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Chronicles of the Damned Greed

AtherionWrites
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In a world where divine power runs in noble blood, Kael Drayvar was declared… normal. Normal. Invisible. Forgotten. The son of a dead concubine in a family that never wanted him. The youngest brother, barely worth a mention. A six-year-old boy no one cared existed. But Kael learned what his stronger siblings never would: true power isn’t brute strength. It’s knowing what moves people. Turning secrets into weapons. Waiting until the moment it’s already too late. While his perfect brother trained to be heir, while his calculating sister wove her intrigues, while his broken brother hid in books… Kael watched. Learned. Waited. Because in a family of wolves, there are only two choices: be a lamb… or something far worse. Kael Drayvar was never a lamb. This is the story of an invisible boy who decided to burn the world rather than stay invisible. Of boundless ambition. Of siblings destroying each other. Of a throne only one could claim. And the price of absolute power. Welcome to the Chronicles of Cursed Greed. Can someone be great… without being good?
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Chapter 1 - The Weight of Silence

Thunder woke Kael before the sun.

It wasn't unusual. In Stormvale, storms arrived with the regularity of tides, dragging with them the scent of salt and iron that permeated every stone of the Drayvar manor. Kael remained motionless beneath the rough sheets, watching the shadows dance on the ceiling of his small room while the sea roared against the cliffs.

'Another day,' he thought without clear words. 'Another invisible day.'

The door opened with the familiar squeak of hinges no one bothered to oil. Ama Maren entered with a firm step, her skirts whispering against the stone floor. She was a woman with a weather-beaten face and calloused hands, one of the few people in the manor who looked him in the eye when she spoke to him.

"Up, young Kael," she said with a neutral voice, neither warm nor cold. Professional. "Breakfast is served in half an hour."

Kael sat up, pushing aside the blankets. The room was functional: a narrow bed, a trunk for clothes, a window facing the stormy sea. No tapestries, no thick rugs, none of the ornaments that decorated Rylan and Lyssara's rooms in the west wing. His window didn't even have proper curtains, just a grey cloth that barely blocked the dawn light.

"Thank you, Ama Maren," he replied, rubbing his eyes.

The woman hesitated for an instant, and in that brief moment, Kael saw something resembling compassion cross her face. But it disappeared as quickly as it had arrived.

"Your brother Sareth is already awake," she added before leaving. "He is waiting for you in the hallway."

The door closed, leaving Kael alone with the sound of the wind howling against the stone walls. He dressed quickly—simple grey tunic, dark wool trousers, boots that were already too small. No one had noticed that his feet had grown in the last two months.

'Of course they didn't notice,' he thought with a crooked smile that didn't reach his eyes. 'They would have to look at me to realize it.'

The main dining hall of the Drayvar manor was a spacious room with high windows that framed the raging sea. The dark oak table could easily accommodate twenty people, but that morning, like every morning, only six chairs were occupied.

Kael entered last, with Sareth glued to his shadow like a nervous puppy. His older brother—though no one would call him that given how he behaved—had black hair just as curly but permanently messy, and eyes that didn't stop moving, waiting for something bad to happen at any moment.

'He probably expects it,' Kael thought as they slid into their seats at the far left end of the table. 'After his ceremony, he probably always expects it.'

Varen Drayvar was already seated at the head, with a stack of unfolded scrolls next to his untouched plate. His father—because technically he was, though the word felt hollow in Kael's mouth—had his jaw clenched while his grey eyes scanned what appeared to be military reports. There were grey hairs at his temples that hadn't been there last year.

'Forty-two years old now. And he has never asked me how I am.'

To Varen's right, Elyn Valmar—because she would never be "Mother" to Kael, not even in his most charitable thoughts—cut a piece of bread with surgical precision. Her platinum blonde hair was pulled back in a bun so perfect it looked carved from marble. She didn't look up when Kael and Sareth sat down.

She didn't need to. Her indifference was a perfected art.

"Good morning, Mother," Rylan said from his seat next to Elyn, his voice full of that morning enthusiasm only those completely secure in their place in the world could afford.

He was fourteen years old, but already stood over five feet seven, with shoulders starting to broaden from constant training. His curly black hair was cut in a military style, revealing a small scar on his left eyebrow that looked like a medal of honor.

