Chapter 366 366: Hord (2) - Reincarnated as an Elf Prince - NovelsTime

Reincarnated as an Elf Prince

Chapter 366 366: Hord (2)

Author: Reincarnated as an Elf Prince
updatedAt: 2025-09-20

The cavern reeked of blood. Black ichor steamed off mutant corpses, their twisted limbs twitching even in death, muscles firing from nerves that hadn't yet realized they'd been severed.

The floor was slick beneath Lindarion's boots, shadows receding reluctantly from the ruin they had helped create. His chest burned with each breath, ribs aching, but he stayed upright. He would not let them see weakness.

Silence stretched, broken only by the crackle of torches and the drip of thick fluid down stone.

Then came the whispers.

"…he cut them down."

"Not even…"

"That blade… did you see the way the air—"

"Not a man. A savior."

The humans stood among the wreckage, soot and exhaustion carved into their faces. They had been beaten into the dirt too many times, buried in caverns like rats with no sun to guide them. But now their eyes fixed on Lindarion, hungry, desperate, terrified.

One man, clutching a broken spear, dropped to one knee. Not from injury. From reverence.

Another followed. Then another.

In moments, half the camp knelt in the muck and blood, heads bowed, whispers hissing like fire catching dry leaves.

Savior.

Prince.

Hope.

Lindarion let the word wash over him like poison.

'They don't understand,' his thoughts curled sharp and cold. 'They see power, so they kneel. They don't see the cracks beneath it.'

[System Notice: Mana Core strain—stabilizing.]

His grip tightened on the sword. Its hum was faint now, satisfied, shadows licking along its edge like a beast too full to hunt. He should have thrown it aside. He should have let them fear it. Instead, his hand refused to let go.

"Master."

Her voice was silk against the back of his mind, warm and steady, a thread binding him where he frayed. Selene.

"They kneel not for the sword, but for you."

'You're wrong.'

"I do not mistake. You are, Lindarion Sunblade. Blood will kneel to you whether you ask it or not. Accept what is yours."

The commander stepped forward, his face carved with soot and scars, sword still red from the battle. He had been the first to doubt, the first to threaten if the weapon turned. Now he looked up at Lindarion not as an equal, but as a man starved looking at bread.

"Prince," he said hoarsely, the title torn raw from his throat. "You saved us. You gave us a chance when none remained." His eyes burned. "Tell us where to march. Tell us how to fight. And we will follow."

The camp echoed with a low murmur. The men and women behind him pressed closer, eyes shining with fevered light. They wanted command. They wanted an order. They wanted someone to bear the burden they had carried until their backs broke.

Lindarion stared down at them, at their kneeling forms, their bloodied hands, their hollowed cheeks.

He had not come here to lead them. He had come for Maeven. For his companions. For the ones who had been stolen. Not for this rabble, these mortals drowning in their own despair.

And yet—

'If I refuse, they will scatter. They will crumble. They will die before Maeven lifts another hand.'

"Then use them," Selene's voice coaxed, warmth coiled with certainty. "Their lives are yours to command. Their blades, their breath, their faith—bend it to your path."

Nysha stood apart from them all, her crimson eyes fixed on him. She didn't kneel. Her shadows twitched faintly around her hands, tension rippling through her frame. She saw the danger in their worship. She saw what he risked becoming.

But she said nothing.

"Rise," Lindarion said finally, his voice low but steady. The word rolled through the cavern like stone dragged across stone.

The commander obeyed instantly, pulling himself to his feet. The others followed, though their eyes never left him.

"You live because you fought," Lindarion continued, meeting each hollow stare. "Do not forget that. But if you want to see another dawn, then listen."

A murmur of assent swept through them, ragged but eager.

He lifted the sword slightly, letting its shadowed hum shiver across the air. They flinched, but did not turn away. Good. Fear was a sharper leash than hope.

"Maeven is not done. He will send more. Worse." His voice cut through their murmurs. "If you run, you will die. If you cower, you will die. But if you follow me—" he let the blade sing, its resonance grinding against the walls, "—then you might live long enough to bury him."

The cavern erupted in shouts. Not cheers, not yet, but guttural cries from throats that hadn't known strength in months. They clung to it, desperate.

"Savior!" someone roared.

"Prince!" another echoed.

"Lead us!"

The words lashed at him. Chains of expectation, heavier than any iron.

Selene's voice hummed soft in his mind, wrapping around the raw edges of his pride. "Do not resist them, Master. They give freely what is already yours. Let them believe. Let them kneel. That is the right of your blood."

Nysha's gaze pierced through the frenzy. Her lips pressed thin, shadows shifting like wings about to break. She wanted to pull him back. To remind him he was killing himself for them.

He turned from her. He could not afford softness.

The commander approached again, lowering his head slightly. "What would you have us do?"

Lindarion's mind sharpened, calculating. Their blades were dull, their mana weak, their formations broken. But numbers—numbers still had use.

"Fortify this cavern," he ordered. "Clear the corpses. Burn them. Then rest." His eyes narrowed. "When Maeven returns, he will find not prey, but a wall of blades."

They shouted again, voices breaking with fervor. The humans scattered to obey, dragging mutant bodies, stoking fires, sharpening what little steel remained.

Lindarion let them move. He let their devotion rise. But inside, his chest ached, his core throbbed with cracks invisible to their eyes.

'Fools,' he thought. 'They mistake desperation for faith.'

"And you mistake faith for weakness," Selene whispered gently. "Master, you are not merely their blade. You are their breath. Without you, they choke. Accept this, even if you scorn it."

He closed his eyes briefly, inhaling through the burn in his ribs. 'If I accept it, it will consume me.'

"Not while I remain with you," she said. Warmth laced every syllable. "You have carried a burden alone. I will not let you now."

His hand loosened on the hilt just slightly. Enough to breathe.

When he opened his eyes again, Nysha was at his side. She did not speak, not with so many ears straining for every word. But her hand brushed briefly against his arm, shadows curling like a question.

He didn't answer her. Couldn't.

Because the cavern had already chosen its answer.

They no longer looked at him with suspicion. They no longer whispered of cursed blades or demon girls.

They looked at him the way men look at fire in winter, hungry, fearful, willing to burn if it meant warmth.

And for the first time since he set foot on this wretched continent, Lindarion realized the truth:

He was no longer just Lindarion, wandering prince, fractured son.

To them, he was salvation.

And salvation was just another word for executioner.

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