I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me - Chapter 660: Prince Takehiko

Chapter 660: Prince Takehiko
“Takehiko-onii-sama…” Haruka said.
Not loudly. Barely above a breath. But the word carried the weight of everything it meant—every political fear, every sleepless night, every calculation about timing and ceremony and the fragile window of legitimacy she was standing in the exact center of.
Her banished half-brother had returned to the capital.
He had come in armor, with samurai at his back, on the day of his nephew’s heir designation ceremony.
And the expression on his face as his fiery orange eyes swept across the dais—taking in Haruka, taking in Ryuuji, taking in the assembled priests and the ceremonial throne and Kaguya standing with the proclamation scroll still unread—was not rage or desperation.
Kaguya’s white eyes settled on him with an expression that revealed nothing and contained everything.
On the platform to the right of the dais, the Heroes of Kastoria had collectively abandoned any pretense of ceremonial stillness—Ryuuki’s hand now fully on his sword’s hilt, Ayaka’s weight shifting onto the balls of her feet, Akane already reading the formation of the samurai with the quiet precision of someone counting numbers and calculating angles.
And at the dais’s left, slightly apart from the Tenebrian delegation, Nathan watched Takehiko walk through the parted crowd calmly.
From Nathan’s perspective—the perspective of someone who had encountered beings that existed so far beyond human scale that the word “dangerous” became almost quaint—Takehiko was not particularly remarkable.
He had presence but compared to someone like Julius Caesar for example it was nothing.
Nathan acknowledged that honestly and without condescension. The way he moved through the parted crowd carried genuine authority—the ease of someone who had never once in his life needed to question whether he belonged in the center of whatever space he occupied. His orange eyes moved across the ceremony grounds with the comfortable assessment of someone taking stock of what was already his rather than what he was attempting to claim.
Some degree of real strength lived in him as well. Nathan could feel the faint register of it—not the ambient pressure of a truly extraordinary fighter, but the solidness of someone who had trained with genuine commitment rather than merely performing martial competence for appearances.
But compared to the people Nathan had actually feared?
Nothing exceptional.
And yet.
Nathan’s attention remained on Takehiko with a focus that it wouldn’t have if there had been truly nothing there. Something about him resisted clean categorization—a quality that Nathan could detect without being able to name precisely, like hearing a sound at a frequency slightly outside normal range. Not threatening enough to explain, not ignorable enough to dismiss.
Takehiko stopped at the altar’s edge, a few measured feet from the ceremonial throne.
Ryuuki stepped in front of Haruka in the same breath. His hand rested on his sword’s hilt prepared for anything.
Takehiko looked at him with mild appraising interest.
“You must be my younger sister’s newfound husband,” he said with a pleasant smile that reached exactly far enough to look genuine. “A summoned Hero of the great Amaterasu. How remarkable.”
“Yes,” Ryuuki confirmed shortly.
Takehiko’s orange eyes moved past him without haste, finding Haruka where she sat on the throne’s edge with Ryuuji held close against her chest—her arms tightening fractionally around her son as her brother’s gaze reached her, a gesture so small it was barely perceptible and absolutely clear to anyone paying attention.
“It has been quite a while, Haruka,” Takehiko said. “And I see that my nephew is faring remarkably well. He looks strong already.”
“Onii-sama.” Haruka spoke hesitantly. “What are you doing here?”
Takehiko tilted his head with an expression of mild, genuine-seeming puzzlement, as though the question itself was slightly baffling.
“What am I doing?” he repeated. “I came to witness my nephew being formally designated as Heir to the throne. Surely that requires no further explanation? It is an important moment—for this family, for this kingdom, for everyone assembled here today.” He let his gaze sweep briefly across the crowd . “I wouldn’t have missed it for anything in the world.”
“Prince Takehiko.”
Kaguya’s voice rang next noticeably colder.
Her white eyes were fixed on him.
Takehiko turned to look at her.
“Kaguya-sama.” His smile shifted—softened, warmed. “As always, beholding you is a genuine privilege. You are extraordinary today—though I suspect you are extraordinary on every day, simply in varying ways.”
He paused a bit.
“I understand entirely the reasoning behind my banishment,” he continued. “Truly, I bear no grievance about it—these are complicated times and complicated decisions must be made. But surely, for an occasion as significant as this one—the formal designation of my own nephew as heir—you would not bar me from being present? Surely family is permitted to offer its blessings, whatever else may stand between us?”
The question wasn’t really a question.
It was a trap constructed from impeccable materials—the framing of family, of ceremony, of decency in a public space before thousands of witnesses. Any answer Kaguya gave would be heard by every person in the plaza and carried immediately through the capital’s streets by every mouth that left it.
Saying yes meant a formal acknowledgment of Takehiko’s presence that his faction would use as implicit legitimacy.
Saying no meant being the person who barred a man from his nephew’s ceremony in front of everyone.
She had perhaps three seconds before the pause itself became its own answer.
“Of course not,” Kaguya said calmly. “You are welcome to remain and offer your blessings to Ryuuji. That is, as you say, what family is for.”
