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Rebirth: Necromancer's Ascenscion-Chapter 137: The City That Waits
Chapter 137: The City That Waits
"Hope is a fragile thing," Velrosa thought, her gaze drifting across the skyline of Esgard.
Not because it was rare. No. Hope bloomed like rot in desperate places—fed by lies, watered by rumors.
But because when it broke, it broke everything.
She watched the city breathe.
From her perch atop the House Elarin estate, she could see the veins of the city: the crisscrossing bridges over chasm-deep canals, the soaring banners of the Great Houses, the columns of smoke rising from merchant stalls and smithies.
Somewhere in that teeming chaos, blood was being spilled.
Gold was being pocketed.
Secrets were being whispered between gritted teeth.
—
Below, in the maze of Esgard’s lower districts, a boy of no more than ten brushed past a drunk noble, palms hidden beneath his sleeves.
A thin scrap of parchment slid from his left hand to another’s without a word. The second figure, cloaked and limping, slipped away into the alley’s shade without glancing back.
Around them, the city was busy, too busy.
An open market screamed with color and noise. Traders shouted the virtues of enchanted silks and beastbone carvings.
Arcane trinkets glimmered beside half-rotted fruits. And behind every stall, someone watched the corners, waiting for opportunity... or escape.
A tall man in noble blue leaned near a tavern door, speaking low to a woman wrapped in road-stained finery. The paper in his hand was gone before he blinked.
Information moved faster than blood in this city.
In the shadow of the Arena, everything had become a game.
—
"The Arena is the heart now," Velrosa whispered.
Not the Council. Not the Throne of Dust. This.
The coliseum had grown beyond a stage for violence.
It was a throne of spectacle.
The greatest form of entertainment the Empire had to offer. People traveled for weeks to see the matches.
Even lords from far provinces came—not for honor, but profit.
And with them came their gold.
And their eyes.
Nobles who once called Esgard a stain now called it home—at least temporarily.
Aristocrats, merchants, commanders, even foreign emissaries. They had all come to feast.
And the Arena fed them.
Noble betting had been made legal for non offering houses.
Wagers filled the vaults of lesser houses.
Betting syndicates grew fatter than barons.
Great Houses warred not just with blades, but with champions.
The arena was politics in armor—steel diplomacy played out in the dust and blood of its rings.
She clenched her jaw.
All of it built on pain.
—
In a tavern near the central ring, the air was choking with smoke and tension.
"He’s not dead," said a broad-shouldered man to his companions, slamming his mug down. "I felt it. The day the sky turned black. We all did."
"Aye," his friend muttered. "Blood in the eyes. That scream in the earth. Never heard a priest speak of it since. But we all bled. Even the air was weeping."
A hunched woman at the next table leaned in. "And the Arena froze. It was proven, the man who can’t die—lived up to his name."
"They say he walked into Hellreach," the first man whispered.
"Then gods help whatever lives in there."
They drank in silence.
The same silence had blanketed Esgard weeks ago.
No one forgot the day the wind changed.
When people cried tears of blood and the statues cracked down the middle. When birds flew backward and the shadows shifted toward the sun.
That was the day they knew, they all knew—
—it was only a matter of time.
—
Velrosa walked through her private garden, though the flowers had long died. Even the weeds curled inward now, recoiling from her touch.
She passed the long line of court documents stacked in her study.
She’d barely been reprimanded for her crimes.
Political manipulation. Forbidden noble practices. Even tampering with arena betting.
All of it should have buried her.
But then Ian had taken the Subjugator’s Oath.
His act had silenced the vultures, cowed the Council, and made House Elarin untouchable.
At least for now.
But there had been a price.
She’d been suspended from the Arena.
Her House could not present a new champion until the previous one returned—or was declared dead by the High Arcanum.
They never did.
And they most definitely couldn’t do so now.
Because they felt it.
And Velrosa had known.
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Somewhere, he still walked. Still fought.
And he was coming back.
She whispered his name to herself.
"Ian..."
—
Across the city, factions waited.
In House Vallis, Lady Alurelle played cards in a room lit by pale green flame. Her hand trembled slightly as she laid down the Queen of Swords.
The card bled black ink.
"The boy returns," she muttered.
House Volmir’s agents had been quiet. Too quiet.
In the Council Tower, Archmage Serel Vaunt sat in meditation, his pupils flickering with runes. Behind his sealed lips, a chant echoed:
The Prophet returns. Esgard will feel this change.
And deep beneath the Sanctum, High Inquisitor Eltharion carved another prophecy into stone, his blood boiling in the basin beside him.
"The Whisperer walks again. A demon in man’s skin. Or worse... a demon slayer."
—
Velrosa lit a single candle at her window.
Not for prayer.
Not for mourning.
For remembrance.
Of the moment he stood in the dust, cloak torn, eyes burning, and swore to the gods, not by uer father or by the church—but by her name.
Of the gasp that passed through nobles and slaves alike when he did the unthinkable.
Of the fear she saw in the eyes of people who had never feared a slave before.
He was more than a champion.
He was the proof that their world could break.
And now the earth trembled again.
—
In the outer ring of the city, near the Blackiron gates, a guard swore he saw something—just for a second.
A figure, walking out of the morning mist. Cloaked. Hooded. Dragging something behind him.
The figure vanished before he could draw breath to shout.
But the ground where he’d stepped had cracked.
—
Velrosa stood before her mirror.
She hadn’t aged in the last few weeks. If anything, she had become sharper, more vivid. Her eyes were no longer merely blue, but something else—moonlit and endless.
She whispered to her reflection.
"He’s coming."
A smile touched her lips.
Equal parts fear and worship.
"Hope... is a fragile thing."