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THE GENERAL'S DISGRACED HEIR-Chapter 357: EXPLOSIVE CONFRONTATION
"Explain?" Flames surged higher around her form. "Explain why you hid your deteriorating condition? Why you didn't trust me enough to help? Why I had to learn from LUNA that you've been dying by inches all this time?"
Tears glimmered in her eyes, catching the firelight and transforming each droplet into a tiny inferno. The raw pain in her expression belied the fury in her voice, revealing deeper vulnerabilities beneath her commanding presence.
From deeper in the laboratory, a sound of muffled laughter grew progressively more pronounced until it erupted into full-throated cackles. Yue, her childlike form doubled over with mirth, wiped tears of amusement from her eyes while her daughter Litty stood beside her, trying and failing to suppress her own giggles.
The flame-wielding woman—Elara—whirled to face them, her expression darkening further. "What exactly is so amusing about this situation?" she demanded.
Litty immediately ducked behind her mother, feigning sudden interest in a nearby alchemical apparatus. Yue, however, seemed entirely unintimidated by the display of elemental fury.
"Oh my," Yue managed between chuckles, "I had no idea your condition was this serious!"
"My condition?" Elara's flames dimmed momentarily in confusion. "What are you talking about?"
Before Yue could elaborate, movement from the shadows caught everyone's attention. A slender woman with golden eyes stepped forward, her human appearance slipping away like a discarded cloak to reveal something far more primal. Her teeth elongated into razor-sharp points, and claws extended from her fingertips, gleaming like polished obsidian in the laboratory's uneven light.
"So," Luna growled, her voice carrying harmonic undertones that no human vocal cords could produce, "you planned to steal my master from me?" The shadows around her feet writhed like living things, responding to her agitation.
"YOUR master?" The words came from a new figure who seemed to materialize from the very air itself. With platinum-white hair that floated as if underwater and skin so pale it appeared translucent, Vespera advanced into the confrontation. "If anyone has claim to David, it would be me." Her voice carried a seductive melody that seemed designed to enthrall, yet beneath it lurked something ancient and dangerously powerful.
"Both of you presume too much," Elara retorted, flames reigniting around her hands as she faced the newcomers. "David is not property to be claimed."
As the three women squared off in increasingly hostile postures, the man at the center of the dispute—David—attempted to intervene, only to stagger slightly. A strong hand steadied him from behind, belonging to a bronze-skinned figure with an aura of divinity that even Maya and Zack could perceive from their hiding spot.
"Nasty women you've collected," Kaelith observed with a mixture of amusement and disdain. "Though I suppose that speaks to your particular taste."
David smiled weakly. "You haven't seen the others yet."
"Others?" Kaelith's expression shifted from smugness to genuine shock before he could mask it.
Whatever response he might have offered died unspoken as his form began to flicker, his substance becoming increasingly transparent. "It seems my time in physical form is expiring," he noted with evident frustration. "I cannot maintain this manifestation without natural mana sources to supplement your own."
He fixed David with a stern gaze as his body continued to dissolve into motes of golden light. "Try not to die while I'm indisposed. I have invested too much in your survival to watch you perish now." With those parting words, his form collapsed entirely, the light streaming back to the ornate bracelet on David's wrist.
David held up the bracelet, studying it thoughtfully as the three women continued their increasingly heated debate behind him. The metal gleamed with internal light, pulsing gently like a heartbeat.
Can you still hear me? David directed the thought inward, an experiment more than an expectation.
Of course I can hear you, fool, Kaelith's voice resonated directly in his mind, startling despite his suspicion that such communication might be possible. Did you think I would abandon you to those harpies?
How is this possible? David wondered, turning the bracelet to catch the light. You couldn't speak to me telepathically before.
The closing of your dimensional fractures has altered our connection, Kaelith explained, his mental voice carrying the same arrogant tone as his spoken words. Your essence is no longer leaking across realities, which allows for more stable communication between us. You should be grateful for the improvement.
David suppressed a smile. So you're saying I no longer need the bracelet? I could just drop it in the nearest disposal chute...
The bracelet flared hot against his skin. You ungrateful whelp! After everything I've done—
"David!" freeωebnovēl.c૦m
Three female voices called his name simultaneously, interrupting the telepathic exchange. Elara, Luna, and Vespera had apparently reached an impasse in their argument and now looked to him for resolution, their expressions ranging from expectant to demanding.
David sighed deeply, running a hand through his hair as he surveyed the destruction around them—shattered equipment, scattered papers, the door embedded in the opposite wall, and the two wide-eyed alchemists peeking around the corner who thought themselves hidden.
"I don't suppose anyone's hungry?" he offered with a weary smile. "Perhaps we could continue this discussion over breakfast?"
From the doorway, Maya turned to Zack with wide eyes. "Did we just witness what I think we witnessed?"
Zack, his scholarly reserve finally abandoned in the face of overwhelming evidence, could only nod mutely.
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In his office atop the Guild's central tower, Archmage Vernathan winced as the building trembled beneath him for the third time that morning. His quill left an unfortunate streak across the funding proposal he'd been meticulously crafting for the past hour. With a resigned sigh, he set the ruined document aside.
"Yue again," he muttered, reaching for a crystal ball on his desk. The sphere flickered to life, revealing an image of the west wing's smoke-filled corridor. "Of course it is."
He rubbed his temples, feeling the familiar headache building. The last quarterly budget meeting still haunted him—three hours of explaining why replacing an entire laboratory wing was "necessary expenditure" rather than "gross negligence." Vernathan glanced at Yue's latest research summary: Stabilisation Applications.
"This invention had better be revolutionary enough to convince the Board to cover these damages," he sighed, making a note to increase next year's maintenance budget. "Perhaps I should just allocate a separate 'Yue Destruction Fund' and be done with it."