The Fallen Hero Reincarnates as the Demon King's Son
Chapter 103 - 102 - Heading for Alek’s Head

Chapter 103: Chapter 102 - Heading for Alek’s Head

The fire in Daimon’s forge had long since burned down to coals, but the heat still clung to the ground, sunk deep into stone and marrow. Caliste stood in its glow, silent and unmoving, the wind stirring his cloak as he stared across the ravaged training field.

This place had tested him in ways no battlefield ever had. Daimon’s trials were not built to teach—they were built to expose. And in three harrowing days, everything soft had been burned away.

There was no illusion left. No hesitation. No past life to lean on.

Only will, sharpened to a point.

Daimon approached, carrying a leather-wrapped bundle in one hand and a cup of bitter root-brew in the other. He offered neither.

"I should be surprised," he said. "But I’m not."

Caliste didn’t look at him. "You knew what I was the moment I walked in."

"I suspected," Daimon corrected. "But now I know. You weren’t shaped by training. You were remembering."

Caliste said nothing.

The silence stretched long.

Then Daimon unwrapped the leather, revealing a short black cloak—the kind worn only by war leaders of the old clans, stitched with the mark of flame and claw.

"Doesn’t belong to you," Daimon said, placing it in Caliste’s hands. "But you wear it better than the last three who tried."

Caliste draped it over his shoulders. The weight felt... right.

"Albert’s waiting."

Daimon nodded toward the ridge.

Caliste turned, then paused. "You were more than a brute, Daimon. You taught me something even I forgot."

"Don’t get soft on me."

"I’m not," Caliste said, glancing back. "But I won’t forget you."

Then he walked.

No farewell. No embrace.

Just two warriors parting ways—one forged, the other proven.

Albert stood tall at the path’s end, silent as ever. He said nothing as Caliste approached, only held up the silver vial.

Last time, it had nearly killed him.

This time, it submitted.

The potion surged through his body, but there was no collapse. No convulsing. His mana harmonized instantly, muscle tightening, breath deepening. He felt not just strong—but aligned.

Albert lowered the vial slowly. "You’ve surpassed expectations."

Caliste flexed one hand. "I remember who I was."

"I believe you."

They left the canyon behind in silence.

The Academy didn’t recognize him at first.

The gates stood tall, blackstone polished and menacing, wards etched in old sigils. Once, Caliste had felt their pressure like iron weights on his back.

Now, they were little more than ornament.

He passed through the courtyard unnoticed at first, the students too absorbed in their petty rivalries, their ritual duels and social games.

Then someone saw him.

Then another.

And the silence followed.

He wasn’t cloaked in arrogance. He wasn’t glowing with magical power. He didn’t need to be.

He was calm.

And calm was terrifying.

No one dared approach.

He made his way through the west wing, past the sculpture hall and the garden atrium, where the tree of silverwood gleamed in permanent bloom.

Fleur sat beneath it, exactly where he’d hoped.

Her book was open in her lap, half-read. Her robe was a shade darker than usual, drawn loose at the collar, one leg tucked beneath the other.

She looked up.

Her eyes widened.

Then she smiled.

"Gods," she murmured, rising. "They didn’t kill you."

"They tried," he said.

She moved to him without hesitation, reaching out. Her hand found his forearm. She paused, then traced up his bicep, her brows arching slightly.

"You’ve changed."

"So have you," he said. "You got prettier."

Fleur smirked. "Liar. You’re just finally seeing me properly."

Caliste stepped closer. "Maybe."

Their chemistry hadn’t faded in his absence—it had deepened. Where before they had teased, now it was all quiet intimacy. A slow burn. She watched him with the eyes of someone who sensed danger but couldn’t look away.

"Did they hurt you?" she asked softly.

"No one can hurt me anymore," he said.

Her fingers lingered on his chest. "I’ve missed this. Missed you."

"You only missed the way I looked at you."

"That too."

She leaned in, and he met her halfway, their kiss slow, deliberate, her fingers curling at his collar.

When they pulled apart, she stayed close.

"They say Alek left the Academy," she said idly, brushing her thumb along his jaw. "Off to serve the Archduke. I always thought he’d be the first of us to rise."

He didn’t react.

Fleur tilted her head, teasing. "Jealous?"

