Chapter 157: Will You Wait?
Date: 6/22/2001 – 11:00 AM {1 Year After Birth}
Location: The Nursery – Living Quarters
Perspective: Kaiser Everhart
My consciousness, still sharp from the precision of the White Room, felt sluggish in the transition.
Cartethyia held me so tightly I could feel the individual beats of her heart. They were erratic.
“Kaiser?” she whispered, her voice brushing against my ear. “Are you awake, my little prince? D-did you sleep… well?”
I didn’t answer. I didn’t reach for her hair.
I simply gave a single, stiff nod against her shoulder.
I felt her breath hitch. She pulled back just enough to look at my face, her eyes searching mine for a flicker of the child who used to mimic her words.
“You’re so quiet lately,” she murmured, her thumb tracing the line of my jaw. “It’s… it’s so l-lonely when you’re asleep. Or when you’re… g-gone. Even when I’m holding you, it feels like you’re… f-far away.”
The withdrawal is working. She is beginning to perceive the distance. The “Mother” role is losing its stability, which is the primary objective of this phase.
She didn’t wait for a response she knew wasn’t coming. Instead, she sat up on the bed, keeping me tucked into the crook of her arm. She stared at the wall, her gaze distant, as if projecting a memory onto the blank surface.
“I was thinking… about the first time I saw the Asura Academy,” she said, her voice small and wistful.
“I was so nervous, Kaiser. Aria was there, of course. She was always the b-braver one.”
She began to describe it. A sprawling, majestic complex of white stone and soaring arches that seemed to touch the clouds. In her memory, the paths were crowded with students—hundreds of them, draped in robes that caught the sunlight.
“It was so big,” she whispered. “I felt like a… a speck of dust. But it was pretty. So pretty. When you grow up… when we’re out of this place… I’ll take you there. I’ll show you the great halls and the fountains.”
“You’ll be the smartest student they’ve ever seen.”
“M-mama will be so proud.”
I looked at her. Her eyes were bright with hope. She was building a future on a foundation of sand.
I gave another slow, indifferent nod.
The silence stretched between us, becoming a physical barrier. I watched her lips twitch.
It wasn’t a smile; it was a tremor of suppressed grief. She waited for a second, perhaps hoping I would say something slurred—a “Cartethyia,” or a “Pretty.”
I said nothing.
She slowly stood up and placed me down in the center of the bed.
“I have to… I have to go out for a bit,” she said, smoothing her dress with frantic, shaky movements.
“Mama has to do something today. I’ll be b-back soon, Kaiser. I promise.”
I stared at her. I didn’t reach out.
I just gave her the same, mechanical nod.
Cartethyia turned toward the door. As she walked away, I saw her hand drop to her side. Her fingers curled into a tight, knuckled fist. She didn’t look back.
The door clicked shut, leaving me alone in the dim light of the nursery.
She is experiencing the early stages of detachment. The possessiveness is being replaced by a confused, defensive hurt.
I rested my head back on the pillow.
It is an unpleasant process, certainly. Watching her erosion is a feeling I would prefer to avoid, but the ends justify the means. If she views me as a cold, unresponsive cho;d by the time the Foundation moves her, the weight in her heart will be lighter.
She will realize I have no value. She will realize I am just a cold child, no different from the gray walls that surround us.
Once she stops caring, the transition will be healthier.
I wonder what today brings…
Cartethyia returned several minutes later. She didn’t speak of where she had been. Instead, she sat by the bed and spoke to me for hours.
She told me about her grandparents’ village.
She described the cobblestone paths and the way the sun hit the thatched roofs of the cottages. It was her sanctuary—the one place where she loved to visit.
I listened, summarizing the data as she spoke. I wondered if I would ever see this village, or if her grandparents still walked those paths, unaware that their granddaughter was raising a ghost in a gray room.
“Goodnight, my little prince,” she whispered.
She wrapped her arms around me, pulling my small, unyielding body against her chest. It was time for the cycle to end once more.
Usually, I would give her a small nod—a crumb of acknowledgment to keep her from starving.
This time, I gave her nothing.
I felt her grip tighten. Her breathing became shallow, hitching in the back of her throat. The isolation I was imposing on her was becoming a physical pain.
She was losing the only thing that made her feel human in this facility, and I was the one holding the knife.
It is a strange thing, gratitude.
Even if I have never called her “mother,” she has been the reason for my survival. She fed me when I was helpless. She held me when the nightmares of the foundation arose. She offered love to a weapon that was designed only to calculate.
