Chapter 103: The Assassin Queen's Smile
The blade stopped an inch from Valerian's throat, its razor edge catching the moonlight in a cold, merciless glint.
A bead of sweat slid down his neck, chilling his skin as he locked eyes with the woman kneeling before him. Her violet irises gleamed with predatory amusement, her lips curling into a wicked smirk. The black armor she wore clung to her like a second skin, accentuating every curve, every lethal angle. The curved dagger in her hand shimmered with a faint green sheen—poison, no doubt, brewed to kill with a single nick.
"Just checking," Selka Vale purred, her voice a velvet blade. "Your reflexes are still sharp, Lord Valerian."
"Assassinating me would've been a very short job," Valerian muttered, his tone dry but edged with steel. His heart still pounded, though he'd never admit it.
Selka twirled the dagger with a flourish, her fingers dancing over the hilt before sheathing it in the strap beneath her thigh. The motion was graceful, almost flirtatious, but Valerian knew better than to trust the Assassin Queen's charm. "Assassinating you? Please." She tilted her head, her smirk widening. "I wouldn't waste good poison on a client." She rose to her feet in one fluid movement, her boots silent on the rooftop garden's stone tiles. "Besides, you summoned me."
Valerian exhaled sharply, turning away to face the night wind that swept across the rooftop. The city of Sanctum sprawled below, its spires piercing the starlit sky, a glittering facade hiding the rot within. "I need a kill," he said, his voice low, deliberate. "Clean. No traces. One of the Nine Monarchs."
Selka let out a long, appreciative whistle, the sound cutting through the quiet like a blade. "You've finally decided to play that card, huh?"
"Not play," Valerian corrected, his gaze fixed on the horizon where storm clouds gathered, heavy with the promise of chaos. "Eliminate."
Her smile widened, sharp and hungry. "I like this version of you. Cold. Calculating. Dangerous." She stepped closer, her presence a shadow that seemed to drink in the moonlight. "Who's the lucky monarch?"
"Therion," Valerian said, his voice flat but laced with venom. "He's been a thorn too long."
Selka's eyes sparkled with delight. "Oh, this will be fun." She tilted her head, studying him. "You have five days."
"Four," she corrected, already vanishing into the shadows, her form dissolving like smoke in the wind.
The Assassin Queen—Selka Vale—was a phantom, a whisper of death that left no trace. And tonight, Valerian had purchased her services with a price that could bankrupt empires. Death was coming for Monarch Therion, and it wore a wicked smile.
---
Deep beneath the Sanctum, in the shadowed depths of the royal crypt, Lira knelt beside a sealed sarcophagus, her golden eyes glowing faintly in the dim light. The air was thick with the weight of centuries, the stone walls etched with runes that pulsed faintly, as if alive. Her fingers traced the carvings on the sarcophagus, her brows furrowed in concentration.
Lady Selene stood behind her, arms crossed, her elegant features marred by a deep frown. Her silver hair gleamed in the torchlight, but her eyes were stormy, troubled. "This is no ordinary tomb," Lira whispered, her voice barely audible over the faint hum emanating from the stone. "The energy… it's ancient. Pre-system. Pre-empire. I think this belonged to the first Emperor."
Selene's frown deepened. "Then why is it reacting now?"
As if in answer, the stone lid trembled slightly, a low rumble echoing through the crypt. The air grew colder, the torches flickering as though starved of oxygen. Lira's breath caught, her glowing eyes narrowing. "Because something is waking up," she said, standing abruptly, her hand instinctively reaching for the dagger at her hip.
Selene glanced over her shoulder, her posture tense. "We need Valerian."
"He's busy plotting an assassination," came a new voice, smooth and sharp as a blade. Seraphine descended the crypt's upper stairway, her dress trailing behind her like tendrils of smoke. Her eyes were unreadable, but there was a weight to her presence, a quiet menace that hadn't always been there.
