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The silence that fell over the plaza of Azurefall was heavier than the roar of the battle had been.

The wind, which had howled through the broken gate like a wounded beast, died down to a mournful whisper. The diamond dust, the only remains of the terrifying Demon Commander, glittered in the pale, returning sunlight, settling like snow on the blood-soaked cobblestones.

In the center of that glittering field, Elara Zephyrwind swayed.

The cosmic light in her eyes had vanished, leaving them a dull, exhausted violet. The starlight robes, woven from the fabric of the universe, flickered and dissolved, retreating into the ether, leaving her in her simple, worn leather tunic. The massive silver book, which had hovered with the weight of judgent, snapped shut with a soft thump and fell into her waiting hand.

She looked small. Without the aura of the ’Azure Devil,’ she looked fragile.

She took one step toward the broken body of Magister Kellan, her hand reaching out.

"Kellan..." she whispered, her voice raspy.

Then, her strength gave out. She didn’t fall, but she sank. Her legs folded beneath her, and she dropped to her knees on the hard stones, her head bowing, her chest heaving with the desperate need for air. She braced herself with one hand against the cobblestones, trembling violently, fighting to stay conscious.

"ELARA!"

The scream ca from the wall. Dain Ragnor didn’t think. He didn’t calculate. He vaulted over the battlents, a drop that should have broken his legs. He landed in a roll, his armor clanking, and sprinted across the plaza, his boots kicking up sprays of demon ash and diamond dust.

He reached her a second before she could tip over. He didn’t treat her like a porcelain doll; he treated her like a comrade. He dropped to a knee beside her, his massive, calloused hand gripping her shoulder to steady her.

"I got you," he gasped, his voice shaking. "I got you, Mrs. Zephyrwind. Just breathe."

She looked up at him. Her face was gray, beads of sweat rolling down her temple, but her eyes were open. They were lucid. She looked at Dain—really looked at him—and a ghost of a smile touched her pale lips.

"Dain," she whispered. "You... grew into your shield."

"LIA!" Dain roared, ignoring the complint, looking back at the wall. "DIC! NOW!"

He didn’t need to shout. Lia was already moving. She scrambled down the rubble of the gate, ignoring the danger, ignoring the remaining demons that were fleeing back into the darkness. Kaelan, clutching his one-ard shoulder, stumbled after her, his face a mask of shock. Ilya dropped from the wall in a swirl of shadow, landing silently beside Dain.

They gathered around her, the broken remnants of Squad 7, encircling the woman who had just rewritten reality to save them.

Lia dropped to the ground, her hands glowing with frantic green light as she hovered them over Elara’s back. "Her pulse is racing... but it’s weak," Lia whispered, panic edging her voice. "She’s not injured, but she’s... she’s drained. Her core is almost empty. She used everything she had."

"I’m fine," Elara breathed, though her voice was barely audible. She tried to push herself up, but failed, leaning back against Dain’s arm. "Just... tired. So tired."

Her violet eyes drifted to Kaelan. She saw the empty sleeve. She saw the blood.

"You..." she whispered, looking at the boy who had tornted her son. "You lost an arm."

Kaelan couldn’t et her gaze. He stood swaying, leaning on his staff, tears of sha and awe cutting tracks through the gri on his face. "I... I did," he choked out. "But we’re alive. Because of you."

Ilya stared at Elara. The silver-haired girl, who worshipped power, who had sought it in the darkest corners of magic, looked utterly humbled. Her analytical mind was spinning, connecting dots she hadn’t even known existed.

"That sword..." Ilya whispered, her voice trembling. "That wasn’t a spell. She didn’t conjure ice. She... she summoned the concept of Winter. She enforced a Law on a being that eats magic."

She looked up at Dain, her silver eyes wide with a terrifying realization.

