Home / System / SYSTEM OF THE SILVER CROWN HEIR / CHAPTER 1: THE FINAL BLOW TO THE HEART
SYSTEM OF THE SILVER CROWN HEIR
SYSTEM OF THE SILVER CROWN HEIR
Author: Mia ar-f
CHAPTER 1: THE FINAL BLOW TO THE HEART
Author: Mia ar-f
last update2026-07-09 09:55:21

Thunder boomed over the Silvermoon Realm. Silver lightning split the sky, mirroring the crest the Von Silvermoon line had bled for over five hundred years. Wind screamed through the palace walls, dragging the sharp scent of rain and wild moonbloom down from the northern cliffs. Duncan didn’t notice. 

He dragged his feet down the west corridor. Bandages pulled tight over his ribs. Dust and dried mud caked his torn white cloak. The dark stains across the fabric weren’t his. Three days. No sleep. Just him and the shadow beasts at the border, carving until his bones screamed, until his muscles felt like they were on fire. All so this godsforsaken kingdom could sleep safe.

In his right hand, he crushed a small velvet box. Knuckles white. The fabric tore under his fingers.

Inside lay the Pendant of the Pure Moon. The oldest treasure of their house. Forged from starlight and the blood of the first Alpha King. It was only given to the true partner of the heir. An oath. Forever. The last bit of magic his mother had left him before the fever took her.

Tonight, he was going to give it to Elara Voss. 

Then he reached his chambers. The rooms he’d built with his own hands. Filled with the books she liked, the chair she said was comfortable, the bed he’d imagined them in. 

And he heard voices.

Not servants. Not guests. 

Elara. Sweet as honey. His name on her lips a thousand times. But now it was breathless. Greedy. It made his stomach turn. 

And under it, another voice. Smooth. Warm. That easy charm that fooled the whole court. 

Gareth.

Duncan stopped. The air went out of him. No. No fucking way. He pressed his back to the cold stone. Inched forward. The door was open an inch. The gale outside pushed it wider.

What he saw broke him.

His bed. Their bed. Gareth had Elara pinned under him. Tangled. Filthy. Stolen. 

Elara’s hair was down. She always tied it up. Said mess made her look weak. Now it was spread across his pillows like a banner. Her face wasn’t ashamed. It was lit up. Triumphant. Like she’d finally won.

“Gareth,” she sighed, nails dragging down his back. “You’re nothing like him. Duncan, the so-called strongest Alpha heir… he treats me like glass. Like I’ll shatter if he touches me wrong. He’s so busy being the perfect prince for everyone else. But you… you don’t ask. You take. You make me feel like I’m not invisible for once.”

Gareth kissed her throat. Slow. Possessive. That soft, sickly sweet voice he used on their father. On every lord in the court.  

“Of course I do. He thinks being second-born makes him special. Thinks Mother’s pendant and Father’s pity make him a king. But I’m firstborn. I learned to smile and wait. I learned what people want to hear.” He looked up, right at the door, and smiled. “He’s just a dog we set loose on monsters. And you… you deserve to sit on a throne, not wait in his shadow.”

“I know,” she whispered. Fingers tracing his jaw. “I’m done pretending to care about his stupid dreams. When you’re king, I’ll be your queen. And we’ll make sure Duncan never touches anything that matters again.”

Duncan couldn’t breathe. His ribs felt like they were caving in. The velvet box slipped from his hand. 

Crack. 

The sound shot through the room like a gunshot.

He shoved the door open. Had to lean on the frame to stay standing. His eyes burned. He wouldn’t cry. Not for them.  

“What the fuck is this?” His voice broke. “Every word. Every promise. Was it all a lie?”

Gareth didn’t even flinch. He pulled his robe on like he had all the time in the world. That same cruel smile from when they were kids.  

“Oh, little brother.” He sighed, disappointed. “Don’t look at me like that. You were always so easy.” He took a step forward. Voice dropped, soft, like he was soothing a child. “I had to make you trust me. Had to let you think I was the only one who had your back. How else was I supposed to get close enough to put the knife in?”

Elara yanked the sheets up. Her face went cold in a second.  

