...

Elyndra stood alone before the altar once more. Kael was gone.

Yet his presence lingered like the taste of night on her lips.

She looked at her hands. The divine glow was still there—but it flickered now. Flickered like a candle in a storm. She could still channel miracles. She could still speak holy tongues.

But for the first ti, she wondered whether she should.

She no longer prayed.

And the gods no longer answered.

Above, the moon watched in silence—silver and patient.

A witness to the Saintess’s first steps away from divinity.

And toward freedom.

To be continued...

You are reading Lord of Deception Chapter 332: The Saintess Beneath the Moon 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

Pokémon Court cover
Similar genre

Pokémon Court

Sounding Stream ·Action

SootopolisCity,atraditionalTrainerfoughtabattleagainstWallace,therepresentativeof...Readmore SootopolisCity,atraditionalTrainerfoughtabattleagainst...

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