The Extra is a Genius!?-Chapter 581: The House He Left Behind

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Chapter 581: Chapter 581: The House He Left Behind

Snow drifted slowly across the outer courtyard of Iskandar Peaks, lighter now than before. The wind had calmed to a steady breath instead of a cutting roar, moving frost across the stone in thin white trails.

Noel stood near the edge of the terrace overlooking the mountain descent. Noir remained beside him, her dark fur dusted with fine crystals of ice, purple eyes reflecting the pale sky.

He had done what he came to do.

The Northern Isles were aligned.

Iskandar had committed.

The other major houses would follow through existing ties and alliances. Some out of loyalty. Some out of strategy. Some because others would move first.

Only one name remained unresolved.

Thorne.

His own house.

The irony was not lost on him.

The break had been his decision. Unilateral. Final. He had chosen distance long ago. They had not chased him away with words; they had done it with actions.

Assassins.

He still remembered that first night clearly. Waking up in a body that wasn’t his own. Inheriting the name "Noel Thorne." The extra in a tragic story where the villains won and the world fell apart.

He had barely understood where he was when they tried to kill him.

That early phase had been chaos and blood and instinct. He had killed because he had to. Because survival left no room for hesitation. Because peace was a luxury he wasn’t granted.

All he had wanted was a quiet life.

The memory surfaced unbidden.

[Save the World.]

The system window had appeared with brutal simplicity.

At first, he thought it was mocking him. Some cosmic sarcasm layered over a bad situation. He had tried to ignore it. Delayed it. Pretended it wasn’t real.

The system had corrected him.

It was not optional.

Refusal was not part of the design.

And now—

Now he stood a single step from completing what had defined years of his existence.

He was no longer alone in this fight. There were allies. Friends. People who trusted him.

He was going to be a father.

Failure was no longer personal.

It was unacceptable.

The snow continued to fall lightly as Noel exhaled, grounding himself before speaking.

Noir shifted slightly at his side, sensing the weight of what came next.

Noir was the one who broke the silence.

"Do we really have to go there, Dad?"

Her voice was calm, but there was tension beneath it. Not fear. Protective instinct.

Noel glanced down at her.

"You know what they did," she continued. "Even before I was with you from the beginning, I learned. The assassins. The nights you had to fight alone. The people you had to kill just to survive because of them."

Her purple eyes held his steadily.

"You have enough allies now. More than enough. The Isles. Iskandar. Valor. You don’t need them."

There was no childish anger in her tone. Just logic wrapped in loyalty.

Noel exhaled softly and lowered himself to one knee in the snow. The cold seeped through the fabric of his trousers, but he didn’t seem to notice. He reached out and rested his hand on Noir’s head, fingers brushing gently through her black fur streaked with purple.

She leaned into the touch without hesitation.

"I know," he said quietly. "Believe me, I know."

His hand moved slowly, absent-mindedly, grounding them both.

"I don’t want to go," he admitted. "Not even a little."

The wind shifted lightly around them.

"But we only get one chance to do this properly," he continued. "One chance to end it without leaving loose ends."

His gaze lifted toward the distant mountains.

"I need everyone. Every major house standing on the same side."

He paused before adding, more practically, "Their territory was devastated during the crystal incident. Their lands were nearly destroyed. If they’ve truly changed, they’ll want revenge as much as anyone."

Noir was quiet for a moment, absorbing it.

"...I think my feelings toward them were clouding my judgment," she said at last.

Noel smiled faintly.

"That happens."

She nodded once.

"Alright, Dad. Let’s finish it."

Noel rose smoothly to his feet, snow falling from his knee.

"Spatial Shift."

The air tightened around them, mana folding space cleanly and without spectacle.

The snowfields of Iskandar vanished.

And the world changed.

Cold white vanished.

Green replaced it.

The shift was abrupt enough to unsettle the senses for a heartbeat. Snow and thin mountain air gave way to mild warmth and the scent of damp earth. Leaves stirred gently in a breeze that carried no bite.

Noel stood on the gravel path leading toward the Thorne estate.

Spring.

At least it felt like it.