I will not let her leave without my gratitude, even if she never knows I felt it.
If she leaves me now to raise someone “better”—someone who can actually smile back—then my objective is achieved.
The future is an uncertain variable. Nevertheless, I am going to age. I am going to survive the Foundation. I will prevail, and 15 years from now, I will walk out of the shadows of this world.
I will visit that village.
I will find the people she spoke of.
I will judge them.
I will look at “Aria” and “Alaric” and every soul that took her happiness and traded it for their own. If my theory is correct—if her own loved ones were the ones who betrayed her to this fate—I will be the consequence they never saw coming.
Those loved ones will “coincidentally” fall to ruin. I am certain of that.
And when they are at their lowest, I will be there to deal the killing blow.
That is my promise to the woman who sang me lullabies.
I let the darkness of the room envelop me. My eyes closed, and the cold logic of the White Room began to pull at my consciousness once more.
The transition from the nursery’s dim shadows to the White Room’s sterile glare took 1.4 seconds. I blinked, and as expected, Amelia was there.
She wasn’t just sitting near me. She was looming, her green eyes wide and fixed on my face with an intensity that suggested she had been counting seconds while I was away.
Before I could even offer a greeting, her hand shot out, her fingers twisting into the fabric of my grey sleeve.
“Why did you leave early?” she asked.
“The assessment ended and I—”
“You disappeared while I was rushing towards you. You didn’t stay.”
“I didn’t know you had a scheduled debriefing in mind.”
“We could have stayed. We could have analyzed the fifth question. We could have read the next Chapter of Eternal Gists.”
“Amelia, the simulation remains open for twelve hours. There is no shortage of time.”
“There is a shortage of your time. You prioritize the real world over this one.”
“In the real world, I am currently a one-year-old in a bed. It’s not exactly a high-stakes environment.”
“And yet, you rushed back to it. You vanished the moment the timer hit zero. It was inefficient. It was… rude.”
“Rude? Are we applying social etiquette to the facility now?”
“I do not like it when you disappear like that. You should establish a departure protocol. You should talk to me first.”
“I’ll make sure to file a three-point notice of exit next time. Would you like me to include a formal goodbye and a summary of my intended nap duration?”
“Do not use sarcasm to deflect. That’s your defensive strategy.”
“And holding my sleeve like this is a high-tier offensive strategy?”
“It ensures you remain present.”
“I’m here now, aren’t I?”
“You are here, but your focus is fragmented. You’re already thinking about the next cycle.”
“I’m thinking about how my arm is going to lose circulation if you keep twisting that fabric.”
She didn’t let go. If anything, her grip tightened. She was genuinely agitated—a bold, human anger that was rapidly overriding her logical sub-routines.
I realized then that words were no longer the correct currency for this exchange.
I stood up, the chair scraping softly behind me. She looked up, her expression a mix of defiance and hurt, her lips pressed into a thin, stubborn line.
I didn’t argue. I reached out and cupped her face with both hands, my thumbs resting just beneath her cheekbones.
The silence that followed was instantaneous. Amelia’s eyes went wide, the emerald irises shimmering. Her hands finally loosened on my sleeve, dropping to her sides as if she had forgotten why she was holding on in the first place.
“Are you okay now?” I asked softly.
She didn’t look at me. She didn’t reply.
Her gaze dropped to the floor, her face heating up until a deep, vibrant flush covered her cheeks. I kept my hands there for a few seconds longer, feeling the heat of her skin and the frantic pulse at her jawline.
I pulled her chin up slightly, forcing her to meet my eyes.
“Are you okay?”
“I’m… okie,” she whispered.
She used the softer pronunciation again. I let go of her face and sat back down, picking up my stylus as if we hadn’t just broken three dozen Foundation protocols on emotional distance.
“Good,” I said, looking at the blank page. “Then let’s look at the next history volume. We have a mountain to climb, remember?”
She nodded, slowly reaching for her own book, her movements much more subdued now, though her eyes remained fixed on the spot where my hands had been.
The next twelve hours were a long absorption of knowledge. I gave Amelia more of my direct attention, and the results were immediate. She became a mirror, reflecting my every move.
She wasn’t just studying the curriculum anymore; she was studying me.
She performed for me. Every time she solved a complex derivation or memorized a dense passage of history, she would pause, her eyes flicking to mine, waiting for the silent approval of a nod or a brief “Good.”
