Episode-456


Chapter : 911


The manufactory was no longer a small, informal workshop of a half-dozen loyal friends. It was now a true, and growing, company, with a clearly defined organizational structure, a formal hierarchy, and a loyal, professional workforce of over fifty people. The alchemists were now the heads of a formal Research and Development department. Jasmin, the quiet, competent former kitchen maid, was now the official Forewoman of the production floor, a respected and capable leader.


They were building an army. An army of soap-makers, of accountants, of guards, of marketers. And they were all, in their own way, utterly, completely, and fiercely loyal to the vision of the one, strange, and now almost mythical man who had started it all.


The stakes of Lloyd’s return had been raised to a level he could not possibly comprehend. He had left behind a small, personal, and very profitable venture. He would be returning to a true, professional, and rapidly expanding commercial empire, an empire that was now a significant economic, and therefore political, force within the duchy. This text is hosted at novelFire.net


His small, quiet revolution was no longer small, or quiet. It was a roaring, beautiful, and very, very dangerous engine of change. And he, whether he was ready for it or not, was its king.


---


The Sultan’s expression did not change. The serene, knowing smile simply returned to his face, wider and more amused than ever.


“Yes, my boy,” the Sultan said, his voice a low, rumbling purr of pure, unadulterated, and deeply infuriating satisfaction. “We know.”


Lloyd’s mind, which had just regained its footing, stumbled again. They knew?


“You are a formidable player, Lord Ferrum,” the Sultan continued, his tone that of a grandmaster generously complimenting a promising, if slightly naive, student. “Your disguises are excellent. Your strategies are… inspired. But you are a very large, and very bright, new star in a sky that I have been watching for a very long time. Did you truly believe that a man of your… significance… could move through my kingdom, could win the loyalty of one of my most powerful vassals, could enter my most sacred contest, and that I would not, as a simple matter of professional due diligence, run a full, and very thorough, intelligence check on you?”


He chuckled, a low, warm, and deeply condescending sound. “My spymaster had your true name, your lineage, and a surprisingly detailed, if slightly outdated, report on your known abilities, on my desk within a week of your curing the Qadir boy. We have known who you are for a very, very long time.”


The final, beautiful, and utterly humiliating piece of the puzzle clicked into place. He had not just been outmaneuvered in the final act. He had been a known quantity from the very beginning. His entire, brilliant, and deeply secret infiltration had been about as secret as a circus parade. He had been a bug under a microscope, a rat in a maze, and the smiling, benevolent scientists had been watching his every, predictable move from the very start.


And it was in that moment, in that final, glorious, and ego-shattering instant of his own complete and utter defeat, that the world changed.


An new, and utterly impossible, presence suddenly filled the throne room. It was not a sound. It was not a sight. It was a pressure. A profound, silent, and absolutely, terrifyingly overwhelming pressure, a spiritual weight so immense that it seemed to make the very air thick and heavy as lead. The glowing crystal orb in the ceiling flickered, its magical light dimming as if in fear.


The Sultan’s smile, for the first time, vanished completely, replaced by a look of sharp, sudden, and deeply serious alarm. The Princess Amina, her own considerable composure finally breaking, let out a small, sharp gasp, her hand instinctively going to her father’s arm.


And from the deep, empty shadows behind the great, obsidian throne, a figure emerged. He did not walk. He simply… coalesced, a shadow detaching itself from the deeper shadows. It was Ken Park. But it was not Ken Park, the immaculate, disciplined retainer.


This was something else. His simple, ducal uniform seemed to ripple and shift, the dark fabric taking on the texture of solidified night. His posture, which was always so perfect, now seemed to possess a new, and almost divine, authority. And his eyes… his dark, quiet, and usually unreadable eyes… were now glowing with a faint, but deeply, profoundly powerful, crimson light.


He was radiating a spiritual pressure that was beyond anything Lloyd had ever felt before. It was beyond Commander-Class. It was beyond what he had felt from the Jahl. This was the calm, quiet, and absolutely unshakeable pressure of a true, and very, very ancient, King-Level Transcendent.