“You gave me nothing, Duncan. Loyalty. Dreams. Empty words.” She spat the last one. “Gareth gives me power. He gives me a future. Don’t you dare act like the victim.”

Duncan laughed. It came out sharp and broken. Copper filled his mouth.  

“Victim? I’m the idiot who loved you more than himself. Who trusted his own blood not to stab him in the back while he fought for this kingdom.” He looked at both of them. “You’re disgusting.”

Gareth’s smile vanished. His eyes went flat. Calculating.  

“You’re too soft, Duncan. Too soft to rule. Too soft to keep what’s yours.” He took another step. “And soft things break.”

Before Duncan could call his magic, before he could reach for his sword, Gareth moved.

A flash of dark violet. 

Poison-iron. Forbidden. A blade made to eat magic and sever royal blood. He’d been hiding it for years.

Duncan was too slow. Too broken.

It went straight through his chest.

Heat exploded. Not pain. Fire. The poison burned through his veins, eating his Alpha strength until his arms went dead. Until his legs gave out. Every breath was glass.  

“Poison,” he choked. Blood on his lips. “You planned this. All of it.”

Gareth crouched in front of him. Whispered in his ear, sweet as venom.  

“Every breath. Every ‘I love you, brother.’ Blood-Blight will take care of the rest. Tomorrow they’ll say the great heir died a hero. No one will know the truth.” He twisted the blade. “And I get the crown.”

Elara didn’t even look at him. She turned away.

Darkness came. The thunder faded. The pain in his body was nothing compared to the hole in his chest. 

But as he died, one thought burned: 

'If I get one more chance. I’ll tear out every lie. I’ll strip you of everything. I’ll make you beg.'

Gareth wrenched the blade free. Duncan hit the cold marble. His blood spread over the carved wolf-and-moon crest. The end of the true heir.

Then the dark swallowed him.

And a voice spoke. Ancient. Certain.

[TRUE HEIR: BETRAYED AND SLAIN.]  

[SILVERMOON BLOODLINE: CONFIRMED.]  

[SYSTEM OF THE SILVER CROWN HEIR: ACTIVATED.]  

[SOUL SECURED. REWINDING TIME.]  

[DESTINATION: SILVERMOON ACADEMY. TEN YEARS PRIOR.]  

[WAKE UP, HEIR. END THE ECLIPSE.]

The cold faded. The pain dulled. 

He wasn’t dead. 

He’d been given one chance. To burn every lie. To expose every snake. To build something they could never steal. 

This time, he wouldn’t be the prince.

He’d be the monster they feared.

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

Latest Chapter

  • CHAPTER 11: THE UNRAVELING THREADS

    Morning light slanted through the tall windows of the King’s study, falling across scattered maps and yellowed scrolls spread over the dark oak desk. Outside, birds called loudly from the palace gardens, their songs carrying clear through air that no longer held the sharp, clinging chill of shadow magic. But inside the room, the weight of unfinished work hung heavy and still.Duncan stood before the large wall map of the Silvermoon Realm, his gaze tracing every winding border, hidden valley, and trade route that might now shelter what remained of the Order of the Eclipse. King Alaric watched him from his carved chair, his expression a mix of quiet pride and lingering worry.“Are you certain no loyalist slipped back into the palace with us?” the King asked softly. “We have checked every guard, every advisor, every mage with access to the archives. But fear that has held sway for a thousand years does not vanish overnight.”Duncan nodded slowly, his eyes never leaving the faint lines ma

  • CHAPTER 10: RETURN TO THE THRONE

    The sky got clearer with every mile they left the Iron Mountains. The black mist that hung over the Silent Valley was gone. Wind came down cold and clean, smelling of pine and thawing earth. Birds were back. Their songs filled valleys that had been silent for months. Deer and hares grazed by the road again. The dark magic that poisoned the air was gone.But Duncan wasn’t light. Silas’s last words kept running in his head. 'Balance needs boundaries, not denial.'Sealing the Shadowgate was just the start. The Order lost their founder. Lost their shot at breaking the realms. They didn’t lose their cause. And a cause doesn’t die because you win one fight.Elara rode beside him. She looked different. No silk. Just plain leather. Hair braided tight. Eyes moving over every ridge. She knew how to disappear. And how to find what was hidden.At a small border village they stopped to rest. She waited until the guards were with the horses and Kael and Mara were up the road

