Kael Ardyn cried only once on the day of his birth.
Not from pain. Not from instinct. But from disbelief.
He wept like a newborn because his body forced him to—but inside, his mind reeled with impossible truths.
Is this reincarnation… or something else?
The mana was… clean.
He could feel it the moment he took his first breath. Refined. Harmonious. Not the volatile, wild current of the Awakening era that surged through him like a storm trying to break its container. This was different.
Tamed. Almost alive.
It flowed through walls, through people, even through machines—interwoven with life in a way he'd never imagined. It wasn't just a power source. It was a foundation. A language. A presence.
It wasn't like anything he'd ever seen.
Not even close.
He was born into wealth. Power. Legacy.
Even as an infant, he could tell.
The manor was massive—its walls sculpted from smooth, marble-veined crystal, etched with ancient runes that pulsed softly with mana. Decorative channels glowed gently beneath the floor, responding to gestures like obedient spirits. Machines floated silently, performing menial tasks with an elegance that made them seem alive. Artificial clouds drifted lazily across the vaulted ceiling of the nursery, shifting from warm daylight to a star-scattered night on cue. Magical lullabies danced through the air like echoes of dreams.
But nothing impressed him more than the people.
"They've refined it all," he thought, barely able to move his tiny fingers. " They've done what we couldn't."
He was a baby in form only.
His mind—his spirit—had been forged in fire and death.
Days passed in silence.
He pretended. Played the part. Suckled milk, wriggled, cried on cue. But deep inside, he was watching. Listening. Learning.
His mother, a weary but elegant woman, bore eyes haunted by faded power. He learned her name from the nurses—Lady Seris Ardyn, once a wielder of Domain Light, now quiet and bedridden. She never smiled, but she sang to him—soft, strange lullabies layered with words in ancient spellscript.
Even the songs were more advanced than anything he had ever known.
Kael memorized the servants' routes. He mapped the house's mana grid in his mind. He noted how the walls responded to their touch, how the house shifted its temperature based on mood, how certain names drew respectful silence.
And he listened.
To every whisper.
Nobles came and went—discussing politics, territories, rankings… and systems.
Systems.
It didn't take long before he heard the word he both feared and longed for:
Awakening Ceremony.
It still existed—structured now, ritualized. A formal rite of passage that connected one to the system. It revealed potential. Rank. Affinities. Everything.
"Only those who Awaken gain access to the system…"
"…Can't judge a child before their Spark."
"…He's born of Ardyn, yes, but he's the 17th son. Don't get your hopes up."
The 17th son.
Kael nearly laughed when he pieced that together.
The Ardyn family was vast—one of the great Houses. Each generation bore dozens of children, from noble wives or carefully selected lineages optimized for strength, mana affinity, and legacy. It was as much a dynasty as it was a bloodline.
He was nothing special here.
A late child. Unawakened. Politically irrelevant.
Forgotten.
And yet…
He could feel it already—beneath the surface of his skin, in the marrow of these new bones.
The mana still answered him.
Not all of it. Not yet. His body was still forming channels. But in the quiet hours, when the world slept and no eyes watched, he pulled it to his fingers—tiny wisps of flame, droplets of water, whispers of wind, flickers of shadow… even fragments of the void.
They recognized him.
Omnimana.
The gift—or curse—that marked him in both lives.
Then, on the day he turned six months old, it happened.
The manor stilled.
All at once.
Doors opened in unison.
Footsteps echoed through the hall—slow, heavy, unhurried. Servants scrambled into formation. The mana in the walls pulled inward, dimming like it too held its breath.
Kael felt it before he saw it.
A presence—crushing, towering. Like a mountain uprooted. Like sunlight bearing down on a frozen plain.
He came.
Kael blinked.
Who... is that?
His infant heart beat faster. The air itself thickened with weight. Not fear. Not mana. Authority.
The nursery door slid open.
Soft footsteps padded across the crystal floor.
Then came a voice, gentle but firm—his mother's.
"Kael," she whispered. "Come with me. Your father is here."
My father…?This pressure… it's coming from him?
Kael turned his small head toward the door.
Is he here to see me? After all this time?
The air around him vibrated—like reality itself bowed in reverence.
He didn't understand it yet. Not fully.
But soon he would.