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Global Islands: I'm The Sea God's Heir!-Chapter 122: The Hidden Stellar War (2)
While Caelum played the shadow-guardian, Bella was beginning to notice the anomalies.
Her connection to the world-core was absolute, and while Aegis was focused on the fleet and Caelum was focused on the pods, Bella was sensing the pattern.
She left the high gardens and walked toward the nursery. She moved like a ghost, her Absolute Zero aura suppressing her footsteps.
She reached the door and paused. Through the crack, she saw the phoenixes playing with her son.
She also saw Caelum’s shadow.
To a normal eye, it was just a shadow. But to the Empress of Frost, who had studied the laws of reflection and light for centuries, Caelum’s shadow was moving independently of his body. It was stretched toward the window, its fingers dancing in a rhythmic pattern that matched the data-pulses of the planetary defense grid.
Bella’s breath hitched. She didn’t enter. She watched as her three-year-old son "accidentally" sneezed, and a second later, a distant explosion echoed from the upper atmosphere: a Kyros spy-satellite being deleted from existence.
He’s not growing naturally, Bella realized, her heart aching with a mixture of pride and terror. He’s training. Under our very noses, he’s becoming a god.
She thought of the thousand years she had carried him. She thought of the "God-Seed." She realized that their desire to give him a "childhood" had been a beautiful lie.
Caelum wasn’t a child; he was the answer to a thousand years of prayer and preparation. He was the sword they had forged in the dark, and he was already sharpening himself.
Bella didn’t confront him. She knew that if she did, Aegis would find out, and the protective, overbearing father would likely lock Caelum in a deeper vault, hindering the boy’s growth.
Instead, she placed her hand on the doorframe, sending a whisper of her own mana into the room, not to track him, but to act as a cooling lubricant for his overworked mana-veins.
If you must be a weapon, my son, she thought, then I will be the sheath that keeps you from burning out.
Outside the planet, Arbiter Malphas was losing his mind.
"How?" he screamed, pacing his bridge. "We’ve launched six hundred pods! Not one has signaled a successful insertion! They aren’t being shot down! They are simply... vanishing!"
"Arbiter," a bridge officer stammered. "The causal-lag is increasing. Our ships are struggling to maintain formation. There’s a... a resonance coming from the planet. It’s not the Emperor. It’s something else. Something older."
"Nonsense!" Malphas roared. "Launch the Star-Forge! If we cannot infect them from within, we will burn their surface! Authorized: Solar Siphon Level 5!"
The jagged crown of the Star-Forge began to glow with a sickly, white light. It reached out toward the Helios-9 sun, intending to strip away its outer layer and hurl the solar mass at Eternia.
Aegis saw the movement. "Felix, the Star-Forge is active. This is it. Total war. Signal the Planet-Crackers."
"Wait, Your majesty!" Felix shouted. "Look at the sun!"
In the center of the solar system, the sun did not react to the Kyros siphon. Instead of losing mass, the sun seemed to tighten. A massive loop of solar prominence erupted, but instead of heading toward the Star-Forge, it curved back, forming a perfect, golden shield around the Helios star.
It was a display of stellar manipulation that was Tier 16, bordering on Tier 17.
Aegis froze. "I didn’t do that."
"I didn’t do it either," Bella said, appearing on the bridge, her eyes meeting Aegis’s with a look of profound realization.
Back in the nursery, Caelum was no longer playing with the girls. He had convinced them to play "hide and seek," and he had "hidden" himself inside a small, wooden cabinet.
Inside the darkness of the cabinet, Caelum’s golden eyes were wide open. His tiny hands were pressed against the wood, his "Planetary Link" at maximum capacity. He was the one holding the sun. He was the one defying the Star-Forge.
You... Caelum’s thought-voice was a silent scream that tore through the Kyros flagship’s shields. You interrupted my play-time.
Caelum didn’t use the Planet-Crackers. He didn’t use the Law-Glaives. He used the "Silence" on a massive scale. He reached out to the Star-Forge’s central reactor—the white dwarf core, and he "asked it nicely" to stop moving.
In an instant, the Kyros Star-Forge, a vessel the size of a small continent, went dark. Its lights flickered and died. Its gravity anchors failed.
The solar siphon-beam snapped back like a rubber band, hitting the Star-Forge with its own stored energy.
"BOOOOM!"
The explosion was silent and beautiful. The Star-Forge didn’t shatter; it simply dissolved into a cloud of glowing crystal dust, the causal-integrity of the ship having been reduced to zero.
The three thousand Kyros ships, seeing their pride and joy erased by a ghost, didn’t wait for orders. The "lag" in their command-link had finally reached a point where they couldn’t even coordinate a retreat. They scattered into the void, jumping to warp in random directions, desperate to get away from the "fringe world" that had just eaten a Star-Forge.
The parley was over. The Star War had ended before the first formal shot was fired.
Aegis stood on the bridge, staring at the crystal dust in the sky. He looked at Bella.
"That was Caelum, wasn’t it?"
Bella nodded slowly. "He’s been training, Aegis. Every night. He’s much stronger than we realized. He’s not just the heir. He’s the guardian."
Aegis felt a complex surge of emotion. The pride was there, but so was the heartbreak. He walked off the bridge and hurried toward the residential wing. He burst into the nursery, his heart hammering.
The cabinet door was open. Caelum was sitting on the floor, surrounded by Eterna, Flama, and Diva. He looked exhausted, his small face pale, but he was holding a wooden block.
"Papa!" Caelum chirped, his voice high and sweet. He held up the block. "I win!"
Aegis knelt and pulled the boy into a crushing hug. He felt the fading heat of the Third Law in the boy’s veins. He felt the weight of the universe that his son was already carrying.
"Yes, you won," Aegis whispered, tears stinging his eyes. "You won, my son."
He looked at Bella, who had followed him into the room. They both knew the truth now. The "natural growth" was a dream they had to let go of. Their son was a Tier 16 monster in the body of a toddler, and the Kyros Hegemony was just the first of many who would come to test him.
Aegis stood up, holding Caelum. He looked out the window at the clear, peaceful sky of Eternia. The Interstellar Chatbox was probably exploding with news of the "Kyros Disaster," and the name Aegis was likely climbing the rankings at a terrifying speed.
But here, in the quiet of the nursery, the Emperor made a new vow.
"If you’re going to be a weapon, Caelum, then I will be the one to teach you how to strike. No more hiding. From tomorrow, we train together."
Caelum leaned his head on his father’s shoulder, a tired but satisfied smile on his face. He had saved his home. He had protected his mother’s garden. And finally, he didn’t have to pretend to be weak anymore.
"Train?" Caelum asked, his golden eyes sparkling. "Like making big fire?"
"Yes," Aegis laughed, his heart finally finding a balance between the father and the sovereign. "The biggest fire the universe has ever seen."







