Extra's Life: MILFs Won't Leave the Incubus Alone-Chapter 247: When Kings Bow to a Prophet

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Chapter 247: Chapter 247: When Kings Bow to a Prophet

The air in the High Church’s inner sanctum was colder than the winter outside, as though the ancient stones themselves had drawn breath and held it. The vast chamber—reserved for only the most sacred rites—had been cleared of all but the essential:

the high altar of white marble veined with gold, the eternal flame burning in its crystal basin, and a single elevated chair of dark oak that had once belonged to the first High pope. Lucifer sat there now, motionless, robes of indigo and living fire pooled around him like spilled night.

The three Archdukes entered together, yet each step seemed to cost them something.

Valorian of the Iron North led, his massive frame clad in bear-fur and steel, the scars of a hundred battles etched across his weathered face. Behind him came Marcellus of the Sapphire Coast, lean and elegant in sea-green silk, rings glinting on every finger. Last walked Draven of the Shadow Marches, cloaked in black, his presence somehow dimming the light around him.

Their combined mana pressed against the world like a physical weight. Candles along the aisle bent sideways, flames stretching toward the floor as if bowing. Hairline fractures spider-webbed across the marble beneath their boots. Lesser clergy lining the walls dropped instinctively to their knees, faces pale, unable to withstand the pressure of three living legends in one confined space.

Lucifer did not rise.

He remained seated, hands resting lightly on the arms of the chair, pale eyes watching their approach with the calm of deep water. The message was unmistakable: I will not stand for you.

The room answered for him. The eternal flame flared higher, casting long shadows that seemed to lean away from the Morning Star and toward the newcomers. Saintess Calipso, standing to his right, kept her expression serene, but her fingers tightened almost imperceptibly on the staff she carried. Young Bela, to his left, could not hide the tremor in her breath.

The Archdukes stopped ten paces from the dais—an appropriate distance for petitioners addressing a pontiff. Yet the very act of stopping felt like concession.

Valorian spoke first, voice a low rumble that had once commanded legions across frozen battlefields.

"oh prophet " he said, inclining his head exactly the degree required by protocol—neither more nor less. "We come in peace and piety, seeking the Church’s guidance for the empire’s future."

The words were flawless. Ceremonial. Respectful.

Beneath them lay a current of condescension sharp enough to cut: You are new. You are useful. You may yet be negotiated with.

Lucifer heard it as clearly as if they had shouted it. He recognized the tone—he had used it himself in another life, when dealing with powers he believed he could bend. These men still thought the Church was a tool to be wielded, not a force that could wield them.

He decided, quietly, to correct that belief.

Marcellus stepped forward next, smiling the polished smile of a man who had bought and sold half the empire’s trade routes.

"Holy One," he began, voice smooth as oil on water, "my lands have suffered poor harvests these past seasons. The people grow restless. I would consider it a personal blessing—if the Light itself were to walk my fields. A single visit from you would restore faith and calm alike."

It sounded submissive. Almost humble.

It was anything but.

A visit from the Morning Star would bind the Church geographically to Marcellus’s territory. Pilgrims would flock there. Tithes would flow there. Future pontiffs would be expected to honor the precedent. It was a velvet-gloved attempt to anchor divine authority to one archduke’s soil.

Lucifer’s response was gentle, almost kind.

"The Light goes where it wills," he said. "It is NOT summoned."

Marcellus’s smile faltered for the space of a heartbeat. The refusal was soft, but absolute. No anger to rally against, no leverage to seize—only serene denial. It unsettled him more than open confrontation would have.

Draven spoke next, his voice low and sibilant, carrying the chill of marsh fog.

"The Church’s new doctrines have... stirred interest across the realm. Many fear instability. A union between sacred and temporal authority could steady the people." He paused, letting the implication hang. "My eldest daughter is unwed. A marriage to the Church’s chosen representative would bind our houses in unbreakable loyalty."

Not romance. Not desire.

A blood-binding contract meant to chain the Church’s future to House Shadowmarch. A child of that union would inherit both divine favor and archducal power, creating a dynasty that could claim legitimacy from both altar and throne.

The chamber froze.

Even the eternal flame seemed to still.

Lucifer’s reply came cold and immediate, spoken publicly for every ear in the room.

