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The Beginning After The End Chapter 341 Ashes and Dust
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The Beginning After The End Chapter 341 Ashes and Dust

Aldir

Ash and dust.

Everything—every tree, every beast, every lesser being—for hundreds of miles, had turned to ash and dust. This was the power of the asura. I scanned the barren landscape for anything, any sign of life or speck of mana, that might have escaped my attack.

But there was nothing.

My steps crunched through the broken surface of the ground with every step as I wandered the wasteland that had once been Elenoir. Even the ground was not stable, threatening to collapse beneath me at any moment.

I was a soldier, doing my duty and following the orders of my lord. The scorched forest should have instilled in me a sense of pride, knowing I had struck a terrible blow against our enemies. Pride, however, was not the emotion I felt at the sight of this grim image. Not nearly.

When I was sent to kill the Greysunders, I had done so without hesitation. There had been no pride—because one does not feel prideful at the swatting of a gnat—but neither was there pity or remorse. It had merely been a necessary moment in the war, the elimination of two important enemy agents.

When Lord Indrath explained what was to happen to Elenoir, however…

“I can no longer afford to sit idly by while Agrona expands his control over the lessers. Alacrya was a sacrifice I was willing to make, allowing him to keep busy with his mutts and experiments, but his continued expansion into Dicathen will not be allowed, especially now that he has somehow succeeded in his efforts to create a weapon of untold power through reincarnation.

“Dicathen is but a stepping stone toward Epheotus, and I refuse to let that traitorous snake bring this war here. For generations, we have worked to make sure Dicathen could fight back against Agrona, but they have failed. We will not sacrifice ourselves to keep them alive. New episodes will be published on light‍nove​lpu​b.c­om.

“What we will do is send a message that Agrona cannot ignore. He has so far used the lessers as a shield, holding their lives hostage to protect his own. No longer. If the choice is between giving him the power to move against us or tearing down the world, then I will see it all burn.”

Windsom was the first to step forward, bowing so low he could have kissed Lord Indrath’s boots. “I volunteer for this honor, My Lord. I will strike the first blow.”

Lord Indrath did not smile, but there was a victorious light in his eyes. “You will continue to serve in your role as guide and protector, Windsom, but you will not swing the axe that is to fall. No, there is only one among us who is capable of wielding the World Eater technique.”

The secret technique of the Thyestes clan is Mirage Walk, an ability that made us unparalleled combatants, but long ago, when the asura often warred with one another, we had another technique, so powerful and devastating that it was forbidden to be used when the Great Eight formed, and was no longer taught, except for one student in each generation.

Which made me the only living member of the Thyestes clan with the knowledge Lord Indrath required.

The World Eater technique allowed the caster to channel an incredible amount of mana, compacting it until the individual particles began to burst, causing a chain reaction that would spread out to the atmospheric mana and continue until not a spark of the caster’s own, purified mana was left, causing unparalleled devastation. Follow the light‍nove​lpu​b.c­om platform for the latest episodes.

“This technique is forbidden, Lord Indrath,” one of the Thyestes clan leaders insisted angrily. “Knowledge of the World Eater is kept alive so that our clan will never forget the horrors of limitless power—”

“This moment is exactly why the technique has been taught to one talented young member of your clan since time immemorial, which I myself commanded as you may remember.”

Although there was grumbling from my clan, no one else challenged Lord Indrath as he summoned me to stand beside Windsom.

“General Aldir, I call on you now to prove your loyalty. You and Windsom will travel to Dicathen, to the forest land of Elenoir, and locate the Alacryan Scythe Nico and the elven princess Tessia Eralith—or her physical body—and activate the World Eater technique. Give my message to Agrona, and rob him of his new weapon in the process.”

In that moment, I had felt something inside me crack, something I thought had been unshakable: the foundation on which my entire identity as a servant of the Indrath clan was built.

Kneeling, I ran my fingers through the dry, gray nothing that I had created when I followed my lord’s command—a command I knew was wrong the moment it was uttered, but to refuse would have risked the future of my entire clan. Lord Indrath would not hesitate to lift one of the other—more servile—pantheon clans into the Great Eight, and label the Thyestes clan as anathema…

Even so, our failure to destroy the reincarnates had drawn Indrath’s ire. We had not expected that they had any method to teleport away so quickly, and Windsom had gotten carried away toying with the angry, black-haired child. And yet, still, the lord’s wrath fell on me.

Do not mope, Aldir, I told myself. It is unbecoming of a member of the Thyestes.

