Global Islands: I'm The Sea God's Heir!-Chapter 119: Caelum’s Powers

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Chapter 119: Chapter 119: Caelum’s Powers

The atmosphere within the Imperial Palace of Eternia had reached a peculiar state of duality. In the public halls and sun-drenched gardens, it was a time of unprecedented prosperity and familial warmth. To the citizens, their Emperor was no longer just a conqueror.

He was now a father, a man who walked the marble corridors with a laughing toddler perched on his shoulders. But in the shadows of the nursery and the cold vacuum of the system’s edge, a silent preparation was unfolding that would determine the fate of the Helios-9 sector.

​Caelum was now physically equivalent to a three-year-old, though his growth was as controlled and deliberate as every other aspect of his existence. He was a masterpiece of biological and spiritual engineering.

His skin had the luster of polished pearls, and his eyes held a depth that often made even the veteran Law-Binders look away in a mix of reverence and unease.

​The day began like any other in the era of the Hidden Hegemony. Aegis and Bella were determined to maintain the illusion of a normal childhood for their son. They spent the morning in the Royal Aviary, where birds made of living flame and frozen mist flitted between the branches of trees imported from the furthest reaches of the Prime World.

​"Look, Caelum," Bella said, pointing to a Phoenix-Lark. "It sings because it is happy. Not because it has to fulfill a quest or master a law. Life is about more than power."

​Caelum clapped his small hands together, his face lighting up with a joyous, toothy grin.

"Birdy, birdy!" he exclaimed, his voice high and sweet. He chased the creature across the grass, stumbling occasionally with a calculated clumsiness that perfectly mirrored a child of his age.

​Aegis watched from a nearby bench, a soft smile on his face. He had spent the previous night overseeing the "erasure" of two Kyros prowlers near the third orbital ring, but here, in the presence of his son’s laughter, that cold world felt a million miles away.

​"He’s progressing well," Aegis noted, leaning back. "His mana-signature is stable. He’s not showing any signs of the premature awakening we feared."

​Bella nodded, leaning her head on Aegis’s shoulder. "The lockdown on his System access was the right choice. He’s learning to be human, hubby. That’s the most important foundation we can give him."

​But Caelum, while seemingly fascinated by the Phoenix-Lark, was actually focused on the thermal fluctuations in the bird’s wings. He was mentally mapping the conversion of mana into heat, calculating the exact efficiency of the creature’s metabolic fire.

Weak, Caelum thought, his mind a cold, crystalline processing center. The energy loss is fifteen percent. If I were to refine that flame, I could extend its flight path by three hundred miles.

​He stumbled again, falling onto his bottom and letting out a playful "Oof!" to satisfy the watchful eyes of his parents.

Beneath the grass, however, his toes were digging into the soil, sending microscopic pulses of Abyssal mana into the planet’s crust. He was "pinging" the planetary defense grid, checking for any new blind spots that the Kyros scouts might have exploited during the night.

​When night fell and the palace settled into its deep, mana-shielded slumber, the mask came off. Caelum sat up in his bed, the silk sheets rustling softly. He didn’t move toward the door; his father had placed a Tier 16 detection ward on the entrance.

Instead, Caelum focused on the space directly in front of him.

​He didn’t use the palace’s mana. He used the "Planetary Link" to draw directly from the Abyssal core, bypassing the local sensors. He activated his self-styled "Chrono-Nursery" technique, a localized temporal bubble that accelerated his personal time. Inside this bubble, Caelum spent what felt like weeks in a single night.

​He was currently working on the Grand Unification of Law. His father commanded the Abyss; his mother commanded the Frost. To the System, these were two distinct, powerful branches.

But Caelum, with his thousand-year gestation period to think, saw them as two halves of a singular cosmic truth: The Silence.

​The Abyss was the silence of the void, and the absence of all things.

The Frost was the silence of the atom, and the cessation of movement.

​"If I combine them, It won’t just freeze the enemy. It will remove them from the concept of motion entirely."

​He held out his hand. A tiny spark appeared, a light that was so black it seemed to pull the very shadows of the room toward it, yet it was rimmed with a frost so cold it made the air turn into liquid oxygen. It was a Tier 15 Law fragment, created by a toddler who hadn’t even had his first formal training session.

​He felt the strain on his small physical frame. His bone marrow burned as it struggled to contain the raw power. This was why he hid his training. If his parents knew he was pushing his body this hard, they would shut him down instantly.

They wanted a son, but Caelum knew the empire needed a weapon.

​The Aggression on the Horizon

​While the heir practiced his forbidden synthesis, the "Ghost War" was rapidly turning into something more substantial. In the Imperial War Room, the holographic map was a sea of red.

​"They’ve stopped sending scouts," Felix reported, his voice tight with anxiety. "The Kyros Hegemony has deployed a ’Diplomatic Pacification Fleet’ to the border. They are claiming that our system’s gravitational instability is a threat to the trade routes."

​"Pacification fleet?" Kaelen spat, pointing to the ship counts. "They have three thousand Vanguard-Cruisers and a mobile Star-Forge. That’s not diplomacy. That’s a siege."

​Aegis stood at the head of the table, his God-Killer Trident glowing with a low, menacing hum. "They are trying to call my bluff. They know we’ve been erasing their scouts, but they have no proof. By sending a formal fleet, they are forcing me to either submit to a ’safety inspection’ which would reveal our true development or fire on them and start a sector-wide war."

​"If we let them in, they’ll see the 1,000x dilation remnants," Sora added. "They’ll see the Law-Glaives. They’ll realize we aren’t a vassal world. They’ll realize we’re a rival."

​Aegis looked at the map. The Kyros fleet was currently anchored just outside the Oort cloud, their massive siphon-beams retracted but their weapons hot. The High Arbiter leading this fleet was not Vane. It was someone higher in the hierarchy, Arbiter Malphas, who was a Tier 15 veteran who had wiped out entire civilizations for less than a missing scout.