SSS Ranked Merchant: Rebuilding a Broken Kingdom With Unlimited Wealth Chapter 34: First Lesson in Servitude
The bandits thought they had escaped the worst of it.
Sure, they were shackled to servitude, but what was a little hard labor compared to the cold steel of an executioner’s blade? A few sore muscles? A little sweat? That was a bargain. Maybe—just maybe—this girl wasn’t as ruthless as she seed.
They were wrong.
The mont they swore fealty, the illusion shattered. Lyrasia didn’t simply command them—she owned them. The rchant-warrior they had underestimated morphed into sothing far more insidious:
A taskmaster with an iron will and a cruelly efficient mind.
"First rule," Lyrasia announced, her voice cutting through the frigid night air like the edge of a whetted dagger. "You do what I say. When I say it. Exactly as I say it. No questions. No complaints."
Her lips curled into a deceptively sweet smile. "Because if you ss up, I will make sure you regret it."
The bandits exchanged uneasy glances, their bravado peeling away like flaking rust.
"Second rule," she continued, stepping forward, her shadow stretching long beneath the flickering torchlight. "Your past? Doesn’t matter. Whatever you were before—thieves, raiders, murderers—ans nothing now. In my village, you start at the bottom. You earn your place."
She tilted her head, the warmth draining from her gaze like the last embers of a dying fire.
"If I catch you stealing, slacking, or scheming—"
The air grew heavy.
Her voice, once smooth and taunting, dropped into sothing dark and final.
"I will personally break your fingers one by one. And then? I’ll make you work twice as hard."
A shudder passed through the group. Their bravado snapped like a brittle twig.
A burly man with a jagged scar carved over his eye scoffed, forcing a smirk. "Tch. What are you gonna do? Make us sweep the streets?"
Lyrasia’s grin was all teeth. "Oh no. That’s for the good boys."
She turned her gaze toward the villagers—huddled together, watching, waiting, their expressions flickering between cautious hope and well-earned skepticism.
"I need volunteers," she said, her tone light, almost playful. "Who here has had sothing stolen by these fine gentlen?"
A hush.
Then—one by one—hands shot into the air.
A sea of raised fists.
Lyrasia clapped her hands together, eyes sparkling. "Wonderful! Now, let’s play a ga.
She pivoted back toward the bandits, who had stiffened under the weight of the villagers’ collective glare.
"Each of you," she purred, "will be personally responsible for the people you’ve wronged. You will return what you took—or you will work until your debt is repaid."
A younger bandit, barely out of his teens, swallowed hard. "A-And if we refuse?"
Lyrasia smiled.
And stomped her foot.
The ground beneath them shuddered, cracks splintering outward from the point of impact. A pulse of raw, unbridled power rippled through the air—not an attack, but a warning. A reminder that she could crush them if she so desired.
The bandits scrambled to their feet, their earlier bravado lting away like frost beneath the morning sun.
Lyrasia smoothed down her sleeves. "That’s what I thought."
Her reign started not with words, but with consequences.
So bandits were dragged to the shattered remains of hos, forced to rebuild the very walls they had torn down. Others scrubbed filth from the village square—the sa ground they had once desecrated with blood and boot prints.
And for the worst offenders?
"Ohhh, you guys are gonna love this," Lyrasia chirped, clasping her hands together.
They were forced to kneel in the heart of the village, their hands bound behind their backs, their faces shoved into the cold, unforgiving dirt.
"You like robbing people in the dark?" she mused, pacing before them, her footsteps slow and deliberate. "Then let’s see how you handle a little public humiliation."
She turned to the villagers, spreading her arms wide.
"Ladies and gentlen! I present to you tonight’s entertainnt."
A hesitant murmur rippled through the crowd.
Lyrasia sighed, placing a hand over her heart in mock disappointnt. "Co on. Who here wants to—oh, I don’t know—throw rotten vegetables at the n who stole from you?"
A pause.
Then—
A woman stepped forward. Then another. Then an entire crowd, grinning as they gathered whatever they could find.
Fruits left to rot in the sun. Moldy potatoes. Fish so rancid they curled in on themselves.
The first splatter of a tomato. A startled grunt. Then another.
And then—
Laughter.
For the first ti in years, the villagers laughed.
Lyrasia stood back, watching the once-feared bandits cower beneath a storm of thrown refuse, their dignity stripped away as easily as they had once stripped this village of its peace.
She humd in satisfaction.
"Ah," she sighed, inhaling deeply. "Justice is so... refreshing, don’t you think?"
By the ti dawn broke, the bandits were exhausted, humiliated, and utterly broken.