My fingers continued to trace through the thick layer of gray nothing, and I found myself examining the bumps and folds in the landscape for some reminder of what this place had been: a fallen tree, the rubble of a collapsed house, even the charred bones of one of the millions of lives I had extinguished.

The World Eater technique left nothing, though, no sign that this place was once a beautiful forest inhabited by millions of elves. The combustion of mana destroyed absolutely.

No, there is still something here, I thought, peering into the hazy air as if hoping to see the amethyst particles of aether suspended in the clouds of smokey ash. Though I could not, I knew it was there, all around me, undisturbed even by the World Eater technique. The thought gave me a sliver of peace, which was disturbed again immediately.

Two figures were approaching from a distance, drawing me out of my spiralling thoughts. Even when they reached me, I didn’t stand up, didn’t turn to look at them. Instead, I scooped up a handful of ash and let it run through my fingers to blow away on the wind.

“Back again, Lord Aldir?” the cool, confident voice said. “You’ve been here often since…well, you know.” Although it irritated me to know I was being watched, I wasn’t surprised. My act had reset the balance of power in Dicathen, sending a tremor of terror through every Alacryan on the continent.

Of course someone has been tasked with watching the wasteland, but choose to show themselves now? I wondered, my back still to them.

“They say ten thousand Alacryans died here,” she continued, her tone unreadable. “But we both know that was just a fraction of the casualties.”

The two stood well back, just close enough to speak without shouting. Their mana stood out like an oasis in the desert, since the atmosphere here was still empty of it.

“Is it confidence or naivety that you dare reveal yourself to me here, Scythe?” My words contained no threat, merely an observation. They knew I could move through them with no more effort than brushing away a spider’s web; there was no need for threats.

“I know genocide makes you somewhat irritable, Lord Aldir, but I wasn’t the one who ordered the deaths of millions of innocent elves,” she replied, gently mocking, devoid of any fear. “Do you think he considered what the act would do to you, asura? Perhaps he did, but then, if a sword breaks, you simply forge another, you do not mourn the loss of steel.”

Then, I turned my eye to her. To her credit, she didn’t flinch away, although the same couldn’t be said for her retainer. “What do you want, Seris?”

“I merely wish to talk, Aldir. Share a few words, in the hope that you’ll hear them.” She smiled, but it wasn’t mocking or amused, only…sad? “If I am right, at this very moment Kezess is busily spinning his web of lies, convincing the Dicathians that it was the Vritra who did this”—she waved one hand at the desolation—“so that the poor fools don’t even know who is really killing them.”

Strategically that would be the correct move, although it risked breaking what little spirit the Dicathians had left. To counter this, Windsom would be working with their Commander Virion—one of the few lessers I thought had any real leadership ability—to make sure that didn’t happen.

“But who do you think has killed more Dicathians in this war?” Seris continued, cocking her head to the side and tapping her lips with a finger. “Agrona’s forces have killed, what? Twenty thousand? Fifty? But Kezess, well…”

“Deaths made necessary by Agrona’s continued treachery,” I said, repeating Windsom’s words when I had shared this same thought in confidence after the destruction of Elenoir. It was unnerving to have this Vritra mutt throw the same words at me now. “And that’s Lord Indrath to you.”

“You sound just like him,” Seris said quietly, digging the toe of her boot into the ash.

I raised my chin and stood, letting my form expand until I was half again as tall as she was. The retainer tried to step in front of his Scythe, but she stopped him with a hand on his shoulder. “I am proud to sound like the great Lord Indrath, and I will not be spoken down to by the likes of you, half-breed.”

She shook her head. “I didn’t mean Kezess. You sound like Agrona.”

Sneering, I summoned Silverlight, which appeared as a long, thin rapier glowing with moonlight, and pointed it at Seris’s heart. “You have exhausted my patience, Scythe. I can cut you both down right now, and there isn’t a soul in hundreds of miles to risk collateral damage.”

I regretted my choice of words immediately as Seris gave me a sardonic look.

“You already took care of that, didn’t you, Aldir?” she asked wryly. The retainer shot her a fearful glance, as if even he thought she was pushing their luck. “But is that all you are now, pantheon? An executioner? Assassin? Faithful automaton, devoid of empathy or the ability to think for yourself?”

Why doesn’t she fear you, Aldir? I asked myself.

Because she knows you are done with death, the answer resounded from the deep recesses of my mind.

