Supreme Warlock System : From Zero to Ultimate With My Wives -
Chapter 454 - 454: Shadow Latch
Warlock Ch 454. Shadow Latch
They ate in silence for a while. Polite. Calm. Normal.
Until the new drink came.
A shimmering amber liquor. House specialty. Rare. The server set it in front of Damian with a bow that was just a little too perfect.
Damian smiled and lifted the glass.
[Observe].
It shimmered faintly.
A spell was buried at the bottom of the cup—one designed to trigger a brief loss of control if exposed to a rage-afflicted mana field.
Damian stared at it for a moment.
Then he raised it in a toast.
"To our gracious hosts," he said.
Everyone around the table raised their glasses.
Damian tilted the cup.
Let a single drop touch his lips.
And then?
He smiled.
It wouldn't work.
Not anymore.
Because whatever they thought he was—
Whatever monster they wanted to unleash—
Damian Blackthorn was something far worse.
He was a man who saw through everything.
And he was done playing their game.
The liquor burned faintly—sweet, smooth, and hiding a blade beneath the honeyed aftertaste. The kind of taste meant to lower defenses, cloud instincts, dull reason just enough to let the beast slip through the cracks.
But Damian wasn't a beast.
He was the cage.
He let the drink rest on his tongue, rolled it once, then swallowed. The spell tried to find a foothold—tried to ignite something wild, something feral. But it was like tossing a match into a frozen ocean.
[System Notification]
[God-Tier Class: Warlock of Eternal Bonds – Passive Effect: Soul Sovereignty Activated]
[All foreign emotional influence, rage-inducing magic, or corruption-based enchantments nullified]
[Stability Maintained. All cognitive and emotional faculties preserved]
Damian exhaled slowly through his nose, not with effort, but with patience. He suppressed a smirk.
Child's play.
The poison, the manipulation, the carefully layered pheromones in the air—all of it was so clumsily aimed at his worst instincts. The Tribunal expected a weapon, not a strategist. They wanted him to snarl, to lose control, to prove them right.
They'd miscalculated.
What they didn't understand—what they couldn't possibly understand—was that Damian's greatest strength wasn't the power he carried.
It was that he knew.
He knew how power moved. How people lied. How those behind the curtain always underestimated someone who had once been on his knees in chains.
And now?
Now he needed just one thing: a clean opportunity.
Because Ralvek's followers—those snakes still hiding in high seats—couldn't be exposed, couldn't be tried or accused without getting stonewalled by legalities. He knew that. Everyone knew that.
They'd buried themselves beneath layers of influence and fake piety, smiling behind wine glasses while planning the next sacrificial altar.
Damian wasn't going to argue with them.
He was going to erase them.
But not here. Not in front of the Tribunal. Not at the dinner table.
No. He needed the correct setting.
A sanctioned kill.
A reason for disappearance.
And the way they kept trying to bait him?
That gave him exactly what he needed.
Victoria leaned in slightly. "You're handling that well."
"They really should've picked something more aggressive," Damian said under his breath. "This concoction's more of a suggestion than a threat."
"They're getting desperate," she said. "They'll escalate," she continued.
"Good," he said. "I need them to," he added again.
He scanned the room again—this time not just with Observation, but with [Foresight Thread], a limited-use passive only recently granted to him from the fusion of his sealed mana core and the warlock class.
One glance. One flicker.
And the timeline split.
He saw movement—one of the aides, the tall one with the sun-marked cloak, whispering in the ear of a senator who hadn't spoken once during the trial. That senator's hands weren't trembling, but they weren't still either.
Damian followed the ripple. Saw the way the waiter—yes, that waiter, the one with the feathered hem—was handing off another drink. It wasn't meant for Damian this time.
It was meant for Lysandra.
The contents weren't toxic. Not outright.
But they would spike her mana pressure subtly. Trigger a dragon's dormant instincts. Her patience had limits.
And if she snapped?
That would be reason enough.
"Don't drink," Damian said, low.
Lysandra didn't move, but her goblet paused an inch from her lips.
"Poison?" she asked.
"No. Worse. It's a misstep."
She nodded once, casually placing the cup down as if it had simply cooled.
Cassius raised an eyebrow. "So, do we keep pretending?"
"For now," Damian muttered.
But not for long.
He needed them to make a move—something small, deliberate. Something he could respond to without starting a war in the middle of the capital.
And right on cue, someone gave him the spark.
Senator Belmonte.
Stern-faced, grey-eyed, a man who had never once raised his voice during Kaelan's trial decades ago. A man who was conveniently absent when Ralvek was tried.
He stood, raising a glass like they were toasting a political victory.
"To peace," he said. "And the warlocks who learn restraint."
Damian raised his glass in return.
"To restraint," he echoed.
And pinned the senator with a look.
Just long enough.
[System Notification]
[You have Marked Target: Senator Belmonte]
[Shadow Latch – Passive Activated: Target marked for delayed retaliation]
And there it was.
A thread pulled.
He watched as Belmonte sat down with just a flicker too much satisfaction on his face.
He thought he'd won something.
Perfect.
Damian turned his attention back to the meal, slicing the pheasant elegantly, chewing slowly, his mind a web of planning.
Belmonte would make a move. Maybe not today. Maybe not even tonight. But something would happen. An "accidental" encounter. A planted document. A sudden discovery in one of Haven's outer districts.
And when that happened?
Damian would already have his thread anchored.
Once the senator took the bait, even a whisper of coercion, even the hint of a black-ops maneuver against his allies?
Clean Break.
No trial.
No spectacle.
Just a removal.
Silent. Precise.
Wiped from existence like a corrupted line of code.
And Belmonte wasn't the only one.
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