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The city of Byzeth erupted into chaos the mont Aric's army marched through its gates. It had been only a whisper before, rumors in the dark—Aszer's failed rebellion.

But now, as the citizens of Byzeth watched a Valerian prince parade through their streets with the severed head of their king dangling from a pole, that whisper beca a roar.

Aric could feel the tension mounting in the air, intoxicating like the scent of blood before battle. The people's faces twisted with uncertainty, fear, and desperation.

What did this an for their kingdom? For their lives?

The streets teed with bodies as word of Aric's arrival spread like wildfire. People poured out of their hos, abandoning their shops and stalls, joining the swelling crowd that trailed behind the army.

So walked in silence, their faces ashen, while others whispered to one another in hushed tones, trying to make sense of the catastrophe that had befallen them.

Aric's na passed from mouth to mouth, growing louder, becoming a chant, a song of dread.

The capital was not ready for him. It was never ready.

By the ti they reached the towering gates of the castle, a massive crowd had gathered behind them. The peasants stood shoulder to shoulder with traders, nobles, and soldiers alike.

Aric scanned the faces in the throng, catching glimpses of the counciln who had served Aszer, the very sa n who had stood by the king's side during his rebellion.

Their faces were masks of barely contained rage, eyes burning with hatred and betrayal as they saw their king's head swinging grotesquely with each movent of the pole.

But they dared not speak up, not here, not now.

Aric dismounted from his horse slowly, his movents deliberate, as though he were already king. His armor clinked softly in the stillness that settled over the crowd as his feet touched the ground.

The weight of every eye was on him, and he carried it with ease. He stepped forward, letting the air of authority wrap itself around him like a cloak.

"Summon the nobles," Aric commanded, his voice steady and cold. "And bring the mbers of Aszer's council before at once."

His words rippled through the castle guards, who scattered to carry out his orders without hesitation.

No one questioned him. Not one soul.

The minutes dragged on like the slow death of a man, but eventually, they ca. One by one, the nobles, the council mbers, and the remaining court filed into the castle front.

So still wore the insignia of Byzeth's power—the marks of privilege, wealth, and old bloodlines—while others had stripped themselves of any indication of their ties to the fallen king.

They stood in two distinct lines before Aric, so trembling, so defiant, but all under the shadow of the Valerian prince.

Among them were relatives of the deceased king—Aszer's sister, his cousins, in-laws. Their faces twisted with grief as they beheld the king's head swaying in the air.

It hung like a morbid trophy of conquest, a grim reminder of the consequences of treachery. So broke into sobs, cries of despair echoing in the vaulted chamber, but Aric's expression remained impassive, as though the wails of the mourning were nothing more than the wind against stone.

He stepped forward, standing tall in front of the assembled nobility, and his eyes swept across them with cold, calculated precision.

He took his ti, savoring the mont. This was his kingdom now. He had no intention of letting them forget it.

"Your king," Aric began, his voice carrying through the crowd, low and steady, "plotted rebellion against Valeria. He sought to throw off the yoke of his empire, to seize more power, more wealth."

His eyes locked onto the faces of the council mbers.

"Tell , what did he... you all seek?"

The question lingered in the air like the scent of death.

One of the nobles, a man with thin, greying hair, stepped forward hesitantly, his voice barely above a whisper.

"Now, we… seek to keep our lives."

Aric's lips curled into a smile that never reached his eyes.

"Wise words. You chose survival over loyalty to a dood cause. And for that, I offer you a choice. Swear loyalty to , here and now, and you might live."

The counciln, shaken and desperate, bowed swiftly, their heads dipping so low it was as if they tried to bury themselves in the ground.

"We swear our loyalty, Prince Aric," they muttered, their voices trembling with the weight of fear.

Aric inclined his head slightly.

"Good. You have made a wise decision."

He turned his attention from the groveling council to the crowd beyond the castle front, his gaze sweeping over the peasants and traders, the common folk who had gathered to witness the fall of a kingdom.

They stood in the front courtyard, pressed against one another, watching with wide eyes.

The tension thickening like a dam ready to break. His expression, cold and controlled, carried finality.

His voice, though low at first, began to rise, resonating through the stone walls, reaching the ears of everyone gathered.

"Rebellion," he began, "is a word that stirs the hearts of n. It carries with it a promise—of freedom, of power, of a future free from the shackles of oppression. It whispers to the weak that they can rise, that they can overthrow those above them, that they can build sothing greater."

His eyes drifted over the faces of the crowd, taking in the mixed expressions—so fearful, others hopeful, all hanging on his every word.

"But the truth of rebellion," he continued, his voice growing firr, "is far more cruel. For rebellion does not birth freedom—it breeds chaos. It does not lead to power—it invites ruin. It does not sow a brighter future—it sets fire to the present until nothing remains but ash and bone."

So in the crowd shifted uncomfortably; others stood frozen, as if afraid to move, afraid to breathe.

"Your king, Aszer," Aric said, his tone icy, "believed that rebellion would bring him greatness. He convinced himself, and many of you, that by breaking the chains of Valeria, he could beco a ruler in his own right, that he could carve out an empire worthy of his ambition. But what did it bring him? What did it bring all of you?"

He raised a hand, gesturing to the severed head of King Aszer, still swaying from the pole beside him. The grueso sight drew murmurs from the crowd, so turning their eyes away in horror.

"It brought him nothing but a headless corpse," Aric stated plainly, the cold truth cutting through the air.

"Rebellion does not make a man stronger—it makes him desperate. See your fellow countryn—lost, confused, wondering what future awaits them. Is this what rebellion has given you?"

A wave of silence followed, held by realization.

Aric's words gnawed at the fragile hopes of those who had once believed in the rebellion, and now they were left staring into the void of its aftermath.

"No," Aric pressed on, his voice darkening with conviction, "rebellion gives nothing but suffering. It brings the sword, the fla, the endless bloodshed. Your king sought to raise a banner of freedom, but what he raised was a funeral pyre for all of you."

He took a step forward, his gaze locking with the nobles, the peasants, the soldiers—none were spared the intensity of his stare.

His presence was suffocating, commanding.

There would be no mistaking his ssage.

"Know this, and understand it," he said, his voice carrying the audacity of a king, "Rebellion is not strength. Rebellion is not courage. Rebellion is weakness, cloaked in the false promise of hope. It is the final act of the desperate, of those too blind to see the inevitable."

Aric walked slowly to the edge of the platform where the nobles stood and raised his voice, his tone hardening as it reached the masses.

"I will tell you what rebellion truly brings, it is the sa thing it will bring to this council mbers."

He let the silence stretch for a mont, letting the implications of his words settle in the hearts of those before him.

The crowd leaned in, as though the air had beco too thick to breathe, anticipation clawing at their throats.

"Death."

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