Dark Parasyte

Chapter 73: Verthalis Tilts



Queen Yvanna's convoy approached the edge of Raven's Nest just as the setting sun cut through the scattered clouds, casting long shadows along the road. As the walls of the domain came into view, Yvanna ordered the carriages to halt. She stepped out of her ornate golden carriage, her boots crunching against the fine gravel of the path.

What stood before her was not just a wall, it was a testament to military might. The outer wall was a behemoth of black stone, forty meters high and twelve meters thick, stretching across the land like the spine of a sleeping giant. As her gaze followed the massive curve of its construction, she noticed not one, but two walls. The second thirty meters high and equally fortified. Between them, a corridor wide enough for cavalry maneuvers. Not a fortress. A citadel. A declaration of power.

"This is not the castle I gave him, he turned it to a stronghold" she thought grimly. "This is a war engine. A fortress designed by someone who expects the world to come for him and plans to survive it."

She narrowed her eyes and took note of the mounted guards riding in disciplined formations. Each movement was precise, synchronized as if choreographed. Even from a distance, she could see that these were not ordinary soldiers. There was something eerie about them, their silence, their composure. And there were dozens of them. Riding tirelessly in perfect sync. Not a single horse out of line. Their helms bore no crests, and their eyes, those that showed through slitted visors were far too still.

Above them, ravens circled like a dark storm cloud. Hundreds of them. Some perched atop the battlements, watching with uncanny stillness. Others cawed and fluttered in rhythmic loops, their presence somehow too uniform, too deliberate. Watching her.

"Even the birds obey him," Yvanna mused, folding her gloved hands behind her back.

And then she saw them, the farmlands. Lush, impossibly ordered, and thriving beyond natural pace. Rows upon rows of wheat, swaying in uniform waves. Orchards heavy with fruit, trees too symmetrical, too bountiful. The soil glowed faintly in certain patches, laced with latent magic. She squinted. No farmers. No tools. Just growth.

"How many workers would it take to cultivate all this?" she wondered. "And how could he accomplish it in mere months? Even with a thousand men, it shouldn't be possible."

Her heart clenched. "By the gods, what has he built here?"

The convoy rolled forward once again, reaching the towering main gate. Twelve elven guards, statuesque and silent, flanked the entrance. Their eyes gave no sign of emotion as they opened the doors. Their armor bore no insignias, but every part of them screamed deadly precision. She was greeted without a word and silently escorted through echoing stone corridors lined with dark wood panels and carved reliefs that whispered forgotten stories.

At last, she reached the main audience chamber.

There he stood, Corvin Blackmoor. Tall, broad shouldered, carved from steel and shadow. His expression was unreadable, his presence almost tangible.

Yvanna curtsied in a noble manner expected from her upbringing in a deference, her emerald gown flowing with the motion. "Queen Yvanna of the Gilded Dominion greets Planarch Corvin Blackmoor," she said, her voice steady but formal.

"Queen Yvanna," Corvin responded with a nod, his tone neutral. "Welcome to Raven's Nest. Please, be seated."

The guards helped her and her retinue settle into the obsidian chairs flanking a long blackwood table.

Yvanna motioned to one of her aides, who stepped forward and presented a velvet covered box. "As a token of the Gilded Dominion's appreciation," she said, "I offer you this. A bottle of vintage Aurelian Sunfire wine, aged three centuries, and a staff forged from a heart tree in the last Sylvan enclave, reforged by Synod smiths in Thalasien, imbued with lightning magic. A relic of three realms."

Corvin accepted the offering with a polite nod, but Yvanna noted how his eyes lingered on neither object. He was being civil, but his interest was... elsewhere. She recognized that look. He had no need for gifts. He was past diplomacy for benefit.

She kept her tone respectful. "Your ascension has and will continue to send ripples across every court in Verthalis, my lord. I came not merely to congratulate you, but to understand your future intentions."

Corvin rested his hands on the table. "My intentions, Your Majesty, are not to disturb the balance. Unless someone gives me a reason."

Yvanna's fingers tightened slightly in her lap. "Let us hope then," she said, offering a smile that didn't reach her eyes, "that no one is foolish enough to give you such a reason."

Inside, her thoughts churned.

"What was I thinking? Agreeing to this man's request of land, a title, and autonomy. He has built a kingdom already.. no, not a kingdom. An empire in embryo. His guards patrol, his ravens listen, his walls defy siege craft, and his fields feed armies. What kind of forces does he truly command? How deep does this go? What did I unleash?"