She was using her perfect memory as a tool to secure her proximity to me.
Day 6 had arrived without a formal announcement from Vance. The books had simply manifested on our desks—a silent command to continue. We were in a skip-cycle, a period where the Foundation tested our self-discipline without direct oversight.
Amelia has become deeply attached. She has set so firmly that she is now neglecting her own independent logic to prioritize my presence.
I looked away from her.
I had already deconstructed and replicated the architecture of her gift. I have the Kelic system now. I had the factory. To stay focused solely on her was to ignore the other students in the room.
My gaze drifted across the rows of grey jumpsuits. It landed on Designation 000372.
She was a girl with silver hair and deep silver eyes.
I’ll call her Talise.
Unlike the others, who seemed to be vibrating with the stress of the skip-cycle, she was unnervingly still. She had the calmest studying session.
I watched the way her stylus moved—not in the rapid-fire bursts of Amelia, but with a slow, deliberate pattern that suggested she was looking for something beneath the text.
I should befriend her. If Amelia provided the blueprint for memory, Talise might provide the blueprint for deep-structural analysis. I should approach her—
A sharp tug on my sleeve broke my concentration.
“Kaiser,” Amelia whispered. Her fingers were tight on my arm.
“You are looking at her again.”
“I am observing the students, Amelia.”
“It is… inefficient. The output of Designation 000372 is irrelevant to our current studies. We have four Chapters of The Draconic Hegemony remaining.”
“Diversity of observation prevents cognitive stagnation.”
“No. It is a distraction. You should… stay focused here.”
The way she pulled at my sleeve, her green eyes clouded with a frantic sort of possessiveness, was a fact I couldn’t ignore. I had lived past her primary use.
I had extracted the “memory” talent and integrated it. I wondered how she would react when I eventually replaced her with someone better.
I turned back to my book, but she wasn’t satisfied. She reached out and took my hand, placing it firmly on the open page of her history text.
“Kaiser… I do not understand this part,” she said. Her voice was steady, but her pulse was racing against my palm. “The bloodline of the Dragonics. Explain the stratification.”
I looked at the text.
“History records the Dragonic bloodlines as the apex of terrestrial nobility,”
“Their genetics are saturated with mana, which they believe grants them a divine right to rule. In a historical context, they are a race defined by their arrogance.”
“And the others?” she asked, leaning closer until her shoulder pressed against mine.
“They view the Dwarves as subterranean laborers—commoners who care only for the mechanical. And the Sylaris… they view them as nomadic pests. To a Dragonic, anyone without a scaled lineage is a lesser being. They do not seek cooperation; they seek hierarchy.”
Amelia nodded, though I doubt she was listening to the history. She was simply focused on the fact that I was talking to her, and not to the girl with the silver eyes.
CLAP.
Director Vance appeared at the podium as if he had been woven from the air itself.
“Congratulations,” Vance said. His voice was a cold rasp that cut through the silence.
“You have reached the benchmarks for the 5th day. Most of you have exceeded them. You have shown that you can process the ’what’ of this world with remarkable speed.”
He paused, his pale steel eyes finally dropping to meet ours.
“But the Foundation is not interested in what you can remember. We are interested in what you are. Tell me…”
He leaned forward, his shadow stretching long across the floor.
“What is talent? Is it a gift? Is it a curse? Or is it merely a biological shortcut that hides a fundamental weakness?”
“I’ll tell you the truth.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 216: Cruel Sight of Destiny - III
- Chapter 215: Peaceful Tides - II
- Chapter 214: Parasitic Tragedy - I
- Chapter 213: Days of Twilight
- Chapter 212: Starchild - II
- Chapter 211: Starchild - I
- Chapter 210: All Bets In
- Chapter 209: High Ground
- Chapter 208: Reckoning I
- Chapter 207: The Reaping
- Chapter 206: Promise Me to not interfere
- Chapter 205: Reunion Of The Trio
- Chapter 204: The Siren’s Method
- Chapter 203: The Golden Standard
- Chapter 202: Counter Break
- Chapter 201: The Only One
- Chapter 200: Please Don’t Look at Me
- Chapter 199: The Sky-Eye
- Chapter 198 - 10th January
- Chapter 197: The Price of History
- Chapter 196: The Birth of Ascension
- Chapter 195: A Dream In My Eyes - I
- Chapter 194: I’ll Prove It Myself
- Chapter 193: Mother of Despair
- Chapter 192: The Mother Beneath the Crater
- Chapter 191: Me and My Wife
- Chapter 190: The False King and His Princess
- Chapter 189: Don’t Touch My Princess.
