Demonic Po*nstar System Chapter 881: Vespera’s Present

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Previously on Demonic Po*nstar System...
Kaiden faced the press after a devastating Kaiju emergence, confirming the escalating threat of the mana apocalypse and his commitment to Eclipse. He introduced his monster companion, Pebble, as his "cute dog," leading to unexpected global reactions of relief and amusement. Kaiden also addressed his father, Magnus Morvane, stating he was under investigation. He concluded with a powerful declaration of humanity's resilience and his intent to protect them.

The staging plain emptied in slow waves.

Association officials folded their portable command stations and loaded them onto armored transports, their movements brisk and organized, the kind of efficiency that came from doing the same job a hundred times.

Foreign guild fighters filtered through the checkpoints Eclipse’s veterans had established, nodding to Soren’s checkpoint on their way out without complaint. Camera crews packed last, reluctant, zooming in on anything that might justify one more minute of footage before Eclipse’s people escorted them past the cordon with polite, immovable finality.

Kaiden watched it happen from the center of the plain with his hands in his pockets, and as he did so, his new reality blossomed before his very eyes.

Vespera had always been watching him from the shadows, but Kaiden hadn’t wanted to build his family’s safety on his mother’s protection. He’d wanted independence.

And independence meant making himself too valuable for the Awakened Association to let die.

Every cooperative smile or action, every negotiation where he offered just enough to keep them invested but far enough away not to take advantage of him, had been his way of ensuring the most powerful organization on the continent kept guards at his entrance, protected him and his girls, stood between them and certain death. More than once.

All because he’d made himself indispensable.

Now the Association vehicles were pulling out in a long convoy, and the plain was growing quieter by the minute.

Grace had told him before the loading started that the Association’s research team would arrive once the formal agreement was signed, tasked with uncovering the mysteries of his dungeon.

Until then, the staging plain was Eclipse’s.

And just like that, only Eclipse remained. His guild. His girls, scattered across the camp in clusters of laughter and bickering and gaming and cooking criticism. His dog, currently attempting to steal a monster thigh from Calypso while she wasn’t looking.

Kaiden breathed in, and for the first time, the air on this plain tasted like it truly belonged to him.

Playing the cooperative young anomaly because he was too weak to stand on his own two feet was finished.

The freedom of it settled through his chest like sunlight hitting a room that had been closed for too long.

A faint click pulled him out of it.

Vespera had drawn a communication artifact from somewhere inside her cloak, a slim black disc no larger than her palm, and was holding it to her lips with her eyes fixed on the middle distance.

"Initiate Project Rebirth."

Three words, delivered in the same flat monotone she used for everything from ordering tea to announcing war. She lowered the artifact, slipped it back into the folds of her cloak, and resumed standing with her hands at her sides as if she hadn’t spoken at all.

Fourteen heads turned.

An Eclipse veteran near the supply line looked at the fighter beside him, mouthed "Did she just order the assassination of someone...?" Two fighters on the outer ring exchanged a glance, because three flat words into a black disc followed by pocketing it without waiting for a reply looked like exactly one thing, and it wasn’t a logistics call.

Kaiden stared at his mother.

"What was that?"

"I initiated a project." Vespera’s gaze didn’t move from the middle distance. "It has been in the works."

Kaiden watched her. His mother was many things, and being a woman of few words was chief among them, but she was never vague.

Vespera spoke clearly and to the point, every sentence a finished thought that arrived exactly as intended. Vagueness wasn’t in her vocabulary.

This was evasion, and Vespera Ashborn did not evade.

He stepped forward until he stood directly in front of her, then reached up and placed two fingers beneath her chin, tilting her face toward his.

Crimson eyes met his without a flicker.

She let her son hold her chin and turn her face without a trace of resistance, as if it were the most natural thing in the world, and it nearly gave the Eclipse members watching from the supply line a collective stroke.

The Shadow Monarch. The woman whose presence alone had cleared battlefields.

The woman whose name was whispered in the same breath as natural disasters, whose killing intent could stop a heartbeat at fifty paces, who had once walked into a room of S-tier guild leaders and made every one of them forget how to speak.

Was letting a boy hold her chin and search her face.

Before Kaiden, no living person could have touched Vespera Ashborn like that.