Corvin gestured gently. "You have notihng to worry your Majesty. You and your retinue are welcome to stay the night. My staff will prepare suitable accommodations."

Yvanna bowed her head. "We are honored."

As Corvin rose from his seat, the queen followed. The meeting was done. No threats. No declarations. But she had seen enough. Raven's Nest was not a castle and the man before her was no duke. He was something much, much more.

--

Yvanna left the next morning after another quiet yet meaningful breakfast with Corvin. She had insisted on touring the farmlands before departing, and Corvin, with his usual polished calm, agreed and personally escorted her across the expanse of 'his' territory. As her carriage rolled reached the farmlands and came to a stop, she stepped out and was immediately struck by the magnitude of transformation this land had undergone.

The farmlands were pristine and bountiful. Fields of wheat shimmered gold in the morning light, their heads heavy with grain. Orchards bore fruit in impossible abundance, citrus from Savaryn, berries from Thalasien, and even exotic hybrids she could not name. Beyond the tilled fields, rows of trellises were crawling with flowering vines, and strange, luminescent herbs bloomed beneath the canopy of leafy groves. None of this should have been possible here, in this climate, in this timeframe.

Yvanna's eyes narrowed. Even the famed agricultural sectors of Goldhaven would be hard pressed to yield such results. It was the kind of transformation that should take decades, not mere months.

Her queenly instincts screamed at her, this was no miracle of soil or season. This was a feat of power. Of magic. Of manpower she could not account for.

As she walked beside Corvin, she watched his composed profile, his expression unreadable. He gave no explanations and she asked none, but her mind raced with possibilities.

"I would like to purchase the entirety of your yields," she finally said, her voice measured. "The Dominion could distribute them to border cities and restock our war reserves."

Corvin offered a slight, aristocratic smile. "If that is your wish, Your Majesty, I believe we can arrange a generous delivery schedule."

She nodded, saying nothing more as he guided her back to her royal carriage. The moment she stepped into it, she glanced back once, at the towering walls, the silent guards, the watchful ravens, and the duke who had become something more than even her wildest expectations.

After seeing her off with impeccable courtesy, Corvin retreated to prepare for another session of experimentation in his lab. But before he could descend, one of his ravens brought word of a new arrival. Another carriage had breached the outer roads. This one bore the banners of Iron March.

A low chuckle left Corvin's lips. "Visitors, visitors everywhere," he mused, straightening his coat before walking to the meeting hall.

Marshall Ilren Vos of Iron March was not a man who enjoyed diplomacy, but he understood its value. As he entered the hall, he saluted with soldierly precision. "Marshall Vos of the Iron March greets Planarch Corvin Blackmoor."

Corvin inclined his head and gestured toward the guest seat. "Your presence honors my hall, Marshall. Please, be seated."

Vos took his time, his keen eyes already sweeping the room and the grounds beyond the high windows. What he saw during his approach had shaken him. The walls, tall and thick were already a point in his mind, it was not possible to lay siege to such a stronghold and now more heavily fortified than any standard Iron March outpost. Patrols moved with mechanical precision. The castle's grounds were alive with training exercises and coordinated drills. Cavalry flowed like water over the earth. And the ravens.. gods, those ravens, they moved like they were part of some greater consciousness.

"Raven's Nest has changed," Vos said, finally sitting. "When I last passed through, it was little more than a border keep with high walls and dreams of ambition. Now? It feels like the war room of a king."

Corvin folded his hands on the table. "Ambition, when guided by preparation, often bears unusual fruit."

Vos allowed himself a small smile. "Iron March respects power, Planarch. But more than that, we respect discipline. What you've built here is beyond impressive."

He leaned forward slightly. "I've come with two things. First, should you require assistance, we are willing to provide it. Be it men, armaments, supply lines, or otherwise. Second, I've seen the yield of your farmlands, Iron March would like to extend an offer. We'd gladly purchase whatever portion of your harvests you can spare. Our border towns have been strained, and this bounty could shift the balance."

Corvin tilted his head slightly, absorbing the offer. "It seems Raven's Nest may become the breadbasket of two nations. A curious turn."

Vos smiled faintly. "A fortunate one. If it is agreeable, let us begin a formal arrangement."

Corvin stood, and the Marshall followed. The two men shook hands with firm respect.

