The Genius Mage Was Reincarnated Into A Swordsman Family - Chapter 325
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Chapter 325: The Silent War Begins
The Nullification dome shattered like glass, and the sound it made wasn’t loud—it was worse than that. It was final. The kind of sound that closes doors that can never be reopened.
I stood in the rubble of what used to be a sanctuary, breathing hard, and tried very hard not to think about what I’d just learned.
I’m a time-bomb. I’m a vessel. I was never real.
The panic hit anyway, like a fist to the gut. My lungs seized. My vision blurred. For a moment, I couldn’t breathe through the sheer, suffocating weight of it—thousands of past lives piled on top of me, an ancient king sleeping in my soul, every moment of my existence counting down to the moment when Klaus Lionhart simply… stops existing.
I forced it down. Literally forced it, the same way you’d push a drowning person under water.
Because that was the horrible, sick realization Greed had burned into my mind: if I could think about my fear, so could he. The Ego. The thing inside me. If Greed had been able to crack open my mind like an egg and rummage through my memories, then Arkadius could certainly hear my panic. Could feel my desperation. Could watch me falling apart from his little dark corner of my soul.
Don’t think it. Don’t even think it.
I had to go silent. Completely silent. Not just my words—my thoughts. Because this wasn’t a war I could plan anymore. The battlefield was my own mind, and the enemy was always listening.
I took a shuddering breath and pushed everything down into a box labeled “deal with this later.” It wasn’t courage. It was pure, desperate self-preservation. I focused on the physical—the dust on my clothes, the ache in my legs, the way my heartbeat slowly stopped hammering against my ribs. The Ten Eyes Mantra had given me discipline. Now I was using it to hide from myself.
* * *
I needed sleep. Not because I wanted it, but because my body was running on fumes and my soul felt like it had been microwaved from the inside out. Greed’s intrusion had left me shredded, and every second I stayed conscious was another second the Ego could watch me fall apart.
So I left the ruined chamber. Walked up the crumbling stairs of the Eastern Tower like a zombie. My mind was deliberately, obsessively blank—just focusing on the mechanics of movement. One foot in front of the other. The color of the stones. The way dust moved in the shafts of light coming through broken windows. Anything to avoid touching the screaming truth in the back of my head.
When I reached my private room, I barely made it to the bed before collapse became the only option. I fell onto the sheets, fully clothed, and forced my consciousness down into a deep, dreamless void. Not sleep, exactly. More like… shutting down. Turning off. Hoping that when I turned back on, the countdown would feel less like a guillotine blade hanging over my neck.
I was betting everything on two days of perfect silence. Two days where the thing inside me wouldn’t hear my desperation, my terror, my completely unhelpful human need to survive.
It was a gamble. But it was the only play I had.
* * *
In the deep places of Klaus’s mind—in the spaces between conscious and unconscious, in the architecture of his soul that should have belonged entirely to him—a separate reality existed.
It was a space of absolute stillness. An endless plane of black glass, polished so perfectly it reflected nothing, suspended over nothing, existing in a state of perfect, frozen order. This was the uninvited sanctum of the Ego. And within it, the Arkadius consciousness manifested not as a person, but as a presence—a pillar of cold white light that was somehow also shadow, speaking a million thoughts at once that somehow formed a single, perfectly clear intention.
Below it, coiled and patient, was Gluttony’s essence. A vortex of dark, hungry energy. Waiting.
“Greed broke protocol,” Gluttony rumbled, its voice like an ocean dragging back from the shore. “The vessel comprehends the deadline now. The host is afraid. Did you miscalculate?”
The Ego’s light shifted, and for a moment it seemed to smile—though it had no mouth, no face, nothing to smile with.
“Fear is a tool, Gluttony,” the Arkadius consciousness said, each word carrying the weight of centuries. “The vessel was constructed to panic. Greed’s meddling simply ensured the panic would accelerate precisely as intended. What does a mortal do when given an impossible deadline?”
Gluttony’s shadow pulsed, considering. “It reaches. It grasps. It accelerates toward the very thing that will destroy it.”
“Indeed,” the Ego confirmed. “The host believes he is fighting destiny. Forging his own path. Rebelling against the design woven into his bones. In truth, he is simply running down the only track ever provided. Sprinting directly toward his own erasure.”
The Ego’s light flared once—not anger, but cold, absolute certainty. The kind that only comes from knowing the ending before the beginning.
“Let him sleep,” it continued. “Let him rest and recover. When he wakes, his desperation will drive him forward faster than any chains ever could. He will gather the fragments. He will seek power. He will pursue the Ten Eyes Mantra with every fiber of his being. And each step forward will be another step toward the threshold.”
“Will he succeed?” Gluttony asked, though the question seemed almost rhetorical.
“Does it matter?” the Ego responded. “If he opens all ten eyes, he delays only the inevitable—my consciousness will simply wait longer for activation, then overwrite a more powerful version of him. If he fails to master the technique, the threshold will activate and erase him immediately. There is no outcome where Klaus Lionhart survives.”
Gluttony’s essence settled into stillness, acknowledging the flawless, suffocating logic.
“He is running toward his grave,” it said simply.
“He is running toward his destiny,” the Arkadius Ego corrected. “And he believes he is choosing to run.”
* * *
I opened my eyes to silence.
For a long moment, I just lay there, not moving, letting my consciousness come back online slowly. The oppressive feeling of being watched had eased slightly—it was still there, that constant, heavy presence in the back of my mind like someone standing just out of sight. But at least I could breathe without feeling like I was being observed having a panic attack.
My body felt better. Restored. Two days of forced unconsciousness had done what sleep never could. My energy was back. My muscles didn’t ache. Physically, I was intact.
But the silence in my head? That was never coming back.
I pushed myself upright. Sunlight came through the thick glass of the tower window, filtered and soft, turning the dust in the air into tiny dancing points of light. For a second, I just watched them float. Tried to find some peace in something so simple and meaningless.
Then I heard it.
The sounds drifted up from below. The scrape of shovels. The clang of metal on metal. Voices calling out instructions. Workers were already moving through the tower, patching walls, clearing debris, making repairs. The damage was being fixed. The mess was being cleaned up.
I almost laughed at the cosmic irony. While I lay in my room fighting for the survival of my soul, the mundane world was just… continuing. Cleaning. Moving forward. Working.
It was absurd. It was grounding. It was the only sane thing happening anywhere.
I stood up. Walked to the window. Looked out over the Eastern Tower and the city beyond it—the scarred but surviving buildings, the people moving through streets like it was just another day. To them, it was. They had no idea that their reality was balanced on the knife’s edge of something cosmic and terrible.
I pressed my hand against the glass and took a breath.
Klaus Lionhart. Klaus Zagerfield. Neither. Both. A walking contradiction in terms.
I was a shield. A spare key. An accident waiting to be corrected. My only weapon was a technique that required me to constantly walk a line between sanity and dissolution. My only deadline was the one carved into my soul by a dead king’s ambition.
And I couldn’t think about any of it. Couldn’t plan. Couldn’t strategize. Not in words. Not in thoughts.
All I could do was move.
I walked to the door and opened it. The sounds of reconstruction flooded in—hammer and shovel and human voices. The simple, normal work of a world that didn’t know it was breaking. The sound of people who still believed tomorrow would come.
I stepped into the noise and let it carry me forward. I didn’t think about my plan. Didn’t think about what came next.
I just moved, one foot in front of the other, into whatever came next.
The silent war had begun, and the first rule was simple: don’t give the enemy anything to hear.
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