Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 382: Talk with the Principal

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Chapter 382: Talk with the Principal

The door closed with a soft click, sealing the room in silence.

Nero stood before the headmaster’s desk, his posture straight, his expression calm. The office was exactly as he remembered—the towering shelves filled with ancient tomes, the faint hum of protective wards, the weight of centuries pressing down from the stone walls. Behind the massive desk, the headmaster sat with the stillness of a mountain, his long white hair catching the fading light from the window.

Those piercing eyes studied Nero for a long, uncomfortable moment. The Knight of Gravitation. A man whose power was so immense that even sitting still, even silent, he radiated an presence that made the air itself feel heavier.

Then the headmaster’s eyebrows rose slightly.

Just a fraction. A tiny movement that most would have missed. But Nero caught it.

"You’ve done it," the headmaster said quietly. It wasn’t a question. "You’ve stepped into the Purple realm."

Nero met his gaze steadily. "Yes."

A long pause. The headmaster’s fingers tapped once on the desk, a soft sound in the heavy silence. His expression was unreadable, but something flickered in those ancient eyes—something that might have been surprise, might have been calculation, might have been the first stirrings of something deeper.

"In the span of a single mission," the headmaster continued, his voice thoughtful. "From middle Red to entry Purple. In days." He leaned back slightly, his gaze never leaving Nero’s face. "You’re hiding things, boy. Secrets. Powers you haven’t revealed."

Nero didn’t flinch. Didn’t look away.

The headmaster studied him for another long moment. Then, unexpectedly, a small smile touched his lips.

"Good," he said quietly. "Everyone has secrets. Everyone has cards they keep close to the chest. The wise know when to reveal them and when to hold them back." He waved a hand dismissively. "I won’t probe. I won’t ask. Your secrets are your own—for now."

He leaned forward, his expression shifting to something more serious.

"Tell me about the mission. Everything. Leave nothing out."

Nero nodded and began.

He spoke of arriving in Oxglen, of the beautiful city and the worried mayor. He described the investigation, the frustrating lack of clues, the realization that they were dealing with something intelligent. He told of the ghost attack, the chase through the mountains, the discovery of the goblin village and the shaman controlling the specters.

He recounted the battle—the three of them working in silent coordination, Elreth holding the frontline, Khione controlling the battlefield, himself hunting down the runners before facing the champion. He described killing the shaman, freeing the villagers, ending the threat.

Then he paused.

"The ambush," the headmaster said quietly. "Your report mentioned an ambush."

Nero nodded. He spoke of the darkened sky, the two black-clad knights, the wave of corrupted monsters. He described the fight—his battle with the two wind-users, Elreth holding the line, Khione protecting the villagers. He mentioned the demonization, the transformations into beast and insect forms.

He told of defeating them. Of winning.

He did not mention Subject #009. Did not mention the true master of the ambush, the golden-winged woman who had nearly killed him. Did not mention his own near-death, his awakening of the third law, the vision of the gray woman, the evolution of his eyes.

Some secrets were too deep to share. Even here. Even now.

The headmaster listened in complete silence, his fingers tapping a slow, steady rhythm on the desk.

Tap. Tap. Tap.

The only sound in the room besides Nero’s voice.

When Nero finished, the headmaster was quiet for a long moment. His expression remained unreadable, his eyes fixed on some middle distance, seeing things Nero couldn’t imagine.

Then, slowly, a low chuckle escaped him.

It was not a warm sound. It was cold, sharp, edged with something that might have been anticipation or might have been barely restrained fury.

"Those maggots," he said softly, almost to himself. "Those blind, arrogant maggots. They’ve grown too bold for their own good."

He looked at Nero, and now his eyes held a light that made the temperature in the room seem to drop.

"The Ouroboros organization has been a thorn in the side of every major power for centuries. They skulk in shadows, perform their vile experiments, think themselves untouchable." His voice hardened.

"But attacking academy cadets on a sanctioned mission? Targeting the heir of a great clan? That crosses a line they should have known better than to touch."

He rose from his chair, moving to the window. His back was to Nero as he stared out at the academy grounds, at the cadets walking below, oblivious to the conversations happening above them.

"A new era is coming," he said quietly. "I’ve felt it for years. The old powers shifting, new forces rising, the balance we’ve maintained for so long beginning to crack." He turned, looking at Nero over his shoulder. "And you, boy, are at the heart of it. Whether you want to be or not."

Nero said nothing. There was nothing to say.

The headmaster turned back to the window.

"The Ouroboros will need to be dealt with. Not just pushed back—culled. Cut down to size until they remember their place. And the clans... the Raizen, the others who think they can move pieces on this board without consequence... they’ll need to be reminded of the rules."

He was silent for a moment, his reflection ghostly in the glass.

"Chaotic times await, Nero. Wars fought in shadows and in daylight. Alliances formed and broken. Lines drawn in blood." He turned fully, meeting Nero’s eyes. "You’ve grown strong. Faster than anyone has a right to. But you’ll need to grow stronger still. Much stronger."

Nero met his gaze without flinching. "I know."

The headmaster studied him for a long moment. Then, slowly, he nodded.

"Good. Then go. Rest. Train. Prepare." He waved toward the door. "The storm is coming, boy. Make sure you’re ready to weather it." 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺

Nero bowed slightly, then turned and walked to the door. His hand was on the handle when the headmaster’s voice stopped him.

"Oh, and Nero?"

He looked back.

The headmaster’s eyes were ancient, knowing, heavy with the weight of centuries. "When the time comes to choose sides—and it will come—choose wisely. The wrong choice in the coming storm won’t just cost you your life. It will cost you everything."

Nero held that gaze for a long moment. Then he nodded once and stepped through the door, closing it softly behind him.

The corridor stretched before him, empty and silent. He stood there for a moment, letting the weight of the conversation settle.

The headmaster knew. Not everything—but enough. Enough to see the shape of what was coming. Enough to warn him.

Nero began to walk, his steps echoing in the quiet hall. Behind him, in the office, the headmaster stood at the window, watching the sunset paint the sky in shades of gold and red.

A new era. A storm. A boy at the heart of it all.

The pieces were moving. The game was beginning.

And somewhere in the shadows, a gray-eyed woman on a throne of bones smiled, waiting for her moment to join the board.

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