The Extra's Rise - Chapter 417
Chapter 417: Exchange Program (2)
There is a certain quality to power that transcends the merely physical. It hangs in the air like an expensive perfume, except instead of making people think of exotic flowers and overpriced little bottles, it makes them think about their own mortality and whether their life insurance is properly updated.
Moyong Jeong was intimately familiar with this quality. As head of the Moyong family—masters of the blade whose swordsmanship was said to be so precise they could slice a falling raindrop into exactly seven equal parts—he typically emanated it himself. An Immortal-ranker whose very footsteps seemed to carry the weight of the Eastern continent’s most illustrious lineage, Jeong had grown accustomed to being the gravitational center of any gathering he deigned to attend.
Today, however, he found himself experiencing something unfamiliar: the sensation of being a mere moon in the presence of a far greater celestial body.
Magnus Draykar. The Martial King.
The man sat across from him with the casual ease of someone who had long ago transcended concern about what others thought of him. His posture wasn’t deliberately intimidating—that would have been unnecessary, like a dragon wearing a sign reading “CAUTION: BREATHES FIRE.” The intimidation simply existed as a natural byproduct of his being.
Jeong found himself swallowing involuntarily, a gesture that would have horrified him had anyone else noticed it. An Immortal-ranker, nervous as a fresh recruit! The thought was absurd. And yet…
“The tea is excellent,” Magnus remarked, lifting the delicate porcelain cup with fingers that could, with the same casual motion, reduce mountains to rubble. “Frost-picked from the northern slopes of Mount Hua, isn’t it?”
Jeong nodded, grateful for the mundane observation that temporarily anchored the conversation in comfortable territory. “Third harvest of the season. The monks reserve it specifically for…” He hesitated. “For distinguished visitors.”
What he meant was “for people we’re afraid might level the compound if displeased,” but diplomacy had always been the art of avoiding saying what one meant while ensuring everyone understood anyway.
“Distinguished,” Magnus repeated, the ghost of amusement playing at the corners of his mouth. “A pleasant euphemism.”
The room they sat in was a masterpiece of Eastern architecture—carved pillars of ancient wood harvested from trees older than most nations, floor cushions stuffed with the down of birds that nested only on cliffs so precarious they made veteran mountaineers weep. The sliding paper doors depicted a scene of winter mountains in ink so rare it was said to be mixed with the tears of a phoenix. All of it—every plank, every brushstroke—existed to impress upon visitors the unfathomable wealth and taste of the Moyong family.
Magnus Draykar seemed about as impressed by it as a man might be by a particularly unambitious pebble.
“I didn’t expect someone of your standing to join us for what amounts to a training exercise,” Jeong said, keeping his voice carefully neutral. Though aware of the vast difference in their power, he maintained the dignity befitting the head of one of the Five Great Families. Respect did not mean subservience.
Magnus’s smile widened fractionally. If normal smiles were meant to signal friendliness, this one seemed designed to remind viewers of the precise arrangement of teeth in a predator’s jaw.
“I had to come,” he replied simply. “My disciple is here.”
Ah. That, Jeong understood immediately. Magnus Draykar was well-known throughout the world, but increasingly, so was his apprentice—Arthur Nightingale, the young prodigy whose rise had been as spectacular as it was inexplicable. The boy had appeared seemingly from nowhere, with abilities that defied conventional understanding. And then he had disappeared for nearly a year, only to return even more formidable than before.
“Your disciple,” Jeong echoed, letting the weight of the word hang in the air between them. “I observed him earlier today during the preliminary assessments.”
What he didn’t say—what didn’t need saying—was that Arthur Nightingale had performed feats that should have been impossible for someone of his age and rank. It was like watching a child pick up a building and casually toss it aside while asking if anyone had seen his lost toy.
“And?” Magnus prompted, though his tone suggested he already knew precisely what Jeong had witnessed.
