SUPREME ARCH-MAGUS - Chapter 1003: A Night Beneath Moonlight Petals

Chapter 1003: A Night Beneath Moonlight Petals
The Lan family estate…
The moon hung like a silver pearl in the sky. The Lan Family estate lay blanketed in silence, its pavilions and gardens dozing under starlit stillness. In the heart of the estate, within the Blue Lotus Pavilion, two guards stood stiff with solemn faces. The air was cold, but their brows were laced with sweat—they had not moved for hours.
Yet neither noticed the sudden ripple in the air.
Not the faint shimmer that passed the corner of their eyes.
Not the shadow that blurred against the wall like wind carving through silk.
Within the locked room, Manuka Lan sat by her jade window, draped in a white and lavender robe. The soft flickering lantern above painted golden glows over her delicate face. She held a brush, but her hand remained still, hovering over parchment. Her eyes, once bright with fire, were now clouded by a storm of thoughts. She had written the letter, yes—but she hadn’t truly believed he would come.
A soft sound—like a petal landing on still water.
She turned sharply.
From the shadows of the curtained entrance, Phillip emerged, clad in a cloak of starlight-black silk, his long hair slightly disheveled by the night wind. His presence didn’t shatter the silence—it absorbed it. As though he was a part of the darkness, molded by it, but glowing from within.
Her eyes widened. “You…”
“I came as you requested,” Phillip whispered.
Manuka stood, stepping back in disbelief, half-shaken by fear, half by emotion. “You… How did you get past the guards?”
Phillip smirked faintly. “I have a few tricks. And they weren’t guarding me—they were guarding you. That was their first mistake.”
She turned her face away. “They’ll lock me deeper in the clan if they know you came. You shouldn’t have come.”
“I should’ve come the moment I knew you were hurting,” he said.
The warmth in his voice hit her like thunder masked in silk.
There was silence.
And then, finally, she turned toward him again—her composure breaking, her lips trembling.
“I need to know, Phillip,” she whispered, stepping closer. “Was all of this just some game? Was it about playing with me? or Did you say those things in front of everyone… just to prove a point?”
He stared at her—his eyes no longer the hesitant pools of a reserved boy, but the calm, blazing certainty of a man who had found his truth.
“No,” he said. “I never believed that a beauty like you, would fall for me. But then you looked at me—once. Truly looked at me. And my entire world shifted.”
She looked away, hiding the tears forming in her lashes.
“Lan…” he said softly, stepping forward. “This world has tried to tell you who you should be, how you should behave, who you should love. But I don’t want you because I played some tricks. I want you because I saw you behind those walls you built. The lonely herb rearer. The guarded girl. The storm no one dared touch.”
He paused, and from his robes, he pulled out a silver lotus ring—the sigil of a soulbound pact.
“I am not here to steal you. I am not here to tame you. I am here to stand beside you. And if that means facing every clan elder, every soul beast, every realm gate in this cursed plane—then so be it.”
Manuka Lan’s breath caught.
“You… fool,” she whispered, tears falling. “You shouldn’t make vows you can’t keep.”
“I intend to keep every word,” Phillip replied.
And then, without hesitation, he dropped to one knee.
Her breath hitched. Her body froze.
“Marry me,” he said. “Not tomorrow. Not after some ceremony where they decide our fate. Marry me now. Tonight. In heart and in soul. Let the heavens witness our vow, and let this room be our sacred altar.”
Her hands trembled.
She fell to her knees, inches from him, and grabbed his collar in both hands.
And then, with tears and laughter mixed into one storm of emotion, she pulled him into an embrace.
“Idiot,” she murmured into his neck. “Why must you make me love you so completely?”
He held her tighter. “Because no one else ever dared.”
Their lips met—a kiss that was neither rushed nor burning, but deep, reverent. As though two stars collided gently in a sky that had long denied them.
Later, the lanterns were dimmed. The jade window remained slightly ajar, letting the moonlight wash over the silken floor and drape their entangled forms in quiet radiance. Manuka’s head rested on Phillip’s chest, her fingers tracing the curve of his shoulder.
“I’ve never let anyone into this room before,” she said, voice half-dream.
Phillip smiled, fingers brushing her cheek. “It’s the most dangerous place I’ve ever entered.”
“You came without fear.”
“I had you to protect me.”
She chuckled softly.
“Tomorrow…” she said.
“Don’t speak of it,” he interrupted gently. “Tonight is ours.”
She didn’t reply. But her her silence was acceptance. Their bodies merged on the soft bed.
— — —
Morning…
A golden beam of sun cut through the paper windows, kissing the slumbering figure on the edge of the silk-draped bed. Phillip stirred, blinking into the light. For a moment, he forgot where he was. Then his eyes caught the gentle curve of Manuka Lan’s back, her long hair spread across the pillow like ink spilled across a scroll.
He sat up slowly, the events of the night washing over him with quiet awe.
She had cried.
She had laughed.
She had chosen him.
His hand moved to brush a strand of hair from her face.
She stirred, blinking once, then smiled faintly.
“Morning, husband,” she whispered.
His heart skipped.
“Morning, wife.”
For a moment, time itself felt shy. Even the ancient heavens above must have paused to glimpse the impossible—storm and calm, sword and soul, wrapped in one another.
But outside, in the distance, the bells of the Lan family guard tower began to ring.
Trouble would come.
Questions would be asked.
But none of it mattered now.
Because for the first time in either of their lives… they had chosen each-other.
And no blade, no clan, no scheme could take that night away from them.
–
Take a look at my new-book!
Search the NovelFire.net website on Google to access chapters of novels early and in the highest quality.
