Chapter 507: The Moonstone King’s Smile
Chapter 507: The Moonstone King’s Smile
The Moonstone King’s Smile
The night stretched deep and cold across the borderlands between Vellore and the Moonstone Kingdom. The moon hung high—silver, vast, and twin-marked in its reflection—its light tracing pale fingers across the sea of tents that sprawled for miles.
The banners of Moonstone fluttered under the wind, deep blue with the crest of twin moons carved in black ink. Torches burned along the paths, their flames whispering against the night air, casting shadows that danced along polished silver armor.
The camp was alive with movement. Soldiers sharpened blades, horses neighed restlessly, and the metallic tang of oil and steel filled the air. It wasn’t chaos—it was discipline sculpted into sound. Every flicker of torchlight bounced off hundreds of helmets and breastplates, each marked with the crescent symbol of the Moonstone army.
At the heart of this massive encampment stood a structure larger than the rest—a temporary war court of timber and silk, draped in the royal color of midnight blue. Within, laughter rolled like thunder.
The court of King Aurelian.
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Aurelian sat upon a raised seat carved from pale stone, his posture that of a warrior-king who had tasted too many battles and survived them all. His short black hair glistened faintly under the torchlight, a trimmed mustache shadowing a face lined with experience rather than age. His blue eyes gleamed sharp and confident, reflecting the gold of his armor—intricate, heavy, regal, with the etching of twin moons across his breastplate.
Around him, his commanders feasted and drank, the thick smell of roasted meat and spiced wine filling the air. The mood was loud, alive—men who had survived war found laughter as easily as they found scars.
One general—a broad man with streaks of gray in his beard—raised his cup.
"To the flames of Vellore! To the fall of Vel!"
The others echoed him in a chorus, steel mugs slamming against the table.
"To Vel! To victory!"
But as the cheer rose, the heavy tent flaps were thrown aside. A messenger stumbled in, his armor dulled by ash and travel. His face was pale, breath ragged as he knelt before the king.
"My... my liege," the messenger gasped, pressing his forehead to the floor. "News from the frontlines of Vel—urgent!"
Aurelian’s laughter stilled. The court’s noise dimmed like a candle’s last flicker. He leaned forward slightly, voice calm but edged with command.
"Speak."
The messenger swallowed hard. "Vellore capital... has fallen. The banners of Vel are torn down. Its lands now renamed Nagareth. It is said the man behind this... is none other than Leon Moonwalker."
Aurelian’s expression didn’t change immediately. For a moment, the king’s face was unreadable—a mask of perfect composure. Then a slow, almost incredulous smile spread across his lips.
"...Leon," he murmured, as if testing the name on his tongue. "So the ghost still walks."
Murmurs spread among the generals.
"Impossible," one hissed.
"He was thought dead for years—"
"I saw his fortress burned!"
But the messenger pressed on, lifting his head. "It is confirmed, my king. He lives. And he stands now at the heart of Nagareth... his banner once again flying over the capital."
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The court burst into noise—some in disbelief, others in joy.
The golden-armored king stood slowly, his shadow stretching long across the tent floor. The sound of his armor moving was like thunder in a quiet storm.
"Alive," he said softly. "After all this time."
His eyes flicked toward the map sprawled across the war table—a great canvas marked with colored pins, symbols, and paths of war. His gaze lingered on Vel’s lands, and then on the faint sigil of Leon’s territory newly drawn in red ink.
One of his younger commanders, lean and sharp-eyed, approached with a bow.
"My king... should we see this as threat or omen?"
Aurelian turned his gaze toward him, then smiled faintly. "Neither. It is... balance restored."
He descended from his throne, boots echoing against the ground, and stood before his men.
"Leon Moonwalker was once a duke of Moonstone," he said, voice rising. "A man of talent, pride, and unbroken will. I knew he was not one to die quietly. If he walks the earth again... then perhaps destiny has chosen a cruel joke for us all."
Laughter broke again through the crowd—half awe, half reverence.
"But my king," one older general said carefully, "this news... it means Vel may unite under him. The war we started may turn—"
"Let it," Aurelian interrupted, his tone carrying the calm of authority that silenced the tent. "Let them rally under his banner. The world grows dull without worthy enemies."
He paced slowly, each word deliberate, his tone shifting from reflection to resolve.
"Leon has earned his survival. But now that he has revealed himself, the winds of fate will stir again. I will not fear them."
Then he turned to the messenger. "Tell me, soldier—did the message say anything else?"
"Yes, sire," the man said, voice trembling. "It says that Leon is preparing to rebuild the city’s order... and that Vel’s people call him ’their returned lord.’"
Aurelian’s blue eyes gleamed brighter.
"He truly reclaims his throne, then." He smiled wider, almost with pride. "So be it."
He motioned to one of his generals—an older man with silver armor and the scars of countless campaigns.
"Tomorrow," Aurelian said, "you will ride to Vel. Deliver my words."
The general bowed deeply. "What shall I tell him, my liege?"
Aurelian’s expression softened—no mockery, no hatred. Just something almost human.
"Tell him this—’I am proud of him.’"
The tent went silent. The generals looked at each other in disbelief.
"Tell him," Aurelian continued, voice steady, "that King Aurelian of Moonstone commends his strength. That once my war is complete, I will come personally to grant him his title and reward."
He looked around the hall, a faint glint of challenge in his gaze.
"Do not mistake pride for mercy. Leon was, and remains, one of mine. He rose from my kingdom, and if he stands tall again—it will be Moonstone that remembers his name first."
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