My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife!
Episode-324
Chapter : 647
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The King’s private study was not a room designed for intimidation, but for vision. Located at the apex of the palace’s central spire, its circular walls were crafted not from stone, but from a single, seamless pane of enchanted glass, offering a breathtaking, gods-eye panorama of the entire kingdom of Bethelham. The capital city spread out below like a jeweled tapestry, its grand avenues and shimmering canals stretching towards the verdant plains and the distant, haze-shrouded mountains. Sunlight, unfiltered and pure, poured into the space, bathing the intricate star-chart inlaid on the polished marble floor and the grand, oak map table in a warm, golden glow. It was a room that demanded one think in terms of nations and centuries, not corridors and whispers.
At the center of it all, standing by the glass and looking out over his domain, was King Liam Bethelham. He wore simple but exquisitely tailored ducal robes, his bearing relaxed, his expression thoughtful. A faint, almost imperceptible smile played on his lips as he swirled the amber liquid in his teacup, watching the city breathe below him. His game was in motion, the pieces moving across the board, and he was savoring the quiet moments before the reports of the chaos he had orchestrated began to arrive.
The heavy, sound-dampened door opened with a near-silent whisper. Headmaster Valerius of the Bathelham Royal Academy stepped inside. The ancient mage’s frame, though stooped with the weight of centuries, radiated a gravity that seemed to momentarily dim the brilliant sunlight. His face, a roadmap etched with wisdom and power, was set in lines of profound seriousness, but his eyes held a glimmer of something else—a deep, resounding awe. He had bypassed all ceremony, his urgency a testament to the magnitude of the day’s events.
“Your Majesty,” Valerius began, his voice a low rumble that resonated with deep, controlled power. He gave a stiff, formal bow, the correct and proper gesture, though the look they exchanged was one of co-conspirators debriefing after a successful but terrifyingly risky operation. “I came as soon as the preliminary reports were consolidated. The situation at the Academy… the outcome was as we feared, and yet, more spectacular than we could have possibly anticipated.”
King Liam did not turn. He continued to gaze out at his kingdom, taking a slow, deliberate sip of his tea. “Tell me, Valerius. Tell me of the storm that visited your garden.”
The Headmaster’s brow furrowed, not in confusion, but in grim understanding of the King’s poetic framing. The garden had been his, the storm theirs to unleash. “It was a targeted act of war, Your Majesty, conducted on sovereign soil. The assailant was a Curse Knight of Eldoria, an Ascended-level user of significant power. His aura alone was enough to wither the grounds and drain the life from a dozen of my students and a senior instructor. They will recover, but the psychic trauma is significant.”
He paused, letting the clinical assessment of the collateral damage settle in the air. “He bypassed the Academy’s wards as if they were mist, just as your intelligence suggested he might. This confirms a profound weakness in our defenses or, more disturbingly, an accomplice within our own walls. His target was unequivocal: the commoner girl, Scholar Airin. He named her ‘the vessel.’ The Princess and her Lion Guard intervened, with predictable and courageous futility. Their blades could not touch him; his curse drained their spirit with every passing second.”
Valerius’s voice dropped, colored by the memory of the near-catastrophe he had been forced to witness, his own power leashed by the King’s direct command. “Isabella would have been slain. The girl would have been taken. The entire endeavor would have ended in a catastrophic political disaster… had it not been for the intervention you so carefully arranged.”
“Ah, the intervention,” King Liam murmured, a note of deep, profound satisfaction in his tone. He finally turned, his eyes, the color of warm honey, holding a light that was far too knowing. “So, our new Professor made his move. Tell me, old friend. Was his performance satisfactory?”
The Headmaster’s stern expression cracked, replaced by a look of genuine, unrehearsed wonder. “‘Satisfactory’ is a gross understatement, Your Majesty. I followed your command. I sealed the area with a silent ward, forbade any faculty from intervening, and I watched from my office. What I witnessed was not a simple battle. It was a statement. A declaration of power on a scale I have not seen in a century.”
