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Chapter 488: A Great Gathering

ARTHUR LEYWIN

It was Lord Eccleiah who met us inside the entrance to Indrath Castle, not Kezess. Although I wasn’t surprised by his presence, I was pretty damned surprised to be there at all, regardless of which asuran lord stood in front of me. I had expected Kezess to shut down Veruhn’s idea—that I should be recognized as a new branch of the asuran race—immediately. Instead, he had agreed to hear the other great lords out, then he and Myre had left.

Now, barely a day after he threatened to murder me, he would be presiding over a meeting where his peers discussed the possibility of my becoming one of them…

“Lord Arthur, Lady Sylvie, so good to see you both again,” Veruhn said, smiling like he meant it and waving us forward excitedly, the skin around his milky white eyes wrinkling.

I peered into those eyes, wondering just what kind of machinations hid behind the cloudy film.

“Hey, I’m here too,” Regis said. My companion was in the form of a large shadow wolf, his back coming up above my hip. Purple flames shimmered around his neck and along his tail, and his bright eyes flicked from face to face, marking each guard and Veruhn himself, vigilant despite his flippantness.

“Well of course you are. You three make up a special kind of trinity, don’t you?” The old leviathan sighed, his thoughts seeming to turn elsewhere. After a long moment, he gestured for us to follow, turned on his heel, and marched quickly along the entrance hall.

There was little time to look around or consider where I was. My mind was occupied with the many potential ways this meeting could go wrong. Since the effects of King’s Gambit, even powered only partially, allowed me to follow several of these threads at once, it also enhanced my ability to delve into the undercurrent of worry.

Veruhn greeted several of the dragons we passed by as he led us deeper into the castle. Although they were respectful to him, most eyes lingered on Sylvie instead. Servants and guards bowed deeply, and a few asuras who might have been Indraths or courtiers from other clans seemed to barely constrain themselves from rushing up to meet her.

I sometimes forget that you’re such a stranger to your own people, I thought as an asura with radiant blond hair and lilac eyes tripped over his own feet as he tried to bow but forgot to stop walking first.

Sylvie gave the young man an empathetic smile as we walked past. ‘I can’t help but wonder if that otherness was on purpose. My grandfather didn’t know who I was, really, or what I would become. Keeping me at arms length—a curiosity rather than a member of the family—created a buffer to ensure I didn’t negatively impact the Indrath clan or Epheotus.’

Padding quietly beside me, Regis looked up at Sylvie. ‘The dude’s scared of what you represent. Change, an alternative path, an existence outside his little bubble.’ His tongue lolled out of the side of his mouth as he grinned. ‘He’s right to be. The prodigal princess returned.’ Regis snorted. ‘Two princesses, in fact.’

As Veruhn led us, he kept up a steady stream of small talk, providing facts about the other inhabitants of the castle, the portraits we passed, and the history of Clan Indrath and Kezess. I listened with one branch of my thoughts, but my main focus remained on preparing for the following meeting.

‘You know, Regis, you could be a princess too, if you wanted,’ Sylvie thought back to our companion. ‘If Arthur becomes Lord Leywin, and you are born directly to him, then you become a princess.’

‘Excuse me, but I am a magnificent weapon of untold destruction!’ With a snort, Regis padded ahead, moving to walk beside Veruhn.

‘That’s no reason why you can’t wear a tiara.’ She glanced at me. ‘Especially if you choose one that matches Arthur’s.’

I caught Sylvie’s eye, and we both smiled. Some of the tension eased.

Veruhn led us out onto a balcony that overlooked the cliffside. Although blue skies stretched away in every direction, a carpet of white-gray clouds hid the distant ground. “We’ll take a shortcut, I think.” He lifted up from the ground and drifted like a wisp of cloud, moving slowly upward.

Regis became incorporeal and moved into my core before Sylvie and I followed. Despite his claims of taking a shortcut, Veruhn’s flight was unhurried, like mist on a gentle wind. He pointed out windows and turrets, statues and engravings, and even stopped to admire the nest of a small bird with shimmering black and red feathers.

“Mountain Wings,” Veruhn explained with a look of pure, childish fascination as his milky eyes stared at the bird. “Also called the stonecunning swallow or cliff swallow. They only live here, although they usually do not nest this high, preferring the cliffs of Mount Geolus below.” He turned his head toward Sylvie. “They were a favorite of your mother’s.”

Sylvie raised a hand toward the bird in its nest, hesitated, and pulled back. It watched her warily with beetle-black eyes. “It’s lovely.”

Veruhn drifted onward, leading us toward a high balcony in one of the many towers. He landed lightly as a feather, then turned his face up toward the sun as he waited for us to land as well. “Ah. A beautiful day for politics.” One brow raised, he faced me. “Are you ready, Arthur?”

I considered everything I knew—and the vast ocean of what I didn’t—and gave the old leviathan a tight-lipped smile. “I suppose we will know soon enough.”

The balcony doors, made of glass or crystal framed in ornate coiling vines of silver, opened as Veruhn approached. The mana and aether were so thick in the air that it nearly hid the powerful signatures of those present within the chamber beyond.

It took a moment for my eyes to adjust to the light as I stepped into the tower behind Veruhn. In that twilight moment where it felt like I moved between worlds, the hair on the back of my neck stood and my skin roughened with goosebumps as I felt the hungry eyes of predators following me.

The airy chamber clarified.

Within, elegant white arches wrapped around the circular chamber, each one carefully carved and molded to look like the branches of thin trees. These opened to similarly arched windows and balconies identical to the one I’d just stepped in from. The light of these many windows and glass doors reflected around the room, making it almost as bright within the chamber as without.

A large charwood table in the shape of a near-full moon dominated the space. Its darkness was in stark contrast to the brightness of the walls and ceiling. Seven ornate, high-backed chairs sat equidistant along the rounded side of the table, while a silver and gold throne with gleaming gemstones floated several inches off the floor at the flat side.

