Chapter 692: The Last Guardian Village
Chapter 692: The Last Guardian Village
The Last Guardian Village
"That is how he knew of us."
"How much did he know?" Leon asked.
"Enough to search," Rex replied. "Enough to fear what sleeps beyond the forests. But not enough to understand the whole truth."
Leon exhaled slowly through his nose.
Interesting.
The world he thought he understood was peeling back layer by layer.
Empires.
Heroes.
An outsider from the void.
Crystals.
Forbidden forests.
And now this—
Bloodlines tied to ancient subordinates of mythic figures.
He rose from his seat and walked a few steps, hands clasped behind his back. His mind was already moving ahead—calculating, rearranging alliances, redefining threats.
If Gary carried fragments of inherited memory... then so did the other three thrones.
Which meant this wasn’t just politics.
It was legacy.
It was awakening.
He stopped and turned back to the three old men.
Their expressions were calm, but there was tension beneath it. They had chosen this moment deliberately.
The air between them felt heavier than the chains binding their wrists. None of them fidgeted, yet something unspoken trembled underneath their composure.
"So, you decided to tell me this because...?" Leon’s voice was quiet, almost conversational. Almost.
Max’s hollow smile returned. It didn’t reach his eyes.
"The five heroes granted our ancestors something."
Leon tilted his head slightly. "That’s vague."
"A power of sense."
Leon’s gaze sharpened, the faint gold in his eyes catching the dim light. "Sense?"
Max glanced at his brothers, then back at Leon. "Not the kind you’re thinking of."
"Yes."
Rex stepped forward just enough for his chains to scrape against the floor. "We can sense ambition," he said steadily. "We can sense intent. Not thoughts. Not secrets. But direction. The shape of a person’s future."
Leon’s eyes narrowed. "You’re telling me you can see fate?"
Lux shook his head. "No. Fate is rigid. This isn’t that." His voice was softer, but no less firm. "It’s more like... feeling the current of a river before it floods. We don’t see the storm. We just know it’s coming."
Leon said nothing. His presence alone pressed against them.
"When we first saw you..." Lux continued, swallowing once, "...even chained... even broken... we sensed it."
The memory lingered in the room. Leon, dragged in like a defeated man. Bloodied. Restrained.
And yet.
Leon did not interrupt.
Max drew in a slow breath. "You are not a king who wishes to maintain the world," Max said. "You are a king who will reshape it."
The words didn’t sound like praise. They sounded like a verdict.
Silence.
The torches crackled faintly along the stone walls.
Leon did not smile.
He did not deny it.
He simply asked, "And you believe I will uncover the rest of this history."
"Yes."
The word was firm.
Rex added quietly, "You won’t be satisfied with fragments."
"You never were," Lux said.
Leon’s gaze moved from one brother to the next, measuring them without mercy. "And if I choose not to?"
Max met his eyes without hesitation. "Then the world will rot in the same shape it has always been. But you won’t allow that."
Confidence. Not arrogance—certainty.
Leon studied them carefully.
Their chains clinked faintly as they shifted weight. Their breathing was shallow. Their cultivation shattered. Their foundation broken.
They had nothing left to bargain with. No leverage. No strength.
And yet— They spoke without fear.
"Then tell me what you guard," Leon said calmly. "Or I will find another Guardian Village."
The threat wasn’t loud. It didn’t need to be. It settled in the room like a blade laid gently on a table—visible, deliberate.
For the first time, something cracked in Lux’s composure. His jaw tightened. His shoulders stiffened, chains scraping softly against stone.
"There are no others."
Leon’s gaze sharpened, not with anger—but with interest.
"No others?" he asked quietly. "You expect me to believe an entire lineage vanished so cleanly?"
Max let out a slow breath. He didn’t look away.
"It wasn’t clean," he said. "It was slow."
Leon leaned back slightly, studying him.
"Explain."
Max nodded once, gathering himself. His voice was steady, but there was something underneath it—something worn thin by memory.
"Our birthrate declined. Our traditions required isolation. We did not marry outsiders. We trusted no one."
Rex gave a faint, humorless smile. "Paranoia dressed as purity."
Lux shot him a brief look, but didn’t argue.
Leon’s eyes flicked between them. "And your numbers fell."
"Yes."
"How many villages were there?"
Max swallowed. "Once? Many."
"And now?"
"From many villages... to one."
Silence pressed in.
Leon’s voice lowered.
"And Gary destroyed it."
Rex closed his eyes briefly. His throat worked before he answered.
"Yes."
The word didn’t shake. That almost made it worse.
Leon’s fingers tightened slightly on the armrest. Not out of pity. Not quite anger either. Calculation flickered behind his golden eyes.
"And you three survived."
Max answered this.
"We are triplets. Sons of the village chief. When Gary attacked... our father tried to evacuate the children."
For a moment, his voice held steady. Then it thinned, just slightly.
"He told us to run," Max added, eyes fixed somewhere beyond the room. "Said a chief protects his people last."
His breath caught for half a heartbeat.
"Not everyone escaped."
Lux’s jaw tightened, the muscle ticking as if he were grinding his teeth against a memory that refused to dull.
"We watched the flames," Lux said, his voice sharper now, edged with something that still bled. "We watched him burn it."
Leon’s gaze flickered between them, silent but attentive.
"Our home," Lux continued, quieter. "Our fields. The temple. All of it."
Rex spoke next, his tone lower, steadier—but there was weight beneath it.
"We left that night. We didn’t look back." His fingers curled slowly into a fist. "We trained. We grew stronger."
"We swore," Max said, glancing at his brothers, "that we would return."
Leon said nothing.
His silence wasn’t indifference. It was pressure. An invitation to keep going.
"We thought we were ready," Max continued. "Years later, we found him again. We thought we could kill him."
Leon’s voice finally cut in, calm and even. "And?"
Max exhaled through his nose, humorless.
"But?"
"But by then... he had stepped into Monarch Realm."
The words landed like iron dropped on stone.
Lux let out a quiet, bitter laugh. "We brought blades to a thunderstorm."
Leon understood.
They had faced a storm thinking they were swords.
"And he crushed you."
"Yes."
There was no anger in Rex’s reply. Only fact.
"He didn’t even fight seriously," Rex said. "He broke through our techniques like they were paper. He shattered our cultivation... destroyed our foundations."
His jaw tightened.
"Left us crippled."
Leon’s eyes narrowed slightly. "Why not kill you?"
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