Chapter4
The cold autumn wind swept dead leaves across the neatly trimmed lawn as I walked straight through the dark gravel path, still clutching that ring in my palm, heading toward the dim, damp detached garage at the edge of the manor.
I walked to the storage lockers in the deepest part of the garage and pulled out an object tightly wrapped in black waterproof tarp. A military encrypted satellite phone lay quietly in my palm.
I pressed the power button. The empty contact list contained only a single number code without any name notation.
It was a secret command line that, once dialed, could instantly sever all arterial blood vessels of the European underground world.
My thumb hovered above the dial button for a long time, because I knew very clearly that once this button was pressed, Arthur the mechanic would die completely, and that abyss that had once drowned countless thrones would tear through the mortal world again tonight.
From the dead silent night sky outside the garage, Julian's extremely distorted mocking laughter suddenly drifted over.
He was wildly rejoicing at successfully escaping the death countdown, boasting about how he had exchanged his cousin's virtue for his own base life.
Emily's sobbing, mixed with humiliation, helplessness, and complete heartbreak, rose up like invisible chains, instantly shredding the peaceful world I had disguised for her.
For five years, I had willingly swallowed all the scraps and leftovers, and could even ignore them trampling my token into the mud.
All this humiliation and endurance was to carefully protect her from the storm.
But now these ants I had once tolerated were actually trying to personally push my deity into the abyss.
Emily's almost suffocating weak whimper completely burned away the last seal lock named forbearance in the depths of my soul.
Without a moment's hesitation, I pressed the dial button representing destruction.
After a long, suffocating three seconds, a hoarse voice, trembling as if containing shattered glass in the throat, tentatively called out: "Sovereign?"
I made no emotional response to this title that had spanned five years of the death chasm, issuing the first classified order into the communicator: "Seventh Knight, you know what to do." After finishing these words that left no room for negotiation, I decisively severed that fuse that had reconnected to the abyss.
I casually tucked the phone into my coat pocket, caressed that silver ring engraved with ancient laws, then turned and exited the garage.
The Seventh Knight convoy that had withdrawn from the courtyard just dozens of minutes ago now blocked all passages from the Dupont manor to the outside world.
As I slowly stopped at the inner side of the wrought iron gate, that black ocean of elite killers outside the gate all knelt simultaneously.
It was a submission planted deep in the marrow, their ultimate surrender to the supreme law of the entire underground world.
A burly man broke away from the crowd, crawling forward half a step on hands and feet. This fierce leader who had just nailed the Dupont family's gate with a blade and unscrupulously read the death ultimatum was now like a loyal hound that had finally caught its old master's scent: "Sovereign, Inquisitor Marcus, welcomes your return."
