Earth's Greatest Magus

Chapter 2854 Trial



Chapter 2854 Trial

While Klea remained under guarded recovery, Emery received another unexpected visit.

The heavy door of his confinement chamber opened not with hostility, but with deliberate formality.

Rosia of Terra stepped inside.

She did not come alone.

Behind her followed several figures in refined ceremonial robes-legal advocates formally retained by the Karat faction. Their insignia shimmered subtly with rank and authority. These were not minor representatives sent as courtesy. These were professionals accustomed to high-sector litigation, political arbitration, and factional disputes between planetary powers.

They carried more than evidence scrolls.

They carried influence.

The Karat delegates had not come merely to assist Rex in building a defense. They had come to apply counterpressure.

When the extended week expired, Emery was escorted once more into the main tribunal hall.

This time, the atmosphere felt different.

More observers filled the gallery. Representatives from neutral factions had taken seats. Political tension hung in the air like static before a storm.

The proceedings began.

And they did not proceed quietly.

Magus Rex, reinforced by the Karat legal team, shifted from defensive posture to open offense. Instead of merely rebutting accusations, they dissected the Astiel narrative piece by piece. They reframed the confrontation not as an unprovoked massacre, but as a chain reaction initiated by unlawful detention, coercion, and spiritual tampering.

The chamber murmured.

The Karat advocates pressed further. They questioned the timeline. They challenged witness consistency. They raised procedural irregularities surrounding the rapid convening of the tribunal.

The Astiels countered swiftly.

They pivoted to the death toll and began playing the victim. They invoked stability. They invoked alliance unity. They framed Emery as a destabilizing force whose actions weakened the alliance-something detrimental in an escalating war.

Klea was summoned again.

Emery’s chest tightened when she entered, supported but walking on her own. Pale still, but stronger. Her aura, though fragile, no longer flickered like a dying ember.

She spoke carefully. Calmly. Her testimony aligned with previous statements. Under cross-examination, she did not waver.

Another week passed under relentless legal exchange.

Gradually, the mood of the judging panel began to shift. Their questions grew more measured. Their expressions less rigid. The narrative was no longer one-sided.

That was when the Astiels altered course.

Without warning, they introduced a new argument.

They claimed that the deaths could not be reduced merely to a conflict between Earth and Astiel interests. They argued that something deeper- something darker-had influenced events.

Then they called a new witness.

The courtroom doors opened.

A Seraph entered.

White wings folded behind him. Golden aura restrained but unmistakable.

Emery recognized him instantly.

Zachari.

The senior seraph who had penetrated his domain during the exorcism attempt.

A cold current moved through Emery’s chest.

“Tell the court what you witnessed,” the prosecutor said.

Zachari stepped forward, wings half-folded behind him, expression solemn but restrained.

He spoke of sensing a presence that did not align with divine order. He described how the Cardinal had perceived corruption and how, under ecclesiastical authority, they had intervened. He explained that an exorcism attempt had been initiated because the spiritual disturbance surrounding Emery was judged to be dangerous.

As he spoke, the narrative subtly shifted.

No longer was Emery merely a defendant in a political conflict.

He was being reframed as something else.

An embodiment of the very evil the Nephilim claimed to stand against.

“The accused harbored a presence inconsistent with divine law,” the prosecutor emphasized, seizing on every word. “Is that correct?”

Zachari paused.

“Yes,” he said carefully. “There was… something”

But he did not elaborate.

He did not describe the gates

He did not speak of the beast.

He did not confirm the nature of what he had seen.

When pressed for specifics-whether the entity was demonic, abyssal, or aligned with forbidden dimensions-he answered with measured restraint. “I will not testify beyond what I am certain of.”

That single sentence created a fracture in the prosecution’s momentum.

Magus Rex proved his worth, noticing something missing in their claim. He rose immediately.

“Your Honor,” he said smoothly, “why is the Seraph here to testify regarding a spiritual verdict that was not concluded? Where is the Cardinal who led this intervention? What was his final judgment?”

The chamber grew still.

The prosecutor requested a summoning.

A brief recess followed.

The Cardinal did not appear.

Rex did not miss the opportunity.

“If the ecclesiastical authority who initiated the accusation is absent,” he continued, “then what remains is subjective perception. Sensing ‘evil’ is not equivalent to establishing guilt. Without formal doctrinal declaration, this is

theological bias, not admissible proof.”

The Karat legal representatives nodded in support, reinforcing the argument with codified precedents.

For a moment, it seemed the prosecution’s pivot toward divine corruption had

stalled.

But the Astiels were prepared.

The lead prosecutor stepped forward once more.