"Dain... do you realize who this is? The ’Azure Devil’. I read about her in the forbidden archives. The descriptions... the starlight robes, the violet eyes, the conceptual magic... she wasn’t just a soldier. She was a catastrophe. They say she ended the Third Abyssal War by herself."

Ilya paused, her brow furrowed in confusion as she looked back at Elara. "But... the books. The records described the power, they described the feats... but the na of her was not ntioned in the books. It was redacted. Blanked out. Why?"

"Because," a wet, ragged voice rasped from the rubble nearby, "if the world knew her na... the war would never have ended."

Magister Kellan, broken, shattered, but miraculously alive, was trying to drag himself toward them. His armor was gone, his chest a ruin of bandages and blood.

"Magister!" Lia gasped, torn between her two patients.

"I’m fine, girl," Kellan wheezed, coughing blood. He looked at Elara, who was watching him with sad, tired eyes.

"They erased her na," Kellan said, his voice gaining a little strength, "because she asked them to. Because she had sothing to protect."

He looked at the students. "Power like that... it doesn’t just kill demons. It calls them. The Demon Lords... they fear her. And what they fear, they hunt."

Kellan’s gaze shifted to Elara, softening. "She put down the sword... she locked away the Devil... to hide him. To let Kairen have a life where he wasn’t hunted. She chose to be a mother instead of a god. She erased her own legend so her son wouldn’t have to live in its shadow... or its target."

Kaelan Brightblade let out a choked, hysterical sound. He slid down to sit on the rubble, clutching his stump. "Kairen," he whispered. "The ’dud’. The ’talentless’ boy."

He looked at Elara, the woman kneeling on the cobblestones, gasping for breath. The irony was a physical weight, crushing the last of his arrogance into dust.

"His father was Torren, the Hero," Kaelan murmured, staring at the sky. "His mother is Elara, the Azure Devil. And I... I called him weak. I told him he didn’t belong."

He closed his eyes. "Gods... he was royalty. He was the son of gods. And he let spit on him."

"He wasn’t royalty," Dain growled softly, his grip on Elara’s shoulder gentle but firm. "He was just Kairen. And he was stronger than all of us without ever lifting a finger."

Elara reached out, her hand trembling, and took Kellan’s bloodied gauntlet.

"I’m awake, Kellan," she whispered. "But the mask... it’s broken."

Kellan nodded grimly. "I know. You lit the beacon, Elara. You saved the city... but you set the sky on fire."

He looked at the sky, as if expecting a shadow to fall over the sun.

"The war hasn’t ended," Kellan whispered. "It has just... escalated."

Far away, the silence of Aethelgard was no longer peaceful. It was suffocating.

Kairen Zephyrwind sat on the mossy ground where the psychic backlash had thrown him. His chest heaved, his skin clammy with cold sweat. The connection was broken, the image of the plaza gone, but the afterimage was burned into his retinas.

The silver light. The ice sword. The face of his mother, transford into a being of terrifying, absolute power.

"You knew," Kairen whispered.

He didn’t look up. He stared at his own hands, the hands that had just learned to hold a single thread of Essence. They felt small. Clumsy.

"You knew who she was."

Sage Vanamali stood a few paces away, his back to the crystal, his face grave. He did not deny it.

"I knew," the Sage said.

Kairen scrambled to his feet, a flash of anger cutting through his shock. "Why didn’t you tell ?! All my life... I thought she was just... Mom! She worked in the archives! She made soup! She... she was terrified when I joined the Academy!"

He paced the small platform, his hands in his hair. "I thought she was scared because she was weak! Because she lost Dad! But she... she’s that? She could have stopped the raid! She could have saved everyone on the island!"

He spun on Vanamali, his violet eyes blazing with accusation. "Why did she hide it? Why did she let believe I was nothing, when I ca from that?"

"Because she loves you," Vanamali said. His voice was not defensive. It was sad.

The Sage walked to the edge of the water, looking at his reflection. "Power, Kairen... true power... has a gravity. It pulls. It distorts. And it attracts."

