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Chapter : 679

They looked at him, their leader, and saw not a defeated man, but a promise of vengeance forged in the fires of righteous rage. And in that mont, their fear began to recede, replaced by a new, hard-edged resolve. They were no longer just a company. They were an army, and their lord had just declared war.

The aftermath of Pia’s death was a heavy, oppressive shroud that fell over the manufactory. The usual hum of productive activity was replaced by a somber, stunned silence. The news had been carefully managed—a story was fabricated about a sudden, tragic illness—but the truth radiated outwards from the core team in waves of unspoken grief and tension. The workers sensed it, the change in the atmosphere, the dark cloud that now hung over their brilliant young lord and his lieutenants.

Lloyd had given his team a day to grieve, a day to process the brutal reality that had invaded their world of soap and comrce. He himself took no such respite. He locked himself in his study—the sa room that was now a tomb of his own failure—and began to work.

His grief was a cold, hard thing, a diamond of rage compressed in his chest. He did not allow it to manifest as tears or despair. Instead, he channeled it, funneling the raw, white-hot energy of his fury into cold, hard, ticulous planning. The Altamirans had sent him a ssage of terror. He would now begin crafting his reply.

He pulled out a fresh map of the continent, his eyes tracing the borders between the Kingdom of Bethelham and the sprawling, arrogant empire of Eldoria. His enemies were no longer a faceless consortium or a shadowy cult. They had a na: House Altamira. They had a ho. And that made them a target.

His mind, the mind of Major General KM Evan, began to move with a terrifying clarity. He was no longer thinking like a businessman or a lord. He was thinking like a deep-cover operative planning a campaign of asymtric warfare. The Altamirans believed they were safe, hidden behind their borders, their armies, and their layers of deniable assets. He would show them how wrong they were.

He began to draft a series of directives, his quill scratching a furious, silent rhythm on the parchnt.

Directive One: Asset Protection. The first and most critical priority was to protect his remaining people. The enemy had proven they could and would target his team. He tasked Ken with a complete overhaul of their personal security protocols. Tisha, i Jing, Jasmin, and the others would now have discreet, 24-hour surveillance. Their hos would be warded. Their travel routes would be varied. He was building a fortress of security around his inner circle, ensuring the enemy could not use the sa tactic twice.

Directive Two: Intelligence Escalation. The hunt for Jager and his network was now the single most important mission for Ken’s intelligence apparatus. Lloyd authorized unlimited resources for the task. He wanted every known Altamiran sympathizer in the capital identified. He wanted every suspected Devil Worshiper’s eting place mapped. He wanted a full workup on the loan shark who had ensnared Pia’s father. He was no longer just collecting information; he was building targeting packages.

Directive Three: Economic Warfare. i Jing would be tasked with accelerating their comrcial assault. Project Brine would be fast-tracked. The plan to dismantle the Salt Guild would be executed with ruthless efficiency. He would not just compete with Altamiran economic interests; he would seek to cripple them. He would use his growing wealth to fund proxy wars in the markets, to undermine their trade routes, to turn their own greed against them. He would make their support of his enemies a costly, painful mistake.

Directive Four: The Vow. This was the most personal directive, the one he wrote not as a general, but as a man bound by an oath to a dead girl. He began to outline a high-risk, deep-cover operation. The objective: the location and exfiltration of the Elara family from their prison deep within Eldoria. It was a mission that bordered on suicidal. It would require him to personally infiltrate a hostile nation, to operate alone, far from his resources and his power base. But it was a vow he had made, and he would see it through, or die trying.

He worked through the night, the fury in his soul fueling a cold, brilliant focus. He was a man possessed, a ghost already at war. The grief was there, a hard, aching knot in his chest, but it was a quiet grief. The rage was the louder, more imdiate presence. It was a clean, purifying fire that burned away all doubt, all hesitation.

Chapter : 680

Pia’s death was a tragedy. It was a wound that would likely never fully heal for his team. But for him, it had also been a clarification. It had stripped away the last of his illusions. He had hoped, perhaps, to win his war through innovation and comrce, to build a future so bright it would simply render the shadows irrelevant. He now knew how naive that was.

The shadows did not retreat from the light. They had to be dragged into it, kicking and screaming, and burned away.

The price of loyalty, he now understood, was a terrible one. Pia had paid it with her life. He looked down at the plans spread before him, at the intricate web of espionage, economic warfare, and personal vengeance he was weaving. He would honor her sacrifice. He would ensure that the price the Altamirans paid for their monstrous cruelty would be a thousand tis greater. They had taken one of his people. In return, he would take their entire world.

When Lloyd finally erged from his study the next morning, he was a changed man. The easy confidence, the occasional flicker of humor, the very warmth that had begun to thaw the icy relationship with his team—it was all gone. In its place was a quiet, unshakeable, and deeply unsettling gravity. His eyes, when he t the gazes of his lieutenants, were the eyes of a man who had looked into the abyss and had not flinched.

He gathered them in the sa room where Pia had died. The space had been cleaned and restored, but the mory of the event was a palpable stain on the air. He did not sit. He stood before them, a commander addressing his troops on the eve of a long and brutal campaign.

"Yesterday," he began, his voice calm and asured, "we suffered a grievous loss. We were reminded that our work is not a ga. We have powerful, ruthless enemies who will stop at nothing to see us fail. They believe that by murdering a single, frightened girl, they could terrorize us into submission. They believe they have broken our will."

He paused, his gaze moving from i Jing’s cold, furious face, to Tisha’s pale and trembling one, to Jasmin’s red-rimd, grief-stricken eyes.

"They are wrong," he stated, the words like chips of stone. "They have not broken us. They have forged us. They have taken a team of rchants, alchemists, and managers, and they have turned us into an army. And today, our war begins."

He laid out his new directives, not as proposals for discussion, but as commands to be executed. He outlined the new security protocols, the escalation of their intelligence gathering, the acceleration of their economic assault on the Salt Guild. He spoke with a clarity and authority that left no room for argunt. He was no longer their collaborative leader; he was their general, and he was leading them to war.

"Pia’s death will not be a tragedy," he declared, his voice ringing with a conviction that was almost hypnotic. "It will be a catalyst. It will be the fuel that drives us. Every bar of soap we sell, every crystal of salt we harvest, every gold coin we earn—it will be another bullet in the gun we are aiming at the heart of House Altamira. We will not just build a better future; we will burn their world to the ground and build our future on the ashes."

His words were brutal, unforgiving, but they were exactly what his shattered team needed to hear. He was offering them not comfort, but purpose. He was taking their grief, their fear, and their rage, and he was giving it a direction, a target.

He saw the shift in them as he spoke. Tisha’s trembling began to subside, replaced by a new, hard-edged resolve. i Jing’s fury coalesced into a sharp, predatory focus. Even Jasmin, lost in her sorrow, looked up, a flicker of her friend’s fighting spirit now igniting in her own eyes. They were no longer victims of a tragedy; they were soldiers who had just been given their marching orders.

The eting concluded not with sadness, but with a grim, shared determination. They left the study and returned to their work, moving with a new, quiet intensity. The manufactory began to hum again, but it was a different sound now. It was the sound of a war machine slowly, inexorably, grinding into motion.

Lloyd remained behind. When the room was empty, he allowed the mask of the commander to fall, and for a mont, the imnse weight of his own vow settled on him. He had promised them victory. He had promised them vengeance. But the path to that vengeance was long and fraught with peril.

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