HEAVENLY INVERSION: RISE OF THE IRON SOVEREIGN
HEAVENLY INVERSION: RISE OF THE IRON SOVEREIGN
Author: Joe
CHAPTER 1: THE WEIGHT OF ZERO
Author: Joe
last update2026-06-16 21:31:35

“If you cannot bleed Aether, Vance, you are nothing more than a dynamic target.”

The words rolled across the open arena, amplified by the noble crowd’s laughter, and Tristan Vance gripped the splintering wooden shield tighter against his forearm.

The sand beneath his boots was already churned dark in places, scorch marks from matches before his. He stood alone at the center of the ring, sunlight glaring off the tiered stone seats where third and fourth-year apprentices leaned forward, eager for blood that wasn’t theirs.

Across from him, Julian Vanguard rolled his shoulders, fire already coiling around his knuckles in lazy orange ribbons. He didn’t bother drawing a blade. He never did against zero-aptitude trash.

“Last chance to kneel, Vance,” Julian called out, grinning at the gallery as much as at Tristan. “Commander Vane likes it when they kneel first.”

Tristan said nothing. He adjusted his grip on his foster father’s old sword, a blunt iron, the edge long since worn smooth from decades of honest use rather than war. The leather wrapping the hilt was cracked, sun-bleached, nothing like the gleaming Aether-forged blades the other apprentices carried. It looked like a farming tool beside Julian’s weapon of pure flame.

Someone in the crowd snickered. Look at the dead branch he’s swinging.

Commander Vane’s voice cut through, flat and amused from the judge’s box. “Begin.”

Julian didn’t wait for the echo to fade. He thrust his palm forward, and a bolt of fire screamed across the sand, not a wide demonstration arc, not the careful tier-1 burst meant for sparring. This was tier-2, a spear of flame meant to land.

Tristan threw himself sideways, shield raised. The wood caught the edge of the blast and instantly blackened, smoke curling off the grain. Heat seared along his exposed forearm, and he bit down hard enough to taste copper.

The crowd’s laughter sharpened.

“Burn the rags off him!” someone shouted, delighted. “See if the orphan’s got anything actually to fight with under there!”

Julian’s grin widened at the suggestion. He didn’t need encouragement, but he took it anyway. The next bolt came lower, aimed at Tristan’s legs, forcing him to leap back as fire licked across the hem of his training uniform. The fabric caught, curling to ash along the seam in seconds. He slapped it out against his thigh, hissing through his teeth.

Another bolt. Then another. Julian wasn’t trying to end the match quickly. He was performing and drawing it out, letting the fire chew through Tristan’s sleeve, his collar, the strap of his shield, all while the nobles’ children howled with laughter at the boy with no magic dancing for his life.

Pain crawled up Tristan’s arm in waves, blistering and raw, and his vision blurred at the edges from the heat radiating off his own ruined uniform. Stay up. Stay moving. He wants you to fall before he wants you to lose.

The wooden shield finally gave out, splitting clean down the center with a crack loud enough to silence the nearest row of spectators for half a second. Tristan didn’t slow to mourn it. He let the broken halves fall and shifted his stanc, the stance his foster father had drilled into him on the cliffs above their village, long before either of them ever set foot in the Academy.

Magic moves in lines. Bodies move in circles.

Julian’s next strike was meant to finish it. a wide, scorching arc aimed center-mass, the kind of spell that ended matches and occasionally apprentices. Tristan didn’t block it. He couldn’t have, not anymore. Instead, he dropped low and pivoted, the way you’d dodge a falling tree rather than a blade, letting his whole body curl beneath the heat instead of away from it. The flame passed a hand’s width over his shoulder, close enough to singe his hair, and then he was already moving, already inside the spell’s dying arc, closer to Julian than fire magic was ever meant to allow.

For one breathless second, Tristan saw something flicker across Julian’s face that wasn’t amusement.

Then the noble boy’s expression curdled into fury. “You…..how did you…..” He didn’t finish the thought. He didn’t need to. Everyone in the stands had seen it too: the boy with zero Aether aptitude had just slipped through a tier-2 spell using nothing but footwork, an old sword, and stubbornness.

The laughter in the crowd faltered, replaced by an uneasy murmur. That wasn’t supposed to happen. Zero-aptitude apprentices didn’t get to be clever.