I ground my teeth and released Silverlight. “If you expect me to abandon Lord Indrath for Agrona, you are—”

“Indrath, Agrona. Agrona, Indrath.” Seris ran a hand along the length of one curving horn. “You speak as if they are the only two beings in the world, as if there is no choice but to serve one or the other.”

I scoffed. So this was the mutt’s plan? To install herself as some kind of opposing queen to the Vritra lord? “This is a war of two sides. Everyone must choose a side, even you, Seris.”

“But is it, though?” A storm raged in the Scythe’s dark eyes as she held my gaze. “If the world is a coin, Agrona on one side, Kezess on the other, then someone else has flipped that coin, and no matter how it lands—whichever face looks up from the ground—it will be that someone who is looking back down.”

“Who is it you speak of so reverently?” I asked, somewhat unnerved by her demeanor. “Who do you believe could rival these two, who are considered great even among the asura?”

The Vritra half-breed smiled coyly. “Oh, you know him well, Aldir, perhaps even better than I do. A certain human mage with a penchant for biting off more than he can chew.”

My eyes flew open—all three of them—as my mind went back to the moments before I finished casting World Eater, when I felt an alien presence watching me, almost as if some greater deity—a true god—had arrived to witness my lowest moment and judge me by it. I hadn’t known who it could have been at the time, but now…

“Arthur Leywin…”

SERIS VRITRA

I was cautiously optimistic as I held the asura’s strange, three-eyed gaze. Cylrit stood protectively at my side, wound more tightly than a spring, more than ready to lay down his own life for me were we to be attacked.

Although the conversation had gone exactly as I had hoped, I wasn’t yet ready to turn my back on Aldir. Instead, we stood like that for some time, him glaring down at me with an expression I hoped was thoughtful, me gazing back as placidly as I could manage given his crippling aura.

I knew it was risky, coming to Elenoir without the High Sovereign's approval and revealing myself to the asura, and I even felt just a little bit bad about giving Arthur’s survival away to the asuras as well. But the boy needed a push. Agrona had his new pet, and it would only be a matter of time before he decided to use her. If Arthur took too long running around the Relictombs playing pat-cake with young Caera Denoir, or hiding under the guise of “Professor Grey” at Central Academy, the escalating conflict between the Vritra and Epheotus would ruin everything. These episodes are published on light‍nove​lpu​b.c­om.

Finally, Aldir released a heavy breath—half irritated scoff, half world-weary sigh—and shrunk back to normal proportions. Wordlessly, he raised a hand, conjuring a black-opal portal, and vanished with a sudden rush of mana.

A sharp breath escaped my lungs as they deflated. I looked down at my trembling hand, then closed it into a tight fist in frustration. I refused to shake with fear, despite the gap in power between the asura and me.

“Will he tell Indrath about Leywin?” Cylrit asked as he reached out a hand to draw in the few lingering particles of mana from Aldir’s spell.

“Not right away, no,” I answered, considering my words just as I considered my knowledge of the asura. “He’ll ponder what we’ve said, agonizing over why we’ve shared this information, afraid it may be a trick or a trap. Then, eventually, his sense of duty will overwhelm his concern, and he will tell Indrath. Exactly like we want him to.”

A slow smile spread across my face as I considered our current situation. My plans were continuing to move forward, keeping just ahead of the war, but the reappearance of Arthur Leywin as the mysterious Ascender Grey was a welcome wild card. And with my protegee so conveniently placed at his side, well…

“Agrona will kill us if he finds out about this meeting,” Cylrit said quietly.

“Agrona cannot currently see beyond the walls of Taegrin Caelum, Cylrit,” I answered smoothly, elbowing my retainer in the shoulder. “He has eyes only for her right now, at least until he decides if this whole reincarnation gambit was worth it.”

“And if he does?” Cylrit’s voice carried an edge of nervousness I wasn’t used to from the stalwart retainer.

“I imagine he’ll grow significantly less careful with his Scythes and their retainers,” I answered.

There was a brief silence. Then, Cylrit cursed. “Sovereign’s horns. It’s eerie here, isn’t it? No mana, no noise, no life at all…”

“This,” I said, linking my arm through his, “is what our world will look like if Agrona and Kezess have their way. Agrona will happily take Epheotus in exchange for Alacrya and Dicathen, and Kezess is willing to rebuild life here from the ashes up if he has to.”

A shiver ran through my retainer at my words as he gazed around the empty waste. “Agrona wouldn’t really let this happen to Alacrya, would he?”