The Moyong patriarch found himself gesturing vaguely with one hand, a rare display of uncertainty from a man whose every movement was typically as deliberate as a master calligrapher’s brush stroke.
“That boy has achieved a monstrous level,” he admitted finally. “His control of water and wind elements exceeds anything I’ve seen in decades of teaching. And two Gifts?” He shook his head slowly. “Even with such natural endowments, his level of precision is… unusual.”
Unusual in the way that finding a live kraken in your bathtub would be unusual. Technically accurate, but severely understating the situation.
Magnus tilted his head slightly, regarding Jeong with something between amusement and appreciation. “Talent alone doesn’t explain it,” he said. “Many are born with potential. Few are willing to endure what is necessary to realize it fully.”
There was something in his tone—a hint of pride, yes, but also something darker. Something that suggested the “endurance” he spoke of wasn’t merely difficult but bordered on the nightmarish.
Jeong found himself wondering, not for the first time, what exactly had transpired during Arthur’s year of seclusion. Rumors whispered of isolation chambers, of training so brutal it would have broken lesser minds, of techniques forbidden for centuries being dusted off specifically for the boy. The Moyong patriarch had dismissed most of these as fanciful exaggerations.
Now, looking at Magnus’s expression, he wasn’t so certain.
Outside, rain began to fall, a gentle patter against the tiled roof that gradually increased in intensity until it became a steady drumming. Neither man acknowledged it; the weather was beneath their notice unless it directly affected their plans.
“Your daughter is remarkable as well,” Magnus said suddenly, changing the subject with the abruptness of someone who had decided that enough had been said on a particular topic. “I rarely offer praise without cause.”
Jeong felt a flicker of pride warm his chest. Seol-ah Moyong was indeed exceptional—ranked among the finest of her generation. Not quite matching Arthur Nightingale or Lucifer Windward’s bewildering trajectory, but then, who did?
“Thank you,” he said simply, accepting the compliment with a slight incline of his head.
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“It’s said she developed her own variation of the Moyong sword techniques,” Magnus continued, his gaze sharp with interest. “Incorporating space mana into traditional forms. Innovative.”
Jeong couldn’t quite hide his surprise. The modification Seol-ah had created was still new, not yet publicly demonstrated. That Magnus knew of it spoke to his intelligence network—or perhaps to his observational skills.
“She has always had an independent mind,” Jeong acknowledged, a faint smile softening his austere features. “Sometimes to my considerable frustration.”
Magnus laughed then, a sound so unexpected it seemed to startle the very air. “The best ones always do,” he said, raising his teacup in a gesture that might have been a toast. “They never simply follow the path laid before them. They question. They challenge. They improve.”
Jeong raised his own cup in acknowledgment. For a brief moment, they were not Immortal-ranker and Radiant-ranker, not family patriarch and legendary warrior, but simply two men who understood the peculiar pride and exasperation that came with nurturing exceptional young talent.
“I trust you’ve planned something sufficiently challenging for them,” Magnus said, setting his cup down with a deliberateness that seemed to mark a return to business.
Jeong’s eyes gleamed with a sudden intensity. “Naturally. We intend to move beyond mere training exercises. They’ll be joining actual missions—confronting genuine threats under the supervision of our best.”
“Good,” Magnus nodded approvingly. “They need that crucible now. Theory without application is like a sword that’s never left its sheath—pretty to look at, perhaps, but useless when it matters most.”
As if punctuating his words, a flash of lightning illuminated the room, casting their shadows against the far wall—two silhouettes that seemed, for an instant, far larger and more imposing than the men who cast them.
“To the next generation,” Magnus said, raising his cup once more. “May they surpass us all.”
Jeong touched his cup to Magnus’s, the faint sound of porcelain meeting porcelain barely audible over the storm outside.
“Gods help us if they do,” he murmured, only half in jest.
Both men drank deeply, their eyes never leaving each other’s—two mountains acknowledging that even they might one day be overshadowed.
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