The Extra is a Genius!? - Chapter 418
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- Chapter 418 - Chapter 418: Chapter 418: The Dawn After Ashes
Chapter 418: Chapter 418: The Dawn After Ashes
The air still burned.
Even after the battle had ended, the ruins breathed heat — a slow, suffocating rhythm that made it hard to tell if the world was alive or simply dying slower than they were.
Hooves clattered against broken stone as three riders emerged from the fading mist. Elena pulled her hood lower, shielding her face from the ash-laced wind. Beside her, Elyra grimaced, covering her mouth with a torn glove.
“This place…” Elyra muttered, voice shaking slightly. “It’s horrifying.”
Elena’s amber eyes scanned the horizon — black towers melted at the base, the ground split open in smoking veins. “It’s worse than I imagined.”
Charlotte rode behind them in silence, her pink hair streaked with soot, the edges of her cloak burned. When she finally spoke, her voice was quiet but heavy.
“It reminds me of the Holy Capital,” she said. “The screams, the smell… everything.”
Her grip tightened on the reins. “At least back then, Noel was there to help me.”
They reached the edge of the main chamber, where the battlefield opened into a crater of molten stone. The first rays of dawn slipped through the cracks in the ceiling, glinting off shattered weapons and the faint shimmer of mana still hanging in the air.
Elyra’s horse stopped abruptly, snorting, refusing to go farther. “Even the ground feels wrong,” she said. “Like it’s breathing.”
Elena dismounted first, landing softly on the charred ground. “Stay alert. If the Pillars left something behind, we’ll find it here.”
Charlotte slid down last, her legs trembling slightly from exhaustion. “Let’s just hope Noel’s still alive.”
From the center of the ruin, a shape moved — faint against the heat-haze, but unmistakable.
Noir darted from the shadows, fur singed and paws bleeding, but still running strong. When she saw them, she leapt forward, collapsing halfway to Charlotte’s feet in her smaller form.
Charlotte gasped, kneeling. “Noir!”
The wolf gave a tired growl that echoed in their heads, voice faint but alive. ‘You made it… good.’
Elena crouched beside her, eyes narrowing. “If she’s here… then he can’t be far.”
And she was right.
Through the smoke, the outline of a man slowly appeared — tall, shoulders slumped, his clothes scorched and torn. Revenant Fang hung loosely in his hand, dragging a faint line through the ash. Behind him, Selene and Albrecht followed, both walking with a limp, but standing.
The sight rooted all three girls in place.
For a moment, no one dared speak.
Then Charlotte stepped forward, voice trembling with relief. “Noel!”
He looked up at the sound of his name, eyes dull with fatigue but unmistakably alive.
A ghost of a smile tugged at his lips. “You actually came.”
Charlotte nodded, tears welling despite the soot streaking her cheeks. “Of course we did.”
Noir lifted her head slightly, tail flicking once. ‘Took you long enough.’
Elyra exhaled shakily, looking at the devastation around them. “What happened here?”
Noel’s answer was quiet, almost lost in the crackle of dying flames.
“Hell,” he said simply. “We survived hell.”
They found a patch of broken stone that hadn’t completely melted, just warm enough to sit without burning. The heat of the ground still seeped through their boots as everyone lowered themselves, exhaustion finally catching up with the silence.
Noel sank to one knee first, his sword resting beside him. The smell of char and iron clung to him, the kind that didn’t wash off easily. Selene sat near him without a word, her wand balanced across her knees. Albrecht remained standing for a moment, scanning the horizon before finally lowering himself beside them with a quiet sigh.
Charlotte knelt between them, her hands trembling as she clasped them together. “Hold still for a moment,” she murmured.
Soft golden light began to rise from her palms — gentle, steady, almost holy in the way it fought against the smoke around them. The warmth spread outward, reaching each of them in slow waves. Noel felt it wrap around his skin, numbing the pain that pulsed under the burns on his arms.
He watched her quietly. Her expression was focused, lips moving in a whisper no one understood. The air shimmered faintly with each breath she took, like reality itself bent to let her prayer pass through.
Noel wanted to speak — to tell her she didn’t need to waste her strength and life — but stopped. The look on her face made it clear she needed to do this.
When the light finally faded, the bleeding had stopped. The cracks in Albrecht’s armor sealed themselves with a faint hum, Selene’s trembling slowed, and even Noir exhaled softly, the burns across her flank gone.
Charlotte, though, was pale. Her breathing uneven.
Noel frowned. “You shouldn’t push yourself like that.”
She met his gaze — tired, but smiling. “You’d do the same for me.”
He hesitated, then gave a small smile in return. “Yeah. I would.”