Selene turned, her gaze sharpening. "You knew?"
"Of course I knew," Seraphine replied with a dismissive shrug, her lips curling into a faint smile. "He tells me everything. Well… almost."
Lira looked between the two older women, her youthful face tight with concern. "You're both too calm. One of the Nine Monarchs might die."
"Good," Seraphine said flatly, her voice devoid of warmth. Her gaze drifted to the sarcophagus, where the runes now pulsed with a faint red glow.
Selene's head snapped toward her. "You've changed."
"No," Seraphine said, her eyes locked on the coffin, "I've just stopped pretending mercy is a virtue in this world." Her words hung in the air, heavy with unspoken truths, as the crypt seemed to tighten around them, the walls themselves holding their breath.
---
At the imperial palace, chaos simmered beneath a veneer of opulence. The war chamber was a cavern of marble and gold, its walls adorned with tapestries depicting the empire's conquests. But the air was thick with tension, the scent of blood and rain clinging to Duke Morthen as he stormed inside, his cloak dripping crimson onto the polished floor.
"They've begun moving," he growled, his voice rough with barely contained rage. "The Black Fang faction has expanded to the northern garrisons. We lost three lieutenants last night. Slaughtered like dogs."
The Emperor, cloaked in gold-trimmed white, sat at the head of the chamber, his presence commanding despite his silence. He stared at a suspended orb floating before him, its surface shimmering with a projection of Valerian's face—sharp features, cold eyes, a man who had become a specter haunting the empire's nightmares.
"Let him come," the Emperor murmured, his voice soft but laced with divine authority.
Morthen's jaw tightened. "My liege, this boy is more than we expected. He's rallied former traitors, forced the Conclave into hesitation, and now…" He hesitated, as if the words were too heavy to speak.
"He's started hunting monarchs," the Emperor finished, his tone calm but carrying the weight of a death knell.
Silence fell across the chamber, broken only by the faint hum of the orb. The other advisors—cloaked figures with eyes that gleamed with arcane power—exchanged uneasy glances.
The Emperor finally turned, his eyes glowing with a divine light that made the air itself tremble. "Let him kill one. Just one. Then we strike."
Morthen's fists clenched, but he bowed his head. "As you command, my liege." But as he left the chamber, his mind churned with doubt. Valerian was no mere boy anymore—he was a storm, and storms did not bow to commands.
---
Back in his study, Valerian sat alone, the weight of his decisions pressing against his chest. He unfurled a sealed scroll, its wax bearing the mark of the Shadow Guild—a skull pierced by a dagger. The words were written in blood ink, each letter precise, unyielding.
*Target marked: Monarch Therion. Location confirmed: City of Glass. Protection Level: Divinity-Class. Assassination cost: 1,000,000 blood tokens. Timeframe: Four nights.*
The cost was astronomical, enough to bankrupt a small kingdom. Valerian didn't flinch. He walked to the system terminal embedded in the wall, its surface shimmering with arcane runes. "Access blood vault," he whispered.
A small screen materialized, glowing faintly.
*[Blood Tokens Available: 2,480,000]*
He transferred the full amount without hesitation, the terminal humming as it processed the transaction. The air seemed to grow heavier, as if the system itself acknowledged the gravity of his choice.
"Enjoy hell," Valerian said to the empty room, his voice low and venomous. But as the words left his lips, a flicker of unease stirred in his chest. Therion was no ordinary monarch—his death would ripple through the empire, awakening enemies Valerian hadn't yet faced.
---
In the ruins of Hollow Reach, where the earth was scarred and the air thick with decay, a shadow rose from the cracked stone. Tall, robed in obsidian and bone, crowned with writhing silver flame, Umbra stood like a monument to entropy itself. The system's avatar of chaos, his presence warped the air, bending light and sound into unnatural distortions.