We were not the first to arrive.

An asura with dusky skin and smoky orange hair pulled back in a bun stood from the nearest chair. He wore a flowing sort of robe reminiscent of the kimonos of Earth, expertly embroidered in shimmering thread that looked like true flame against the silky black fabric. His gray eyes seemed to take all of me in within a breath, and then he turned and gave a shallow bow to Lord Eccleiah: the gesture of an equal.

“Lord Novis of Clan Avignis,” I said, addressing the phoenix member of the Great Eight with a bow that was only slightly deeper than that shared by Veruhn and this phoenix. I hadn’t been named an asura—or the lord of an entire clan or race—just yet. It was important not to come across as too presumptuous, but I also couldn’t afford to be seen as weak or timorous, either.

“Arthur Leywin, a pleasure to—”

“Hello!” a sharp, airy voice cut across Lord Avignis’s words.

The speaker was a small woman with light blue skin that seemed to…move, almost as if she weren’t quite corporeal. She had drifted out of her chair and was floating across the massive black table, bobbing around like an apple in a shallow stream. Her youthful face was split by a wide grin, revealing brilliantly white teeth that came to points. Her misty blue-gray eyes sparkled with enthusiasm as she did a kind of midair curtsey. Her dress, which seemed like nothing so much as a sort of windy mist that she’d wrapped herself in, fluttered at the motion.

One small hand brushed through white hair that similarly floated around her head like a cloud. “I’m Lady Aerind, but as a soon-to-be member of the Great Eight—or Nine, but that doesn’t work quite the same—you can call me Nephele!”

Before I could respond, the sylph did a flip in the air, flew to the room’s third occupant, and wrapped her arm around the extremely tall woman’s shoulder. “And this is Mads!”

The woman stood stiffly, her features practically carved of wood. As I looked more closely, I thought I could see faint lines in her skin that did, in fact, remind me of tree bark. “Please, Lady Aerind, show some sense of decorum,” she said, stepping sideways to break free of the grinning sylph. “Greetings, Arthur Leywin. I am Lady Mapellia, representative of my clan and all the hamadryads among the other great clans of Epheotus. You are…welcome.”

There was a slight hesitation that suggested quite strongly that I was not, in fact, welcome, and I looked more closely at the high lady of the hamadrayds. There was no flicker of hostility in her butter-yellow eyes despite the severity of her expression and attitude. Outwardly she would have been intimidating, but the simple river-blue gown that clung to her reedy figure and volumes of green hair that fell in thick ringlets down over her bare shoulders served to undercut this impression.

I repeated my careful bow. “Thank you, Lady Mapellia.”

“Mads!” Lady Aerind said in a stage whisper before bobbing back to her seat.

“My name is Morwenna, Lady Aerind,” the hamadryad said in exasperation.

At this moment, another asura appeared from a stairway beyond an open set of doors carved of some light-colored wood and bound, like much of the room, in silver vines. At first I thought he must be a servant or attendant, mostly because of the fact that he took the stairs instead of flying or simply appearing in the meeting chamber. Then, I fully registered him.

Although dressed plainly in a beige shirt that stretched over his broad chest and bulging muscles, the belt that kept up his leather breeches was inlaid with gold and studded with strange, multicolored gemstones. His beard was long and bushy but otherwise well maintained, and he wore diamond studs in his ears. There was something very solid about the man, and his mana signature immediately reminded me of Wren.

“Ah, Radix, perfect timing as always,” Veruhn said, putting his hand on my back and gently guiding me around the table. Behind me, I heard Lord Avignis introduce himself to Sylvie.

“So this is the pup, eh?” The man—Radix of Clan Grandus I now knew—strode forward and shook Veruhn’s hand roughly. I had at first taken him to be a few inches shorter than myself, but as he’d approached, he seemed to grow. By the time he extended his hand to me, he was exactly my height.

I shook his hand, which was rough at stone. His fingers clasped my hand with enough strength to shatter bone if my body hadn’t been strengthened by aether. Whereas the other lords had so far focused entirely on me, Radix looked right through me to Regis. His flint-black eyes narrowed.

“Is that the signature of Wren of Clan Kain, fourth of his name?” he rumbled.

Instead of waiting for confirmation, he brushed past me and knelt in front of Regis, who watched him warily. My companion’s eyes widened when Radix took him by the jaw, forcing his mouth open. The titan inspected Regis’s mouth like a tinker might inspect a horse.

“Hm.” He said only that, then stood, scratched Regis behind the ear, and finally tossed him what looked like a piece of dried meat that had appeared as if from nowhere.

“I feel strangely violated yet flattered,” Regis said while chewing the meat. “And my god is this jerky good. What even is this?”

Radix slumped into his seat and kicked one booted foot up on the table. “That’s a special treat usually reserved for our guardian beasts.”

‘When you’re an asuran lord and member of the Fine Nine or whatever, you have to get that recipe,’ Regis thought desperately. ‘I don’t care if we have to go to war over it.’

One of the balcony doors opened of its own accord, and shadow condensed within it. From the shadow stepped a thin man in black battlerobes. His dark red eyes flicked around the room rapidly before catching on me. He fiddled with one of his horns, which sprouted from his forehead and swept back before curving forward again, pointing at me like two spears.

I was caught off guard by the basilisk’s sudden appearance. I had known, logically, that Clan Kothan represented the basilisks in the Great Eight, but I had failed to consider that he would actually be present.

Making a snap decision, I strode around the table toward him. The basilisk watched me approach warily. Not out of fear, I thought, but uncertainty about me or my intentions. I stopped before him and extended my hand, just as Radix had done. Lord Kothan’s deep red eyes flicked past me to where I knew Lord Avignis stood. Are they allies? I wondered. It made a kind of sense; both the basilisks and phoenixes had lost their great clans in the Vritra and the Asclepius. The part of my mind that was active with the magic of King’s Gambit began dissecting this information.