"Good morning, Rylan," Elyn replied, and it was like watching the sun rise. Her voice softened, her eyes—the same grey as Varen's but colder—lit up with genuine affection. "Did you sleep well?"

"Yes, Mother. I dreamed that..."

Kael stopped listening. He already knew this conversation. It repeated every morning with slight variations: Rylan talked about training, Elyn praised him, Varen grunted something that could be interpreted as approval. Sareth stared at his plate. Kael watched.

He always watched.

Lyssara arrived late, because Lyssara always arrived when she wanted. At thirteen, she had already learned that rules were for those who needed to hide behind them. She slid into her chair with a book under her arm—something about naval strategy she had probably stolen from Varen's library—and began to eat without greeting anyone.

Her eyes, however, swept the table in a quick and calculating scan. They stopped for half a second on Kael.

He held her gaze.

She looked away first, but at the corner of her lips, there was a small smile. Or a threat. With Lyssara, it was hard to distinguish.

"Master Torin says I will soon reach the second Apprentice layer," Rylan announced, puffing out his chest slightly. "He says my progress is... what did he call it? Ah, yes, exceptional for my age."

"Of course it is," Elyn said, and her pride was so tangible Kael could almost see it glowing around her. "Blood of Valmar and Drayvar. You are the son of two great houses, Rylan. It is in your nature to be exceptional."

'And we,' Kael thought while spreading butter on his dry bread, 'are the sons of a dead concubine. I suppose that is also in our nature.'

"How long did it take you to reach the second layer, Father?" Rylan asked, turning toward Varen.

Varen looked up from his scrolls, blinking as if he had just remembered there were other people in the room.

"Fifteen years," he replied with a rasping voice. "But times were different. Less structure in the training."

"Then I am ahead," Rylan concluded with a satisfied smile.

"You are."

Varen returned to his reports. The conversation ended as abruptly as it had begun. Rylan didn't seem offended; he was used to his father's emotional distance. Elyn didn't react either, busy now mentally reviewing—Kael could see it in the way her eyes moved—some plan or strategy that probably involved securing Rylan's future even further.

Sareth leaned toward Kael, whispering so low it was barely audible over the wind hitting the windows.

"Do you think they will teach us too one day?"

Kael chewed his bread slowly before answering, also in a whisper.

"Not you, Sareth."

He watched his brother's face crumble, but continued with a neutral voice:

"Your ceremony was clear. Weak Aether. You are not a warrior."

"Then... what am I?" Sareth's voice trembled slightly.

Kael looked at him, really looked at him. He saw an eleven-year-old boy who had been broken at five, when an ancient crystal had told the whole world he wasn't worth enough. He saw the constant fear in his eyes, the way his shoulders hunched expecting a blow at any moment.

And something in Kael's chest, something small and resilient that hadn't yet been completely crushed by eight years of indifference, tightened uncomfortably.

"You are my brother," he said simply. "That is sufficient."

Sareth blinked, and for a moment, hope lit up his face.

"But seriously," Kael continued, returning to his bread, "you should stop thinking about swords. There are other ways to be strong."

"Like what?"

Kael didn't answer immediately. His eyes drifted toward Lyssara, who had closed her book and was now observing Rylan with an analytical expression as he explained some combat technique to Elyn. Lyssara couldn't defeat Rylan in a duel, not yet, perhaps never, but Kael had seen how she got things. How she manipulated conversations. How she planted seeds of doubt with innocent questions.

"Like knowing things others don't know," he said finally. "Like understanding what people want before they know it themselves. Like being there when they need you and vanishing when they don't."

Sareth looked at him with confusion.

"I don't understand."

"Not yet," Kael admitted. "Neither do I. But I will understand."

'I have to understand,' he added silently, watching Varen finally push his plate aside without having tasted more than two bites. 'Because "moderate" was what they said at my ceremony. Moderate like my existence. And if I stay here, being moderate, I will disappear completely.'

Breakfast ended the same way it had begun: with Varen retiring first without a word, followed by Elyn and Rylan, who was still talking animatedly about his training. Lyssara left with her book, casting one last indecipherable look at Kael.