“In light of the Seraph’s testimony and the unresolved spiritual irregularities surrounding the accused,” he said, voice steady, “we formally request that the accused undergo the Test of Faith.”

The words struck the chamber like a thunderclap.

Gasps rippled through the audience.

The Test of Faith was not merely symbolic. It was a sacrament administered by

the Papal Church to evaluate one’s alignment with divine law. For those pure of spirit, it was affirmation. For those who walked in darkness, it was annihilation.

It was not called execution.

But in practice, that was precisely what it was.

Rex stood instantly.

“Objection,” he uttered sharply. “The accused is an affiliate member of the

Nephilim factions. He is not a core member and therefore not subject to compulsory ecclesiastical examination.””

A murmur of agreement spread among neutral observers.

The prosecutor did not hesitate.

“Article 3018 of the Codex,” he replied, already holding a prepared scroll. “A

leader of a Grade Two affiliate is to be regarded as a full member for purposes

of doctrinal compliance and disciplinary measures.”

Silence followed.

Emery felt a cold weight settle in his chest.

“Grade Two…?” he said quietly.

The prosecutor’s lips curved faintly.

“Yes,” he replied. “Congratulations are in order. Your Grade Two application was

approved yesterday.”

A low wave of realization swept through the chamber.

Earth’s advancement in Magus Alliance ranking should have taken years-years

of evaluation, political vetting, and review.

It had been accelerated.

Forced through.

Not as recognition.

As leverage. To make him eligible.

To make him vulnerable. Emery understood instantly.

The Astiels had moved their influence not only to condemn him-but to

reshape jurisdiction itself to ensure his destruction.

The Test of Faith was no longer a distant threat.

It was now legally admissible.

And the courtroom waited for the judge to speak.

Rex’s composure faltered for the first time since the proceedings began. He

turned slightly toward Emery, lowering his voice just enough to avoid

projecting weakness.

“How certain are you,” he asked quietly, “that the Test of Faith would be… harmful to you?”

It was not a rhetorical question.

It was calculation.

Emery did not answer immediately.

Inside, his thoughts moved rapidly. His Dao was not purely dark. Nor was it

purely light. He had walked a path of balance, one that embraced contradiction rather than submission to either extreme. In theory, that balance might grant

him a chance-perhaps even a fair one.

Fifty percent. Perhaps.

But he was not naïve.

The Astiels had already demonstrated their willingness to bend procedures,

accelerate classifications, and manipulate jurisdiction itself. If the Test of Faith proceeded, it would not be conducted in neutral ground. It would be

orchestrated.

Refined.

Engineered.

He had no doubt that additional safeguards-unofficial ones-would be placed

within that ritual.

The judge, who had been listening carefully, leaned back in his seat. The proposal of the Test of Faith offered him something convenient-distance. If he approved it, responsibility would transfer to the Papal authority. The outcome

would be framed as divine will, not judicial bias.

A clean solution.

“The court acknowledges the request,” the judge began, tone measured.

The shift in atmosphere was immediate.

This was the moment.

It was then that Emery heard it.

A voice.

Not audible to the room-but clear within his mind.

A single suggestion.

He identified it instantly.

Without hesitation, Emery straightened.

“I invoke my right,” he said firmly, voice carrying through the chamber, “to the

Trial of Distinction.”

The words cut through the air like a blade.

For a heartbeat, no one reacted. Then realization spread.

If Emery was legally classified as a Grade Two affiliate leader-if he was to be

treated as a full Nephilim member for the purpose of religious examination- then he was equally entitled to the protections granted to identified prodigies and exceptional talents.

The Trial of Distinction.

An alternative codified under Nephilim law.

A path reserved for individuals whose potential was deemed strategically

significant to the alliance.

It was not mercy.

It was merit-based exemption.

A genius, if proven, could bypass the Test of Faith.

The loophole was elegant.

And perfectly timed.

The prosecutors exchanged glances, irritation flashing across their faces.

The judge’s brows furrowed as he consulted the codex.

“It is… procedurally valid,” he admitted. Murmurs rippled through the chamber once more.

The prosecution attempted to object, but their footing was unstable. The very

classification they had weaponized against Emery had now granted him a defensive countermeasure.

After a moment of deliberation, the judge raised his gavel. “The court grants the accused’s petition. Proceedings are suspended pending completion of the Trial of Distinction. The accused will be evaluated under the appropriate standards. Court adjourned.”

The strike echoed through the hall.

A delay.

An opportunity.

Not victory-but survival.

As the guards approached, Emery turned subtly, searching for the source of

that guiding whisper.

Near the back of the chamber, standing quietly among observers, was a figure

he had long respected.

Grand Magus Delbrand of the Magus Academy.


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