Lyrasia stood before them, arms crossed, her silhouette outlined against the rising sun.
"Let’s make one thing clear," she said softly, her voice carrying the weight of an undeniable truth.
She stepped forward, crouching until she was eye-level with their slumped forms.
"I am not your friend. I am not your savior. I am your owner."
She tilted her head.
"You breathe because I allow it. You eat because I permit it."
She tapped her chin in mock thought. "Speaking of food... what should I do about your rations?"
The bandits stiffened.
Lyrasia let the silence stretch, savoring the mont. Then, finally, she smirked.
"I’ll be generous," she said. "Half portions. Until you prove yourselves useful."
She rose, dusting off her skirt.
"Now, get back to work." Her tone sharpened into sothing lethal.
"Or starve."
A week passed.
And with it—change.
Where there had once been ruin and decay, there was now movent and purpose.
The bandits—now reluctant laborers—rebuilt fences, reinforced hos, and patrolled the village’s borders.
And the villagers?
They thrived.
For the first ti in years, they slept without fear.
Perched atop a rooftop, Lyrasia stretched out her arms, exhaling slowly.
Sothing unfamiliar settled in her chest. A quiet, creeping satisfaction.
Power.
Not just the kind that ca with wealth. Not just the kind that ca with brute force.
Real power.
The kind that shaped fate itself.
A slow, satisfied smile curled across her lips.
As the sun clawed its way up the horizon, the stench of rotten vegetables and sweat clung to the village square like an unwanted guest. The bandits—battered, humiliated, and thoroughly broken—moved sluggishly, their limbs sore from a night of punishnt.
Lyrasia, perched on an overturned crate, stretched lazily, watching her new workforce shuffle about. They had spirit, she’d give them that. It took a special kind of stubbornness to still stand after everything she’d put them through.
She yawned. "Alright, let’s wrap this up. I’m feeling generous."
The bandits flinched at the word. They were learning.
"Ti for the last part of your punishnt," she continued, hopping down. "Paynt."
They froze.
Lyrasia grinned. "Oh, don’t look so scared. I’m not taking your teeth or anything—unless you want to volunteer?"
They shook their heads rapidly.
"Sha." She sighed dramatically. "Instead, you’re going to pay for the damage you caused. Gold, valuable—whatever you’ve got."
A murmur rippled through the group.
One by one, the bandits emptied their pockets, tossing out stolen coins, rings, and even a few daggers. A pitiful offering, but it would do.
Then, the scarred brute—the sa one who scoffed at her the night before—stepped forward. His lip curled in sothing between defiance and resignation as he reached into his tattered coat and pulled out...
A pendant.
At first glance, it was nothing special. Just an old piece of jewelry, its silver chain tangled, the gemstone at its center a dull, sickly green.
Lyrasia plucked it from his palm without hesitation. "How generous," she teased. "Giving a trinket instead of real money."
The bandit stiffened. "It’s worth more than you think."
"Oh?" She twirled the pendant between her fingers, unimpressed.
After thoroughly robbing her new employees—er, bandits—of anything remotely valuable, Lyrasia whistled her way back ho, arms full of loot. Gold trinkets, rings, a few battered coins, and so shiny-looking objects she had no idea how to appraise. She even snatched a particularly ominous-looking dagger because why not? It glowed—which obviously ant it was worth sothing.
As she reached her doorstep, she took a deep breath.
Ti to switch modes.
Gone was the ruthless taskmaster. In her place stood an innocent, sweet little sister returning from a totally uneventful night of absolutely not enslaving criminals.
She even practiced her ’helpless, adorable child’ look before stepping inside.
Then she saw her big sister.
Ruan was seated at the table, arms crossed, expression blank. The kind of blank that wasn’t really blank at all—it was the calm before the storm.
Lyrasia froze.
Her hands tightened around her stolen loot.
Ruan’s gaze dropped to the suspiciously jingling sack in Lyrasia’s arms.
Then back to Lyrasia.
Then back to the jingling sack.
"...So," Ruan said, voice dangerously smooth, "where exactly did you go?"
Lyrasia panicked.
"Would you believe if I said... a charity event?"
Ruan’s stare remained unchanged.
Lyrasia cleared her throat. "A very exclusive one. For underprivileged... war criminals."
Silence.
Ruan slowly raised a single eyebrow.
Lyrasia tried to smile. "They, uh, generously donated!"
A beat of silence. Then—
"Lyrasia."
Oh, shit.
Lyrasia bolted.
Ruan moved faster.
The last thing Lyrasia saw before getting tackled was her sister’s foot swinging toward her like divine retribution itself.
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