She brushed soot from her knees and sat beside him, the faint golden glow still lingering around her fingertips.
The silence that followed was heavy, but not unbearable — for the first time in what felt like hours, it was just quiet.
Then Albrecht spoke, his voice cutting through the air like a blade. “What about outside?”
Elyra leaned forward, brushing a strand of black hair from her eyes. “The mansion’s safe. The walls held, thanks to Damon and Kael. Sylvette coordinated the defense — she’s… stronger than I thought.”
Albrecht nodded slowly. “Good. Minimal losses?”
Elena answered this time. “A few soldiers. The courtyard’s half-destroyed, but the Thorne crest still flies.”
Charlotte glanced at Noel. “We saw the fire from miles away. I thought…” She paused, looking at the blood-stained ground beneath them. “I thought we were too late.”
Noel shook his head, leaning back against the cracked stone wall. “You weren’t.”
Selene, still catching her breath, added quietly, “Barely.”
For a while, none of them spoke again. The ruin around them creaked and hissed — a tired, broken echo of the war that had just ended.
Noir stretched beside Noel, her tail brushing against his boot. ‘You look less dead now.’
He huffed, almost laughing. “That’s the nicest thing you’ve said to me all week.”
Charlotte smiled faintly, the corners of her lips trembling. The moment was small, fragile — but it was peace, even if it would not last.
Albrecht straightened his back, wiping the soot from his gauntlet with slow motions. His voice, when it came, was calm, carrying that same chill that never seemed to melt, no matter how close he stood to the flames.
“So,” he said finally, “what of Sylvette?”
Elyra glanced toward him, her posture subtly straightening. “She did well,” she replied evenly. “When the monsters reached the walls, it was Sylvette who rallied the soldiers. She kept order when everyone was panicking.”
Charlotte nodded in agreement, smiling faintly. “She never hesitated. Even when the outer gate started to crack.”
Albrecht’s gaze stayed steady on them — as if he could hear the edge of what they weren’t saying. But he said nothing. He only hummed once, low, considering.
“I see,” he murmured, his tone unreadable. “So she finally stepped forward.”
Elena added, “She’s young, but… there’s something natural about the way she commands. The troops followed her without question.”
A long silence followed. Then Albrecht nodded once. “Good.”
He leaned back, resting his hands over his knees, eyes half-lidded as if lost in thought.
‘Sylvette… strong, composed, decisive when it counts,’ he mused.
‘If Noel continues to reject the family’s path, she’s the right choice. Between her, Kael, and Damon, she’s the only one who carries both heart and control.’
The thought lingered like a whisper in the back of his mind. There was no malice in it — just pragmatism, the kind of cold clarity only a patriarch could carry.
Noel, watching him from the corner of his eye, caught that look — the same calculating stare his father always wore when weighing lives like pieces on a board.
A quiet bitterness rose in his chest.
‘That’s fine,’ he thought. ‘Keep her as the heir. Keep this whole cursed name. Once this is done, I won’t have to come back anyway.’
He forced his expression to stay neutral, rubbing the back of his neck as if the tension there were only exhaustion. The truth was simpler — he didn’t want this conversation to continue.
Selene, sensing it, shifted the focus. “She’ll make a good leader,” she said, her voice measured. “The soldiers seemed to trust her.”
Albrecht gave a faint nod, almost approving. “Then I chose well.”
Charlotte tilted her head slightly. “Chose?”
He looked at her for a moment, then turned his gaze back toward the horizon. “A leader isn’t born,” he said simply. “They’re recognized.”
The words fell flat — heavy, final.
Noel exhaled slowly, staring down at the blackened ground beneath his boots. ‘Recognized,’ he echoed silently. ‘Or trapped.’
The quiet shattered without warning.
A low hum cut through the air — then a streak of light tore past them like a spear, splitting the smoke in half. The impact shook the ground, scattering ash and molten fragments. Everyone froze.
Noel’s instincts flared too late. His head snapped toward the sound — and there, standing where the crystal had been only seconds ago, was a man holding it casually in one hand.
The crystal glowed faintly in his palm, its soft pulse reflecting off his eyes — eyes that gleamed with that same unnatural, mocking brilliance Noel would never forget.
Noir’s fur bristled instantly, her fangs bared, a low growl rumbling from deep in her chest. ‘Him.’
Noel’s heart sank. He didn’t need her to say it.
He already knew.
The man smiled — wide, cheerful, completely out of place amid the ruins of fire and death. His long coat fluttered in the wind, unburned by the heat, his hair disheveled, his expression bright with that maddening kind of joy only someone unhinged could wear so naturally.
