Trinity of Magic
Chapter 463 - B7 - 16: The Empire’s Diplomacy II
The light faded, leaving spots dancing across Viola's vision. When the world reassembled itself, the hooded figure had moved twenty paces forward, standing alone in the grass between their small group and the vast elven host.
The morning breeze died completely. Not stilled—murdered, cut off mid-breath as if the air itself recoiled from what was about to unfold.
"Turn back." The figure's voice carried across the valley without rising, without strain. It simply arrived, inevitable as gravity. "Consider this a formal warning."
Viola's chest tightened. The sheer audacity of it. One person, radiating no magical signature whatsoever, standing before ten thousand elven warriors and issuing commands. Her grandfather would have called it sublime arrogance. Her instructors would have called it suicide.
The elven commanders remained mounted on their dream-beasts, antlers catching the light like crystalline crowns. One urged their mount forward, stopping in shouting distance of the hooded figure. This close, Viola could see the commander's face clearly: She had an ageless beauty married to barely contained fury, lips pressed thin, jaw muscles taut beneath porcelain skin.
"You dare?" The commander's voice rang like struck silver. "You dare stand before the Emerald Host and speak commands? We smell the blood on your winds, human. We have seen the smoke of our cousins' pyres. And you—" a gesture of disgust, "—you who reek of nothing, who brings no power to this field, would presume to threaten us?"
The hooded figure tilted their head slightly. "I presume nothing. I merely state what will be."
Laughter rippled through the elven ranks, not mirthful, but sharp as breaking glass. The commander raised one elegant hand, and from the host rose the flyers.
Viola's breath caught. She'd thought herself skilled in aerial combat, had taken pride in her family's mastery of the skies. But these elves moved like wind given form. They didn't fight the air—they were the air, flowing upward in spirals that defied every principle of aerodynamics she'd been taught. A hundred of them, perhaps more, ascending with such grace that her own abilities felt like a child's fumbling.
They struck without warning, without battle cries. Silent as diving hawks, they descended on the lone figure from every angle. Blades of compressed air, invisible to normal sight but clear as day to Viola's senses, sliced toward the hooded form in a pattern that left no escape route, no possibility of—
The figure snorted.
Such a mundane sound. Dismissive. Bored.
The flyers dropped.
Not fell—dropped. Like marionettes with severed strings, they plummeted from the sky. The air that had been their ally, their very essence, simply ceased to acknowledge them. Viola watched in horror as bodies tumbled earthward, some trying desperately to summon their magic, others already unconscious from the shock of separation.
They hit the ground hard. Bones snapped. Cries of pain rose from those still conscious. But none died, their bodies too strong to succumb from such a fall.
"Your people yet live," the figure said, still in that tone of absolute certainty. "This mercy will not be extended twice. Turn back."
The elven commander had gone very still atop their mount. Around her, the perfect formations wavered slightly, uncertainty rippling through ten thousand warriors who had never known defeat.
"Who are you?" The question came out careful now, weighted with new wariness.
The figure's hood turned slightly, as if considering whether the question merited a response.
"I have no name." Each word fell like a stone into still water. "I am will made manifest. I am the word of my Emperor given form. And like that will—" the pause stretched, "—I cannot be defied."
The commander's face flushed, beauty transformed by rage. Her mount reared, antlers slicing air, and their voice cracked like a whip across the valley.
"Emerald Host! Show this creature the price of defying the Children of the Tree!"
The charge began like an avalanche: slow at first, then building to inexorable momentum. The ground trembled beneath thousands of feet moving in perfect synchronization. Nature Mages led the van, and Viola's eyes widened at their appearance.
These were not the lithe, graceful beings of elven stereotype. Their skin had taken on the texture and hardness of ancient bark, muscles corded like old roots. Some stood eight feet tall, their limbs elongated and joints bent at angles that shouldn't have been possible. They ran with their hands touching earth, and where they passed, the grass itself became weapon—blades of green shooting upward, hardening to steel-sharp points.
Behind them came the regular infantry, spears lowered, shields interlocked. And threading through it all, the Life Mages worked their art. Viola watched muscles swell to twice their size, fatigue banished, strength doubled and redoubled.
An army of nightmares bearing down on four people, one of whom still radiated nothing.
This tale has been unlawfully lifted from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
Beside her, Ignis cursed. "We need to—"
The words died in his throat. Viola felt it at the same moment: a pull, gentle at first, then insistent. Her mana, the warm current that had flowed through her for years, began to slip away. Not stolen, exactly. Called. Summoned by something so far beyond her that resistance wasn't even a concept.
"What—" Livia's hands flew to her chest, eyes wide with panic.
Viola dropped to one knee, not from pain but from sudden understanding. The absence of a magical signature hadn't been emptiness: it had been restraint. Like standing next to a dam and not hearing the water because it was so perfectly contained.
Now the dam opened.
Power flooded the valley. Not wild or chaotic, but structured, purposeful, overwhelming in its sheer scope. The air itself became thick with potential, crackling with forces that made her teeth ache. And at the center of it all, the hooded figure hadn't moved.
"Exarch," Ignis whispered, the word torn from him like a confession.
