Episode-209
Words : 1572
Updated : Sep 27th, 2025
Chapter: 417
Lloyd watched him go, a faint, almost invisible smile touching his lips. He hadn't needed to use his Void power, his chains, his lightning. He had defeated his old rival with a few, carefully chosen words, and a well-timed, devastatingly effective, job title. The ghosts of the quadrangle, it seemed, weren't quite so scary after all.
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The ripple of stunned silence that followed Victor’s humiliated retreat was a tangible thing, a wave of pure, unadulterated disbelief that washed over the main quadrangle. Marco, his jaw still hanging slightly open, stared at Lloyd as if he had just sprouted a second head that was reciting dwarven poetry. The other students were murmuring frantically amongst themselves, their gazes darting between the departing, furious form of Victor and the calm, unassuming figure of Lloyd Ferrum, Professor. The power dynamics of their entire world had just been inexplicably, seismically, upended.
“Faculty?” Marco finally managed, his voice a bewildered squeak. “Lloyd, you’re... you’re a teacher here?”
Lloyd offered a small, self-deprecating shrug. “A recent, and I assure you, equally surprising, development.” He clapped his old acquaintance on the shoulder. “It’s good to see you, Marco. We’ll have to catch up later. But,” he nodded towards Master Elmsworth, who was tapping his foot with an air of impatient purpose, “it seems the Headmaster awaits.”
“The Headmaster... of course,” Marco stammered, still trying to process the sheer, glorious absurdity of the situation. He stepped back, a new, profound respect dawning in his eyes. “Of course, Professor Ferrum.”
The title, spoken aloud for the first time, felt strange, alien, almost comical. Lloyd suppressed a wince and followed Master Elmsworth, who was now striding with renewed purpose towards the imposing central spire of the administration building.
They climbed a wide, sweeping staircase of polished marble, their footsteps echoing in the hallowed, academic quiet. The air here was older, heavier, smelling of ancient books, floor polish, and the faint, lingering aura of immense, concentrated power. They arrived before a set of massive, iron-banded oak doors, intricately carved with the sigils of the kingdom’s oldest and most powerful magical disciplines. This was the office of the Headmaster of Bathelham Royal Academy, a position of immense power and influence, second only, in the academic world, to the King himself.
Master Elmsworth knocked, a sharp, respectful rap. A deep, resonant voice, a voice that seemed to hold the weight of centuries, boomed from within. “Enter.”
Elmsworth pushed the heavy doors open, gesturing for Lloyd to precede him. Lloyd stepped inside, his own senses on high alert.
The Headmaster’s office was not the opulent, sun-drenched study of the King, nor the grim, power-focused chamber of his father. It was a room that felt both ancient and alive. The walls were lined, floor to ceiling, with towering shelves crammed with thousands of books—ancient scrolls, leather-bound tomes, modern treatises. The air was thick with their scent, a dry, sweet perfume of knowledge. In the center of the room, on a large, circular rug woven with complex astronomical patterns, sat a massive desk carved from a single, petrified ironwood log, its surface clear save for a single, glowing crystal that pulsed with a soft, steady light.
And behind the desk sat the Headmaster.
He was old. Incredibly old. His face was a roadmap of wrinkles, a testament to a life that had spanned centuries. A long, snow-white beard flowed down to his waist, braided with small, silver clasps that glinted in the light from the crystal. He was dressed in simple, flowing robes of a deep, midnight blue, the color of the abyss between stars.
But it was his eyes that held Lloyd’s attention. They were a pale, almost colorless, shade of blue, like ancient, weathered sea-glass. And they were not the dim, faded eyes of an old man. They were sharp, piercing, brilliant with a light that was pure, undiluted intelligence and an immense, almost terrifying, power. These were the eyes of a man who had forgotten more about magic and the nature of reality than most scholars would ever learn.
This was Headmaster Valerius, a legendary figure, a Spirit User whose power was whispered to be on par with the great Dukes, a man who had been the head of this Academy for longer than most noble houses had held their titles.
“Master Elmsworth,” Valerius greeted, his deep, resonant voice a calm, steady rumble. “And... Lord Lloyd Ferrum.” His pale eyes settled on Lloyd, and for a moment, Lloyd felt as if his very soul were being weighed, measured, and analyzed by a force of nature. “Welcome back to Bathelham. Your return has been... a topic of some considerable discussion.”