“Ohhh!” he exclaimed, clapping his hands together like he’d just spotted an old friend at a tavern. “Good morning, Noel! What a delightful surprise!”
Noel rose slowly, his pulse hammering in his throat. “You…”
The man twirled the crystal between his fingers as if it weighed nothing. “Look at you! You’ve grown so much since the last time I saw you. Taller, sharper — stronger too! I hope these little milestones on your journey are helping you become the hero you were meant to be.”
Noir took a step forward, shadows pooling beneath her paws. “Put. That. Down.”
The man tilted his head, grinning wider. “Ah, right — this?” He held up the crystal, admiring the glow. “Beautiful, isn’t it? You went through so much trouble to clean up this mess for me. How considerate.”
Noel clenched his fists, mana flaring around his body. “Why are you here?”
“Oh, don’t look at me like that,” the man said lightly, brushing a bit of dust off his sleeve. “I simply couldn’t reach this little treasure before — too many nuisances in the way. But now?”
He gestured at the scorched chamber, the corpses, the silence. “Now everything’s nice and quiet.”
He turned the crystal in his hand, watching the light refract through his fingers. “Last time, I gave you a wonderful gift, didn’t I? I’d love to offer another…”
His smile sharpened, eyes glinting with that familiar madness. “…but I’m afraid I’m short on time. So instead, I’ll take this gift for myself.”
Noir’s growl deepened, shadows spreading like veins through the floor. “You won’t make it out alive.”
He laughed softly, utterly unfazed. “Oh, little wolf, you’ve said that before.”
Then his gaze flicked back to Noel, sharp and gleaming. “Though I have to admit—” he said, tone lilting with mock admiration, “I’m shocked you’re still alive. Honestly, I was certain you’d die like poor Nicolas von Aldros.”
He paused, tapping his chin as if thinking deeply, though his grin never faltered. “Now that I think about it… he should be almost dead by now, shouldn’t he? No mana core, no hope—ugh, what a waste.”
A faint chuckle escaped him, cruel and casual. “He had so much potential, too.”
The way he said it made Noel’s stomach twist — not from the words themselves, but from how amused he sounded saying them. Noel stepped forward, Revenant Fang trembling in his grip. His breathing quickened — not from rage, but from the instinctive, choking fear that only this man could stir.
The man gave a short bow, tucking the crystal into his coat. “Do keep up the good work, Noel. The world’s about to change again — and I’m dying to see what you’ll do next.”
A flash of light swallowed his body whole — silent, instantaneous.
When it faded, he was gone.
Only the scorched imprint of his boots remained on the cracked floor.
Noel’s knuckles went white around the hilt of his sword.
He didn’t move, didn’t breathe. Noir stood beside him, hackles raised, her voice trembling in his mind. ‘He’s back…’
Noel’s reply was barely a whisper. “Yeah.”
The silence after the man’s disappearance was almost unbearable. The air still buzzed with the residue of his mana — sharp, unstable, taunting. Noel stood frozen in place, every muscle locked.
Then, suddenly—
[Mission Completed!]
[Congratulations, Noel!! You have successfully prevented the Fall of House Thorne!]
The familiar blue text burst across his vision, flashing brighter than usual — too bright.
[You may now claim your reward: The Truth!]
[Error! ERROR!]
[The crystal containing Elarin has been stolen!]
[System integrity compromised! Recalculating—recalculating—!!]
The text blinked rapidly, lines of distorted symbols flashing between messages before the screen stuttered.
Noel’s eyes narrowed slightly, but his expression didn’t change. His breathing stayed steady, his grip on Revenant Fang loosening just enough to look normal.
No one around him noticed the flickering glow in front of his face.
Only Noir did.
Her tail went still, her mind brushing against his thoughts. ‘What’s wrong?’
Noel’s reply was silent, tight. ‘The system’s losing it.’
More text appeared, shaking, like the words themselves were panicking.
[Noel! Listen carefully!!]
[You must go to the Thorne library—immediately!!]
[Time is limited!]
[The Truth is still there, find it!]
Then, without warning, the message shattered into static and vanished.
Noel blinked once, hiding the tension in his jaw.
On the outside, he looked calm — just a tired young man staring into the wreckage of another battle.
But Noir could feel the storm underneath. Her voice trembled in his head. ‘The system’s never done that before… has it?’
‘No,’ Noel answered quietly, eyes flicking toward the horizon. ‘Which means whatever’s coming next… won’t be good.’
He exhaled slowly and turned away from the scorched floor.
The message’s last words still echoed in his mind—
‘Go to the library. Find the truth.’