I snorted indelicately. “If, in exchange, he could rule over all the other asura clans—or destroy them and take Epheotus for the Vritra—then you know damned well he would. What is one mortal world in exchange for the land of deities themselves?”

“But there’s one thing I’ve never really understood,” Cylrit admitted, slowing slightly so that I had to release his arm. I turned to meet his serious, steady gaze. “Why the human? He’s strong, yes, but he only lived long enough to grow into his strength because of you. What’s so important about him?”

I floated into the air and turned southwest toward Darv. “Even now, I can’t say what Arthur Leywin’s part in all this is going to be. He’s an anomaly, a force of change. I sensed that the moment I laid eyes on him. In a world where deities have the strength to wipe out entire countries, one human shouldn’t matter. Even you and I are a ripple in the sea of power next to beings like the asuras. These episodes are published on light‍nove​lpu​b.c­om.

“It was the mana that told me, Cylrit. The way it seemed to be drawn to him, as if awaiting his command, like he was constantly reshaping reality without even trying. He didn’t just move through the world, the world moved to accommodate his passing.”

Chapter end

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Chapter 374.5
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Chapter 218
Chapter 217
Chapter 216
Chapter 215
Chapter 214
Chapter 213
Chapter 212
Chapter 211
Chapter 210
Chapter 209
Chapter 208
Chapter 207
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Chapter 204
Chapter 203
Chapter 202
Chapter 201
Chapter 200
Chapter 199
Chapter 198
Chapter 197
Chapter 196
Chapter 195
Chapter 194
Chapter 193
Chapter 192
Chapter 191
Chapter 190
Chapter 189
Chapter 188
Chapter 187
Chapter 186
Chapter 185
Chapter 184
Chapter 183
Chapter 182
Chapter 181
Chapter 180
Chapter 179
Chapter 178
Chapter 177
Chapter 176
Chapter 175
Chapter 174
Chapter 173
Chapter 172
Chapter 171
Chapter 170
Chapter 169
Chapter 168
Chapter 167
Chapter 166
Chapter 165
Chapter 164
Chapter 163
Chapter 162
Chapter 161
Chapter 160
Chapter 159
Chapter 158
Chapter 157
Chapter 156
Chapter 155
Chapter 154
Chapter 153
Chapter 152
Chapter 151
Chapter 150
Chapter 149
Chapter 148
Chapter 147
Chapter 146
Chapter 145
Chapter 144
Chapter 143
Chapter 142
Chapter 141
Chapter 140
Chapter 139
Chapter 138
Chapter 137
Chapter 136
Chapter 135
Chapter 134
Chapter 133
Chapter 132
Chapter 131
Chapter 130
Chapter 129
Chapter 128
Chapter 127
Chapter 126
Chapter 125
Chapter 124
Chapter 123
Chapter 122
Chapter 121
Chapter 120
Chapter 119
Chapter 118
Chapter 117
Chapter 116
Chapter 115
Chapter 114
Chapter 113
Chapter 112 - Newfound Goal
Chapter 111 - Good Night
Chapter 110 - The Lost Art
Chapter 109 - Snail's Pace
Chapter 108 - Ones Closest To Gods
Chapter 107 - A Grudging Tolerance
Chapter 106 - Logic's Biggest Foe
Chapter 105 - When Ignorance Is Bliss
Chapter 104 - The Great Eight
Chapter 103 - Peculiar Congregation
Chapter 102 - Chess Pieces
Chapter 101 - Visitors
Chapter 100 - Intentions
Chapter 99 - Fellow Captive
Chapter 98 - Floating Castle
Chapter 97 - Outcome
Chapter 96 - The Storm
Chapter 95 - The Calm Before
Chapter 94 - Arrival
Chapter 93 - Chosen Ones
Chapter 92 - Bird's Cage
Chapter 91 - Collapse of Xyrus
Chapter 90 - The Start
Chapter 89 - A Cursed Blessing
Chapter 88 - A Stroll
Chapter 87 - A Will's Unwillingness
Chapter 86 - Winding Down
Chapter 85 - Elven Kingdom
Chapter 84 - Lineage
Chapter 83 - A Greater Scale
Chapter 82 - Benefactor
Chapter 81 - At Last
Chapter 80 - Meanwhile III
Chapter 79 - Meanwhile II
Chapter 78 - Meanwhile
Chapter 77 - Allies?