Before him knelt a man, his once-fine clothes tattered, his eyes empty, his body trembling. A former noble, spared by Valerian in a moment of mercy—or weakness. Now, he was a broken thing, consumed by rage and desperation.
"You seek vengeance?" Umbra's voice was a rotting wind, each word dripping with malice.
"Yes…" the man rasped, his voice barely human. "I-I'll give anything!"
Umbra's skeletal hand extended, plunging into the man's chest. The noble's scream tore through the ruins as dark veins spread across his skin, his body convulsing. His eyes blackened, his screams turning to laughter—maniacal, unhinged.
A new enemy was born, forged in the crucible of Umbra's power. And in the distance, the ruins seemed to whisper Valerian's name.
---
*Nightfall – City of Glass*
Selka Vale crouched on the rooftop of a spiraling cathedral, her black armor blending with the shadows. Below, Monarch Therion dined in obscene luxury, surrounded by golden-armored knights, fawning concubines, and tables laden with decadence. The City of Glass glowed around them, its crystal spires refracting light into a thousand colors, but Selka saw only her target.
Therion's laughter echoed, arrogant and carefree. He believed himself untouchable, protected by divinity-class wards and an army of loyal blades. Selka's eyes narrowed, her fingers tapping the hilt of her poisoned dagger.
One whisper, and it would all end.
She raised her wrist, speaking softly into the rune-etched band. "Phase one complete. Ready to strike."
Valerian's voice crackled through, cold and unyielding. "Make it hurt."
Selka's lips curved into a smile that promised pain. "Oh, I will."
She vanished into smoke, her form dissolving into the night. Below, Therion raised a goblet, oblivious to the death descending upon him.
---
Back at the Sanctum, Valerian entered the main hall, his steps heavy with purpose. Seraphine, Selene, and Lira awaited him, their expressions a mix of resolve and unease. The air was thick with the scent of old stone and faint traces of ozone, as if the sanctum itself anticipated what was to come.
"You're not going to stop me," Valerian said, his voice cold, his eyes daring them to challenge him.
Seraphine stepped forward, her smoky dress trailing like a specter. "No. But you'll need us."
Valerian raised a brow, surprised by her acquiescence. "You approve?"
"No," Selene interjected, her voice sharp. "But we know better than to let you do it alone."
Lira stepped beside him, her golden eyes flickering with determination. "Besides, the tomb is reacting to your bloodline. If you don't open it, something else will."
Valerian's gaze dropped to the tomb map etched into the floor. Three of the six seals glowed red now, their light pulsing like a heartbeat. The crypt below was no longer dormant—it was alive, and it called to him.
He clenched his fist, his knuckles whitening. "Then we do both."
Selene smirked, a rare crack in her stoic facade. "Murder and awakening an ancient god?"
Valerian's eyes glinted with dark resolve. "I call that a productive week."
But as they turned to leave, a low rumble shook the sanctum. The map's fourth seal flickered, then blazed red, brighter than the others. Lira gasped, her hand flying to her dagger. "It's accelerating," she whispered.
Seraphine's eyes narrowed. "Something's forcing it open."
Valerian's jaw tightened. "Then we're out of time."
---
Far away, in the depths of the System Core—a realm of endless light and shadow—two figures watched Valerian through an astral screen, their forms cloaked in haze.
"He's becoming unstable," the first voice said, its tone laced with concern.
"He's becoming exactly what we need," the second replied, calm but calculating.
"Too early. He may break the seals before the convergence."
The second voice paused, its silence heavy with implication. "And if he does…?"
"Then he'll either become a god—or the trigger for the end."
The screen flickered, revealing a new image: the ruins of Hollow Reach, where Umbra's newly forged weapon rose, its black eyes burning with purpose. Behind it, the silver flames of Umbra's crown flared, and the air cracked with the sound of shattering stone.
A voice echoed through the Core, ancient and malevolent: "Valerian… your time is running out."
The screen went black, but the words lingered, a promise of chaos yet to come.