After a beat of hesitation, the basilisk took my hand. Despite his somewhat frail appearance, he had a strong grip. “Arthur Leywin. The human who felled Agrona Vritra.” Suddenly he released my hand and went to one knee. The air in the chamber seemed to grow very tense, and I could feel the weight of the others’ attention threaten to bring me to my own knees. “I, Rai Kothan, representative of Clan Kothan and all the basilisks of Epheotus, owe you a great debt.” He looked up to meet my gaze, and something blistering and wrathful and dark swam just beneath the surface of his blood-clot eyes. “The Vritra clan nearly destroyed our race in their selfish pursuits. You have brought us justice. That will not soon be forgotten.”

Even with King’s Gambit partially active, I couldn’t think of anything to say and only nodded firmly in response. Thankfully, Sylvie appeared at my side. She extended a hand to Lord Kothan, who took it with the same wariness with which he had watched me earlier. “Lord Kothan. We appreciate your words and the intent behind them, but rest assured, the fight against my father was one we pursued for the good of all living beings across both our worlds. You don’t owe us anything.”

Well said, I thought to her gratefully.

Rai stood and straightened his battlerobes. Without speaking further, he rounded the table and took a seat next to where Lord Avignis was now sitting.

It seems we’re only missing the lord of the pantheons and Kezess himself.

“Arthur, you and Lady Sylvie will join me here,” Veruhn said, gesturing to where a gap had been left between his seat and Radix’s, directly across from Kezess’s throne. “It is customary that you stand until you are either dismissed or, in this case, offered a seat at the table.”

Nephele laughed, and a cool breeze that smelled like sweetshrub and gardenias blew through the chamber. “Oh, this is so interesting.”

I stood in the expected spot, Regis to one side and Sylvie on the other. The six gathered lords and ladies eyed me expectantly for a moment, then as one turned toward the throne. Suddenly Kezess was sitting in it. There was no flash of light, no sense of movement, only a ripple in the aether.

His gaze settled on the only empty seat at the table. He closed his eyes briefly, then opened them to look at Lady Mapellia. “Lord Thyestes is purposefully taking his time, it seems, but he will be here momentarily. Until then, we shall wait. In silence.”

At his left hand, Lady Mapellia sat stiffly. Beside her, Nephele fidgeted restlessly. The rest of the lords’ demeanors landed somewhere in between. Kezess’s gaze settled not on me but his granddaughter.

Veruhn caught my eye as I was looking around and gave me a subtle wink.

A full minute passed in this awkward, forced silence. It was finally broken when a tall, athletic figure landed on the same balcony we had entered from. The doors opened, and he strode in purposefully. This man, who I knew to be Ademir Thyestes, lord of his clan and all the pantheon race, moved like a predator. His four front, forward-facing eyes flicked to me for only an instant before focusing on the empty seat between Lord Grandus and Lord Kothan. The bright purple eyes on the sides of his head moved constantly, however, from one lord to the next, to me and my companions, and regularly back to Kezess.

Kezess watched Lord Thyestes get settled for several long seconds before returning his attention to the room at large. “As we all know why we have been called together—and most, it seems, have already discussed the situation in more private environs—I expect this meeting will be a short one.”

The hamadryad, Lady Mapellia, stood. “It has been suggested that this human, Arthur Leywin, may in fact have evolved beyond being a mere lesser into what might be considered a new branch of the asuran family tree.” She paused and stared around to ensure that everyone had heard. “Our only task today is to decide if this is true. First, we open up this session of the Great Eight to any lord or lady who wishes to express their opinion.” She then sat.

I glanced from the corner of my eye to Veruhn, but he remained still and silent.

Surprisingly, it was Lord Thyestes who stood. He looked straight at me as he said, “It is nothing but wishful thinking that you all engage in. This lesser has killed two of the Thyestes and brought down the Vritra clan as well. None of us wish to believe a lesser could do such a thing, and yet this one has. Instead of acknowledging reality, however, you seek to make him something he is not. Because he is not an asura, and even killing General Aldir of Clan Thyestes can’t make him one.”

Kezess wasn’t watching the pantheon, rather he was inspecting me closely.

Nephele, floating above her seat, let out a huff that made her flutter around. “Only a pantheon would think you earn your way to being an asura by killing people. Ademir! Look at him. That’s no lesser physique. I mean, he even has golden eyes!” She turned thoughtful and looked at Lady Mapellia to her right. “Do lessers normally have golden eyes?”

Morwenna returned her look stone-faced and gave a small shrug.

Ademir sat, his arms crossed. “We’ve all heard by now the tale of Lady Sylvie’s sacrifice and the physical rebirth of both their bodies. Perhaps she gave him some asuran aspect, but how does that match up against the eons of evolution and empowerment that each of our races has gone through?”

Lord Grandus leaned forward, his elbows on the table and his hands folded into his thick beard. “If we look at this boy’s actions, then we are forced to consider how these actions were performed. The actions themselves aren’t the reason we’re here, only the catalyst for the discussion.” His deep voice rumbled through the air so that I felt it in my chest. “My clan has long made it our business to study the advancement of life, and even to mold that advancement. There is no reason, through the application of powerful enough mana or aether arts, that a human couldn’t become something more. And in that event, even if they did not evolve alongside the rest of the asura, a case could also be made for folding them into our culture for a variety of reasons. We should resist the urge to jump to a decision and instead take time to study Arthur further.”

“While study is warranted…” Rai of the basilisk clan, Kothan, had raised a finger into the air as he started speaking. He hesitated in the middle of his sentence, shooting a furtive look to Kezess, who nodded very slightly. “While study is warranted,” he began again, “we shouldn’t overlook the current situation.”

