The Last Heir's Regression
Chapter 1: The Day I Died
The air was thick with smoke and iron. Blood pooled across the marble floors of Vaelthorn Manor, staining the golden crest of the family like a final insult. Once the proud seat of an ancient magical bloodline, the estate now lay in ruin—its great halls shattered, its defenders silenced, its legacy reduced to whispers and embers.
And in the center of it all knelt Harvey Vaelthorn.
Chains bound his wrists and ankles, etched with runes that burned every time he moved. Magic-suppressing glyphs shimmered on the floor beneath him, pulsing with cruel light. His once-elegant coat was torn and bloodied, stained with his family’s slaughter.
He could still hear the screams of his sister. The sound of his father’s body hitting the stone. The soft sobs of the servants who died hiding children that never survived.
They had taken everything.
Above him, nobles in silk robes and enchanted armor watched from behind a barrier of light. Their faces were twisted in smug satisfaction, like wolves full on the blood of a rival pack. Among them stood Duke Roderic Valemont, the man who had raised a glass at Harvey’s birthday three months prior—now the architect of his downfall.
“You could have ruled with us, Harvey,” Roderic said, voice as smooth as polished glass. “You were born noble. But instead, you sided with your father's ideals. With weakness.”
Harvey lifted his head slowly, eyes dead of warmth. “You were always a liar, Roderic. Even now, you hide behind honor to justify betrayal.”
The duke offered a pitying smile. “So young. So naive.”
Naive… The word echoed in Harvey’s mind like poison. Maybe he had been. Maybe he had believed in justice, in loyalty, in the value of blood and name.
Not anymore.
A sharp whisper cut through the silence.
The blade that pierced his chest was ceremonial—too ornate, too cruel for anything but execution. It entered clean and slow, dragging pain across his ribs, severing the last threads of his failing body.
But Harvey didn’t scream.
He didn’t cry.
He just… watched.
The world blurred at the edges as cold flooded his limbs, spreading like ice through his veins. His vision dimmed, sound turned to echoes. And just before darkness claimed him, a voice—one he had never heard before—whispered from the void.
> [Black Crown System initializing…]
Executor recognized: Harvey Vaelthorn]
Synchronization complete.]
Recalibrating timeline—standby…]
He didn’t understand.
And then, he was gone.
---
GASP
Harvey shot upright with a gasp, drenched in sweat.
He clutched his chest—no wound. No pain. Just the thunder of his heart and the hum of ancient magic curling beneath his skin.
He looked around wildly. The stone walls were gone. The blood was gone. He was in a room—his room. Dusty wooden shelves filled with old books, a cracked mirror on the far wall, a desk piled with schoolwork and failed spell formulas.
“No… this can’t be.”
He stumbled to the window and threw it open. The city below stretched in familiar gray tones—cracked sidewalks, high-rise towers, arcane streetlamps buzzing faintly. The protective dome shimmered faintly above the skyline. It was exactly as he remembered it ten years ago.
March 3rd. The day before his coming-of-age ceremony.
The day he was still powerless.
No. Not anymore.
He ran to the mirror. The reflection stared back—sixteen years old, too thin, too soft. But his eyes… they were different now. Colder. Sharper. Those weren’t the eyes of a teenage noble. They were the eyes of a man who had watched the world fall.
And then—
> [Black Crown System online.]
Welcome back, Executor Harvey.]
Time Regression: 10 years.]
Primary Objective: Rewrite Fate.]
Secondary Objective: Vengeance.]
A dark sigil flared on his palm, shaped like a black crown wreathed in thorns. It pulsed in time with his heartbeat, whispering promises of strength, of power, of destruction.
Harvey stared at it in silence.
So this was real.
A second chance.
He could stop the betrayal. He could prevent the slaughter. He could tear down the bastards who laughed over his grave.
But this time, he wouldn’t play fair.
This time… he wouldn’t show mercy.
He turned from the mirror with slow purpose, voice a quiet whisper.
“This world thought it buried me.”
A pause.
“But I was only planting roots.”