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The Villain Professor's Second Chance-Chapter 807: The Devilish Keynote Speaker (1)
I’m a student.
I’m a nobody.
I’m about to present in front of them.
Ifrit grumbled under her robe, the heat of his irritation crawling into her skin. "All this water. All this pomp. They build cages out of pretty light."
Amberine wanted to agree, wanted to be angry at something so she wouldn’t be afraid, but the truth was simpler.
She was scared.
Not of the stage.
Of being seen.
The constellation sphere dimmed and the chime-voice spoke again.
"Priority recognition complete."
The hall went quiet in a way that felt physical. The last syllable faded and the silence remained, thick as the ocean above their dome.
It felt like Aetherion itself was holding its breath.
A ripple passed through the amphitheater.
At first Amberine thought it was her imagination—nerves turning air into ghosts—but then she saw the shimmer travel along the edges of the floating platforms, along the bridges, along the seams where crystal met stone.
Aetherion’s defenses were synchronizing.
The fortress core pulsed. Heartbeat lanterns across the ceiling answered with a low, resonant hum. Thin bands of aquamarine light ran up the walls and vanished into the dome like veins feeding a heart.
Amberine’s eyes picked up details she hadn’t noticed before.
New conduit patterns had been carved into the architecture—finer lines nested under older runes, like a second skin. There were layered dampening fields too, subtle distortions in the air that made loud magic feel like it would hit a wall and die. Even the decorations weren’t just decorations. The kelp carvings, the coral mosaics—some of them hid joint seams.
Constructs.
Not guards. Not ceremonial.
Fail-safe executioners.
Two months ago, Devil’s Coffin had ripped open the "safest place" on the continent. Amberine could still taste that humiliation, even if she hadn’t been the one blamed. She remembered alarms sputtering, the sound of water hammering through a fractured corridor, the look on a Council warden’s face when they realized their wards had been outplayed.
The Council was terrified of being embarrassed twice.
Professor Astrid’s fingers reached for her glasses again, adjusted nothing, then found her symposium badge as if checking it still existed.
Maris leaned closer, her voice barely a breath. "If we survive this keynote, our presentation will feel like a friendly chat."
It was a joke, but it landed softly, like a blanket over Amberine’s shoulders.
Elara’s fingers trembled once more around the parchment bundle. She stopped it with sheer will, knuckles whitening.
Then the keynote archway breathed.
The leviathan-bone doors didn’t burst open. They didn’t glow. They simply released a clean, mechanical sigh, like the fortress itself had decided to open a mouth.
No fanfare.
No hero music.
Just the sound of pressure equalizing.
And then he stepped through.
Draven Arcanum Drakhan entered alone.
Amberine had seen him in classrooms. She’d seen him in hallways, in the faculty tower, in his office, in those moments where he arrived so quietly the room only realized he was there when the air changed.
But this was different.
Here, the world was watching him.
He walked with exact posture, shoulders aligned, steps measured like he’d already calculated the distance from door to dais and decided the most efficient rhythm. His gaze was surgical—not curious, not warm, not even arrogant. Just sharp and clean, like a blade that didn’t need to prove it could cut.
His expression was neutral to the point of cruelty.
Not because he enjoyed cruelty.
Because he didn’t spend emotion where logic was required.
The crowd reacted in layers.
Admiring scholars leaned forward as if proximity could turn them smarter. Skeptics narrowed their eyes, calculating how to dismantle him if he faltered. Power players went still, because you couldn’t out-rank a moment like this. You could only endure it.
Amberine’s heart thudded so loudly she was sure the nearest platform could hear it.
This is the same man who makes a room of students afraid to breathe—so what does he do to a room full of kings and legends?
Ifrit’s voice scraped again, uneasy now. "He’s... too clean."
Amberine didn’t answer. She couldn’t.
Draven crossed the central aisle without looking left or right, yet it felt like he saw everything anyway. His eyes flicked once—one quick cut across the front platforms—and Amberine had the chilling sense that he’d already counted every doubt in the room.
Her gaze snagged on Queen Aurelia.
The queen was looking at him.
Not like a ruler assessing a tool.
Not like a politician measuring a threat.
Like a proud mother watching a son step onto a stage that would either crown him or cut him.
Aurelia’s mouth curved—barely—then she muttered something under her breath that Amberine couldn’t hear, but the shape of the word looked familiar.
