Chapter 251 – Shards of Command - Elven Invasion - NovelsTime

Elven Invasion

Chapter 251 – Shards of Command

Author: Respro
updatedAt: 2026-01-25

POV 1: DYUG VON FORESTIA – AMID THE WRECKAGE

The sea reeked of iron and ichor. Broken masts of Elven frigates and twisted metal of human destroyers drifted together in a graveyard that had no borders.

Dyug wiped black Nightborne blood from his face, his silver hair clinging to his skin. His knights still stood, though half their number had fallen. The Corps around Mary formed a protective wedge as if instinctively drawing the line between Dyug and annihilation.

“Prince,” one knight said breathlessly, “the mortals are holding the flank. They… they saved us.”

Dyug’s eyes flicked toward the human destroyer still burning, its guns hammering into a wounded titan. Another salvo bought them precious seconds. Mortals—weak, short-lived, and unworthy in Elven doctrine—were fighting like gods of iron and fire.

He raised his sword, its edge cracked but unbroken. “Then we bleed beside them. No thrones, no crowns—only survival.”

The cheer was ragged, desperate, but it echoed across shattered seas. For the first time, Dyug felt he was not his mother’s son. He was a commander of the living.

POV 2: MARY – ROYAL KNIGHT CORPS

Her arms shook from exhaustion, but Mary’s eyes blazed. She had once dreamed of glory in parades, of Queen Elara’s blessing, of Dyug’s hand clasping hers under Luna’s light. Now the dream lay drowned in black waters, replaced by something rawer—truth.

“Shields high!” she barked as another Nightborne crashed against their line. Sparks of corrupted magic crackled across its talons. The Knights braced, their shields glowing faintly with moonsteel runes.

A missile strike from a nearby human frigate slammed into the titan’s flank, knocking it sideways. Mary didn’t hesitate. She thrust her spear, her Corps surging as one, tearing the monster down.

Cheers rose—not just from Elves, but from the human sailors watching across decks. For one breath, they were not enemies.

She turned, catching Dyug’s gaze across the field of wreckage. His eyes met hers, and for the first time, she saw no prince, no royal leash—only the man she loved, standing bloodied yet unbowed.

And she knew: her loyalty was no longer to crown or creed, but to him.

POV 3: CAPTAIN NATHANIEL HARKER – USS PROVIDENCE

The Providence’s bridge smelled of gunpowder and sweat. Harker gripped the railing as another wave slammed against the hull. Screens showed Elven frigates firing ballistae in rhythm with U.S. Navy cannons—uncoordinated, yet undeniably effective.

“Sir!” an ensign cried. “The Elves just signaled—they’re covering our aft. They’re… protecting us.”

Harker’s jaw tightened. Protecting themselves, he wanted to say. Yet he couldn’t deny the truth: their line had held only because Elves and humans fought back-to-back.

“Return the courtesy,” he ordered. “Shift fire to cover their wounded frigate.”

The crew hesitated only a second, then obeyed. Guns roared, cutting down a Nightborne before it reached the crippled Elven vessel. Across the storm-lit sea, Knights raised their weapons in salute.

Harker’s chest tightened. Indigo’s sacrifice haunted him, but perhaps this—this fragile, blood-soaked alliance—was what she had died for.

“Broadcast to Command,” he said firmly. “We’re no longer two fleets. We’re one wall.”

POV 4: REINA MORALES – SOUTHERN COMMAND HUB, USHUAIA

Screens painted her command center with light and flame. Her staff erupted in murmurs at the impossible sight: Elves and humans fighting shoulder to shoulder.

“Ma’am,” an officer whispered, voice almost reverent, “they’re working together.”

Reina Morales stood tall, eyes locked on the feeds. Her voice rang iron-sharp: “Then broadcast it. Every channel, every screen, every bunker. Let the world see it. Show them that monsters bleed when mortals and Elves stand as one.”

Technicians scrambled, patching uplinks through failing satellites. Across continents, people saw it: Knights and sailors covering one another, warships of two worlds unleashing fury together.

Reina leaned forward, voice low. “But remember—alliances forged in fire break as easily as they form. When the Gate shifts again, when Elara demands obedience, they may turn their blades on us. We must be ready.”

Her aide swallowed hard. “And if the alliance holds?”

Reina’s eyes never left the flickering Gate. “Then maybe, just maybe, humanity lives to see another dawn.”

POV 5: QUEEN ELARA – THRONE OF MOONLIGHT

The fortress-ship groaned under the strain of wards buckling. Queen Elara stood at the heart, her palms bleeding light, her body trembling. The Gate pulsed like a living heart, refusing her command.

Her courtiers whispered in terror. Even High Elves with golden hair, their pride eternal, avoided her gaze. The Nightborne—once weapons of divine obedience—had rebelled.

“Majesty,” murmured a trembling priestess, “your son… Prince Dyug rallies the Knights under his own banner. He fights with the mortals.”

Elara’s hands clenched, blood dripping from her palms. Rage and despair warred in her chest. Her son, her blood, was defying her in open battle. Yet beneath fury lay something more dangerous: fear.

For the Gate spoke in pulses she alone could feel:

I am not your weapon. I am not your leash. I am becoming.

The words pressed into her mind like knives. Elara staggered, her crown dimming. For the first time in centuries, the Queen of Moonlight felt powerless.

But her voice, when it came, was cold as steel. “How much more time do they require? Summon the High Priestess Corps NOW. If the Gate must be drowned in blood to obey, then so be it. Even if it means burning my own son’s rebellion.”

The courtiers bowed low, terror in their eyes. None dared to answer.

POV 6: DYUG & MARY – THE BREAKING SEA

Nightborne titans fell one after another, torn by missiles, ballistae, and sheer will. Yet the Gate pulsed stronger, cracks spreading in the sky itself.

Mary wiped her blade, breath ragged. “Dyug… this isn’t just survival. Something’s changing. The Gate—it wants.”

Dyug looked past the wreckage, his silver hair plastered to his face. The realization struck him like a blade: his mother had lost control. The war was no longer Elves against mortals. It was life against something new, something that refused all chains.

He took Mary’s hand briefly, squeezing with more truth than any vow. “Then we stand together. With whoever will fight.”

Above them, human and Elven ships shifted into formation—not by orders, but by instinct. For the first time, the ocean carried the rhythm of a single fleet.

CLOSING SCENE

The South Pacific had become a crucible of unity and fracture alike:

* Dyug, once chained by bloodline, now stood as a commander of survivors.

* Mary, once sworn to crown, now found loyalty in love and respect.

* Captain Harker, haunted by loss, accepted the fragile truth of alliance.

* Reina Morales, strategist of humanity, turned chaos into the seed of unity.

* Queen Elara, her throne trembling, faced rebellion not just from mortals, but from her own son—and from the Gate itself.

And the Gate pulsed, darker, brighter, alive. Not a passage. Not a leash. But a will.

The war was no longer two-sided. It was the world itself against the unknown.

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