Magus Reborn Chapter 295
Added 2025-10-26 07:12:26 +0000 UTCChapter 295
Aldrin stood high on the stone balcony, overlooking the training fields of Fort Valemount. He had visited this border fortress many times as a childâhis motherâs homeland was right next to it. It was the place where Alparcan banners always fluttered beside Lancephilâs. But never like this. Never with so many bodies packed into the dirt, every square patch of ground claimed by another soldier.
From above, the field looked like a storm of movement. Captains barked orders until their throats went raw. Men sprinted in tight ranks. Others drilled spear walls again and again until their arms shook. There were no lazy steps⌠no resting hands. Not when the sound of war drums was already echoing deep in the kingdom.
Most of these soldiers had never seen a real battlefield. They didnât know how blood smelled when it hit dirt. They didnât know how loud dying men screamed. But they could feel something heavy pressing toward them.
Aldrin knew it was going to be soon. Because he had paid the price to know.
His purse had groaned every time he drafted more gold for his communication networkâavian beasts trained to carry encrypted messages faster than any courier rider. Heâd bribed border smugglers for information routes. Heâd placed silent watchers in every major city weeks before the crown fractured.
Knowledge was his blade.
Yet⌠every report lately cut him instead.
His brothers were tearing into each other as expected, wearing themselves thin. By Aldrinâs calculations, they should have weakened each other slowlyâover monthsâuntil he could strike the final blow and take what he deserved.
But the letters painted a different picture now.
Some lines advanced too fast. Some victories were too clean. Some namesâone name especiallyâkept appearing where they shouldnât.
Arzan Kellius. The wild card.
Aldrin gripped the balcony rail, fingers turning white. He had planned for rival princes, corrupt nobles, foreign meddlers⌠but not a single Duke ripping through battlefields like a spell of divine judgment.
His soldiers trained below, still believing war had not yet reached them.
But Aldrin knew better.
War was already running at them.
Although Thalric had taken several cities and forts already, Aldrin wasnât worried about his second brotherânot really. Thalricâs army was stretched thin, and Eldric would grind him down soon enough. That part of the war was moving just as Aldrin expected.
What unsettled him⌠was the outlier.
Arzan Kellius.
The one piece on the board that refused to move the way he predicted.
Aldrin flipped through the latest coded reports again in his mind. Two border forts were already taken. And Solmere City was lost before anyone even understood what hit it. The last whisper from his informers there had mentioned explosions that had shook the city, then there was silence.
Either his man fled⌠or he was lying dead in the rubble.
Arzanâs advance wasnât surprising. The manâs reputation had been built on impossible victories. But the speed? The lack of losses? That was not part of Aldrinâs neat little timelines.
Battles were supposed to drag on. Enforcers and Mages were supposed to suffer attrition, bleed energy with every clash. That was the entire pointâwear Arzan down long before he arrived at Valemount.
Instead, forts were falling like knocked-over game pieces.
Aldrin tightened his jaw.
He had planned for a war of erosion. Arzan was delivering a war of beheadings.
And every fortress that toppled without costing him strength only pushed Aldrin closer to a truth he didnât like: If Arzan kept this pace⌠their confrontation would come far sooner than Aldrin had wanted.
And if his real plan failed?
Then surrendering might be the only intelligent move left.
Better to bend the knee to a rising storm than be swept away by it.
If Aldrinâs projections were right, he and Arzan would clash far sooner than he had planned. The speed of it was the only thing that worried him. Everything elseâArzanâs victories, his movement across the map, his growing conquered territoryâhad all been calculated, expected, accounted for in his grand design. He had prepared several ways to bring the man down. And if every single one of those plans failed⌠well, then Aldrin would surrender and swear loyalty. There would be no shame in kneeling to a force that could not be stopped. Only fools fought the tide.
His thoughts were cut short by firm footsteps behind him.
Aldrin turned, schooling his face back into calm just as his cousin, Prince Vhailor of Alparca strode toward him, wrapped in one of his usual showy robesâdark silk stitched with golden feathers, each gleaming at the slightest shift of light. Strength radiated off him with every step.
Four Royal Mages followed in formation.
