Chapter 409: Summoning Ken
Chapter 409: Summoning Ken
Miles away from the frozen valley, beneath dark banners snapping violently in the wind, the Usurpers’ main encampment simmered with tension.
The General stormed into the central command pavilion, his scorched armor still faintly smoking where frost and flame had clashed. A deep cut ran along his side, hastily sealed but not fully healed. His aura was unstable, not from weakness, but from fury barely contained.
Officers inside the pavilion fell silent the instant he entered.
Maps lay scattered across a heavy wooden table. Markers indicating cavalry superiority and projected flanking routes now meant nothing.
They had lost the first exchange.
Not annihilated.
But forced back.
And in war, perception mattered as much as numbers.
The General slammed his gauntleted fist onto the table. The impact cracked the wood down the center.
"They turned momentum with a single commander," he said, voice low and trembling with rage. "A second-stage Sage pressed me to stalemate under elemental interference."
No one dared speak.
He replayed the moment in his mind, the white-hot compression of flame drilling through his guard, the ice domain stabilizing the battlefield, the unnatural coordination of traps and morale shifts.
This was no coincidence.
And he would not allow the next engagement to hinge on unpredictability.
He turned sharply toward a kneeling messenger near the entrance.
"You will ride immediately," he ordered.
The messenger bowed low. "To whom, my General?"
The General’s eyes hardened.
"To Celestial Ken."
A heavy silence followed.
Even among seasoned officers, that name carried weight.
"Inform him," the General continued coldly, "that his presence is required on the battlefield. Immediately."
The messenger hesitated only a fraction before nodding deeply. "Yes, General."
The General stepped closer, lowering his voice but sharpening its edge.
"Tell him the Valerion forces have revealed unexpected assets. A Celestial-tier combatant will ensure decisive victory. If he delays, the next exchange may cost us more than territory."
The implication was clear.
They would escalate.
If a Celestial stepped onto the field, the balance would shatter.
A being of that level was not merely stronger than a Sage. It was an existence that distorted the entire structure of battlefield hierarchy. Domain suppression would become overwhelming. Lower-stage cultivators would struggle to even stand under the pressure. Defensive formations would collapse.
Numbers would become irrelevant.
The General straightened slowly.
"They believe they won," he muttered. "Let them celebrate."
His eyes flicked toward the distant direction of the valley where Lucas had stood defiantly against him.
"You forced me to reveal my hand sooner than I intended," he said quietly to himself.
Then his expression hardened again.
"If they want war beyond calculation..."
He turned back toward the pavilion entrance.
"Then we will give them one."
The messenger sprinted out moments later, horse already being prepared at full speed.
By the time the sun dipped lower, a summons would be riding toward Ken.
And if Ken answered...
The next battle would not resemble the first.
It would be annihilation.
The ride to Rus was relentless.
The messenger did not slow for weather or fatigue. Orders from the General carried urgency, and fear. By the time he reached the fortified city of Rus, dusk had painted the sky in muted crimson.
Rus no longer looked like a capital.
It looked occupied.
Usurper banners draped over shattered imperial crests. Guard towers once bearing the symbol of the Rus dynasty now flew dark standards instead. The streets were quiet in the way conquered cities always were, too quiet.
The messenger was escorted directly to the upper citadel.
Ken was already aware he had arrived.
Inside a vast chamber overlooking the subdued city, Ken stood with his back to the door, hands clasped behind him. His presence alone distorted the air subtly, a weight that pressed downward without visible effort.
He did not turn immediately when the messenger knelt.
"My lord," the messenger said, bowing low. "The General requests your presence on the battlefield. Valerion has proven... resistant."
Ken’s jaw tightened almost imperceptibly.
"Resistant?" he repeated calmly.
The messenger swallowed. "They forced a tactical withdrawal in the first engagement. The General believes that with a Celestial on the field, the next battle will conclude decisively."
Silence followed.
Rus had cost them dearly. The siege alone had bled thousands. Valerion was supposed to fracture quickly under pressure, outnumbered, outmaneuvered, politically isolated.
Instead, they had rallied and proved difficult.
Ken dismissed the messenger with a flick of his hand.
When the chamber emptied, he remained still for several moments.
Then he turned and walked, not toward the war council hall, but downward.
Deep into the citadel.
Past guarded corridors and past reinforced iron doors.
Into the dungeon.
At the far end of a heavily warded corridor sat a single reinforced cell.
Inside, chained yet upright, was the former Emperor of Rus.
He had aged visibly in captivity, but his posture remained dignified. His eyes, though tired, had not lost their clarity.
The cell door opened with a heavy groan.
Ken stepped inside without fear.
The Emperor looked up slowly.
"I was wondering when you would come," he said evenly.
Ken regarded him quietly for a moment before speaking.
"You should be pleased," Ken said calmly. "Your former allies are proving difficult."
The Emperor did not respond immediately.
"They resisted the first major exchange," Ken continued. "Valerion has shown teeth."
A faint flicker crossed the Emperor’s eyes.
Ken walked closer, stopping just beyond the reach of chains.
"We have gained territory across three fronts. Minor kingdoms have folded without prolonged conflict. Trade routes have been seized. Supply lines consolidated."
He leaned slightly closer.
"And soon, another will fall."
The Emperor studied him.
"Which one?" he asked.
Ken’s lips curved faintly, not quite a smile.
"One that will shock everyone."
Silence settled between them.
"You believe conquest is momentum," the Emperor said finally. "That each victory feeds the next."
"It does," Ken replied.
"You lost many taking Rus."
Ken’s expression hardened slightly.
"Necessary cost."
"And Valerion?"
Ken’s gaze sharpened.
"They are stubborn," he admitted. "But stubbornness breaks."
The Emperor held his stare.
"Or it hardens."
For a moment, the dungeon felt smaller.
Ken straightened.
"I will step onto the battlefield personally if required," he said. "When a Celestial moves, resistance ceases to matter."
The Emperor’s chains shifted faintly as he adjusted his stance.
"Then you admit this is no longer a simple campaign."
Ken did not deny it.
"This is the shaping of a continent."
He turned toward the exit, pausing briefly at the threshold.
"When Valerion falls," he added quietly, "the rest will understand that resistance is futile."
The cell door shut heavily behind him.
Left alone in the dim torchlight, the Emperor of Rus exhaled slowly.
Far beyond the dungeon walls, preparations had already begun.
If Ken answered the summons...
The next battlefield would not merely test armies.
It would test the limits of power itself.
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