Chapter 430: His Domain
Chapter 430: His Domain
"I’ll be the master of my destiny. Achieving things never achieved by others, so be warned, I’m born different be ready to understand what being different mean.’’~ Nero Adams
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Darkness came as a velvet hug, a tender embrace that serenaded the stars with black’s bold song. She was the orchestra and the choir too, soothing the last hues of daylight and letting them dream anew. She was the cradle of the wind’s night song, the keeper of Camelot days and armor strong. She bade the sun to take his rest, to regain his spent strength, so that tomorrow’s dawn might be his best yet. Until then, she held the night close, cloaked the land in silver shadow, and wove the soft aroma of evening flowers and the susurrations of sleeping leaves into a lullaby spun of gold.
Nero was back in his room tonight. The festival still hummed faintly in the distance, a muffled heartbeat of laughter and music, but here, in the quiet of his dorm, there was only stillness. He sat on the mat in the center of the living room, cross-legged, his hands resting on his knees. The lights were off. The only illumination came from the moon, a pale sliver through the window, casting long, gentle shadows across the wooden floor.
He was deep in thought.
The day had been full—the festival, the games, the brief tension with Elreth and Azalea, the warmth of Khione’s hand in his. But now, in the solitude of night, his mind turned inward. He closed his eyes, let his breathing slow, and sank into the depths of his own soul.
His inner world unfolded around him.
The nine stars hung in the void, silent and majestic, each one a different color, each one a sleeping law. Three of them shone brightly, their light warm and steady. The crimson star blazed with the fury of the Law of Fire, its surface rippling like molten metal. The golden star crackled and sparkled, lightning arcing between its jagged edges—the Law of Lightning. And the brown star, solid and patient, glowed with the deep, earthy light of the Law of Earth. They pulsed in a slow rhythm, almost like breathing, as if they were alive.
The other six stars remained dim, shrouded in shadow. Nine black chains wrapped around each of them, heavy and thick, sealing their power away. But one of them—the blue star, the one that held a law he could not yet name—had only two chains remaining. The others had broken, one by one, over the course of his battles. Soon, perhaps very soon, it would awaken.
And at the center of it all, below the stars, the vortex churned. It was vast, dark, endlessly deep. Something moved within it—something ancient and powerful, something that had been sealed there long before Nero was born. It did not struggle. It simply waited. Patient as stone.
Nero observed everything in his soul form, a translucent figure floating in the vastness of his own being. He traced the stars with his eyes, counted the chains, felt the hum of the vortex. Then, with a thought, he withdrew.
His awareness returned to the mat, to the moonlit room, to the quiet of the night.
He did not open his eyes. Instead, he let his thoughts drift to the Purple realm, to the power that awaited him, to the question that had been gnawing at his mind for days.
Every knight who stepped into the Purple realm acquired a domain—a sphere of absolute control where their law reigned supreme. Within that domain, they could shape the battlefield, empower their attacks, and weaken their enemies. The power of the domain depended on one’s connection to their law, the depth of their understanding, and the strength of their will.
Domains were typically divided into two categories.
The first was the Classical Domain. It was straightforward, practical, and reliable. The knight created a bounded field around themselves, and within that field, their law manifested freely. A fire knight could turn the domain into an inferno. A lightning knight could fill it with crackling storms. An earth knight could make the ground rise and fall at their command. The size of a Classical Domain could be large, covering a wide area, making it ideal for battlefield control.
The second was the Personalized Domain. It was smaller, more concentrated, and far more powerful. Instead of spreading their law across a wide area, the knight tailored the domain to their own needs, weaving it into their fighting style. A Personalized Domain might enhance the knight’s speed, strengthen their blows, or grant them new ways to use their law. It required deeper understanding and greater control, but the results were worth it. Most geniuses chose this path.
Nero had thought about both options. He had weighed the pros and cons, imagined himself fighting with each type. And he had rejected them both.
He was different. He had always been different. Three laws. Two cores. Eyes that could see the structure of magic itself. He could not walk the same path as others. He had to forge his own.
His mind turned to a new idea, a wild, almost impossible idea.
What if his domain was not a field around him? What if, instead, his domain was his own body?
He imagined activating the Law of Fire not as a weapon, but as a transformation. What if, when he called upon his domain, he did not create a circle of flames around him? What if he became the fire itself? His flesh turning to living flame, his blood to molten fury, his thoughts to the very essence of destruction. He would not wield fire. He would be fire.
The same could be done with lightning. His body becoming a conduit of pure electrical energy, moving faster than thought, striking with the fury of a storm. Or with earth. His skin turning to stone, his bones to bedrock, his strength becoming immovable and unbreakable.
In the Purple realm, no one thought this way. Such ambitions belonged to the Black realm—the ultimate stage, where knights transcended human limits and became one with their law. The Zodiacs, the strongest beings in the world, were said to have achieved this. They did not simply use their laws; they embodied them. They were living domains.
But Nero was not even a full Purple knight yet. He had just stepped into the realm. And already, his mind was reaching toward the heights of the Black realm, toward a power that should have been decades away.
He knew it was unusual. He knew it was arrogant. He knew it might be impossible.
He did not care.
He opened his eyes. The moonlight had shifted, the shadows longer. He rose from the mat, walked to the window, and looked out at the sleeping academy. The festival lights were still glowing, soft and distant.
"A living domain," he murmured to himself. "Becoming the law itself."
The idea felt right. It felt like him.
He would not follow the paths laid out by others. He would carve his own, through fire and lightning and earth, until he became something the world had never seen.
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