The Vengeful Extra's Ascension-Chapter 234: Compliments!
"This is where decisions are made."
As soon as Ysvara said that, Albedo felt a flood of mana rushing through the entire room, converging towards the twin thrones like gravity wells.
Lucian straightened instinctively, posture sharpening. Veronica’s eyes flicked across the room, calculating angles not of combat, but of influence. Even Zeus, usually irreverent to the point of defiance, went quiet, jaw tightening as if he understood—perhaps for the first time—that brute force alone meant nothing in a place like this.
Kael Nocturna took his seat first.
He did not sit so much as settle, his presence locking into the obsidian throne as though the seat itself had been waiting for him. The gold veins along its surface flared briefly, then dimmed, acknowledging its ruler.
Ysvara followed, seating herself upon the pale onyx throne with fluid grace. Silver tracery shimmered once, then stilled, mirroring the composure of its queen.
They did not speak immediately. They did not need to. The thrones themselves seemed to hum softly, ancient power resonating through the chamber like a held breath.
Finally, Kael leaned forward slightly, forearms resting on his knees.
"You’ve seen our outer halls," he said. "Our memory and even our weapons,"
His gaze swept over the assembled students, lingering not with intimidation, but with appraisal as he finally finished his statement, "Now you’ll see why this place still stands."
He gestured, and the air to the right of the throne hall shimmered.
Space unfolded like a curtain being drawn aside, revealing a wide balcony overlooking something vast beyond comprehension.
They stepped through.
The sight stole the breath from more than one of them.
Beyond the balcony stretched the Demon Capital itself, Nocturna in its full, living scale. Tier upon tier of cityscape descended into a glowing abyss, structures of obsidian, crimson steel, and living stone stacked and spiraled in deliberate chaos.
Rivers of molten mana cut through districts like arteries, powering entire regions. Massive chains anchored floating bastions in the air, each one bearing sigils of ancient demon houses.
Above it all, the sky burned with movement.
Clouds of mana drifted like nebulae, streaked with violet and gold, while colossal demonic constructs patrolled the heavens, their silhouettes cutting across the light like slow-moving stars.
"This is Nocturna," Ysvara said softly. "Not merely a capital. A convergence."
Elara’s breath caught. Her Battle Map Gift surged to life unbidden, her mind scrambling to comprehend the sheer scale of systems layered atop one another—defense arrays, mana circulation routes, population flows, ritual anchors.
"This city could withstand a god," she whispered.
Kael smiled faintly, "It has."
They moved along the balcony, Kael and Ysvara leading, Raven keeping a careful distance behind the students, her presence a silent blade at their backs.
They descended again, this time via a vertical corridor of light that carried them smoothly downward, depositing them into a chamber unlike any they had yet seen.
The Chamber of Trial.
A circular arena stretched before them, its floor divided into countless shifting plates of stone and sigil. Spectral constructs flickered in and out of existence around the edges, illusory enemies, environments, hazards, all cycling endlessly.
"This is where we test," Kael said. "Adaptation."
Lucian’s eyes gleamed. "You train here?"
"We evaluate here," Ysvara corrected, "Training happens everywhere else."
Zeus cracked his knuckles, clearly tempted to ask if he could try.
Raven shot him a look.
He wisely said nothing.
Further on, they passed through the Archive of Names, a cathedral-like space filled with towering pillars of crystal, each one inscribed with countless demonic names, titles, and deeds.
"Every demon of note," Ysvara explained. "Every ascension. Every fall."
Fade paused, hand hovering inches from a pillar without touching it. "And failures?"
Kael’s voice was even. "Especially failures."
That answer lingered.
They continued, through living forges where weapons were not crafted but negotiated into existence; through spires of meditation where demons sat suspended in midair, locked in centuries-long contemplations; through halls where young demon nobles sparred under the watchful eyes of ancient instructors whose auras alone would have crushed most armies.
At no point were the students treated as lesser and at no point were they coddled. They were watched and measured just like any other Demon would be, and slowly, almost imperceptibly, the atmosphere around them shifted into interest.
By the time they returned to the central axis of the palace, even the demonic attendants they passed regarded the group with subtle nods of acknowledgment.
Not as children.
But as variables.
Kael stopped at last before a sealed doorway etched with interlocking sigils of blood and starlight.
"This is where we part," he said, turning to face the group.
Raven stepped forward. "Students will be escorted to their assigned quarters."
There was a murmur of acknowledgment.
Then Ysvara’s gaze shifted.
It settled on Albedo.
Then Elara.
"Albedo Neverwinter," she said. "Elara Vance."
Both of them straightened instantly.
"Yes, Your Majesty," Elara said, voice steady despite the sudden pressure.
Albedo inclined his head. "Queen Ysvara."
Kael’s smile widened, sharp but approving. "You two will stay."
A ripple went through the group.
Lucian glanced at Albedo, curiosity and concern mingling. Veronica’s eyes narrowed thoughtfully. Zeus looked openly jealous.
Raven nodded once. "I’ll see them settled."
The others were ushered away, reluctant glances cast back over shoulders as they departed.
The great doors sealed behind them.
Silence returned.
Only four remained.
Kael rose from his throne.
Ysvara did the same.
The pressure returned, not crushing, but undeniable.
"Walk with us," Kael said.
They did.
The sealed door opened into a private chamber—smaller, intimate compared to the vastness they had traversed. The walls here were smooth, unadorned stone, the only decoration a circular table carved from a single piece of black crystal.
Power hummed faintly within it.
Kael gestured for them to sit.
They did.
Ysvara studied them both for several heartbeats, silver-black eyes penetrating, layered with centuries of judgment.
Then she spoke.
"You have performed exceptionally."
Elara blinked.
Albedo remained still.
"In situations where others faltered, you adapted," Ysvara continued. "In environments designed to overwhelm, you observed. In the presence of power far beyond you, you did not submit, nor did you challenge foolishly."
Kael leaned back against the table, arms folded. "You excelled under pressure repeatedly."
Elara swallowed. "We... just did what we could."
"That," Kael said, "is exactly the point."
His gaze fixed on Albedo. "You, especially."
The air tightened.
"You have stood before Abyssal entities and lived," Kael said. "You have altered outcomes without drawing unnecessary attention. You have accumulated power without becoming its slave."
Albedo met his eyes evenly. "I don’t enjoy being controlled."
Kael barked a laugh. "Good. Neither do gods."
Ysvara turned to Elara. "And you," she said softly, "possess a mind that sees systems, not moments. Your Gift is rare, but your restraint is rarer."
Elara’s hands clenched slightly in her lap. "I try not to let it consume me."
"It will," Ysvara said calmly. "One day. When it does, the question will not be if you break, but whether you bend the world instead."
Elara inhaled sharply.
Kael straightened. "Make no mistake. This is not idle praise."
He looked between them, expression sharpening.
"The Abyss is not the only force moving," he said. "Old laws are eroding. New variables are emerging."
Ysvara nodded. "And individuals like you, who thrive in adverse conditions, who grow stronger under pressure rather than fracture, are dangerous."
She paused.
"And valuable."
The word hung heavy.
"We will be watching you closely," Kael said. "Both of you."
Albedo felt Havoc and Ruin hum faintly at his side, almost pleased.
"I assumed as much," he replied.
Ysvara smiled, "Good. Then you understand."