He stood, pressed his palms into the top of the table, and leaned forward. “Agrona Vritra has been a danger to us for many hundreds of years, and his occupation of our motherland—the very soil that birthed Epheotus—has been an insult and a threat. We have been shut off from the growth of the lesser world for too long because of Agrona, and it has blinded us to their progress. Arthur Leywin is standing here as proof of their evolution, and his service in defeating the Vritra clan should be rewarded appropriately.”

“The name asura isn’t merely a title to be traded for political good will!” Ademir snapped.

The meeting dissolved into arguing and bickering. It only ended when Kezess sent out a pulse of King’s Force that drew all attention back to himself.

“We’ve heard base emotional reactions, but none of you have presented any proof, only suggested we find it.” Kezess’s focus shifted to Veruhn. “I was told that this conversation had already begun, encouraging me to bring it into a more formal environment. But I find myself…unconvinced by what I’ve heard here today. Only Lord Thyestes seems to be making sense.”

I noticed Ademir’s jaw tighten and his lips go white as Kezess mentioned him. There was a stony look in his eye that almost might have been hostility. I considered what I had learned about Aldir’s flight from Epheotus and realized that Ademir still harbored some anger about Kezess’s treatment of his clanmate.

Lord Avignis cleared his throat. “Forgive me, Lord Indrath, but I don’t think you’re being fair to Rai. His words bring many questions to my mind. Questions that, I think, would be best answered by Arthur himself.”

The phoenix turned to look at me, his gray eyes smoldering with flame-orange sparks. “We have all been made aware of certain facts, Arthur. You nearly died while channeling the will of a powerful dragon, Sylvia Indrath, but you were saved by your bond with her daughter, Lady Sylvie. The result was that your body became something closer to asura than human. You have a core, but it is made of and manipulates aether instead of mana, empowering your body directly with aether, unlike even the dragons. And you channel certain…aether arts. Such as the ability you used to interrogate the Vritra criminal, Oludari.

“It remains unclear, however, exactly how you disabled Agrona Vritra.” The sparks in his eyes flared, even though the rest of his expression remained passive. “What power did you use?”

The hamadryad, Morwenna of Clan Mapellia, hummed in irritation. “How does this question help us in our consideration of Arthur’s asuran state?”

It was Radix who answered, leaning forward over the table now so that his chest practically rested on top of it. “Of course, Novis! It was necessary for us to take on new forms to contain our growing power, even back before our ancestors forged Epheotus from the soil of the lesser world. In doing so, we branded our mana arts with our own specific strengths. While Arthur’s use of aether is interesting, it is also rather obvious. He was granted the will of a dragon in addition to being bonded to Lady Sylvie here. That alone proves nothing. But this power that captured Agrona…” His steely gaze hammered into me like he was trying to unearth the truth from me with a pickaxe. “What was this power? Is it some lesser ability, or a product of your exposure to the dragons?”

All eyes were on me, so no one else aside from my own companions saw the glare Kezess gave me. The warning was obvious.

Regis, who had sat down and was now scratching his ear with one hind paw, sent me a mental roll of his eyes. ‘Oh screw him. I say tell them. You’re Arthur Leywin, Master of Fate! Cue evil laughter.’

Sylvie shifted beside me. ‘Not to use his language, but Regis may be right. If Kezess has kept the revelation of Fate from the rest of the asura, revealing it may swing things in our favor.’

I thought back to my conversation with Kezess over the fields of lava. Maybe, but we also don’t quite see the whole picture yet.

“All of my magic is aetheric in nature,” I said in answer to the questions that had been posed by Lords Grandus and Avignis. “As I gain insight, I am able to tap into magic held within the conscious aether itself, forming what I’ve called godrunes—pieces of powerful magic that are branded directly into my flesh.”

“Oh, how fascinating!” Nephele said, floating over the table toward me. “Can we see?”

Before I could answer, Veruhn coughed against the back of his hand then stood slowly. Nephele bit her cheek and drifted back to her seat.

Verun’s back straightened segment by segment, giving the impression that he was even older than he looked. His smile as he gazed blindly around the chamber was tremulous. In human terms, he seemed to have aged fifty years between our arrival and now, but I couldn’t tell if it was a show or somehow the result of the conversation itself.

“It is deeply correct that everyone currently gathered at this table is passionate about this conversation,” he said, speaking slowly and enunciating each word carefully. “Never before has such a thing been considered. We asura are slow to grow, slow to change. It is not in our nature. And so we have remained as only eight races since the failure of the wraiths. Even the intermingling of our races has never resulted in a new branch of our long and storied family tree.”

Veruhn paused to collect himself and catch his breath. His milky white eyes seemed to focus above the heads of all those seated at the table. “But we cannot deny what fate has placed right in front of us. For this evolution to happen now, as the situation with Agrona seemed to be building to a full out war, is certainly no mere chance. Arthur’s growth, his transformation, was necessary for both our cultures to survive. Now we have an opportunity that we have never had before: to change and grow as a people, together with the lessers whom we have for so long been apart. Let Clan Leywin speak on their behalf, be their voice. We cannot afford to let their world fester and spawn another Agrona.”

The other asuras regarded Veruhn thoughtful as he struggled to sit back down. I could see how his words had settled over them, changing the direction of the conversation in mere moments.

‘They do not all respect each other, but they do him,’ Sylvie noted. ‘I can’t help but wonder if we’re not being put in the middle of a building power struggle between the asuran clans.’

I traced back the threads of each encounter with Veruhn. Why did he give me the mourning pearls? I wondered yet again. Out loud, I said, “Thank you, Lord Eccleiah. I appreciate your vote of confidence.” After pausing to ensure I had everyone’s attention, I continued, “When I was first told about this…offer, I’ll admit I myself wasn’t entirely sure it was right, or that I even wanted it.”