Julian’s hand ignited fully now, fire crawling up past his wrist, no longer performance but rage. “Hold still,” he snarled, “and burn properly.”

That was when Commander Vane raised a hand, and the arena’s enchanted barriers dimmed the spell mid-formation, snuffing Julian’s fire out like a pinched candle.

“Enough,” Vane said, descending the judge’s steps with unhurried, deliberate steps, his boots clicking against stone in the sudden silence. He circled Tristan slowly, taking in the ruined uniform, the blistered arm, the cracked shield discarded in the sand. His eyes lingered last on Tristan’s face, and it narrowed.

“Look at this,” Vane said to the crowd, though his gaze never left Tristan. “Burned to the skin and he still won’t bow his head.” He reached out and tilted Tristan’s chin up with two fingers, almost gentle, almost mocking. “Rebellious eyes. I don’t like rebellious eyes on apprentices who can’t even bleed Aether.”

He let go, turned to the row of academy officials seated nearby, and his voice hardened into something administrative, final. “Strip his badge. Effective immediately, Tristan Vance is reassigned from apprenticeship to the Suicide Vanguard, for the border sweep at month’s end.”

A ripple went through the stands, not laughter this time, but something colder. Everyone knew what the Suicide Vanguard meant. Nobody survived two sweeps. Most didn’t survive one.

Tristan’s jaw tightened, but he didn’t argue. Arguing had never once worked in his favor, not in eighteen years of being told what he wasn’t.

As an official stepped forward to unpin the small bronze apprentice badge from his ruined collar, Tristan’s hand drifted instinctively to the hilt of his foster father’s sword, still clutched at his side. The leather wrapping, warm from his grip moments ago, had gone suddenly, sharply cold, colder than the morning air, colder than anything blunt iron should ever be. It bit into his palm like frost climbing up from the inside of the metal, and for half a heartbeat, he could have sworn he felt it pulse, once, in answer to the dying heat of Julian’s spell still hanging in the air.

He didn’t have time to wonder what that meant. Commander Vane was already turning back toward him, something small and dark glinting in his hand. It was a collar of black iron, etched with runes that seemed to drink the sunlight rather than reflect it.

“One more thing,” Vane said, almost pleasant now. “Can’t have my Suicide Vanguard recruits wandering off before their sweep.”

Before Tristan could step back, before the crowd could even finish processing what they were watching, Vane snapped the collar shut around his neck. It settled cold and impossibly heavy against his collarbone, far heavier than its size should have allowed, and Tristan felt his limbs go sluggish for one disorienting second, as though gravity itself had doubled around him alone.

Vane smiled, stepping back to admire his work. “A Sinner’s Iron Collar. Say the wrong word to me, Vance….he tapped two fingers against his own throat, and it ends you on the spot. Try to run, and it ends you slower. Wear it well.”

The crowd had gone utterly silent.

Tristan stood there, badge gone, uniform in ash, a dead man’s collar locked around his throat, and somewhere beneath the pain and the cold dread pooling in his chest, the sword at his hip pulsed once more against his palm like something old, and patient, had just woken up.

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

Latest Chapter

  • CHAPTER 11: THE BLADE THAT DEFILES DECREES

    “The next hand that touches this armor doesn’t come back attached to an arm.”Tristan’s voice carried flat and certain across the Academy gates, drawing a ripple of nervous murmurs from the gathered students who’d stopped to watch, drawn by the sight of an arrest warrant being read aloud against a boy most of them remembered as the zero Aether washout.Commander Vane’s guards didn’t hesitate, their Aether infused spears blazing bright with lethal enchantment as they lunged forward in a coordinated strike meant to end the confrontation before it began.Tristan drew his father’s reforged sword.What followed happened too fast for most of the watching crowd to properly track, a single fluid arc that swept through the air almost lazily, carrying with it a microscopic, invisible pulse of Primordial Mana flowing from Tristan’s palm directly into the blade. The sword met the first spear’s enchanted shaft and simply continued through it without resistance, the heavy magical reinforcement wove