He turned to Kairen. "Your mother, Elara... she is a Singularity. Her magic, the Conceptual Arts of the Scribe, is not rely strong. It is a violation of the natural order. It rewrites the rules of the Essence Web. When she uses it, she shines like a supernova in a dark forest."

Vanamali gestured to the sky, to the hidden world beyond the mists. "There are things in the dark, Kairen. Things older and hungrier than Grak-thul. The Demon Lords. The Void Hands. They hunt light. Seventeen years ago, your mother and father fought them. They won... but at a terrible cost. They realized that as long as they shone, the war would never end. And more importantly... you would never be safe."

Kairen stopped pacing. "?"

"You," Vanamali confird. "You, the child with the Garuda Seal. You, the vessel of an even greater, more dangerous potential. If the demons had known of you... if they had connected the ’Azure Devil’ to the child she bore... they would not have sent armies. They would have sent assassins. They would have leveled the city to get to your crib."

The Sage’s eyes softened. "So she made a choice. The hardest choice a warrior can make. She put down her weapon. She extinguished her light. She beca ’just’ a mother, ’just’ an archivist, so that you could be ’just’ a boy. She endured the insults, the pity, the grief of a quiet life... to give you a chance to grow up in the shade."

Kairen sank back to his knees. The weight of it settled on him. The ’fear’ in his mother’s eyes when he joined the Academy... it hadn’t been weakness. It had been terror. She knew what was out there. She knew what she was hiding him from.

"She saved ," Kairen whispered. "Every day of my life, she was saving ."

"Yes," Vanamali said.

Then, the Sage’s face grew hard. The compassion vanished, replaced by the cold, strategic reality of their situation.

"But that protection is now gone."

Vanamali walked over to Kairen, looming over him. "Do you understand what happened today? She did not just save the city. She revealed herself. To save your friends, to stop the siege, she had to open the book. She had to use the Stylus."

"She lit the beacon," Kairen said, rembering Kellan’s words from his vision, rembering the feeling of the web tearing.

"She did more than light it," Vanamali corrected grimly. "She set the sky on fire. The Demon King, Lord Malakor... he is not blind. He felt the pulse from the sewers when you fought the Stalker. He suspected a catalyst. But now?"

Vanamali pointed toward the invisible direction of Azurefall. "Now he knows exactly where it is. He knows the Azure Devil has returned. He knows she is protecting sothing. The shadows are no longer hunting in the dark, Kairen. They have a map. They have a target."

"The Void Hand," Kairen breathed, the na Vanamali had ntioned before chilling his blood. "The assassin."

"It is coming," Vanamali said. "Malakor will not send another army to break against her wall. He will send a knife to cut her throat in the dark. He will send the Void Hand to Azurefall. And your mother... she is drained. She is empty. She cannot fight what is coming."

Kairen stood up. The fear was there, yes. But the indecision was gone. The ’dud’ was gone.

"Then I have to be ready," Kairen said. His voice was steady. "If she can’t fight... I have to."

He looked at his hand, then at Vanamali.

"Teach ," Kairen commanded. "The Second Seal. The opening. The closing. The sorrow. I don’t care how much it hurts. I don’t care if it breaks . I have to master it."

He looked toward the mist, toward his ho.

"She spent seventeen years hiding ," Kairen said, his violet eyes burning with a new, cold fire. "It’s ti I stepped into the light."

Vanamali looked at the boy—no, the young man—standing before him. He saw the resemblance to Torren in the jaw, the resemblance to Elara in the eyes. But he saw sothing else, too. Sothing new.

"Very well," Vanamali said. "The ti for gentle lessons is over. Prepare yourself, Zephyrwind. We are going to open the gate... and we are not going to close it until you can hold the sun."

You are reading They Said I Had No Magic, But My Mark Holds a Secret Chapter 54: The weight of the crown on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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