Chapter 37: The Stillness Beneath the Tides - Spellforged Scion - NovelsTime

Spellforged Scion

Chapter 37: The Stillness Beneath the Tides

Author: Zentmeister
updatedAt: 2025-09-05

CHAPTER 37: THE STILLNESS BENEATH THE TIDES

The moonlight filtered through the arched coral spires of the palace like molten silver, casting long, rippling shadows across the polished aquamarine floors.

Outside, bioluminescent leviathans drifted by in solemn procession, sentinels of a kingdom too deep for light, but not for treachery.

Thalassaria sat alone in her sanctum, a chamber carved into the living spine of an ancient sea-beast whose name had long been forgotten.

Her throne was quiet, regal, woven from translucent strands of abyssal pearl and woven kelp, but it may as well have been a blade’s edge.

She sipped absentmindedly from a fluted goblet of deepwine, swirling the dark liquid as her gaze drifted to the rippling surface of the scrying pool.

The images had long faded: the battle above was over, and Caedrion yet lived.

That alone would have been enough to tempt fate.

But fate, she knew, was never without hands, clutching, greedy little hands that clung to power, to legacy, to old jealousies dressed up as divine mandates.

She could feel them now. The currents of discontent. The weight of whispers thickening in her court. The sudden, careful silence of her generals.

The way her high priestess averted her gaze just a heartbeat too long. The subtle shift in etiquette, in posture, in the order of bowed heads.

You think I didn’t notice?

Her eyes half-lidded, her lips curved ever so faintly into something that wasn’t quite a smile.

You think I didn’t know that you petty little shits would rebel against me the moment I showed interest in a man who wasn’t you? That the moment I turned from your stale counsel to gaze upon a mortal spark, your illusions of control would fracture?

She exhaled slowly through her nose, placing the goblet down on the armrest with an audible click.

I’ve ruled longer than any of you have drawn breath. I’ve seen treachery dressed in more noble robes than yours. I’ve waded through centuries of palace intrigues, survived assassinations with a sigh, and broken conspiracies with a glance. You are not special. You are not hidden. You are not safe.

She rose to her feet, slowly, gracefully. Her gown of woven tideglass shimmered like moonlight dancing on the sea’s edge.

One of her advisors flinched as she passed. Another bowed too deeply.

She smiled.

They still bowed. That was enough, for now.

Let them believe their rebellion blooms in secret. Let them mistake patience for ignorance, mercy for blindness. Let them gather, whisper, plot. Let them try to steal what I’ve already anticipated. When the time comes, I won’t need a blade. I’ll just stop holding the tides back.

She stopped at the grand archway overlooking the endless abyss, the lights of her queendom twinkling far below.

Somewhere beyond, above, Caedrion lived. And fought. And grew.

Her voice was but a whisper... soft, dangerous, reverent.

"That’s my man."

Behind her, none dared speak. Even the water stilled.

---

The throne room of the Ember Court burned not with fire, but tension.

Murmurs echoed beneath its obsidian arches as generals and viziers clutched fresh reports, some trembling, others grim-faced, all too afraid to speak first.

At the apex of the room, Lord Veltharion Ignarion stood like a monument chiseled from scorched basalt, his crimson cloak trailing behind him like the tongue of a dying flame.

His golden gauntlets flexed with restraint as he skimmed the final page of the dispatch, his amber eyes smoldering beneath a furrowed brow.

No one dared interrupt his silence.

Then, he exhaled through his nose, a low, steaming breath, and folded the parchment slowly, methodically, as if sealing the fate of an entire bloodline in that motion alone.

"That disgraceful son of mine," Veltharion said, voice thick with contempt, "starts this war without permission, loses half my army in a single engagement, and now thinks he can burn my lands in a fit of divine fury?"

He turned to the gathered court, their eyes avoiding his. The brazier flames flinched as his aura flared.

"A child throws a tantrum and finds a matchstick. He calls it godhood." He stepped down from the throne dais, boots echoing with finality. "I’ll go forth personally. I’ll tame the little brat."

He paused, letting the word tame settle into the marrow of every advisor and commander present.

"Once I’ve shattered his delusion and extinguished that pitiful flame he’s clinging to, I’ll ensure his death, no, his lesson, is as long and miserable as possible."

"And I want Caedrion to see it," Veltharion growled, voice low and venomous. "Let him understand what fate awaits those who dare to challenge House Ignarion."

"His rebellion was bold. Admirable, even. But I will make his agony legendary."

The hall remained still. One of the war-magi finally dared speak.

"My lord... if I may... the boy’s power, it resembles something ancient. Perhaps even—"

Veltharion waved him off with a flick of his hand, fire crackling from his fingertips.

"I know what it resembles...."

He reached for his sword, an heirloom forged from the heart of a fallen star.

"Fetch my armor. Summon the Infernal Host. And inform the world: the Lord of Embers rides to war, not to conquer, but to discipline."

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