Home / Fantasy / From Ruin to Reign / Chapter 10: The Truth Revealed
Chapter 10: The Truth Revealed
Author: Jon Bell
last update2026-01-24 00:20:38

The academy healer worked quickly on Marcus's wounds. The knife cuts were deep but clean. Nothing vital had been damaged. Still, he'd lost a lot of blood.

"You're lucky," the healer said, wrapping bandages around his torso. "A few inches to the left and that blade would have pierced your lung. What kind of training accident causes knife wounds?"

"The dangerous kind," Grandfather Octavius answered from the doorway. "Leave us. I need to speak with Marcus alone."

The healer bowed and left. Lydia tried to stay, but Octavius shook his head. "You too, Rouxi. This is between Marcus and me."

"But Grandfather..."

"Please. Trust me."

Lydia left reluctantly, closing the door behind her. The room fell silent except for the sound of Marcus's breathing.

Octavius pulled a chair close to the bed and sat down. For a long moment, he just looked at Marcus. His old eyes seemed to see everything.

"I've suspected for a while now," Octavius finally said. "But I wanted you to tell me yourself. So I'm asking directly. Are you Marcus Aurelius, the lost prince of the Aurelius Kingdom?"

Marcus's first instinct was to deny it. But he was tired of lying. Tired of hiding. And Octavius deserved the truth.

"Yes," Marcus said quietly. "I am."

Octavius nodded slowly, as if confirming something he already knew. "The river. The timing. Your age. Your talent. And those eyes. They're exactly like your father's."

"You knew my father?"

"I met him once, many years ago, when I still lived in the Celestial Domain. Alexander was... unusual. Powerful beyond measure, yet he chose to live as a mortal king. I never understood why." Octavius leaned forward. "Tell me what happened that night. The real story."

So Marcus told him everything. The coup. Watching his father die. His mother pushing him into the river. The golden light that saved him. The three years of hiding and training for revenge.

Octavius listened without interrupting. When Marcus finished, the old man was quiet for a long time.

"Cassian must pay for what he did," Marcus said. "That's why I need to get stronger. That's why I can't stop training."

"And then what?" Octavius asked. "After you kill Cassian? After you take back the throne? What will you do with all that hatred you've been feeding for three years?"

Marcus didn't have an answer.

"Revenge is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die," Octavius said. "It will consume you if you let it. I know because I've walked that path."

"What do you mean?"

Octavius stood and walked to the window. "Why do you think I'm here, running a small academy in Silvermere? I used to be a Sky King warrior in the Celestial Domain. I had power, respect, a family. Then someone killed my son and his wife. Lydia's parents."

Marcus's eyes widened. He'd never known this.

"I hunted the killer for five years," Octavius continued. "I found him eventually. A minor lord who'd ordered the assassination over a political dispute. I killed him, his family, everyone connected to him. I thought it would bring me peace."

"Did it?"

"No. It brought me nothing but emptiness. The people I killed couldn't bring back my son. Revenge didn't heal my wounds. It just created new ones." Octavius turned back to Marcus. "That's when I came here. To start over. To teach the next generation. To do something meaningful instead of destructive."

"Are you saying I should forgive Cassian? After what he did?"

"I'm saying you should think carefully about what you're becoming. Right now, you're growing strong for the wrong reasons. That strength is hollow. It will crack under pressure."

Marcus wanted to argue, but he remembered his breakthrough. How he'd only succeeded when he stopped thinking about revenge and started thinking about protecting others.

"What should I do then?" Marcus asked.

"Stop training for revenge. Start training for justice. There's a difference." Octavius sat back down. "Cassian is a tyrant. He's probably hurting many people right now. Your kingdom suffers under his rule. That's what should drive you. Not personal vengeance, but protecting others from the same pain you experienced."

It made sense. But it was hard to let go of the hatred that had kept him going for three years.

"I'll try," Marcus said. "But I can't promise anything."

"That's all I ask." Octavius smiled slightly. "Now, about the assassin. Did she say anything useful?"

"She said the tournament is a trap. Cassian will have assassins waiting for me there."

"Of course he will. But you still need to go."

Marcus looked surprised. "Why? If it's a trap..."

"Because hiding won't keep you safe. Cassian knows where you are now. If you don't show strength, he'll send armies to destroy this academy and everyone in it. But if you go to the tournament and win, you become too public to assassinate quietly. You become a symbol."

"A symbol of what?"

"Hope. Resistance. The rightful heir challenging the usurper." Octavius's eyes gleamed. "Cassian's rule isn't as stable as it looks. Many nobles remember your father fondly. Many people suffer under his taxes and laws. They need someone to rally behind. You could be that someone."

Marcus hadn't thought about it that way. He'd been so focused on personal revenge that he'd missed the bigger picture.

"But I'm only ten years old. Who would follow a child?"

"A child who's already an Earth King warrior? A child who carries royal blood and his father's eyes? Don't underestimate the power of symbols, Marcus." Octavius stood. "Rest now. We have six months to prepare. I'll train you properly. Not just in combat, but in strategy, politics, and leadership. If you're going to challenge Cassian, you need to be more than just strong."

After Octavius left, Marcus lay in bed thinking. The old man's words had shaken something inside him. Maybe revenge wasn't enough. Maybe he needed a better reason to fight.

The door opened quietly. Lydia slipped in, tears on her face.

"I heard everything," she whispered. "You're really a prince? And all this time you were planning revenge?"

Marcus looked at her, guilt washing over him. "I'm sorry I lied to you."

"I don't care about the lies." Lydia sat on the edge of his bed. "I care that you were suffering alone. That you carried all this pain by yourself when I could have helped."