Chapter : 648
He stepped forward, his ancient memory replaying the scene with perfect clarity. “He did not just command a Transended spirit of fire and magma; he conducted it. The initial manifestation was a silent wave of heat so intense it warped the very air, a display of absolute control that prevented any collateral damage to the onlookers. An Entry-Level user would have incinerated half the Academy by accident. This was the work of a master.”
“He toyed with the Curse Knight, dismantled him with the contemptuous ease of a master swordsman disarming a child. And then, when the knight transformed into that abyssal entity… Your Majesty, the power he unleashed to erase it was not just fire. It was a concept. A pillar of pure annihilation that unmade the creature from reality itself. The control required to manifest such a force, and then to negate its final, desperate attack with a perfectly modulated counter-wave… it was flawless.”
Valerius shook his head slowly, the memory still fresh and terrifyingly vivid. “And the aftermath is a political masterwork of unintentional chaos. He left behind a single, scorched Ferrum crest. Now, Princess Isabella, bless her fiercely logical but often misguided heart, is convinced the Arch Duke is hiding a secret, warrior son. She refuses to believe a man with Professor Ferrum’s public record of mediocrity could be the ‘White Mask.’ She is hunting for a ghost, a hidden brother, a theory so beautifully wrong it could only have been conceived by her. She is chasing a shadow, while the dragon sits in her very classroom.”
He finished his report, his chest tight not with alarm, but with the gravity of what they had unleashed. He had come not to report a crisis, but to confirm the results of a terrifyingly high-stakes experiment. The dragon was awake.
King Liam Bethelham simply smiled. It was a small, knowing, and profoundly unsettling expression. He set his teacup down on the map table with a soft click.
“Excellent,” the King said, his voice gentle but laced with the cold steel of command. “Everything has proceeded exactly as I orchestrated.”
The Headmaster finally allowed himself to relax, a long, slow breath escaping his lips. The King had been right. The risk had been immense, the potential for catastrophic failure at every turn, but the payoff was a confirmation of a truth that would change the balance of power on the continent forever.
“Your Majesty,” Valerius said, his voice now tinged with a deep, personal curiosity. “You were so certain he would act. So certain he would reveal himself in such a spectacular fashion. How could you possibly have known?”
“Because I placed the one thing in that garden he could not bear to see harmed,” the King replied, his smile widening into a grin of pure, strategic triumph. “Now, sit, Valerius. Have some tea. Let me tell you about the true purpose of the Princess Isabella Scholarship Fund, and why one places a very precious, and very specific, piece of cheese in a garden when one wishes to confirm the true nature of the dragon hiding within it.”
Headmaster Valerius finally sat, the ancient bones in his legs protesting the release of the tension he had been holding. He sank into the plush leather of the chair opposite the King, his mind a maelstrom not of confusion, but of dawning, horrified respect for the sheer, cold-blooded audacity of his monarch. He had been a party to this gambit, had agreed to its necessity, but to hear the King speak of it with such calm, triumphant satisfaction was another matter entirely.
“You… you used the girl,” Valerius said, the words less an accusation and more a statement of fact, a confirmation of the ruthless calculus they had both agreed to. “You used Scholar Airin as bait. You knew her presence would draw them out.”
King Liam’s smile did not falter, but his eyes grew colder, harder. He poured a second cup of tea, the fragrant steam rising in the quiet room. “A harsh term, ‘bait.’ I prefer to think of it as a strategic deployment of a high-value asset to expose a clear and present danger to the kingdom. Tell me, Valerius, what is the Princess Isabella Scholarship Fund truly about, in the eyes of our rivals?”
“It is a noble endeavor,” Valerius answered, his tone stiff, reciting the public truth that he himself believed in. “A testament to the Princess’s belief that talent, not birthright, should define one’s worth.”