SSS Talent: From Trash to Tyrant

Chapter 684: The Aurevane Report



Chapter 684: The Aurevane Report

Caelum began."The train incident was not the center of the Aurevane affair, my lord. It was the first visible piece. A theft attempt, at least on the surface. The attackers wanted something being transported through the train, and the assault escalated when they failed to take it quietly. Young Master Trafalgar became one of the key reasons the defense held long enough for the situation to be contained."

Valttair did not interrupt.

Moses remained where he stood, one fist still near the Morgain crest on his chestplate, his earlier humor buried under the weight of the room. He listened now. Properly. The mana pressure around Valttair had not faded, and the lesson had apparently entered through his horns if not through his pride.

Caelum continued, voice precise. "The gas came later. That was no longer theft. It crossed into a public terror attack the instant civilians, neutral travelers, and uninvolved personnel were put to sleep without warning. The First Concord arrived because of that. Their authority came from the Council of Sages, and their mandate was clear: protect those who do not belong under any family banner and prevent neutral casualties from being swallowed by noble disputes."

Moses's purple eyes shifted slightly, but he did not speak.

"The First Concord did not interfere in Aurevane's internal politics," Caelum said. "They secured the people from the train, locked down the immediate threat, and forced the matter into a channel where it could not be erased by the first powerful name that grew uncomfortable. They were careful. Neutral, not blind. That distinction helped us."

Valttair rested both hands over the pommel of his sword. "That is what you wrote in the first report."

"Yes, my lord."

"Good." Valttair's gaze moved across the scarred chamber as if reading an invisible map laid over the stone. "It seems the youngest continues to do well. He is growing the name of our family in places where I expected him to survive first and be useful later. That is a pleasant inconvenience."

Moses gave a short breath through his nose. "If half of what I have heard is true, the useless boy became busy while I was gone."

The air stopped being heavy.

It became a hand around the throat.

Valttair did not step toward Moses. He did not raise his sword. He only turned his eyes to him, and the mana in the chamber folded inward with such sudden force that even Caelum felt it grind against his bones.

Moses choked.

For all his size, for all the demonic blood snarling inside him, for all the years of battle that had made him the strongest soldier under the Morgain banner, he dropped to one knee. The stone cracked beneath the impact of his armor. Purple aura flared by instinct and died under Valttair's pressure like a candle drowned in black water.

"Moses," Valttair said, cold enough that the name sounded less spoken than carved. "Trafalgar is an heir of our family. He is my son, and he carries the Morgain name whether you were present to witness his growth or not. You will not speak of a Morgain that way in my chamber again or anywhere."

Moses lowered his head. His breath came hard once before he forced it steady. "Forgive me, my lord. I spoke from outdated memory and misplaced arrogance. It will not happen again."

"No," Valttair said. "It will not."

The pressure withdrew.

Moses rose without pretending the fall had not happened. That was one of his better qualities. He could be arrogant, loud, and poisonous when his pride ached, but he understood power when it placed a knee on his neck. His gaze did not move toward Caelum. He kept it on Valttair, as a soldier should after being corrected by the man he followed.

Caelum resumed only when Valttair's attention returned to him.

"The deeper issue emerged after the train was secured. Young Master Trafalgar believed part of what happened on the train might be connected to something hidden inside Aurevane's academic channels. He followed that suspicion and sought information. Officially, it was an inquiry born from the attack and the stolen object. Unofficially, it took him into a project that should never have existed."

Valttair's fingers rested against the sword hilt. "What project?"

"A homunculus," Caelum said. "Not a simple artificial servant nor a disposable construct made for labor or war. The descriptions I received suggest a living body shaped through alchemy, old notes, and a control method designed before the subject could possess a will strong enough to resist. Obedience was not taught to it. It was placed beneath thought, where instinct should have formed."

The room held the words badly.

Even Moses, who had marched through places beyond sane maps, kept his mouth closed.

Valttair's eyes narrowed by a fraction. "How was this discovered?"

Caelum bowed his head just enough to make the lie respectful.

"By chance, my lord. Young Master Trafalgar noticed details around the train attack that did not align with the theft. He believed there might be a connection to something moving through Aurevane's internal circles and chose to ask questions before the trail went cold. Director Selara became involved afterward. She helped him gain access to information he would not have reached alone."

Valttair watched him.

Caelum did not look away.

It was a dangerous thing, lying to Valttair. The danger came from the fact that Valttair understood people too well. A clumsy lie would die before it left the tongue. A careful lie might survive, but only if it did not insult the listener.

This one was close enough to truth to walk.

"And what did Director Selara uncover?" Valttair asked.

"The person behind the homunculus was her own master," Caelum said. "The same man who had taught her, guided part of her academic path, and earned enough trust that few would have looked at him first. That made the discovery slower. Personal trust is often a better shield than any ward."

Moses's jaw tightened, but he remained quiet.

Caelum continued, "Selara did not defend him once the truth became clear. She helped secure what remained, assisted Young Master Trafalgar, and moved to contain the damage before Aurevane could bury the entire affair under politics. Her cooperation was useful, though I would not call her harmless."

"No one useful is harmless," Valttair said.

Caelum accepted the correction with a small inclination of his head. "No, my lord."

Valttair's gaze drifted toward one of the deep cuts in the far wall. The mana around him did not rise again, but the chamber felt watchful, as if every scar in the stone had turned an ear toward him.

"Do you think Vaelion had a hand in this?" he asked.

Caelum answered without rushing. "I do not know, my lord. There are old routes, buried loyalties, and enough political rot around Aurevane to make several conclusions tempting. But I am reporting what I learned, not what would be convenient to assume. The evidence points to a forbidden creation, Director Selara's master, and knowledge that feels older than his own work. Anything beyond that should be drawn after comparison, not before."

Valttair said nothing. He knew what history Aurevane had with Selara's master.

Caelum knew that look. The patriarch did not think in straight lines when the board widened. He weighed loyalties, blood, timing, fear, ambition, and the quiet stupidity of men who believed themselves clever because no one had punished them yet. Watching Valttair analyze a problem was like watching a blade vanish into water. There was almost no movement on the surface, but something below had already begun cutting.

To Caelum, Valttair was not comforting. He was not safe in any soft sense of the word. He was a mind with a kingdom's worth of pressure behind it, a man who could listen to three facts and begin arranging consequences before another person had finished understanding the first. That was why Caelum served him. Not because Valttair was kind. Because he saw further than most men dared to look, and because when he chose a direction, the world usually learned to bleed along that line.

Moses saw something else.

For him, Valttair was the center the battlefield lacked. The man who could send the First Squadron beyond the edge of maps and make three years of horror feel like a road with purpose. Moses could resent Caelum's position, curse orders, mock reports, and scrape his pride bloody against the hierarchy of House Morgain, but when Valttair stood before him, the noise inside him knew where to kneel. Follow that man, and the ugliness had meaning. Follow that man, and even the Dead Meridian became a task instead of madness.

Valttair finally spoke.

"Good report, Caelum."

Caelum bowed his head. "My lord."

Valttair's eyes moved to Moses.

"Now, Moses."

The captain of the First Morgain Squadron straightened as if the words had pulled steel through his spine.

Valttair's voice remained cold.

"Did you bring what you found?"


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