"How could you help? This is my burden."

"No, it's our burden now." Lydia took his hand. "You're my brother, Marcus. Not by blood, but by choice. Whatever you face, you don't face it alone anymore. Understand?"

Looking at her determined face, Marcus felt something warm in his chest. Not the burning fire of revenge, but something gentler. Something like hope.

"Thank you, Lydia."

She smiled through her tears. "Now rest. You look terrible."

As she left, Marcus closed his eyes. For the first time in three years, he didn't dream of revenge. He dreamed of a future where he protected people instead of destroying enemies.

It was a small change, but it was a start.

Outside the window, hidden in the shadows, Felix the spy watched and listened. He'd heard everything. The prince's true identity. His plans for the tournament. The old man's training.

This information would make him rich beyond imagination.

He hurried away to write another report, unaware that the assassin from earlier was watching him from a rooftop, a thoughtful expression on her scarred face.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 170: From Ruin to Reign

    Marcus woke before dawn on the morning of the summer solstice.Not from anxiety. Not from crisis. Just from the particular alertness of someone whose body had learned over decades that early morning was when thinking happened most clearly.He dressed quietly. Left Lydia sleeping. Walked through the palace in the dark the way he had learned to walk through it as a child. The floors remembered him. He remembered them back.He went to the kitchen garden first. Habit now. The place where important things settled into clarity.The garden was grey and quiet. The herbs small and dark shapes in the pre-dawn. The bench where Helena sat on her morning visits empty. The wind had dropped completely. Everything still.Marcus sat on the bench and looked at the sky lightening in the east.He thought about the boy who had stood in this garden thirty years ago. Not quite this garden. The garden had changed. The palace had changed. The boy had changed most of all. But the east horizon looked the same a

  • Chapter 169: The Kingdom in Spring

    Winter passed quietly.Marcus governed. Not dramatically. Not through crisis management or cosmic intervention. Just the daily sustained work of attending to a kingdom that was learning to trust that attention would continue.The citizens review board met for the first time in February. Twelve people selected by lot from across the realm. A baker from the western district. A teacher from the northern provinces. A retired harbor worker. A young woman who had emigrated from the second convergence during the merger and had lived in Aurelius for three years. Eight others, each from different circumstances, each bringing a different window onto the same kingdom.They sat in the formal council chamber for the first time with visible uncertainty about whether they were supposed to be there.Marcus opened the session by telling them directly that their uncertainty was appropriate and that anyone who felt immediately comfortable in that room probably had not understood what was being asked of

  • Chapter 168: What Forgiveness Actually Looks Like

    Helena came to the palace officially for the second time on a Friday.Again through the front entrance. Again announced properly. But this time Marcus met her in the entrance hall rather than waiting in a sitting room. The difference was small and they both understood it.He led her to the small library off the east corridor. His father's room from before. The one Mara had maintained. The one that still carried the quality of careful preservation even now that Marcus used it regularly as a reading room.Helena looked at it when they entered. Recognised it. Said nothing about the recognition.They sat across from each other. Tea on the table between them. Outside the corridor Mara moved quietly doing morning tasks that did not require her to be in the east corridor but which had somehow positioned her there anyway.Marcus had spent three days deciding what he wanted to say. Had written and discarded several versions. Had finally understood that the discarding was part of the process. T

  • Chapter 167: The Conversation That Finished Things

    Julian found Marcus in the throne room the next morning.Not sitting on the steps this time. Standing near the east wall. Near the column Marcus had mentioned once in passing years ago during a conversation about childhood. Julian had remembered. He remembered most things.Julian stood in the entrance and looked at the room with the expression of someone taking it seriously. Not as architecture. As a place where real things had happened."You have never shown me this room," Julian said."No.""Why now?"Marcus looked at the column. "Because I have been working up to it for months. Understanding the other things first. And now you are here and you are the person who should see it with me."Julian walked into the room. Stood beside Marcus. Looked at the space."Tell me about it," Julian said. "The night of the coup. You have never told me directly. I heard pieces over the years. But not from you."Marcus had told Cassian's version recently. The strategic version. The version that explai

  • Chapter 166: Julian Arrives

    Julian arrived on a Thursday with Isabella, Cora, and considerably more luggage than Marcus had expected.He stood in the palace courtyard looking exactly like himself. Slightly greyer at the temples. A small scar above his left eyebrow that had not been there before and that Marcus suspected came from the third realm mission years ago and had never properly been discussed. Otherwise Julian. The same steady quality. The same way of standing that communicated both readiness and complete ease simultaneously.Isabella stepped down from the carriage with the efficient grace of someone who had learned to manage long journeys with young children through systematic organization rather than optimism. She was composed and warm and looked at the palace with the frank assessment of someone who had heard about it extensively and was now forming her own opinion.Cora was handed down last. Eleven months old. Round faced. Surveying the courtyard with the serious focused expression of someone encount

  • Chapter 165: The Southern Coast

    The southern coast smelled of salt and pine and the particular freshness of air that had come a long way across open water before reaching land.Marcus had forgotten that smell. It arrived before they saw the sea. Just present suddenly on the road, and something in his chest opened slightly in response to it without being asked.Octavius lived in a small house set back from the cliff edge with a view of the water that changed completely depending on the light and the weather. Marcus had visited twice before and both times the view had been different. Today it was grey and quiet with low clouds sitting on the horizon and the water moving in long slow swells that had the patient quality of something that had been moving exactly this way for longer than anyone alive could remember.The house was exactly as he remembered it. White walls. A garden that was less formal than the Iron Sword Academy grounds had been but maintained with the same underlying care. Wind chimes near the door that O

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App