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"You propose to contain ?"

The question hung in the air, deceptively simple yet layered with harmonics that resonated through the chamber's ancient stonework. Klaus's crystalline eyes fixed on the Stone Monarch with unnerving stillness.

"rely standard protocol," the Stone Monarch replied, though sothing in his voice betrayed uncertainty that hadn't been present monts before. "A formality to ensure productive discourse."

"A formality," Klaus echoed, each syllable carrying multiple tones that caused the chamber's glass to vibrate subtly. "Interesting."

He remained motionless on the central dais, yet sohow his presence seed to expand, filling the imperial chamber with pressure that made breathing increasingly difficult for those present. The monarchs shifted uncomfortably in their thrones, political calculation temporarily overwheld by primal instinct.

"Perhaps we should reconsider—" the Lightning Queen began.

"No," the Stone Monarch interrupted, his decades of absolute authority rendering him less susceptible to the intimidation affecting his peers. "The Council cannot be held hostage by a single transford being, regardless of his connections. The suppression fields are non-harmful—rely neutralizing external influence."

He gestured to guards positioned at the chamber's periter. "Implent containnt protocol seven. Authorization: Stone Sovereign."

The guards hesitated, looking toward Roman for confirmation. When the Ice Monarch remained silent, frost patterns expanding across his throne's armrests, they reluctantly moved to activation panels concealed within the chamber's wall decorations.

"You misunderstand," Klaus said quietly, his attention still fixed on the Stone Monarch. "My question was not an objection. It was... curiosity."

As the guards pressed their palms against the activation panels, ancient chanisms humd to life beneath the chamber floor. Circular patterns illuminated in the stonework surrounding the central dais, runes of suppression dating back to the Concordat that had established the Council centuries earlier.

Energy surged upward, forming a do of iridescent power designed to neutralize magical influence within its circumference. For generations, this system had contained beings of extraordinary ability when Council security demanded it—a failsafe for maintaining balance between sovereign powers.

The mont the containnt field touched Klaus, it shattered.

Not gradually, not with struggling resistance, but imdiately—like glass striking stone. The carefully calibrated energy patterns disintegrated into fragnts that dissolved before touching the floor, the ancient chanisms beneath the chamber going silent all at once.

Without moving, without visible effort, Klaus had neutralized a containnt system designed by the continent's most powerful mages over centuries of refinent.

"Fascinating," he remarked, crystalline eyes studying the fading remnants of the field with academic interest. "Your suppression technology relies on conventional harmonic principles. Effective against standard energy signatures, I imagine."

The Stone Monarch's weathered face darkened with fury. "You dare?" he thundered, the floor beneath him cracking as his power manifested physically. "I have tolerated enough insolence."

The atmosphere in the chamber grew heavy as the Stone Monarch released his full aura—a crushing weight of primordial power that had shaped mountains and carved valleys. The very air seed to thicken, pressing down on all present with the inexorable force of tectonic plates. Lesser beings would have been flattened instantly by such raw power.

The other monarchs tensed, several bracing themselves against their thrones. Even they, sovereign rulers with extraordinary capabilities, felt the pressure of the Stone Monarch's unleashed aura.

Only Klaus appeared unaffected. He stood as before, perfectly still, studying the manifestation of power with the detached interest of a scholar observing a natural phenonon.

"Is this ant to impress ?" he asked, his voice cutting through the oppressive aura without effort.

The Stone Monarch's expression contorted with rage and disbelief. "Impossible," he muttered. "No being can stand unaffected by my full manifestation."

"Perhaps you're not trying hard enough," Klaus suggested, the faintest smile touching his perfect features.

The insult—delivered with such casual indifference—broke the last of the Stone Monarch's restraint. With a roar that shook the chamber's foundations, he released the full asure of his power, centuries of accumulated might crashing down upon the central dais like a mountain collapsing.

The Lightning Queen rose in alarm. "Varroth, you risk destroying the chamber itself!"

Her warning ca too late. The Stone Monarch's aura expanded to its maximum extent, creating a localized gravitational field that cracked the floor and caused smaller objects throughout the chamber to implode under the pressure.

Klaus remained unmoved, unaffected, unbothered.

"My turn," announced the Fla King, rising from his throne of volcanic glass. "Perhaps heat succeeds where pressure fails."

Fire erupted around him, not the mundane flas of ordinary combustion but the primordial inferno that had forged the world itself. His aura manifested as waves of scorching heat that lted the very air, creating a shimring distortion that spread throughout the chamber.

"You compound foolishness with more foolishness," the Wind Monarch cautioned, raising his voice above the roar of flas. "This is not the place for such displays."

The Fla King paid no heed, his crown of living fire expanding into a halo of intense brilliance. "Join , Varroth," he called to the Stone Monarch. "Let us show this transford child the true aning of sovereign power."

The two monarchs, normally careful rivals within the delicate balance of continental politics, united their auras in unprecedented cooperation. Fire and stone, heat and pressure—fundantal forces combining in a display of power that threatened to overwhelm the ancient chamber's protective enchantnts.

The other monarchs retreated to the edges of the room, even their extraordinary capabilities insufficient protection against such raw manifestation of primordial energy. Only Roman and the Beast Emperor remained unmoved, though frost patterns had expanded across the entire Ice Throne, and the Beast Emperor's golden eyes glead with unusual intensity.

At the center of this maelstrom of power stood Klaus, still examining the phenonon with the sa detached interest. His white hair didn't stir in the heat vortex; his perfect skin showed no response to pressure that would have crushed diamond to dust.

A sound like distant crystalline chis filled the chamber—Klaus's laughter, beautiful yet alien, carrying harmonics that seed to resonate with the fundantal structure of reality itself.

"Like watching children throw pebbles at the moon," he remarked, his voice carrying perfectly through the catastrophic noise of the combined auras.

With a gesture so subtle it was nearly imperceptible, Klaus dispelled both auras simultaneously. The pressure vanished; the heat dissipated. The two monarchs staggered backward as if physically struck, their expressions shifting from rage to the first glimrs of genuine fear.

"Impossible," the Fla King whispered, his crown dimming to a re flicker of its forr glory. "No being could..."

"Your understanding of possibility is constrained by experience," Klaus observed, his tone conversational despite the tension saturating the chamber. "A limitation I do not share."

The silence that followed carried more weight than the combined auras had monts before. The monarchs looked at one another, centuries of political rivalry temporarily superseded by a more fundantal concern: they stood in the presence of sothing beyond their comprehension.

"Perhaps," the tal Empress suggested, her ageless voice breaking the tense silence, "we might return to the intended purpose of this assembly."

Klaus inclined his head slightly in her direction—a gesture that might have been mistaken for deference if not for the absolute confidence radiating from his transford being.

"A reasonable suggestion," he agreed, the harmonics in his voice receding slightly. "Let us continue our discussion of Northwatch."

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