  • CHAPTER 9: THE GATE ALMOST OPENED

    A biting gale hit them on the plateau. Snow and ice in their faces. Below, the horror spread out in front of the cavern.Violet light surged from the center of a circle. So bright the snow hissed and turned to steam. The ground throbbed with it. Like the whole mountain had a heartbeat.“Three hundred,” Mara whispered. “All high shadow mages. We charge in, we die.”Duncan used the Eye of Truth. At the heart of the ring, in front of a rune-carved gate, stood a black obsidian altar. Five crystal pillars burned violet around it. Between them was one empty groove. Shaped for a single drop of royal blood.“They’re waiting for me,” Duncan said. Quiet. “All the power they drained in the north... It was just prep. The final lock only opens for a Von Silvermoon heir.”Lyra gripped her sword. “Then we hit them now. Cut the flow before the seal breaks.”Elara shook her head. Fast. Pale. “Don’t cross that line. It’s not a ring of guards. It’s a web. Step past the edge and it drains

  • CHAPTER 8: TRAILS IN THE FROZEN LAND

    By day three, the borderlands were gone. Green forests turned to twisted pines. Snow stuck to the branches. Roads became dirt. Then nothing. Just faint paths in the snow that disappeared and came back. Thick mist sat in every valley. You couldn’t see past your own horse. Even the wind sounded wrong. Sharp. Cold. Like someone crying far away.Duncan rode in front. Eye of Truth open. Watching the ground. The shadows. Every warp in the air. Lyra rode beside him. Hand on her sword. Eyes on the ridges.“This is the Silent Valley,” she said. Quiet. They stopped at a ravine to rest the horses. “Villagers say nothing lives here. No birds. No beasts. Anyone who comes after dark doesn’t come back. They say the mist eats your memory. You forget who you are. Then you just walk deeper till you fall.”Elara pulled her horse up. Staring at the fog. “That’s not a story. The Order made this. They put drowsiness in the mist. Slow. You don’t feel it. Till you’re alone. Till you can’t fin

  • CHAPTER 7: THE SHADOW THAT REMAINS

    Two days since the throne room. Silvermoon Palace was silent. Too silent.No public announcement. No trial. King Alaric locked it all down. Only 12 people had access to the archives now. New guards at every gate. Chosen for loyalty, not name. Every house tied to Valerius was being watched. Letters read. Steps tracked. No one knew how deep it went.Duncan stood on the balcony of the West Wing. Cold wind from the north. Pine. Wet earth. Mist on the trees. He’d just come from the dungeons.Gareth was in a cell warded with silver runes. No magic. No talking. He sat in the corner. Silk clothes dirty. Face hollow. He didn’t look up. Through the Eye of Truth, Duncan saw it. Rage. Shame. All of it eating him alive. He lost everything.In the next cell, Duke Valerius stood waiting. Calm. Eyes bright. Like this was a meeting, not a prison.“You think this ends it?” Valerius said. Soft. Sure. “You pulled one thread, nephew. This web is three generations old. Every court. Every

  • CHAPTER 6: THE TRUTH BEFORE THE THRONE

    The royal carriage rolled through the gates of Silvermoon Palace. White marble under the wheels. Silverwood trees lined the road. Their leaves caught the morning sun.Inside, it was dead quiet. Gareth sat in the corner. Face calm. Hands clenched until his knuckles went white. Every few seconds he glanced at Duncan. Duncan didn’t look back. He just watched the trees go by.“You look too sure of yourself, little brother.” Gareth’s voice was light. Too light. “Remember this before father. Proof matters more than power that shows up overnight. People who play with fire get burned first.”Duncan turned. Met his eyes. Through the Eye of Truth, Gareth was a mess. Dark red and black. Hate. Fear. And chains of shadow wrapped around him.“You’re right,” Duncan said. Calm. “Fire stolen from dark places burns the one holding it first. I just hope you don’t get scorched when the truth comes out.”Gareth went silent. He looked away. He didn’t get it. The brother who used to flinch was now t

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