One was a sharp-boned man with crackling, seal-marked arms; static danced over his skin, and the scent of lightning followed him like a warning. Next came a tall Mage whose staff was taller than his body. The third wore a heavy set of armour and looked more like a Knight. The last Mage was an old man who looked at Aldrin over as if evaluating him.
Vhailor reached him and immediately pulled him into a crushing embrace.
Aldrinâs ribs strained. He tried to push free without looking too desperate, but the princeâs grip made every hug feel like a wrestling match with a bear. When he finally managed to slip loose, Vhailor let out a booming laugh.
âYou always make that face when I hug you, cousin,â he said, grinning wide. âYouâre too delicate for your own good. You should spar with me sometime. Iâve been training with a foreign weaponâa trident. It's like a spear, but far better.â He mimicked a stabbing motion for emphasis.
Aldrin forced a faint smile, rubbing his ribs. âIâll think about it,â he said. âBut⌠you know the complications I have.â
Vhailor snorted, planting a hand on Aldrinâs shoulder and giving it a squeeze that almost pushed him off balance.
âI know, I know,â he said. âYour frail body, your careful steps.â His tone softened for a breathâonly a breath. âBut that doesnât excuse you from being a warrior, Aldrin. Spells are good⌠but war needs more than hands and words. You must move. Strike. Bleed. No Mage survives by standing still.â
Aldrin lowered his eyes, jaw tightening. He wanted to snap back. I could, if your family had given me the potion.
The Vermion Elixirâthat cure heâd never been allowed to touch.
His weakness wasnât a mystery. He carried more than a few drops of Alparcan royal blood in his veins. An old bloodline that came from the blood drinkers, ancient beings stronger and faster than humans. But centuries of mixing had thinned the line. Those born outside the true royal branchâlike Aldrinâdidnât gain strength from it.
They suffered from it.
His heart worked harder. His muscles tired faster. Every spell burned him more than it should. But the potion⌠the Vermion Elixir was designed to strengthen the body so the blood drinker lineage could finally awakenâturning weakness into advantage.
His mother had begged for it.
They had refused.
âTradition,â they said. âRules,â they said. âIt is only for pure heirs,â they said.
Aldrin knew the real reason. It was leverage. A chain they wrapped around his throat. A tool they would use when the time came. When he finally rose up to the throne. Blood ties meant nothing to the Alparcan court unless they led to profit.
To the world, they acted like his loyal allies. His motherâs proud family. But Aldrin wasnât fooled. They wanted a king in Lancephil they could control.
He forced his voice steady.
âIâll⌠do what I can,â he said. âWith the body I have.â
Vhailor simply grinnedâconfident, careless, completely unaware of the battles Aldrin fought inside his own skin every single day.
Even the terms of Alparcaâs support had been steepâalmost insulting. But Aldrin had signed anyway. The civil war had ignited faster than any prediction, and his careful plans involving Arzan had been kicked right off the board. He needed powerful allies, and Alparca had stepped forward with open arms and swords hidden behind their backs.
He fell quiet, thoughts looping again, until Vhailor bumped his shoulder.
âWhat are you brooding over now?â his cousin asked with a lazy grin. âYou couldâve joined me for lunch with Lady Seraphine. She dressed really nicely today.â
Aldrin let out a small sigh. âI was reviewing our reports on Duke Arzanâs march. His army has taken Solmere already. It means theyâll be pushing toward the next strongholds soon. We need to discuss defenses.â
Vhailorâs eyebrows twitched upâsurprised, if only for a heartbeat. âThat quickly? I thought Iâd have more time with Seraphine.â He huffed. âThose men of his are more capable than I expected.â
âI told you,â Aldrin replied. âYou underestimate too often.â
Vhailor grinned. âBecause most Mages are nothing special next to me and mine. You know that.â
From behind him, one of the Royal MagesâAldrin thought his name was Specterâspoke up, pride sharp in his voice.
âWith Prince Vhailor leading us, we could crush Arzanâs entire army. Thereâs no need for concern, Prince Aldrin.â
Aldrinâs gaze slid toward the Mageâflat, unimpressedâbefore returning to Vhailor.
âConfidence is fine,â he said. âBlindness is not. Arzan is a Fourth-Circle Mage who has already defeated a Magus And not just defeatedâcrippled. You remember how terrified you were of Magus Veridia.â
That struck. Vhailorâs smile tightened at the edges.
