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He appeared to be a man, but one wrapped in perpetual motion. Water flowed around and through him like liquid armor, never still, never settling, creating patterns that spoke of tides and storms and the inexorable pull of lunar gravity. His features shifted constantly beneath the aquatic veil, sotis young and beautiful, sotis ancient and terrible, but always carrying the weight of oceanic depths.

Around his throne, rmaids circled in an endless dance.

David’s breath caught in his throat. These weren’t the sanitized creatures of children’s tales, but beings of predatory grace and alien beauty. Their scales shifted through every shade of blue and green, while their eyes held the cold intelligence of apex predators. They moved through the water-thick air with sinuous purpose, each one carrying delicacies to their master, exotic fruits that glowed with their own light, cups filled with nectar that sparkled like liquid starlight, and other offerings that David’s mind refused to fully process.

The being on the throne accepted their ministrations with the casual entitlent of one who had never known want, never experienced denial. When he fed, reality itself seed to pause in deference to his pleasure.

Then those eyes, vast as ocean trenches, deep as the spaces between continents, fell upon David.

The recognition was imdiate and terrible. This was not so random entity David had stumbled upon in his fractured mindscape. This was sothing that knew him, sothing that had been waiting for this mont.

The pressure hit David like the weight of the entire ocean compressed into a single point.

His knees buckled, then gave out entirely as he was driven face-first into the non-ground of his mindscape. Every bone in his body scread in protest as forces beyond his comprehension pressed down upon him with the inexorable patience of geological ti. His shadows, usually so responsive to his will, fled like startled animals, leaving him exposed and helpless.

Blood began streaming from his eyes as vessels burst under the impossible strain. When he tried to speak, to demand answers or beg for rcy, no sound erged. His jaw was clamped shut by pressure that could have crushed diamond into powder.

This is what true power feels like, a corner of his mind observed with detached fascination even as the rest of him scread in agony. This is what I’ve been pretending to be.

Then, like salvation given form, sothing cold wrapped around his body.

The relief was instantaneous and overwhelming. Where the oceanic being’s pressure had been crushing and alien, this new presence carried a different kind of weight, still imnse, still beyond his ability to resist, but sohow... protective. The sa force that could have annihilated him was instead cradling him, shielding him from the worst of the other entity’s attention.

A hand settled on his head with infinite gentleness, guiding him until his face rested against sothing impossibly soft. The scent that reached him was familiar yet impossible to place, winter forests and starlight, ancient magic and newer mysteries.

"Who," the voice above him asked, each word carrying temperatures that could freeze fla itself, "gave you permission to test what is mine?"

David tried to look up, to see the face of his protector, but the hand on his head prevented any movent. All he could make out were pale thighs beneath fabric that seed woven from moonbeams and shadow, and the suggestion of a form that existed partially in his reality and partially sowhere else entirely.

The voice was familiar. Hauntingly, impossibly familiar. But from where?

From his throne of living water, the oceanic being’s attention shifted from David to his protector. When he spoke, his voice carried the rhythm of waves against distant shores, beautiful and terrible in equal asure.

"Nyaxalia," he said, and the na resonated through the fractured mindscape like a tuning fork struck in a cathedral. "Why does a man I have never blessed interfere with my descendant?"

Descendant?

The word hit David like lightning, but as the shock faded, understanding dawned. Of course, the oceanic being wasn’t referring to him at all. This wasn’t his mindscape that was fracturing and bleeding dinsions. Sohow, he’d been pulled into Seraphina’s consciousness during their Sacred Essence Cultivation.

The realization sent another wave of disorientation through him. If this was Seraphina’s mindscape, then she was the descendant in question. But that raised more questions than answers, he’d never seen any indication that she carried such specific bloodline.

"Nyaxalia," David whispered, the na falling from his lips with sudden, terrible recognition.

The Sovereign of the Enchanted Veil. The goddess, shrouded in mysteries that even scholars feared to investigate too deeply. She was here, in Seraphina’s mindscape, protecting him from another being of equal cosmic significance.

But why? What was he to her that she would risk confrontation with another Sovereign?

Was it is because of their agreent, he pondered knowing fully well how a snake she was.

Above him, Nyaxalia’s grip tightened slightly, her presence wrapping around him like armor woven from shadow and hex-touched power. When she spoke again, her voice carried undertones that made reality itself tremble.

"This one bears marks of passage between realms," she said, each word asured and deliberate. "His soul carries fragnts of powers that predate your blessing, [INCOMPREHENSIBLE]. Whatever claim you believe you hold, it is secondary to older obligations."

The oceanic Sovereign’s na ca through as nothing but static, a sound that David’s mortal consciousness couldn’t process. He was hearing divine discourse he had no right to witness, protected only by Nyaxalia’s will.

"Older obligations?" The unnad Sovereign laughed, and the sound was like tsunami waves breaking against cliffsides. "This soul reeks of your touch, shadow weaver. Do not pretend your protection stems from anything but personal interest."

The air around David grew thick with hexed energy, dark magic coiling through the space like living smoke. The very atmosphere seed to pulse with curses held in check, spells that could unravel reality given form.

"My interests," Nyaxalia said with deadly quiet, "are not subject to your judgnt."

David found himself caught between two forces that could reshape continents with a thought, trapped in a mindscape that wasn’t even his own, the battlefield for a conflict he didn’t understand. All he knew was that his existence,whatever it truly was,had managed to attract the attention of beings whose very presence made his carefully cultivated power seem like a child’s toy.

And sowhere in the chaos of revelation and divine attention, one thought echoed through his mind with crystal clarity:

What the hell have I gotten myself into?

You are reading THE GENERAL'S DISGRACED HEIR Chapter 405: THE SOVEREIGN’S GAZE on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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