"The Church does not trade faith for bloodlines. Yes we allow indulgence in our church but not to this...level."

Draven’s eyes narrowed fractionally—the first crack in his composure. This was the first time in living memory that an archduke had been publicly, unequivocally denied.

Valorian tried next, spreading his massive hands in a gesture of openness.

"Then let us speak of simpler things. Gold for new cathedrals. Entire cities placed under Church stewardship. Tithes doubled—tripled—if it pleases the Light. Name your price, Holy One, and the North will pay it gladly."

They escalated quickly now, offers tumbling over one another: vaults of ancient coin, holy relics "recovered" from forgotten ruins, monopolies on mana crystals, even the ceding of border fortresses to Church control.

Lucifer rejected each with the same quiet finality.

When the last offer died into silence, he spoke the line that would be repeated in taverns and war councils for generations.

"Gold once ruled the Church," he said, voice carrying effortlessly to the farthest corner. "That era ended the moment I arrived."

Fear began then—not anger.

The Archdukes were accustomed to rage. They had faced armies, assassins, rival sorcerers. Rage could be met with force, bargained with, turned aside.

This was different. This was inevitability wearing the face of calm.

Lucifer rose at last.

Not in fury. Not in arrogance.

In simple, unhurried finality.

The movement drew every eye. The eternal flame flared again, brighter than before, casting his shadow long across the marble until it seemed to swallow the three men before him.

He spoke not as a man addressing equals, but as a force addressing obstacles.

"I have seen what comes," he said. "A famine will strike the Sapphire Coast within two seasons—your granaries will empty, Marcellus, and your people will look to the Church for bread before they look to you. A succession crisis brews in the Iron North—your second son already writes letters to foreign courts, Valorian, promising concessions in exchange for support. And in the Shadow Marches, Draven, your most trusted marshal sharpens a blade he believes you will never see coming."

Each prophecy landed like a hammer blow.

Marcellus’s face drained of color. Valorian’s scarred hands clenched into fists. Draven’s shadow seemed to flicker, as though the darkness itself recoiled.

They did not deny it. They could not. The details were too precise, too intimate. This man already knew their futures—knew the cracks in their foundations better than they themselves had admitted.

Lucifer continued, voice unchanged.

"Your age is not ending because of me. It is ending because you no longer deserve to rule it."

As the final word left his lips, the great bells of the High Church began to ring.

Not by human hands.

The massive bronze bells—silent for centuries except on highest holy days—swung of their own accord, their deep, resonant toll rolling through the capital like the voice of judgment itself.

The Archdukes did not flinch, but something in their posture shifted. A subtle lessening. The barest acknowledgment that they were no longer the apex predators in the room.

Lucifer delivered the ultimatum without raising his voice.

"Stand with the Church, and you will survive the coming era. Resist—and you will be remembered only as relics of a time that could not endure."

No negotiation. No timeline offered. No mercy implied.

Only choice.

He sat once more, the movement dismissing them as clearly as any spoken command. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦

Valorian was the first to turn. Then Marcellus. Finally Draven.

They left the sanctum without another word, cloaks sweeping the marble, mana no longer pressing against the world but withdrawn, coiled tight. Still powerful. Still proud.

But shaken to the core.

Behind them, the chamber erupted into barely contained chaos. Cardinals whispered frantically, some pale with terror, others flushed with exhilaration. Saintess Bela stared at the empty doorway, whispering, "I have never felt power like that..." Calipso’s gaze remained fixed on Lucifer, equal parts awe and calculation.

The Church understood, in that moment, that it no longer reacted to the nobility.

It commanded it.

When the last echo of footsteps faded and the doors closed with solemn finality, Lucifer remained seated a while longer. The bells had fallen silent again, as abruptly as they had begun.

He was alone now, save for the eternal flame and the ancient stones.

Gold, blood, and crowns all fail eventually, he reflected. They rust, they spill, they tarnish.

Faith does not.

Far beyond the capital’s walls, in a distant keep ringed by dragon banners that hung strangely limp in the wind, a different silence reigned. Messengers had not returned. Ravens carried no replies. The Archduke of Dragons had not answered the summons.

Lucifer had noticed.

So had the three who had just left.

They knew something was wrong.

He knew they knew.