Chapter: 418
“Headmaster Valerius,” Lloyd replied, executing a perfect, respectful bow. He felt the old man’s gaze on him, a subtle, probing pressure. It wasn't the raw, crushing force of Rosa’s Spirit Pressure. It was something far more refined, more insidious. A gentle, probing tendril of spiritual energy, sweeping over him, assessing his own power, his Spirit Core, his very essence. It was the most subtle, and most comprehensive, magical scan he had ever experienced.
He knew what Valerius was doing. He was testing him. Verifying the King’s judgment. Gauging the true extent of the power that this disgraced former student supposedly now possessed.
Lloyd didn’t resist. He simply stood there, calm and still, allowing the probe. He let the Headmaster’s senses wash over the surface of his being. He kept his own powers coiled tight, his Steel Blood a quiet hum in his veins, his Black Ring Eyes dormant, his bond with the now-Transcended Fang Fairy a silent, hidden river of lightning. He did not need to flaunt his power. A true master, he knew, would be able to sense the ocean beneath the calm surface.
And Valerius was a true master.
Lloyd watched as the Headmaster’s pale eyes, which had been sharp and analytical, widened almost imperceptibly. A flicker of profound, almost startled, surprise crossed the ancient, wrinkled face. The probing tendril of energy, which had been sweeping over Lloyd with a confident, almost casual, authority, suddenly faltered, then recoiled, as if it had touched a live, high-voltage power line.
Valerius stared at Lloyd, no longer as a Headmaster assessing a new professor, but as a being of immense power confronting another, utterly unexpected, and deeply, profoundly, perplexing, force.
He couldn't see the specifics. Lloyd’s control was too tight, the nature of his abilities too alien. But he could feel the potential. The sheer, raw, overwhelming density of it. He had expected to find a competent Ascended-level user, perhaps, someone whose power had bloomed late, justifying the King’s unusual interest.
But what he felt... this was different. He felt a Void power that was sharp, refined, and humming with a latent heat that felt fundamentally different from the crude Iron Blood of the other Ferrums he had known. And his Spirit Power... it was a maelstrom. A sleeping thunderstorm. He could feel the connection to a spirit of immense, terrifying potency, a power that was not just Ascended, but was pushing at the very boundaries of reality itself. It felt like standing on the edge of a volcano, sensing the vast, unimaginable pressure of the magma churning deep beneath the earth.
This boy... this quiet, unassuming boy... his spiritual pressure was not that of an Ascended user. It was the contained, controlled, and utterly, terrifyingly, vast pressure of a Transcended being. Or something so terrifyingly close to it that the difference was academic.
The ancient Headmaster, a man who had not been genuinely surprised by anything in over two hundred years, was well and truly, comprehensively, stunned.
The King had not just sent him a quirky innovator. He had sent him a monster. A quiet, polite, soap-making monster, disguised as a disgraced former student.
A slow, deep chuckle, a sound like ancient stones grinding together, rumbled up from Valerius’s chest. The initial shock gave way to a dawning, almost delighted, amusement. He looked at Lloyd, his pale eyes now shining with a new, profound respect and a healthy dose of pure, academic curiosity.
“Well, well, well,” Headmaster Valerius murmured, steepling his long, wrinkled fingers on the desk before him. “It seems His Majesty, in his infinite wisdom, has neglected to mention a few... pertinent details... in your appointment file, Professor Ferrum.” He savored the title, a genuine warmth entering his voice. “This... this is going to be a most interesting academic year. Most interesting indeed.”
He had seen the truth. Or at least, a glimpse of it. And far from being concerned, he seemed... thrilled. The stagnant, predictable world of the Academy had just had a dragon dropped into its neatly manicured quadrangle. And Headmaster Valerius, it seemed, was very much looking forward to the fireworks.
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The Headmaster’s assessment, which had begun as a subtle, probing test, had concluded with a shared, unspoken understanding. Valerius had sensed the immense, coiled power within Lloyd, and Lloyd had recognized in Valerius not just an academic administrator, but a being of ancient power who understood the deeper games being played. The old Headmaster’s initial surprise had morphed into a look of keen, almost predatory, delight, the look of a grandmaster who has just been presented with a fascinating, entirely new, piece on the chessboard.
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