Aldrin let the silence linger a moment. He needed Vhailor confident⌠but not careless.
Vhailor snorted and stamped one foot, the sound sharp on the stone. âThat was three years ago,â he said. âBack then I hadnât learned the Alparcan arrays. Now I have. One Mageâno matter how boldâwonât stand before me. Heâll fall.â He straightened, eyes bright with confidence. âHonestly, I donât think you need more help than that. I promised Iâd kill him the instant he reached the fort.â
Aldrin kept his voice low. âWars arenât won on promises, Vhailor. You want one victory, fine. But you must plan for the next ten after that. Backups for backups.â He paused, watching a line of men run drills below. âDo not forget why your family came here. The Alparcan court wants the aethum mines and you helping me would also strengthen your position for the crown.â
Vhailor waved a hand, half laughing. âAnd the mines, and the forests, and the riversâyes, weâll talk about them once you sit on the throne.â He grinned, eager and impatient.
Aldrin only nodded. âWeâll talk about that later. Thereâs a long road before the throne. If we beat Arzan now, my other brothers will be easier to handle.â He met Vhailorâs gaze steadily.
For a moment Vhailorâs face hardened. âIs Arzan really that important?â he asked. âHeâs a Duke, a capable Mage, yes, but youâre giving him too much credit.â
Aldrinâs jaw tightened. He looked down at the drills, the soldiers moving like a single living thing, and remembered the crack of wood and stone in the arena. âYou werenât there when the arena collapsed,â he said quietly. âArzan isnât just strong on paper. He reads battle. He finds the weak points no one else sees. Meeting him in the field is how you truly know him and how terrifying he could be.â
Vhailorâs smile thinned into something colder. âI donât have to meet him beforehand to kill him,â he said. The words came easy, like a promise he had already made to himself. The heat left Aldrinâs face, replaced by a small, careful silence.
One of Vhailorâs Mages stepped forward then, voice smooth and sure. âThe prince has bested Mages above his circle before. You need not worry, Prince Aldrin.â He spoke as if victory were a fact already written.
Aldrin gave a short, polite nod. âI wish you the best, cousin.â
The words did not sit well with Vhailor. He slammed both hands on the balcony rail and glared at Aldrin, jaw tight. âI donât like you doubting me,â he said. âYou should be the one who knows my power best.â
Aldrin held the princeâs stare without blinking. âI do know it,â he said quietly. âThat is why I want you to take this seriously, Vhailor.â
For a moment the princeâs face hardened, then brightened with a dangerous light. He straightened his shoulders and turned on his heel. âFine,â he snapped. âIâll train harder. Iâll change your mind when I hand you his corpse. When I kill Arzan, you will know I am the strongest Mage, not just in the kingdom, but in the world.â
He strode off in long, eager steps, his retinue falling in behind him. Aldrin watched his cousin go and the corner of his mouth lifted into a small, private smile. Riling up Vhailor had always been easy; the prince treated anyone taller and stronger than him as a target. He did not like warnings. He liked conquest.
Aldrin wondered, not for the first time, why the royal house did not post an elder to temper the princeâs heat. But he guessed it was because Vhailor disliked being guided; he resented restraint. The family had long learned to let his temper burnâit was useful theatre for their aims.
That suited Aldrin fine.
He did not expect Vhailor to finish Arzan. The man couldnât do it, even if he wanted to. He only needed the prince to strike recklessly enough to wound or slow the Duke. A careless thrust, a poorly timed duelâsomething to leave a mark. If Vhailor drew blood, Arzan would be far easier to deal with. That would be the opening Aldrin wanted.
He turned his eyes back to the drilling men below, feeling the plan settle again like a set of stones. Let Vhailor rush and make a show. Let Arzan be nicked and angered. Then Aldrinâs true movesâthe ones he had built for monthsâcould begin.
Comments
war of erosion->attrition*
ThoMiCroN
2025-10-26 14:49:04 +0000 UTC" I took a calculated risk, and boy was I bad at math..." -Aldrin next chapter
Runaway_Cactuar
2025-10-26 07:49:47 +0000 UTC