Tall trees lined the approach, their branches thick with fresh foliage. Sunlight filtered through in scattered patterns across trimmed hedges and polished stone walkways. The estate grounds were orderly, carefully maintained, nothing out of place.

The manor itself rose ahead in pale stone and dark slate roofing, its structure unmistakably noble. Large windows reflected the afternoon sky. The crest of House Thorne rested above the main entrance, restored and polished.

It was no longer in ruins.

The crystal incident had devastated this territory once. Sections of land had fractured. Parts of the estate had been reduced to rubble.

Now it stood rebuilt.

Stronger, if anything.

A symbol of recovery.

For a moment, Noel simply looked at it.

Memories pressed in quietly.

Corridors he once walked without thought. Voices he no longer heard. A name he had chosen to step away from.

Noir remained at his side, silent.

A servant crossing the courtyard froze mid-step upon seeing him.

Recognition spread quickly.

Within seconds, movement rippled through the front steps. A junior attendant hurried inside. Doors opened. Footsteps echoed beyond the threshold.

And then Frederick appeared.

He moved with measured pace despite his age, posture slightly hunched but controlled. His formal attire was immaculate as always. Pale, lined skin framed a face sharpened by decades of service. His white hair was combed back neatly, and his eyes, though aged, remained keen.

He stopped a few steps from Noel.

"Welcome back, young master," Frederick said, voice steady.

Frederick remained where he stood, hands folded neatly behind his back.

Up close, the years showed more clearly. The faint tremor in one hand when he shifted his weight. The deeper lines at the corners of his eyes. Age had bent his frame slightly, but it had not dulled him. His gaze was as sharp as it had ever been.

He had served this house longer than most of its current members had been alive.

Mentor to Albrecht.

Witness to everything.

"Welcome back, young master," he repeated, inclining his head just enough to fulfill protocol without turning it into ceremony.

Noel gave a small nod in return.

"It’s been a while, Frederick."

"Yes," the old butler replied evenly. "It has."

There was no accusation in the statement. Just fact.

A brief silence settled between them before Frederick continued.

"May I ask why you have returned?"

Direct.

Noel didn’t look away from him.

"I need the family’s help," he said plainly. "I believe some is owed."

Frederick’s expression did not shift, though something in his eyes flickered—recognition, perhaps. Or understanding that went deeper than the words spoken aloud.

"That," Frederick replied carefully, "is not for me to decide."

A pause followed.

"But your father will be pleased to see you."

Noel did not respond immediately to that.

Frederick had always known more than he ever said. He had remained through every shift in this household—through the loss of Albrecht’s wife, through the hardening that followed, through the fractures that spread quietly behind closed doors.

He had never left.

Loyal to the house.

Perhaps loyal to something more complicated than that.

"If you would follow me," Frederick added, turning slightly toward the entrance. "I will inform Lord Albrecht of your arrival."

Frederick guided him through the familiar corridors without unnecessary words. The estate interior smelled faintly of polished wood and fresh linen. Servants stepped aside as they passed, some lowering their gaze, others glancing up briefly with curiosity before returning to their duties.

Nothing felt abandoned.

Nothing felt neglected.

They stopped before a door at the end of the eastern wing.

Frederick opened it.

"Your room has been maintained," he said simply.

Noel stepped inside.

Crimson accents lined the walls in subtle patterns, refined but restrained. A large bed stood against the far side of the room, carved headboard polished to a quiet shine. The desk near the window had been cleared and organized, papers stacked neatly as if awaiting use. Books filled the shelves along the left wall, arranged with care rather than dusted into neglect.

Sunlight filtered through the wide window, casting a warm reflection across the floor and revealing the estate grounds beyond—trimmed gardens, orderly paths, movement of distant staff.

It was better maintained than he remembered.

He walked further inside, gaze moving slowly across the space.

’They’re still cleaning it.’

The thought settled more heavily than he expected.

He remained standing near the center of the room, hands at his sides, eyes tracing details that once meant nothing and now meant too much.

The past and present overlapped quietly.

Then—

Tok.

Tok.

Tok.

A knock at the door.