Probably bastard.
Prince Caelum’s gaze was different. Assessing. Protective. Conflicted. Like he was ready to applaud or draw a blade depending on what came next.
Duchess Malesya watched Draven like she was deciding whether to invest or assassinate.
Sophie von Icevern’s eyes held that strange light war heroes carried—battle-recognition. She respected killers of chaos, even academic ones. But this one, somehow filled with a certain kind of hatred...
Draven reached the dais.
No bow.
No greeting fluff.
He placed one hand on the podium as if anchoring reality itself. The movement was small, but it silenced the last stray murmurs that had survived the door’s opening.
He looked out over the amphitheater.
Amberine felt the weight of his gaze pass over the crowd like a cold wind.
Then he spoke.
"There is no safety in tradition."
Draven didn’t raise his voice.
He didn’t need to.
It was the way he placed each word—cleanly, as if he were setting glass pieces into a frame—that made the air feel like it had been trimmed thinner. His tone was calm, controlled, and so precise it carried a faint impression of inevitability, like a blade sliding into a sheath.
Amberine felt her throat tighten before she understood why. Her lungs tried to pull in a deeper breath and failed halfway, as if the hall itself had decided what her capacity was allowed to be.
"There is only stagnation."
The room snapped into absolute silence.
Not the polite silence of etiquette.
Not even the tense silence of an audience waiting to be entertained.
This was the kind that happened when something predatory spoke and everything else remembered it could die.
Amberine experienced it physically. Her ears rang, as if Aetherion’s vast acoustics had swallowed all sound but left a pressure behind. Her skin prickled across her arms, and the fine hairs at the back of her neck rose. Her heartbeat became obscene in the quiet—a loud, private drum in a place that suddenly felt like a cathedral.
Ifrit shifted under her robe, a hot twitch against the oppressive water mana, like a coal refusing to be drowned.
"He’s cutting the room," Ifrit muttered, irritation sharpened into unease. "He’s making space for his will."
Amberine didn’t answer. She didn’t dare move her lips. She wasn’t sure she could have spoken even if she wanted to. It felt like Draven had taken the concept of "permission" and removed it from the air.
Draven let the silence sit. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝙬𝙚𝓫𝒏𝓸𝓿𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝙤𝓶
Not because he was savoring it.
Because he was measuring it.
Amberine watched him the way she watched him in class when he waited for an answer: not impatient, not bored—simply allowing reality enough time to catch up with him.
Then he continued, tone unchanged.
"You have gathered under reinforced wards and ceremonial lights to convince yourselves you have recovered from shame."
The sentence was not loud, but it hit like a hand on the back of the skull. A faint stir rippled across the amphitheater—shoulders shifting, robes tightening, someone’s ring scraping against a railing.
The movement died almost immediately, as if the crowd had collectively realized even rustling sounded like guilt.
Draven’s gaze didn’t linger on any one face.
But Amberine felt accused anyway.
"You have not."
Two short words.
No flourish.
No apology.
Aetherion’s air seemed to tighten. The enormous water-mana pressure in the hall—already thick—settled heavier, like the ocean above the dome had remembered gravity existed.
Amberine’s fingers flexed around the edge of her own parchment without her meaning to. She forced herself to loosen her grip. She could almost hear Elara’s sharp voice in her mind: Don’t show stress. Don’t waste movement.
Maris stood a half-step in front of Amberine and slightly to the side, close enough that her presence was a small anchor. She didn’t touch Amberine now—too public—but Amberine could feel her steadying in the way Maris breathed, slow and even.
Elara’s face remained composed.
Only her hands betrayed her—fingers pressed too firmly around their notes. A tremor tried to start. Elara strangled it into stillness by sheer refusal.
Professor Astrid, behind them, adjusted her glasses. The motion was tiny, habitual, but Amberine saw it anyway.
They were all being pulled into the same gravity.
Draven’s.
"The magical world," Draven said, "is suffering from systemic denial. Denial of mechanisms. Denial of cost. Denial of accountability."
He paused, and the pause was not empty.
Amberine could practically hear quills lifting. Spell-tablets priming. Crystal recorders syncing. Somewhere, a scribe’s stasis charm clicked, locking ink at the exact moment of capture.
The hall didn’t just listen.
It prepared evidence.
"And denial creates monsters."