After the stream where he’d hugged her from behind on live television, the world had begun to understand that the rules simply did not apply to her son. But understanding it on a screen and watching it happen three meters away were very different experiences, and several Eclipse members were currently failing to process the difference.

"You’re being secretive." Kaiden’s fingers stayed where they were. "Why?"

Vespera’s expression gave away nothing.

Then her eyes shifted away from his.

"...It’s a present."

Two words, mumbled by the most dangerous woman on the continent while refusing to meet her son’s eyes.

The supply line short-circuited.

An Eclipse fighter who’d served under the Shadow Monarch for six years squealed. There was no other word for it. She grabbed her colleague’s arm hard enough to leave marks, and neither of them pretended it hadn’t happened.

Kaiden smiled, warm and easy, and released her chin. "Thank you."

"You don’t even know what it is," Vespera said, her gaze still fixed firmly on the horizon.

Kaiden shrugged. "I never got a bad gift from you."

A warmth she hadn’t authorized broke through her composure for half a second, because in the next instant she dissolved into shadow so fast the air where she’d stood snapped shut with a soft pop.

She reappeared fifty meters away at the far edge of the plain with her back to the camp, her cloak settling around her shoulders like it had never moved, and stood there facing the open ground, perfectly still.

And what no one could see from this distance was the smile on Vespera Ashborn’s face, unguarded, a mother’s happiness.

But while most of Eclipse stared at Vespera’s distant silhouette with varying degrees of bewilderment, that did not include everyone.

Talia was already moving.

The Runewoven leader had heard those three words and hadn’t blinked.

She turned toward her smiths, said something too low for Kaiden to catch, and the effect was immediate: twelve Runewoven members broke from the camp in organized pairs, hauling crates that had been sitting quietly among Eclipse’s supply stores since before the Chairman meeting.

They pried the lids off and began unpacking rune-etched stakes, calibration arrays, and portable inscription platforms that unfolded into workstations the size of dining tables. The gear had been here the entire time, waiting for a signal.

Then the rumble reached them from the north.

*BRRRRMMMMMM*

*THOOM. THOOM. THOOM.*

A convoy of industrial vehicles carved through the wilderness on tires taller than Kaiden, diesel stacks belching black against the afternoon sky.

Flatbeds carried concrete mixers, mobile cranes, and welding rigs strapped down with chains thick enough to anchor ships.

Behind them came transports loaded with cargo that was decidedly not made by mundane human means: mana-forged support beams humming with contained energy, prefabricated ward anchors, and modular enchantment cores the size of refrigerators, each one pulsing with a soft blue glow that made the nearest Eclipse fighters step back.

*FWOOOOOOOSH*

A cargo plane banked low overhead, and the bay doors opened.

Figures dropped from the hold in staggered lines, parachutes blooming against the sky in rapid succession.

They landed in a disciplined spread across the open ground east of the dungeon entrance, rolled out of their chutes, and began setting up before the silk hit the ground.

The insignia on their jackets marked them as the Ironveil Collective, one of the most sought-after awakened construction guilds on the continent.

Talia, meanwhile, had vanished into the work.

She circled the inscription platforms without pause, adjusting alignments with precise taps of her fingers, calling corrections to her smiths in a language half technical jargon and half shorthand only they understood.

Her hands traced glyphs in the air that burned bright and faded, testing resonance, mapping the mana conductivity of the soil beneath their feet.

Kaiden had never seen her like this. He’d watched the leader, the diplomat, the quiet professional. He’d never seen the craftsman, and she was magnificent.

His girls had gathered around him, and not one of them was talking.

They watched the staging plain transform in real time, the scale growing with every truck that pulled in, and Kaiden finally understood what his mother had done.

He was close to securing sovereignty over his dungeon, the first guild in history to hold that right.

Eclipse didn’t have a headquarters because Vespera had left everything to Magnus when she walked away, including the Ashborn ancestral home.

They needed a base, and where better to plant it than on the doorstep of a dungeon that would soon be recognized as sovereign Eclipse territory?

Vespera ordered the creation of Project Rebirth, where the Ashborn family would truly get to shed their past and create a home, a guild, and a future for themselves where no man, be that Magnus or even the president, could tell them what to do.

Kaiden looked toward the edge of the plain where his mother hadn’t moved, convoy rumbling past her on both sides like water around a stone.

He shook his head, smiling.

This woman was simply too amazing.