“That was precisely my intention,” Takehiko said, his smile holding.
He stepped aside, moving to the left of the ceremony space with his samurai filing into position behind him—a bloc of red-armored figures arranging themselves on the opposite side of the altar from where the Heroes of Kastoria stood, the symmetry almost architectural in its deliberateness.
Kaguya waited a bit before starting speaking.
Her voice carried the ancient words across the plaza without effort, each syllable landing with the particular resonance that distinguished divine speech from mere recitation. The priests flanking the dais held their sacred implements steady, their own lips moving silently in the accompanying prayers they had rehearsed for weeks.
The crowd had gone genuinely, completely quiet.
Even Takehiko’s samurai stood still.
When the proclamation reached its formal close — the legal and political declaration of Ryuuji’s designation as Heir to the Kastorian Throne, witnessed by the assembled kingdom, sealed by the presence of Amaterasu’s own daughter — Kaguya descended the two steps from the dais’s upper platform and approached the throne directly.
Haruka looked up at her. No words passed between them. None were needed.
Kaguya extended both hands, her white sleeves falling back, and held them open above Ryuuji.
The light came first — not dramatic, not blinding, but warm and deeply golden, the specific color of late morning sunlight concentrated into something more deliberate than natural light ever managed. It gathered between Kaguya’s palm, and it settled downward around Ryuuji in a way that felt less like magic being performed and more like recognition being granted.
Ryuuji looked up at it with his broad, calm infant gaze.
He did not cry. He did not startle.
He reached one small fist upward toward the light with the cheerful, purposeful motor instinct of a baby encountering something interesting, and several hundred people in the crowd exhaled at once.
“Child of Kastoria,” Kaguya said. “You arrive before your kingdom not yet knowing what you carry. You will grow into the weight of it — the responsibility, the joy, the sorrow, and the purpose that belonging to a people truly means.”
She paused briefly.
“Amaterasu, our divine mother, looks upon you this morning with full recognition. Her light does not fall on titles or bloodlines — it falls on those who will carry her kingdom forward with the honesty and courage she asks of all who serve under her warmth.”
The golden light deepened for a single breath — vivid enough that even the crowd’s outer edges registered it and pressed forward instinctively — before softening, settling, and gradually dissolving into Ryuuji’s skin like warmth absorbed rather than light reflected.
“May her blessing remain with you,” Kaguya finished, “in every year between this morning and the one when you are ready to lead.”
Silence held for three full seconds.
Then the crowd erupted.
The cheering was enormous — louder than Kaguya’s entrance, louder than Haruka’s emergence, carrying in it the specific release of a people who had been holding collective tension for weeks and had just been given something certain and sacred to believe in.
Haruka pressed her lips to the top of Ryuuji’s head, her eyes closed.
Ryuuki’s hand finally left his sword’s hilt.
Kaguya straightened and stepped back, her expression returning to its composed serenity — though the faint warmth that had entered it during the blessing didn’t entirely leave.
Takehiko applauded as well.
His orange eyes, above the pleasant expression, had not changed at all.
The ceremony lasted the better part of an hour.
The Heroes of Kastoria, having grown up in Japan, navigated it with reasonable comprehension — the ritual structure, the formal speech patterns, the precise choreography between priests and principals all carried enough cultural similarity to be legible even when the specific words weren’t. They stood on their platform with appropriate solemnity, following the ceremony’s rhythm with the instinctive recognition of people raised in a culture that understood this particular kind of sacred formality.
Nathan lasted approximately fifteen minutes before quietly concluding that nothing requiring his attention was going to happen for the remainder.
Takehiko had positioned himself, shown his face to the crowd, forced Kaguya’s hand on the question of his presence, and was now applauding at appropriate interval. Whatever his next move was, he wasn’t making it here. Not in front of this crowd, not during this ceremony, not while thousands of witnesses stood between him and any action that couldn’t be immediately framed as something other than what it was.
Nathan had read that within the first five minutes of Takehiko settling into position.
So he walked off the formal witnessing area without ceremony, found a large cedar tree at the plaza’s edge whose roots had lifted enough of the surrounding stone to create a comfortable natural seat, and settled against it with his arms folded and his eyes closing.
He was asleep within two minutes.
Whether anyone noticed was their business. Whether anyone considered it disrespectful was equally their business, and no one with any working awareness of who was leaning against that tree showed any inclination to raise the point with him directly. The Kastorian knights nearest to him exchanged a single glance and returned their attention to the crowd with the professional discretion of people who had decided this particular situation was above their clearance level.
The ceremony proceeded around him — the proclamation, the blessing, the golden light, the crowd’s eruption of cheering — and Nathan slept through all of it with the complete ease of someone whose internal alarm system was calibrated specifically to the things that actually required waking up for.
An hour later, the crowds were beginning to disperse into the celebratory atmosphere that followed — vendors and festivities and the general warm noise of a capital city given an occasion to be glad about.
“Onii-chan~”
Nathan opened his eyes.
Ayaka was crouched in front of him at eye level, smiling.