  • CHAPTER 10: THE INQUISITORS TRAP

    “You hide your Aether perfectly, Tristan Vance.” Aurelia’s voice carried easily across the quiet of her private chambers, refined and unhurried, the kind of tone that suggested she’d already won whatever conversation was about to happen. “But your heartbeat sounds like thunder.”Tristan stood near the chamber’s tall windows, the city sprawling below in lantern lit quiet, and said nothing. Admitting nothing felt safer than confirming anything.Aurelia circled him slowly, her silver hair catching the candlelight, her expression unreadable in the way only people born into centuries of political maneuvering ever managed. “A zero Aether squire, dismissed from the Academy, assigned to a suicide posting that should have killed him within the week,” she said. “And yet here you are, calming a beast that three market guards with high tier enchanted arrows couldn’t even slow.” She stopped in front of him. “I don’t believe in miracles, Tristan. I believe in things people haven’t explained to me y

  • CHAPTER 9: THE BEAST WHISPERING OUTCAST

    Panic screamed through the market as a three ton wyvern prepared to paint the walls red.Market guards converged from every direction, their bows already drawn, loosing high tier Aether arrows in rapid succession. The shafts struck the beast’s flank with sharp cracks of released magic, drawing blood and rage in equal measure, but accomplished nothing close to slowing it. If anything, the pain only sharpened its fury, the wyvern’s wings flaring wide as it bellowed loud enough to rattle the cellar’s support beams.A cluster of merchants had frozen directly in its path, too terrified to run, huddled together as the beast’s massive clawed feet tore through stalls and crates on its way toward them.Tristan stepped into its direct line of charge without hesitation.To everyone watching, it looked like the act of a man who’d simply given up on living, a young figure in a plain cloak standing calmly between a rampaging monster and certain death, making no move to draw a weapon or flee. Someon

  • CHAPTER 8: RECLAIMING THE SHADOWS

    The slums of the Capital didn’t care about magic. They cared about who held the bread.Tristan moved through the narrow streets ahead of the military convoy’s slower march, his cloak drawn low, his Aether signature dampened into something forgettable. Vendors shouted over each other in the evening market, hawking stale loaves and watered wine, and not one of them spared a second glance at the young man weaving quietly through the crowd. That suited him perfectly.He reached the cramped tenement on the city’s eastern edge just as the sun dipped below the rooftops, climbing the familiar creaking stairs two at a time until he stood before the door he’d grown up behind.Marcus was worse than Tristan had imagined.The old veteran lay propped against a stack of thin pillows, his skin sallow and stretched too tight over his bones, dark veins crawling visibly beneath the surface of his forearms like ink spreading through water. He’d been a broad, solid man once, the kind who could silence a r

  • CHAPTER 7: THE BLOOD DUEL DEMAND

    A noble’s pride was a fragile thing. It broke louder than bones.“Burn him!” Julian screamed, the words cracking with a hysteria that had nothing of his earlier composure left in it. His hands snapped together, channeling far more Aether than the moment required, and a torrent of flame erupted between his palms, coiling instantly into the shape of a massive serpent made entirely of fire. It was his signature spell, the one that had earned him his reputation at the Academy, capable of reducing a grown man to ash before he finished screaming.The Fire Serpent surged forward across the cliffside, roaring as it consumed the space between them, and the two remaining squires scrambled backward, shielding their faces from the heat that scorched the stone even from a distance.Tristan walked straight into it.The flames wrapped around him completely, swallowing his entire body in an inferno that should have ended him instantly. Instead, beneath his skin, scales he hadn’t known existed until t

  • CHAPTER 6: THE GHOST OF THE RAVINE

    “They say the dead don’t walk,” one of the squires muttered, swirling wine he had no business drinking on a battlefield, “but I swear I hear armor moving in the ash.”His companions laughed, the sound carrying easily across the ravine’s rim where Julian and his three high-born squires had set up a small celebration, a folding table draped with a cloth too fine for a war front, bottles of wine chilling in a bucket someone had hauled all the way from the carriages.“Relax, Cassian,” Julian said, leaning back in his chair with the satisfaction of a man who believed his problems were thoroughly buried. “The rat fell into a bottomless ravine wearing a collar that should have shattered his spine on impact alone. There’s nothing left down there but a story for the Emperor.”“To the heroic last stand of House Vanguard,” another squire said, raising his glass, “against the savage Ashen Orcs, tragically overwhelmed despite Lord Julian’s valiant efforts.”They drank. They laughed. Nobody noticed

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