Ademir’s brows pinched together in a frown, while Morwenna turned her nose up slightly.

“I have a home to return to, and people who rely on me that are probably suffering as we speak. Dicathen and Alacrya need me, not Epheotus.” I let these words sink in.

Kezess was listening politely, his expression otherwise carefully blank. Beside him, Novis whispered something to Rai.

“But listening to you all speak here today, I’ve come to understand something.” At my mental command, Sylvie and Regis took half steps closer to me so that we were almost touching. “Those people do need me to be here. They need me to protect them, and that means having a voice among the asura.”

Nephele had sunk down into her seat properly and had her arms crossed on the table, her chin resting on her forearms. It was difficult to tell if she was enraptured or thinking about something else entirely.

“I may not have been born among the asura, but I have been entwined with your people since before I was even born,” I said firmly. “I have bonded to you, been trained among you, fought beside you and against you. And, like a crucible, the presence of the asura in my life has molded me into something other, something new.”

I looked directly at Radix, who had eased back into his seat bit by bit as I spoke. He was running his fingers through his beard, deep in thought. “Not only have I gained great power and evolved beyond the limitations of my humanity, I, like the asura, have transformed to contain this power.”

Releasing a sudden rush of aether, I fully activated both Realmheart and King’s Gambit. Vibrant aetheric runes burned along my skin and beneath my eyes. My hair lifted up to drift around the crown of light floating above my head. Aether condensed in my channels until it shined through my skin in glowing veins.

My voice resonated as I spoke, the words pieced together from a dozen parallel lines of thought.

“You have asked, and I will answer. The power that I wield is Fate itself.”

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    That last line went hard 🔥🔥🔥
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    Chapter 489: It's Not a Gift

    — You asked, and I will answer. The power I wield is Fate itself.

    The words, heavy with the resonance of the ether that permeated them, hung heavily in the air.

    The full force of my ethereal intent pressed down with the weight of all my power, responsibilities, and fears, and with the King's Gambit burning bright and hot against my spine, my mind fragmented into dozens of parallel branches to process every possible scrap of information from the asuras' responses.

    Their eyes, each a different color, glowed with the reflection of the purple and gold light of the aether that emanated from my skin and the crown floating above my flowing hair. Each reaction from the asuran lords carried a line of genuine surprise, but each was also marked by a particular emotion individual to them.

    Right in front of me, Kezess revealed the least of his thoughts through his outward expression. His lips were slightly parted, and his eyes were dilated a fraction. There was a stiffness in his shoulders, running down his arms to his left hand, which rested on the wooden table. That alone spoke of his surprise. It was the trembling of the small muscles in that hand and the darkening of his purple eyes that revealed his anger. It wasn’t a raging anger that would likely burst the limits of his control, but a bitterness that I registered from a distance as being more troublesome. Not because of any danger, but because I didn’t fully understand it.

    To his left, Morwenna of the Mapellia Clan, great clan of the hamadryads, was giving me only half her attention. Her lips were tightly pressed together, highlighting the subtle woodgrain pattern in her skin. She had pushed away from the table, and the muscles in her legs, hips, and back were tensed as if she were ready to spring to her feet if ordered to. Every half second, her eyes would flick to Kezess.

    Beside Morwenna, the sylph leader, Nephele of Clan Aerind, had sunk into her chair. Her mouth was open in a near-perfect circle, and a sharp wind blew around her, sending her cloud-like hair and clothes billowing. Her blue-gray eyes had turned lightning white, and there was something hungry in them that I couldn’t quite decipher.

    Veruhn, just to my right, was no less surprised than the others, but within his surprise, there was something more. Under the influence of the King’s Gambit, I felt no emotional response to what I saw reflected in Veruhn’s reaction, but I recognized what he must have felt. Because beneath the act of the elderly and senile uncle, beneath the feeble exterior he presented, there was a being much larger and older and, above all, more ferocious than he allowed anyone to see.

    In that instant, Veruhn could not hide his true self. Some of the faded color returned to the ridges that ran along his head, and there was a purple flush on his cheeks. The wrinkles smoothed out, and a dark, victorious smile shone on his face. Even his King’s Strength surged, the leviathan hidden beneath the wrinkled old man struggling to be freed.

    — And beings of light descended, bringing with them unimaginable magic. Bringing with them a power too terrible to contemplate. And they called themselves Deva , and they, in their power, were terrible and unimaginable. They marked the world with their power, and then they were gone, never to return.

    The softly spoken words came from Lord Rai of the Kothan Clan, the basilisk who had replaced Agrona among the great clans. Sitting to Kezess’s right, he was pale as a ghost, and his hands, clasped before him on the great wooden table, were trembling.

    — Silence — Kezess ordered without looking at the basilisk.

    Rai’s words sent ripples through the room. Beside him, the phoenix lord, Novis of the Avignis Clan, watched me with wary consideration, his brows furrowed as he shifted in his chair, but he stiffened when Rai spoke, casting a nervous glance at the basilisk out of the corner of his eye as Kezess ordered silence.

    On the other side of Rai, Ademir Thyestes crossed his arms and snorted.

    “We should all be ashamed of ourselves for mentioning fables and fairy tales at this table.” However, with the King’s Gambit active, I could see the truth. The hairs on Ademir’s neck stood on end, and the pantheon lord’s breathing was shallow and troubled. He glanced out one of the windows, and from the focus of his eyes, he seemed to be looking at something very far away. Following his gaze, I could almost make out a village far, far away, just beyond the range of vision, surrounded by green and blue grass.

    Simultaneously with my analysis of the asuras' response, I was trying to dissect what Rai had said.

    “And beings of light descended, bringing with them unimaginable magic.” Beings of light? Could the magic be mana, or perhaps ether?

    “Bringing with it a power too terrible to behold.” This is from the perspective of the asuras, I presume. What kind of power could be terrible even to the asuras?