- Chapter 188: I’m Going to Kidnap You
- Chapter 187: The Price of Doing Good
- Chapter 186: The Price of a Life - PART 2
- Chapter 185: Where Heroes Didn’t Come - PART 1
- Chapter 184: Don’t Touch Her.
- Chapter 183: Sea of The Heart
- Chapter 182: The Day He Chose the Past
- Chapter 181: The Composite Sword
- Chapter 180: The Hungry Bunny
- Chapter 179: Party Ascension
- Chapter 178: Zero Potential
- Chapter 177: The Gone Star
- Chapter 176: The Avalon Invitation
- Chapter 175: Supreme Masquerade
- Chapter 174: The One Above All
- Chapter 173: The Architecture of Failure
- Chapter 172: Ceres Omega
- Chapter 171: Void’s Trial 3: The Acceptance (3)
- Chapter 170: Void’s Trial 3: The Acceptance (2)
- Chapter 169: Void’s Trial 3: The Acceptance (1)
- Chapter 168: Void’s Trial 2: The Fiction of Reality (2)
- Chapter 167: Void’s Trial 2: The Fiction of Reality (1)
- Chapter 166: Void’s Trial 1: The Essence of Life
- Chapter 165: God-Killer Theory
- Chapter 164: KAISERISM - THE TRUTH
- Chapter 163: Mother’s Love...
- Chapter 162: Happy Birthday Kaiser!
- Chapter 161: The Final Hours
- Chapter 160: The First Number 000001
- Chapter 159: The Pedestal of Stupidity
- Chapter 158: The Hierarchy of Genius
- Chapter 157: Will You Wait?
- Chapter 156: Self-Engineered Weapon
- Chapter 155: Surprise Examination
- Chapter 154: Flawless Mnemonics
- Chapter 153: What’s Affection?
- Chapter 152: Your Name is ’Amelia’
- Chapter 151: Personality Types - KDN
- Chapter 150: Abandonment
- Chapter 149: Kaiserism
- Chapter 148: What is fiction?
- Chapter 147: Aporetic False Genius
- Chapter 146: I Will Find The - Truth -
- Chapter 145: The Life of a ’1 Year Old’
- Chapter 144: A False Genius?
- Chapter 143: Toxic Love
- Chapter 142: - Harmless Guy -
- Chapter 141: The Avalon Island Raid
- Chapter 140: The Elvian Kingdom
- Chapter 139: We’re Engaged?!
- Chapter 138: I Like You - Celia <3
- Chapter 137: Timeless Love
- Chapter 136: Celia’s Crushing Childhood - Part III (FINAL)
- Chapter 135: Celia’s Crushing Childhood: Part II
- Chapter 134: Celia’s Crushing Childhood: Part I
- Chapter 133: Don’t Decide My Happiness
- Chapter 132: Ribbon of Love
- Chapter 131: The Night She Asked Why
- Chapter 130: You Can’t Get Rid Of Me.
- Chapter 129: Aching Love
- Chapter 128: Everything for you
- Chapter 127: Under the Moonlit Blossoms
- Chapter 126: Defy All Measures
- Chapter 125: Uninvited Guests to The Grave
- Chapter 124: The Mighty God Killer
- Chapter 123: The Vengeful Hunter
- Chapter 122: The Darker Side Rises
- Chapter 121: I was... Deceived
- Chapter 120: You’re My Toy
- Chapter 119: Cursed Arrival
- Chapter 118: Depths of The Hunt - II
- Chapter 117: Join Me
- Chapter 116: The Hunt Begins - I
- Chapter 115: Tales of My Love
- Chapter 114: Fake Childhood
- Chapter 113: Dark Lover
- Chapter 112: Demonic Feud
- Chapter 111: The Veil Falls
- Chapter 110: Happy Birthday Celia!