Chapter 76 - Good To See You
Chapter 75 - Manifest Destinies
Chapter 74 - Order Of Power
Chapter 73 - A Will's Last Breath
Chapter 72 - One Fallen
Chapter 71 - A Confusing Day
Chapter 70 - Course of Breakthrough
Chapter 69 - An Unfamiliar Burden
Chapter 68 - Widow's Crypt V
Chapter 67 - Widow's Crypt IV
Chapter 66 - Widow's Crypt III
Chapter 65 - Widow's Crypt II
Chapter 64 - Widow's Crypt
Chapter 63 - Field Trip
Chapter 62 - Baby Steps
Chapter 61 - My Team
Chapter 60 - Romantic Idiot
Chapter 59 - Confrontation
Chapter 58 - First Day At The Job
Chapter 57 - Feelings and Old Memories
Chapter 56 - Family Gathering
Chapter 55 - This Is Going To Hurt
Chapter 54 - Match Start
Chapter 53 - It's a Pleasure
Chapter 52 - Classes and Professors III
Chapter 51 - Classes and Professors II
Chapter 50 - Classes and Professors
Chapter 49 - Disciplinary Committee
Chapter 48 - Reminisce
Chapter 47 - Attention
Chapter 46 - Wiser Than The Wise
Chapter 45 - Not Quite As Planned
Chapter 44 - You Dare?
Chapter 43 - Xyrus Academy
Chapter 42 - A Ball II
Chapter 41 - A Ball
Chapter 40 - I'm Not That Nice
Chapter 39 - New Winds
Chapter 38 - Introspection
Chapter 37 - In the Meantime
Chapter 36 - A Son, Brother, and Friend
Chapter 35 - Precautions
Chapter 34 - Rash Actions and Limits
Chapter 33 - Dire Tombs III
Chapter 32 - Dire Tombs II
Chapter 31 - Dire Tombs
Chapter 30 - Last Leg
Chapter 29 - Sword and Body
Chapter 28 - Changes In Dicathen
Chapter 27 - Examination
Chapter 26 - Worth Fighting For
Chapter 25 - Partners In Crime
Chapter 24 - Aftermath
Chapter 23 - Auction
Chapter 22 - Royalty
Chapter 21 - For Them
Chapter 20 - Everybody Wins
Chapter 19 - Proclamation
Chapter 18 - Peaceful
Chapter 17 - Family
Chapter 16 - Companion
Chapter 15 - Next Step
Chapter 14 - What's to Come
Chapter 13 - Q & A
Chapter 12 - Meeting
Chapter 11 - To and Fro
Chapter 10 - Road Ahead
Chapter 9 - The Ones Held Dear
Chapter 8 - Questions
Chapter 7 - How I Wished
Chapter 6 - Up the Mountain
Chapter 5 - Let the Journey Begin
Chapter 4 - My Life Now
Chapter 3 - Head Start
Chapter 2 - The Encyclopedia of Mana Manipulation
Chapter 1 - The Light at the End of the Tunnel
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C466
C465
C464
C463
C462
C461
C460
C458
C456
C455
C454
C452
C448
C439 Holding Ground
C438 A Broken Path
C434 Fellowship Forged
C433 Respect and Regards
C432 Overdue
C431 Time
C430 Opposition
C419– One of Mine
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Chapter 398
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Chapter 379
Chapter 376
Chapter 362
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Chapter 360
Chapter 359
Chapter 358
Chapter 357
Chapter 356
Chapter 355
Chapter 354
Chapter 353
Chapter 352
Chapter 351
Chapter 350
Chapter 349
Chapter 348
Chapter 347
Chapter 346 A Dim Spark
Chapter 345 Socialite
Chapter 344 Eyes Locked
Chapter 343 Professor Princess
Chapter 342 Duality
Chapter 341 Ashes and Dust
Chapter 340 Burden and Stakes
Chapter 339 The Central Dominion
Chapter 338 A Weapon Against Him
Chapter 337– Layers
Chapter 336– Protection
Chapter 335– Haunting Peace
Chapter 334– Last Mercy
Chapter 333– Attention
Chapter 332– Broken Chains
Chapter 331– The Trial
Chapter 330
Chapter 329– A Plea for Help
Chapter 328 Face to Face
Chapter 327 Enough For Now
Chapter 326 Backlash
Chapter 325 Painless
Chapter 324
Chapter 323
Chapter 322
Chapter 321
Chapter 320
Chapter 319
Chapter 318
Chapter 317
Chapter 316
Chapter 315
Chapter 314
Chapter 313
Chapter 312
Chapter 311
Chapter 310
Chapter 309
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Chapter 265
Chapter 264
Chapter 263
Chapter 262
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