    “And they called themselves Deva, and they, in their power, were terrible and unimaginable.” I had never heard the term deva before. The repetition of terrible and unimaginable reinforces this message quite a bit, but it’s also a kind of asura storytelling I didn’t expect to hear.

    “They marked the world with their power, and then they left, never to return.”

    I didn't know what to make of this last passage. I tried to reach out to Sylvie or Regis for help, but both were forced to turn their minds away from mine, unable to withstand the effects of the King's Gambit.

    Lord Radix of the Grandus Clan stood up. His eyes, which shone like the multicolored gems that adorned his belt, studied me intently. His own surprise quickly dissipated, and unlike the dismay the others had shown at Rai’s speech, Radix was attentive, his eyes darting back and forth, indicating that he was thinking quickly as he considered something.

    The Titan took a step closer to me, stroking his beard. The mana was moving strangely around him, as if it were acting as an extension of his senses. As if he could see and feel through the mana itself. While Radix had a similar signature to Wren’s, I had never experienced this phenomenon with Wren before.

    “That’s enough, Arthur,” Kezess snapped firmly, his voice tight with carefully concealed frustration and, I thought, even a tremor of fear.

    I held his gaze for several long seconds before releasing my divine runes and gathering the aether that was providing the glowing effect back into my core.

    I felt sluggish without the divine rune active, and I had to balance myself to keep from staggering.

    “ Are you okay? ” Regis asked, returning to my thoughts.

    —It’s nothing. There’s always a feeling of… detoxification when I fully release the King’s Gambit —I replied through the mental fog.

    “ Stay alert, Arthur ,” Sylvie thought, bringing my attention back to Radix.

    The titan placed a hand on my shoulder, forcing me roughly back into the moment as my knees shook from the unexpected weight. Aether flooded my body to strengthen my legs. My shoulder ached, and I realized Radix was manipulating the density of his own body to somehow test mine.

    “May I?” he asked, moving behind me and reaching for the hem of my shirt, forcing Sylvie to pull away, her eyebrows raised in surprise.

    “Uh…” Was all I could say before the titan lifted my shirt to examine the skin on my back. There, I knew he would see the fake runes the first djinn projection had provided to disguise my divine runes when I was among the Alacryans. What I hadn’t expected was the tingling I felt from the divine runes themselves.

    Through my connection with Regis, I felt Radix’s eyes trace the connection between us before settling on my companion. Regis’s hackles rose defensively, and I could feel Radix’s piercing senses outlining the shape of the Destruction rune contained within Regis’s physical form.

    “I see,” the titan said, his voice rumbling like an earthquake, and then he returned to his seat.

    I found myself frowning, but before I could ask, Nephele was quicker.

    — Well, share with the rest of us, Rad. What’s really going on here? — The sylph was floating above her chair again, hands on her hips, her entire body turned at a thirty-degree angle.

    Radix leaned back in his chair, arms crossed, one hand stroking his beard thoughtfully.

    —I have seen enough to change my mind, and I call a vote of the Great Eight on Arthur Leywin's status as a new breed of asura.

    This sudden proclamation seemed to take the others by surprise.

    — Now wait a moment, we need to…

    — …but what did you see? It would be beneficial for all of us…

    — …a blessed and short meeting, and then we can…

    — This is not a decision to be rushed!

    This last one was accompanied by a heavy fist slamming down on the wooden table, making it bounce and cutting off the other voices as they spoke over one another. The others shivered, even the carefree Nephele, while Ademir glared menacingly at his fellow lords and ladies. His King’s Strength was like a knife blade pressed against my throat.

    “Many of us at this table measure our lives in millennia,” he continued, more controlled. “In the centuries I have sat at this table with you, I have never experienced such a sudden desire for immediate resolution.” His attention turned to Rai. “The decision to appoint Clan Kothan to the Great Eight to replace Clan Vritra took us fifty years, and even that was a short time compared to our deliberation over what to do about Agrona itself.”

    “Now, faced with a question that, depending on our answer, could very well redefine the nature of our world for the next ten thousand years, must we vote based on mere minutes in this boy’s presence?” Ademir’s gaze fell to his fist still pressed against the table. “If you are determined to force this vote, Radix, then let me be the first to refuse. The pantheons will not recognize Arthur Leywin or his clan as members of the asura race.”

    Anger boiled inside me. He wasn’t just voting against me, he was openly declaring that he refused to accept the results of any vote. Regis, beside me, the flames of his mane crackling around him, reinforced my emotions, but Sylvie tried to calm us down:

    — Don't forget that the pantheons are a race of warriors. They face challenges head on. And as far as he knows, you are responsible for the deaths of Taci and Aldir.

    “You may not be the true source of his anger,” Regis added reluctantly, surprising me.

    Realizing I was letting myself get frustrated, I channeled aether into the King’s Gambit. Just a little, just enough to expand my thoughts into a few simultaneous threads, which had the added benefit of dampening any emotional reactions I might have had to the events.

    “Those are dangerous words, Lord Thyestes,” Morwenna said, her eyes narrowing. A faint blush crept up her neck, highlighting the subtle patterns on her skin once again. “Express your opinion as you will, but remember that we are all sworn to uphold the will of the Great Eight, even when we disagree with their decisions.”

    Rai cleared his throat. Maintaining direct eye contact with me, he said:

    — My opinion has not changed. I vote that Arthur be named the first of his race, chief of his clan, and a member of this council.

    “Of course, so do I,” Nephele said, looking very seriously at the ceiling, having spun halfway around so that she was almost upside down. “Shall we see what fate has in store for him?” She laughed suddenly and flew up to nudge Morwenna. “Fate?” “Do you understand what I did?” She chuckled happily to herself, seemingly oblivious to Morwenna’s icy glare in response.

