The Extra's Rise-Chapter 800: Two Years (1)
Chapter 800: Two Years (1)
Time moved with cruel indifference through the ruins of what had once been the greatest city in human civilization.
Two years had passed since the night Avalon City burned, since thirty million souls had faced annihilation at the hands of the Order of Fallen Flame. Two years since the darkness was held back by sacrifices so profound they had reshaped the very foundations of the Empire. Yet time, uncaring of heroism or tragedy, continued its relentless march toward an uncertain future.
The wind carried autumn’s chill through the Memorial Gardens, a vast expanse of pristine white marble that had been carved from the ruins of the old noble district. Hundreds of thousands of names were etched into stone—Imperial Knights who had held the line, Nighthawks who had died in shadow, civilians who had perished protecting their families. Each marker told a story of courage in the face of impossible odds.
But at the heart of the memorial, elevated on a platform that caught the morning light, stood two tombs that drew pilgrims from across all five continents.
Emperor Quinn Slatemark knelt before those sacred stones, his imperial robes abandoned in favor of simple black mourning clothes. The weight of two years pressed down on his shoulders like a physical burden, each day since that terrible night adding another layer to the guilt that had become his constant companion. freeweɓnovel~cѳm
The first tomb bore a simple inscription: Archduke Leopold Astoria - Beloved Father, Loyal Servant, Demon Slayer. The second, somehow more devastating in its brevity: Elara Astoria - The Healing Light - Saved Three Million Souls.
"I was wrong about everything," Quinn whispered to the wind, his voice carrying the rasp of a man who had spoken these words too many times. His hands trembled as he traced Leopold’s name. "Twenty years of suspicion. Twenty years of watching you like an enemy when you were the most loyal man in the Empire."
Empress Adeline stood a respectful distance behind her husband, her silver eyes reflecting patient understanding. She had watched Quinn struggle with guilt and regret for two years, had seen him wake from nightmares where Leopold’s voice echoed with unspoken forgiveness.
"The reports from the borders grow worse each week," Quinn continued, his voice taking on the hollow tone he used when discussing threats beyond their control. "Demonic incursions increasing. The Order rebuilding. And we’re weaker—" His voice cracked. "Our two strongest nobles, gone."
The memorial gardens stretched around them in perfect silence, the usual crowds of pilgrims cleared away by security protocols. Only the wind moved through the carefully tended paths, carrying the scent of violets and roses that had begun growing spontaneously around the platform.
Quinn’s enhanced senses swept the area automatically, a habit drilled into him by years of assassination attempts and political intrigue. The magical wards hummed with quiet efficiency, the guard posts reported all clear, and his own Radiant-rank awareness detected nothing but autumn wind and grieving silence.
Nothing at all.
Which made the voice that suddenly spoke from behind him hit like a physical blow.
"I’m sorry, Elara."
Quinn’s blood turned to ice. His head whipped around so fast something in his neck cracked, imperial reflexes engaging even as his mind struggled to process the impossible. Someone was here. Someone was here, in the most secure location in the Empire, speaking with grief so profound it made the air itself seem to weep.
But there had been nothing. No approach, no presence, no disturbance in the magical fields that surrounded this place like layers of impenetrable armor.
A figure knelt between the two tombs, draped in a traveling cloak that seemed to absorb the morning light. The fabric was stained with substances that Quinn’s enhanced senses couldn’t identify—not blood, not dirt, but something that didn’t belong to any earthly classification.
"Who—" Adeline began, but her voice died as the stranger rose with fluid grace that made physics itself seem negotiable.
The air around the figure shimmered, not with heat or magical distortion, but with something far more unsettling. Reality itself seemed uncertain in his presence, as if the fundamental laws governing existence were politely stepping aside to accommodate something that operated according to different rules entirely.
Quinn felt his knees threaten to buckle as recognition hit him like a tsunami of impossible understanding. The worn cloak, the way shadows bent around the figure’s form, the sense that space itself was making room for something too large to be contained in human dimensions.
When the stranger reached up to lower his hood, Quinn’s world fundamentally reordered itself around a truth too vast to immediately comprehend.
The face was older, carved by experiences that would have destroyed lesser beings. Black hair fell longer now, framing features that held depths Quinn couldn’t fathom. But the azure eyes—those were unmistakable, even as they reflected understanding that belonged to cosmic forces rather than mortal concerns.
Arthur Nightingale stood before them, and the very air seemed to bow in his presence.
Quinn’s mouth went dry as his enhanced senses finally registered what they were dealing with. The feeling that had haunted him since the Demon Duke’s appearance, the same crushing certainty of facing something fundamentally superior—it was here again, radiating from the man who was his daughter’s fiance.
But this was different. The Duke had felt like malevolent hunger given form. This felt like... authority. The kind of power that didn’t need to threaten because its very existence rewrote the rules of every conflict.
"Arthur," Quinn managed to whisper, though his voice came out strangled. "You’re..."
Arthur’s eyes moved to him with the kind of gentle attention that cosmic forces might show to particularly interesting insects. Not cruel, not dismissive, but carrying the weight of perspective that reduced imperial power to quaint local concerns.
"Hello, Quinn," Arthur said simply.
The words themselves were normal, almost casual. But they carried harmonics that made the memorial stones resonate, that caused the flowers around Elara’s tomb to bloom brighter, that sent ripples through magical wards designed to contain Radiant-rank threats.
Quinn felt his knees hit the marble platform as his body made a decision his mind was still struggling with. This wasn’t kneeling in submission—this was kneeling in recognition of something that belonged in the same category as the forces of nature themselves.
"Impossible," Adeline breathed, though she too was sinking toward the ground as her magical senses screamed warnings about proximity to something that shouldn’t exist.
Arthur’s gaze moved to Elara’s tomb, and for just a moment, the cosmic authority flickered. Beneath it, Quinn caught a glimpse of grief so profound it made his own guilt look shallow by comparison.
"I promised I’d come back stronger," Arthur said to the carved stone, his voice carrying weight that made the air itself seem to listen. "Strong enough that no one would ever have to die the way you did again."
The wind picked up around them, but it wasn’t natural weather. It was the world itself responding to Arthur’s presence, reality bending to accommodate something that had transcended its normal limitations.
Quinn looked up at the man who had built a guild and was engaged to five remarkable women, who had disappeared into impossible light two years ago. Now Arthur stood before them transformed into something that made Quinn’s Radiant-rank power feel like a candle before the sun.
The age of struggling against impossible odds was ending.
Arthur Nightingale had returned, and Quinn finally understood what it meant when a Nightingale’s voice truly pierced the sky.
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