Caliste’s voice was quiet. "Not of him."

"I liked him," she said. "He was kind."

He met her eyes, and for a flicker of a second, the air changed.

Fleur blinked.

"Is something wrong?"

Caliste kissed her again.

Shorter this time.

But deeper.

When he stepped back, something had settled behind his gaze.

"I can’t stay."

She exhaled. "You just got here."

"There’s something I need to finish."

"Will you come back?"

He paused.

Then smiled, gently.

"You’ll know when I do."

She didn’t press further. Maybe she knew not to.

Caliste turned, his cloak stirring at his ankles, and made his way out of the courtyard, past students who dared not speak his name, down the quiet eastern halls of the Academy...

...and beyond them.

He walked without words, without destination—only purpose.

He had remembered who he was.

And now, the world would remember, too.

***

The world beyond the Academy walls stretched wide and unfamiliar.

Gone were the cold stone halls and the murmuring students. Gone were the whispers of Fleur’s voice, the smell of ink and incense, the petty duels and politics of boys pretending at war. Now, there was only wind, dirt, and sky—open and endless.

Caliste walked alone.

He didn’t take a carriage. He didn’t fly. He didn’t weave some noble banner through the sky for the world to see.

He walked.

Because the weight he carried wasn’t something that could be rushed.

The land shifted around him as he passed through it—plains turned to rocky hills, the trees growing darker, the soil richer and redder. Every footfall was measured. Every breath controlled. He had no need to rest. The strength he’d gained under Daimon’s eye ran deep now, layered through every tendon, every thought. He was quiet. Precise. Controlled.

A storm in still water.

And ahead—somewhere beyond the fractured ridgelines and the distant black peaks—waited the man who had once looked him in the eye and smiled as he broke him.

Alek.

The one everyone still called a hero.

Caliste moved through a small, nameless village before sundown. The people there stared as he passed—no one said a word. There was tension in the air. Hunger beneath the surface. A man with gold-threaded robes stood at the village center, flanked by two armored guards bearing Alek’s crest: a silver fang against a blood-red sun.

The moment Caliste passed him, the man’s gaze shifted warily. But Caliste didn’t stop.

He didn’t need a confrontation here.

Yet.

He kept moving until the village was a memory, and the sun had nearly vanished behind the trees. He made camp not far from a stream, beneath the skeleton of an old ironwood tree. The fire he lit was low, the flame muffled by stones, his presence concealed like a shadow nestled into the forest’s breath.

And there, in the flickering light, he allowed himself a single moment of stillness.

Not rest.

Reflection.

The last time he saw Alek, the man was standing on the dueling platform above him—arm raised, face calm, sword bloodied. Caliste had been on the ground, chest heaving, ribs cracked, vision blurred from the poison that Alek had slipped into his flask hours before the match.

"You’re not meant for this," Alek had said then, so quiet no one else heard it. "Stay in the dirt. You’re more useful there."

The cheers from the crowd had drowned out the rage in Caliste’s chest.

He hadn’t remembered then. Not truly. Not the lifetimes. Not the swords. Not the worlds he had once fought to protect.

But that day had broken something loose.

And now—every memory was clear.

There was nothing that would get in his way now. Caliste would get his revenge even if it meant he’d die for it.

And Alek... Alek was just the first name on a list far older than he could imagine.

As the fire dimmed, Caliste stared into the flames. His fingers idly rolled the edge of the Silent Edge’s hilt, feeling the familiar pulse in the steel. The dagger was part of him now. It whispered, but never screamed. It wanted blood, but it would wait.

There would be no rush.

Alek had built himself a territory—he’d carved out land in the name of "security," rallied students and lesser lords under his banner, promised power and order. And they believed him. Because he smiled. Because he fought well. Because he didn’t kill unless it served a purpose.

He was what the world wanted in a hero.

But Caliste knew what he really was.

A coward with polish.

A butcher with manners.

A snake draped in silk.

Tip: You can use left, right keyboard keys to browse between chapters.Tap the middle of the screen to reveal Reading Options.

If you find any errors (non-standard content, ads redirect, broken links, etc..), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible.

Report
Follow our Telegram channel at https://t.me/novelfire to receive the latest notifications about daily updated chapters.