    “I have seen enough,” Radix said in response to the vote he had called. “Arthur may not be an asura in the traditional sense of the word, but whatever transition he has undergone has brought him closer to us than to the lesser beings he was born from.” Speaking directly to me, he continued, “I hope, Arthur, that you will work with the Grandus clan to explore these changes more fully in the future, but for now, I agree that you should stand between us.”

    I nodded, not wanting to promise anything just yet. Most of my mind was still on Ademir’s words, as I considered the potential ramifications and consequences if he made good on his threat to refuse the Great Eight’s will. I couldn’t believe that his hostility hadn’t been taken into account by either Kezess or Veruhn, which meant that one or the other was likely working directly against him.

    Ademir shook his head as he looked around the table.

    — Novis? Morwenna? Surely you will not fall for the illusions of others. You must agree with Lord Indrath and me.

    Morwenna looked at Kezess, whose floating throne made him slightly taller than the others.

    Kezess nodded. His face was so carefully impassive that it seemed almost arrogant in the absence of expressed emotion.

    “I agree with the others,” Novis said simply, his posture reserved.

    Morwenna's head tilted slightly, and she gave Ademir a hard look as she said,

    — I bow to the will and wisdom of the Great Eight. I am convinced that I will at least give the Leywin Clan their place at the table. We shall see what happens after that.

    Ademir snorted. Almost in despair, he turned to Veruhn, but the old leviathan smiled sadly.

    — I'm sorry, old friend. You know very well where I stand on the matter.

    Ademir’s jaw clenched, and his expression turned stony. Slowly, defeated, he looked at Kezess, as if he already knew what the dragon was going to say.

    Kezess stood up, tossing his wheat-blond hair back carefully. There was a glint in his lavender eyes as he tugged at the gold-embroidered cuffs of his thin shirt.

    Sylvie shuffled her feet.

    “Why does this look staged? ” she suggested.

    — Friends. Leaders of your respective clans and peoples. Members of the Great Eight. I respect your opinions and thank you for sharing them. — His gaze lingered longer on Ademir, and despite calling him a friend, there was no friendship in the look they exchanged. — This council is divided, but the opinion of the majority is clear. While I admit I have my reservations, I nevertheless agree. Arthur Leywin has transcended his human nature. Despite some draconic aspects, he is not a dragon, making him something completely new.

    There was a cadence to her speech that reminded me of watching a play, just as Sylvie had suggested.

    —Arthur Leywin is hereby named an asura, his bloodline being that of an entirely new race. His clan, the Leywins, will transcend the boundaries between human and asura, even if they themselves do not share their qualities. As the leader of his clan, the only clan of his race, he is also immediately offered a place among us here, as a member of the Great Eight.

    “You’ll need a new name,” Nephele said in a theatrical whisper to Morwenna.

    Ademir stood and glared at Kezess. The clash of their opposing forces seemed about to topple the tower around us, but it lasted only a moment. Without another word, Ademir spun on his heel, crossed the room to the nearest balcony door, yanked it open, and flew quickly out of sight.

    Even Kezess, always so carefully controlled, couldn’t help but let out a barely concealed smile before turning his attention back to the rest of the group. A chair appeared behind me, and the other people adjusted slightly to accommodate it. Those sitting in it barely seemed to notice.

    “Speaking of names, Arthur, you’ll have to name yourself,” Kezess said, forcing a small smile to better hide his expression of triumph. “Have you thought of anything yet?”

    I opened my mouth but did not speak, realizing that I had not thought about what my race might be called. Despite the asuras’ decision, I was not sure if I would ever consider myself anything other than human.

    “I have a suggestion,” Veruhn said. He paused to cough into his hand before giving the others an apologetic smile. “It was long ago theorized that beings of power might one day materialize from the barrier between worlds, formed by that power and carrying its spark as their consciousness.” He paused again, taking a few breaths before continuing. “Their apparition never manifested, but the name we gave to this myth still echoes through the ages.”

    “The archons,” Radix said, linking his fingers in front of him and breathing through the shape it created. There was a burst of mana, but I couldn’t make out what he had done.

    Kezess looked at me curiously for several seconds. “Arthur Leywin, head of your clan, archon of the Eight Greats. Is that acceptable to you?”

    “ I like it ,” Regis thought immediately. “ It’s very… solemn, you know. It sounds like royalty. You could even say it’s majestic.”

    Doing my best to ignore him, I turned to Kezess.

    —I accept your offer to be recognized as a member of the asura race and the name of archon. Thank you. — To Veruhn, I added, —I appreciate everything this council has said.

    “Very well. Arthur Leywin, lord of the archon race. Welcome to the Great Eight. Now, I’m afraid I have other matters to attend to,” Kezess said abruptly. “I encourage each of you to consider carefully what today’s decision means for your people.”

    So just like that, he was gone. None of the others seemed surprised.

    Rai and Novis turned to each other and began talking in low voices. Morwenna, Radix, and Veruhn stood up, while Nephele flew toward me on a gust of wind that ruffled my hair and made the fabric of my shirt flutter.

    “Ah, but thank the summer grass and the winter winds for a short meeting,” she said, her tone softening as she released some of the forced cheerfulness she had maintained throughout the meeting. “It’s boring being indoors, don’t you think? These meetings would be much more productive under the open sky or the canopy of trees.” She grew thoughtful and glanced out the window. “I think I’ll go away for a while. I’ve had enough of big events and the insides of buildings for one day.”

    Nephele’s body became incorporeal and almost invisible, just a little more than her form drawn in white lines of wind. She smiled, her eyes closed, and flew out through an open window, did several spinning pirouettes, then disappeared against the blue sky and the gray-white cloud ground.

    —I’ve heard of sylphs, of course, but I expected their queen to be more… refined —Sylvie thought as she watched Nephele leave.

    “ I don’t trust her ,” Regis replied. “To be fair, I don’t trust any of them, but she seems a little… unstable.” He chuckled at his own pun.