And Kael and Sareth remained alone at the end of the table, eating the leftovers of the stale bread, invisible even to the servants who were beginning to clean.

Kael and Sareth's tutor was named Master Corvin, a middle-aged man with a prominent belly and a voice that seemed designed to induce sleep. He was from a minor house—so minor that Kael had never bothered to find out which one—and had been assigned to educate Varen's "secondary children" with the same enthusiasm someone might accept cleaning latrines.

The study room was small, located in the east wing of the manor, far from the main areas. It had a long table, three uncomfortable chairs, and shelves full of old books that smelled of dampness and neglect.

"Today," Master Corvin announced with a sigh suggesting he would prefer to be anywhere else, "we will continue with the history of the Empire. Specifically, the consolidation of power under Emperor Titus Draconis."

Sareth straightened immediately, pulling out parchment and quill with nervous movements. He was an obsessive student, taking notes on every word the tutor said, underlining passages in the borrowed books, memorizing dates and names as if his life depended on it.

'Maybe it does depend on it,' Kael thought as he leaned back in his chair. 'If he can't be strong, at least he can be useful. That is his survival strategy.'

"Emperor Titus ascended the throne three hundred and twelve years ago," Corvin continued, reading directly from a book without even looking at his students, "following the death of his father, Emperor Cassius Draconis. In the first fifty years of his reign, he consolidated the power of the six Great Houses under the imperial banner, eradicating..."

The tutor's voice became background buzzing. Kael pulled out his own parchment, but instead of taking notes, he began to draw in the margins. First, the basic shape of the Drayvar manor seen from above. Then, small circles representing each family member, with lines connecting them.

Varen in the center, but isolated. Elyn connected strongly to Rylan and Lyssara. Sareth and himself floating on the edges, almost off the diagram.

"...and thus it was that Emperor Titus, in his infinite wisdom, established the Imperial Solar Council, ensuring that every Great House had a voice but none could challenge the authority of the Crown."

'Voice but no power,' Kael translated mentally. 'Control without the illusion of freedom. Clever.'

"Young Kael," Corvin's voice pulled him from his thoughts, "are you paying attention?"

Kael looked up, his expression perfectly innocent.

"Of course, Master Corvin. Emperor Titus established the Solar Council..." he pretended to consult his "notes", "two hundred and sixty years ago, after the Rebellion of the Three Houses."

Corvin blinked, clearly surprised that Kael knew the answer.

"Yes, well. Correct. Pay more attention to my words instead of..." he looked at Kael's parchment, frowning upon seeing the drawings, "...scribbling."

"Yes, Master."

Corvin continued with his monotonous recital. Sareth kept writing with fervor. And Kael returned to his diagrams, this time adding arrows. Arrows showing flows of power, of attention, of resources.

All the arrows flowed toward Rylan. None flowed toward him.

'Not yet,' he thought, tracing a dotted line from his own circle toward the center of the diagram. 'But someday. Somehow.'

"...and this brings us to the Divine Weapons, legacies of the Age of Gods. Can anyone name the two main weapons that still exist?"

Sareth's hand shot upward.

"The Sword of Zorath, wielded by Emperor Titus, and the Spear of Kryon, in possession of our House Drayvar."

"Correct," Corvin admitted without enthusiasm. "Although 'in possession' is a generous term. The Spear of Kryon has not been wielded in combat for two hundred years. It is more relic than weapon at this point."

"Why?" Kael asked before he could stop himself.

Corvin looked at him with surprise, as if a piece of furniture had suddenly spoken.

"Why what?"

"Why hasn't it been wielded? If it is a divine weapon, shouldn't it be used?"

"Divine Weapons have... costs," Corvin said with discomfort. "The kind of costs that make even the most powerful think twice before using them. Now, let us return to..."

But Kael was no longer listening. His mind had hooked onto that word: 'costs'.

'Everything has a cost,' he thought. 'Power, position, respect. The question is: what are you willing to pay?'

The lesson continued for another endless hour. When it finally ended, Sareth had three pages of meticulous notes. Kael had a page of diagrams and a question he couldn't get out of his head.

How much would it cost to stop being invisible?