The charging elves hit the edge of that power and stumbled. Their enhanced forms wavered, bark skin flaking away, elongated limbs snapping back to normal proportions with sounds that made Viola's stomach turn. The grass they commanded withered and died. The strength granted by Life Mages evaporated like morning dew.
For a heartbeat, the entire army wavered on the edge of breaking.
Then the figure raised one hand.
Wind answered. Not the playful breezes Viola knew, not even the fierce gales she'd learned to summon. This was wind as primordial force, wind as the world's own breath turned to purpose. Chесk fоr thе lаtеst updаtеs оn Мy Virtuаl Librаry Еmpirе (
The first vortex formed directly above the elven center. It descended like the finger of an angry god, touching earth with a roar that deafened. Bodies flew, not dramatically, but with the casual indifference of leaves in a hurricane. The funnel moved with surgical precision, carving through formations, scattering weapons, reducing ordered ranks to chaos.
A second vortex. A third. A dozen.
Then came the blades.
Viola had thought she understood wind blades. Her family's techniques had been refined over generations, each edge honed to perfection. But these, these were different. Each one was the size of a building, visible to the naked eye as distortions in the air itself. They moved slowly, almost lazily, giving the elves time to see death approaching.
Not that it mattered. Within the Exarch's domain, they had no power to defend themselves.
The first blade hit the right flank. Bodies didn't so much fall as simply cease, bisected with such clean precision that some took steps before realizing they were dead. The second carved through a desperate shield wall like paper. The third, fourth, fifth—Viola lost count, could only watch as those perfect formations dissolved into screaming chaos.
Some elves tried to flee. Hurricanes caught them, hurled them back into the killing ground. Others attempted to rally, to form defensive circles. Compressed air burst their eardrums, left them writhing in agony. A few, the bravest or most foolish, actually charged the hooded figure directly.
They never made it close. The very atmosphere around the Exarch had become hostile to life—pressure so intense that bodies simply crumpled, bones snapping, organs rupturing.
Through it all, the figure never moved from that single spot. Never gestured beyond that first raised hand. Never spoke.
It wasn't a battle. It was a demonstration.
When the survivors finally broke—really broke, discipline and pride shattered equally—they fled for the forest's edge. Perhaps two thousand from ten, stumbling over the bodies of their kin, supporting wounded comrades, all beauty and grace torn away to reveal the terrified creatures beneath.
The wind died as suddenly as it had risen. The vortices dissipated. The blades faded. In the terrible stillness that followed, only the moaning of the wounded and the whisper of settling dust remained.
One figure didn't flee. The commander who had ordered the charge sat slumped on her mount, one arm sliced clean off, blood streaming from a gash across their forehead. But their eyes burned still, fixed on the hooded figure with hatred pure enough to kill.
"Vow breaker," they spat, blood flecking their lips. "The world will know what the Empire has done this day. What you have done."
The hooded figure turned slightly, considering. Then, with deliberate slowness, reached up and pushed back their hood.
Viola's heart stopped.
Silver-white hair spilled free, caught by the morning light like spun moonlight. The face beneath was neither old nor young, features sharp enough to cut, eyes the color of winter storms. But it was the hair that held her—that impossible, unmistakable shade that marked her own bloodline, that had been her family's pride for twenty generations.
The Exarch's expression never changed. "I am the will of my Emperor. Whatever will come of my deeds is what he intended, nothing more and nothing less."
With effort, the commander turned their mount toward the forest. "The Matriarchs will answer this outrage. And when they do—" a final glance back, "—may your Emperor's will protect you then."
They rode away, slowly, proudly, leaving the Exarch standing amid the carnage they had wrought.
Viola remained on her knees, unable to move, unable to think beyond that singular impossibility: silver-white hair on someone who shouldn't exist. Her family had no Exarchs. Had never produced one. It was their shame and their safety both—too weak to threaten the Emperor, too useful to discard.
So who was this person who wore their colors and wielded power beyond imagining?
The Exarch pulled the hood back up, becoming once again just another robed figure. When they spoke, their voice had returned to that earlier emptiness.
"We return now."
No one argued. Ignis helped Livia to her feet—she was shaking, face pale from having her magic ripped away. Viola stood on her own, legs unsteady but functional. None of them looked at the field behind them, where the morning sun was beginning to warm cooling bodies.
They walked in silence, retracing their path through lands that now seemed alien after what they'd witnessed. Viola's mind churned with questions that had no safe answers. The Accord that kept Exarchs from being used as weapons of war had been shattered. The consequences would ripple across the continent.
But beneath that political understanding, more personal questions burned. Who was this person with her family's blood? Why had her grandfather never spoken of them? What other secrets did the house hide?
And darkest of all: if the Empire had hidden Exarchs, weapons beyond the Emperor himself, what else waited in the shadows?
The journey back stretched before them, three people who had witnessed the impossible and now had to live with that knowledge. The morning's beauty had curdled into something oppressive. Even the wind, when it finally dared to stir again, felt different, tainted by the memory of its use as an instrument of slaughter.
Viola pulled her own hood up, hiding her silver hair from the world. She had no answers. Only questions that multiplied with each step away from that killing field.
Behind them, smoke began to rise from the forest's edge: funeral pyres for the fallen. The wind carried the scent of burning sage and sorrow.
Ahead lay only the long road back to the Ehrenlegion, and the certainty that the world had changed in ways none of them yet understood.