"Then let it be so," Corvin said. "Verthalis is full of wolves. Better to share strength than hoard it in silence."

They parted not just as allies, but as men who understood the weight of power. The air around Raven's Nest shifted once again, bearing witness to yet another turning of the great wheel.

--

As Marshal Vos's carriage rolled down the winding slopes from Raven's Nest, his report already drafted in his mind, the distant thrum of diplomatic chaos echoed across Verthalis. Word of Corvin Blackmoor's ascension to Planarch rank had spread like wildfire, carried on whispered spells and enchanted ravens alike. In the sanctums of power, reactions were immediate, rippling through factions like a tremor in a sleeping volcano.

Far across the Veilborn Expanse, beneath the ancient canopy of Umbraveyn, the dark spires of the Obsidian Gate trembled with tension. The Hexarchy had convened in full force.

Planarch Selyndros stood, eyes burning with calculated focus. Around him sat the other members: Planarch Dhaelora, Archmagus' Vaelorin, Yserith, Thalern and Caladriel. The chamber pulsed with quiet energy, each member cloaked in layered enchantments that shimmered faintly with suppressed power.

"He's gone too far too quickly," murmured Dhaelora, her crimson eyes narrowing beneath her hood. "Corvin's rise to Planarch is not only unprecedented, it is uncontained. That rank should be earned under the Synod's banner, not stumbled upon in the wilderness."

"It was no stumble," Selyndros replied, his voice smooth, deliberate, and cold as northern frost. "We have no information on legacies of our ancestors, How were they rising thrugh the ranks? Are there any difference with me and you Dhaelora? What can a Sylvan Planarch can do that we can not? "

"Let us not forget he was once one of ours," Yserith Vale interjected, her tone quiet but firm. "We entrusted him to the Arcanum. His methods may be savage, but his loyalty can still be nurtured."

"If it can be," said Selyndros. "Vaelorin, you will go to Raven's Nest. Take a full team of Shadows and several senior magi. Establish our presence there again. Make it clear that his strength is recognized, that his sovereignty is respected, but that his roots are still Synod. We must bind him to us.. gently, for I do not want to fight a Sylvan Planarch."

Vaelorin bowed his head in acknowledgment. "I will depart within the hour."

Meanwhile, deep in the veiled lands of Aeloria, within the flowering groves of the Silent Aurora, another gathering stirred beneath the ethereal glow of moon petaled trees. Whispershade, the enigmatic leader of the Aurora, stood before three cloaked figures in a moonlit amphitheater of shifting light.

"We are late," Whispershade said, his voice like a breeze through leaves and secrets. "He has risen. Not only as a Planarch, but as a symbol. If he declares under the Synod, all our work for balance will crumble."

One of the cloaked figures stirred. "You wish him listed under the Aurora?"

"No," Whispershade replied. "It is too soon, he will not do so. But he must not belong to the Synod. Their grip must not tighten. I've heard of a Synod Magistra.. If this Corvin has such weakness send Archmagus Aeryndor Thalanis from the Starlight Arcanum. Inform him of the situation and make him choose some magi with exceptional charms. He is subtle, persuasive, and wise. Have him offer neutrality. Friendship. Access to elven relics and forgotten magics. Whatever keeps Corvin from falling into Vaelorin's grasp."

"And if he refuses?" asked the second voice, wary.

Whispershade's silhouette shifted like mist in moonlight. "Then we wait. Even the stars take millennia to die."

Elsewhere, in the cold adamant towers of Blackspire Bastion, Grand Marshal Varkos Thorne of the Iron March sat alone in his war chamber, reading Marshal Vos's encrypted report. His brows furrowed, his scarred fingers tapping against the steel rimmed table.

"Planarch," he muttered, the word heavy on his tongue. Not with shock, but with quiet reverence and brewing concern.

He leaned back in his chair, gazing at the sprawling war map of Verthalis pinned to the wall, colored banners and miniature armies arranged with meticulous care.

"We must stop Gareth before his pride causes a war," Varkos murmured to himself. "He will drag Iron March into ruin by challenging a power backed by both High and Dark elves."

He turned to his aides, standing silently nearby. "Summon the High Assembly. Tonight."

The wheels of politics, war, and ancient schemes turned faster. Diplomats, spies, envoys, and silent blades were already in motion. Raven's Nest had become the eye of the storm, and Corvin Blackmoor the axis upon which the future of Verthalis now threatened to spin.


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