    I bit back a groan, focusing on Radix, who was extending his hand toward mine. “Thanks for the vote of confidence,” I said as I shook his hand.

    “Trust?” His beard twitched in apparent amusement. “No, Lord Leywin, do not thank us for what we have done. This is not a gift, nor a show of trust. Each of my fellow lords and ladies will have their own reasons, but mine I would call an initial understanding.” His gemstone eyes gleamed. “Until next time, then.” His hand released mine, and the titan descended the stairs without a backward glance.

    Morwenna gave the same respectful bow the others had shared upon arriving at the meeting chamber.

    “Do not celebrate this as a victory,” she warned. “It is a responsibility of the highest honor to represent your people among the Eight Greats. Our choices shape worlds, Lord Leywin.” Moving stiff and straight as a tree on legs, the hamadryad followed Radix down the stairs.

    “That was very well done, Arthur,” Veruhn said, now standing straight and unbent, the deliberations now over. “A good demonstration with the divine runes. It even took me by surprise, to be honest.”

    I looked at the phoenix and basilisk, raising my eyebrows slightly.

    “Lords Avignis and Kothan are as interested as I am in seeing what you can accomplish with your new position, Arthur,” Veruhn said, dismissing any concerns I had about speaking in front of the others. “It may have seemed like a spur-of-the-moment decision today, but we have spoken at length about this possibility.”

    Rai and Novis stood up as Veruhn spoke, and they both nodded in agreement.

    “Before I go, I would like to extend an invitation to visit my family at my home, Featherwalk Aerie. It is tradition for a newly appointed representative of the Great Eight to travel through Epheotus and introduce themselves to the other lords. There will be an official ceremony later, of course.” Novis gave me an awkward smile. “I think it took… what? …half a century to plan my own appointment ceremony, even after Clan Avignis was promoted to the Great Eight.”

    “The Kothan Clan extends the same invitation, of course. At your service,” Rai added. Unlike Novis, he wore a tense expression and was clearly worried about something, but he didn’t voice his concerns aloud. “Things here may seem too slow for someone accustomed to moving at the speed of the smallest, but I’m sure you’ll adjust to a slightly… more sustained pace.”

    “We would be honored to meet your clans,” Sylvie replied. “For now, however, our own clan needs to be informed of today’s events.”

    Novis and Rai exchanged a glance upon hearing the words “our own clan,” but neither of them said anything. Instead, they wished us a safe journey for now and left through different balcony doors.

    “May I escort you back to the Eternal Flame, Arthur?” Veruhn asked, holding the door through which Novis had just exited.

    — Of course. Thank you, Veruhn.

    As we flew, I longed to fully activate the King’s Gambit to better analyze what had been said during the meeting. However, I feared giving Veruhn, or anyone else who might be observing, the wrong impression. Instead, I let my body go on autopilot and focused every branch of my thoughts on the meeting, aware only of the occasional words exchanged between Veruhn and Sylvie as we flew.

    There were some things I was certain of, though the meeting had left more questions than answers. I was confident that Kezess had manipulated things to get Ademir out, but why? Was I just a pawn in a larger game I didn’t understand? And were the other lords playing the same game, or their own?

    Am I really being placed on equal footing with these ancient beings? Or do they see me as a pet?

    I could hazard a few guesses as to why Kezess had actually allowed my ascension. Even if he pretended otherwise, I couldn’t dismiss the fact that I had just become subservient to him in a way I hadn’t been before. And yet, I also had a certain equality with him, now officially recognized by the rest of the Great Eight.

    —But how independent are they really? — Regis thought, from where he hovered near my core.

    That was a good question. Despite the claim that the Eight Greats formed a ruling council, it seemed that everything still depended on Kezess’s will. What would have happened if everyone else agreed, but he still refused?

    I became vaguely aware that someone was talking to me.

    — Excuse me, what?

    Veruhn gave me an enigmatic look.

    — Forgive me, Arthur. It is clear that you were lost in thought, which I completely understand. I do not wish to interfere in your first meeting with your newly-appointed clan, so I will leave you here.

    Looking around, I realized that we were already on the outskirts of the city.

    — Before I go, however, I would like to extend the same invitation as Lords Kothan and Avignis. Please visit me at my home. It sits right on the coast of the great Boundary Sea. I believe you will find it well worth the trip. We still have much to discuss, I think.

    “I will, of course,” I replied, genuinely interested in the leviathan’s home. “But first, I’m afraid I need to take care of something. My friend, Tessia, has been waiting patiently for me here, but it’s time for her to go home.”

    Cheerfully stating that he understood, Veruhn took his leave. With a wave, he disappeared in a wave of foaming, rippling seawater.

    We completed our journey through the air, flying over the rooftops of Eternal Flame. As we approached the residence where my family was staying, I landed on the sloping roof of a house not far from the street, careful not to dislodge the tiles, and looked down at Ellie, Mama, and Tessia. They were sitting at a table in the small front yard, chatting animatedly with a couple of young dragons who seemed to have stopped along the way, their arms laden with cloth bags, probably from the market.

    Everything was going to change now. My life would never be the same, and neither would theirs. The risk suddenly seemed almost foolish, danger coming from every direction. I was in a clan of five, and two of them were human.

    Sylvie and Regis remained silent, not invading my introspection, but supporting me against the weight of my thoughts.

    We stayed like that for a long time, until Mom, Tess, and Ellie got up and went back inside. I sighed and prepared to inform my family that they had been promoted to godhood.
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  3. Offline
    + 20 -
    Oh damn 🥶 🙏🙏🔥 🔥 🔥 🔥
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  4. Offline
    + 10 -
    This is so f#cking cool
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  5. Offline
    + 10 -
    that was pretty f#cking cool
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  6. Offline
    + 10 -
    bitchessssssssssssss
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