- Chapter 109: Awakening of Veil
- Chapter 108: New Year’s Night
- Chapter 107: Labyrinth’s Savior
- Chapter 106: Crawler’s Demise - VI
- Chapter 105: Crawler’s Demise - V (FINAL)
- Chapter 104: Crawler’s Demise - IV
- Chapter 103: Crawler’s Demise - III
- Chapter 102: False Impression
- Chapter 101: Crawler’s Demise - II
- Chapter 100: Aspiration of Thermodynamics
- Chapter 99: Crawler’s Demise - I
- Chapter 98: Wait For You
- Chapter 97: Beyond Dreams
- Chapter 96: Frost-Serpent
- Chapter 95: The Mother Of Fairies
- Chapter 94: Forest Of Wishes
- Chapter 93: Promise Of Stars
- Chapter 92: Celestial-Revival
- Chapter 91: History Of Celestine
- Chapter 90: Endless Friendship
- Chapter 89: Primordial Hunt Begins
- Chapter 88: Forbidden Destiny
- Chapter 87: Your Story Ends Here - II
- Chapter 86: The Last Tear Never Fell
- Chapter 85: The Aftermath
- Chapter 84: Ascend- Swarm Tyrant IV (Ending)
- Chapter 83: Celestine’s Hero
- Chapter 82: Rinascita’s Last Breath - Swarm Tyrant II
- Chapter 81: The Sky Falls - Swarm Tyrant
- Chapter 80: Preparations Of The Skies
- Chapter 79: Knights Of The Realm
- Chapter 78: Distorted Bonds
- Chapter 77: Your Story Ends Here - I
- Chapter 76: His Arrival
- Chapter 75: Rinascita’s Ending
- Chapter 74: Swarm Tyrant’s Arrival
- Chapter 73: The Masked Killer
- Chapter 72: The Grotesque War Begins
- Chapter 71: Heartbreak Part 4 (Final)
- Chapter 70: Heartbreak Part 3
- Chapter 69: Heartbreak Part 2
- Chapter 68: Heartbreak Part 1: I Wish I Lied
- Chapter 67: Grotesque War Part 2: Hidden Pasts
- Chapter 66: Grotesque War Part 1: Preparations
- Chapter 65: A Murderous Love
- Chapter 64: A Hero Born From Regret - Lucas Reinhardt
- Chapter 63: When Monster and Devil Cross Paths
- Chapter 62: Heartless Forever
- Chapter 61: Mother to the Void
- Chapter 60: I’ll Be The Monster
- Chapter 59: The Grotesque Nest
- Chapter 58: Red Flags Of Tomorrow
- Chapter 57: Before I Become Myself
- Chapter 56: False Heir
- Chapter 55: Abandoned
- Chapter 54: Obsessive Desires
- Chapter 53: Cold-Calculations
- Chapter 52: Heavenly Beginning
- Chapter 51: The Joker
- Chapter 50: Beginning and End
- Chapter 49: Cursed Love
- Chapter 48: Every Scar Marks My Rebirth
- Chapter 47: The One in Control
- Chapter 46: Cheat Skills
- Chapter 45: Whispers and Wagers
- Chapter 44: God-Speed Vs Technique
- Chapter 43: Torn Apart
- Chapter 42: The Swarm’s Beginning
- Chapter 41: Bloom of Curses
- Chapter 40: Broken Hopes...
- Chapter 39: He... he’s gone
- Chapter 38: The Swarm Tyrant
- Chapter 37: Meaning Behind Curses
- Chapter 36: Strings of Fate
- Chapter 35: The Wife Gatherer
- Chapter 34: Did I Steal Her Heart?
- Chapter 33: Stay With Me
- Chapter 32: A New Stage
- Chapter 31: The Nightmare
- Chapter 30: Decaying Fate
- Chapter 29: The Fallen Angel
- Chapter 28: The Broken Chains
- Chapter 27: Reawakening Conquest
- Chapter 26: The Queen of Curses
- Chapter 25: Empress of The Abyss
- Chapter 24: The Silent Executioner
- Chapter 23: King of Flames Vs Wielder of God-Speed
- Chapter 22: The Sword Saint
- Chapter 21: The Final Confrontation Begins
- Chapter 20: The Truth
- Chapter 19: Twisted Queen
- Chapter 18: My Gift
- Chapter 17: Two Sides
- Chapter 16: Turning Point
- Chapter 15: Breaking Talents
- Chapter 14: Her Memory
- Chapter 13: Strings of the Puppet Master
- Chapter 12: One Last Time
- Chapter 11: Crushed Dreams
- Chapter 10: Lost Purpose
- Chapter 9: Shattered Trust
- Chapter 8: No Mercy
- Chapter 7: Betrayal
- Chapter 6: A Step Closer
- Chapter 5: A Promise to Keep
- Chapter 4: Lost Hope
- Chapter 3: Cursed Past
- Chapter 2: Into the Darkness
- Chapter 1: The Cursed Fate