Chapter : 912


He moved to stand at Lloyd’s side, a silent, dark, and utterly immovable mountain of pure, contained power. And he spoke. His voice was not the quiet, respectful murmur of the retainer. It was a low, resonant, and deeply, profoundly dangerous rumble, a sound that seemed to make the very stones of the throne room vibrate in sympathy.


And his words were not a request. They were a challenge. A quiet, polite, and absolutely, terrifyingly clear challenge, from one king to another.


“Your Majesty,” Ken Park said, his crimson-glowing eyes fixed on the Sultan. “I am afraid there has been a profound, and very serious, misunderstanding. The contract has been altered without my master’s consent. And my master,” he concluded, his voice a low, rumbling promise of a war that would tear the world apart, “cannot be held to a marriage that he never, and will never, agree to.”


---


The arrival of Ken Park was not just an interruption; it was a fundamental rewriting of the entire power dynamic in the throne room. The air, which had been charged with the high-stakes, but ultimately civilized, tension of a political negotiation, was now thick with the raw, primal, and deeply dangerous energy of a confrontation between two apex predators.


The Sultan, Asad Ullah, who had been the undisputed, absolute, and serenely confident master of this domain, was now faced with a new, and completely unexpected, variable. A variable that was radiating a level of pure, contained spiritual pressure that he himself had not encountered in over a decade. He was no longer the only king in the room.


His initial, sharp alarm, however, quickly subsided, replaced by a new, and far more complex, expression. It was a look of profound, almost academic, and deeply, deeply appreciative respect. The final, and most interesting, piece of the puzzle had just revealed itself.


He leaned back in his obsidian throne, a slow, genuine, and utterly delighted smile spreading across his face. He did not look at Ken as a threat. He looked at him as a fellow grandmaster, a worthy opponent who had just made a magnificent, and very dramatic, opening move.


“Ah,” the Sultan said, his voice a low, rumbling purr of pure, unadulterated, and almost joyful satisfaction. “The famous Shadow of the North. Ken Park. It is a true, and very rare, pleasure to finally meet you in person. The whispers of your power, it seems, do not do you justice. It is a wonderful, and very rare, thing to be in the presence of a fellow traveler on the high path.”


He was not just acknowledging Ken’s power; he was explicitly, and publicly, identifying himself as being of the same, King-Level, caliber. It was a quiet, almost casual, statement of his own, immense, and deeply hidden strength.


Ken simply inclined his head, a gesture of a warrior acknowledging his equal. The silent, powerful challenge still hung in the air between them.


The Sultan then turned his gaze back to Lloyd, and his smile was now laced with a new, and deeply paternal, and deeply infuriating, amusement. “You, my dear boy,” he said, his voice a cheerful, almost chiding, tone, “are a walking, breathing, and deeply, profoundly troublesome magnet for monsters. To have a King-Level Transcendent as a personal bodyguard… it is a level of ostentatious, and frankly reckless, overkill that even I find a little bit… tasteless.”


He chuckled, a low, warm sound that did nothing to dissipate the tension in the room. “My own mages, you see, were the first to notice. During your magnificent performance in the arena. They were not watching the flashy, and I must say, very impressive, fire demon you call a spirit. They were watching you. And they felt it. The quiet, deep, and very powerful echo of not one, but two, other Commander-level entities, sleeping within your soul.”


He was, of course, referring to Fang Fairy and the residual, Transcendent-level power of the crimson ghost that lived within Lloyd. His spymaster had not just identified Lloyd’s name; he had identified the very nature, and the very number, of his hidden gods.


“A young man who commands three separate, high-level spirits,” the Sultan mused, his tone now one of pure, academic wonder. “One of whom is a King-Level entity in disguise. It is a thing of myths. A beautiful, and utterly terrifying, anomaly. I confess, it was this final, beautiful piece of intelligence that convinced me. A man of such… potential… was the only man in the world who could possibly be worthy of my daughter.”