The Celestial Emperor remained motionless for a few monts after Strax’s last reply, as if allowing each word to settle in the air before continuing. The hall remained silent, but it was no longer the rigid silence of the beginning of the audience. There was now a more refined tension, sustained by two strong wills studying each other without haste. The pale light filtering through the ceiling structures drew discreet lines on the dark floor, and even the air seed to circulate more slowly around them.
When he spoke again, his voice maintained the sa serene, firm tone, devoid of any need for artificial imposition. "There is a simpler alternative," he said, resting his arm on the side of the seat. "If you accept becoming a Monarch, we don’t need to asure our strength against each other. There will be no unnecessary conflicts, no pointless escalations, and everything that today seems like confrontation can be resolved through dialogue."
He inclined his head slightly, observing Strax’s reaction with genuine attention. "I have no interest in wasting resources fighting soone potentially valuable. Nor do I have any interest in seeing him continue killing my soldiers and occupying territories that belong to the order of this continent. There are better ways than repeating violence."
Scarlett chuckled briefly at the elegant way the proposal had been presented. Tiamat kept her arms crossed and raised an eyebrow, clearly unimpressed by the political framing of the situation. Ouroboros, on the other hand, observed the Emperor as if evaluating not only the content of his words, but what he had chosen to omit.
Strax did not respond imdiately. He took a few slow steps to the side, glancing quickly at the architecture of the hall before returning his gaze to the Emperor. His face showed no irritation, but there was a more distinct firmness in his posture when he finally spoke.
"I will repeat it one last ti because it seems you like to refra facts in here," he said. "I didn’t go around killing your soldiers and taking territories out of gratuitous ambition. I was attacked first. On every relevant occasion."
The sentence landed in the hall like a stone in still water. The Emperor didn’t interrupt him, and that was enough for Strax to continue.
"The Beastly Monarch attacked a city where I was. The One of the White Flas ca to settle everything by force. Soldiers surrounded before any honest negotiation. What happened afterward was a response. Retaliation. A direct consequence of baseless actions." He shrugged, as if summarizing sothing too simple to require lengthy discussion. "If soone advances violently and loses, it’s not my fault."
Tiamat smiled discreetly. Scarlett nodded, satisfied with the brutal clarity of the response. Ouroboros rely closed her eyes for a mont, as if internally confirming that they were both trapped in incompatible perspectives.
Strax continued before the Emperor could intervene. "I also have no interest in continental war, symbolic conquest, or that kind of historical theater that powerful n love to stage. I don’t need waving flags or chroniclers writing legends." His gaze hardened slightly. "I am rely accumulating power to complete my future plans."
This ti there was a perceptible shift in the Emperor’s interest. Not external, not theatrical, but real. He straightened slightly in his seat and his eyes beca even more attentive.
"Future plans," he repeated. "What plans?"
Strax let out a small sigh, as if the answer didn’t deserve much ceremony. "I have a war to settle with so people."
Scarlett smiled imdiately, amused by the simplicity of the phrase. Tiamat seed to approve. Ouroboros glanced at the ceiling for a second, as if she already knew enough about that story to know that the word "so" concealed much more than it seed.
The Emperor remained silent for a brief mont. Then he asked, in an even lower voice than before: "The gods?"
The entire hall seed to compress around that word.
Not because it had been said aloud, but because there were nas that altered atmospheres even in whispers. The man waiting near the entrance stiffened his shoulders. Scarlett’s smile faded for a mont. Tiamat slowly uncrossed her arms. Ouroboros turned his full attention to the center of the conversation.
Strax, however, rely nodded.
"Yes," he replied. "So it seems you know about their little dispute over the core of this planet."
The casual way he spoke about sothing so vast contrasted sharply with the weight of the subject. The Emperor showed no surprise, which in itself was revealing. Instead, he leaned back slightly and interlaced his fingers in front of him.
"I know enough," he said. "More than most people imagine. This world is not rely territory for mortal kings. There are ancient interests here, forces vying for control of sothing buried long before current civilizations. So call it essence. Others, source. Others, core." He paused briefly. "Different nas for the sa greed."
Strax watched him silently.
The Emperor continued. "And I think as you do. If these entities intend to use this continent as a chessboard, then capable n need to decide whether they will be pieces... or players."
Scarlett inclined her head, clearly interested. Tiamat let out a slight nasal sound of approval. Ouroboros remained motionless, but her attention was absolute.
"That is why," the Emperor concluded, "the best course of action would be to join forces."
The proposal hung in the air for only an instant.
Because Strax interrupted him before the echo even died.
"No."
The word ca out simple, clean, and definitive.
The Emperor didn’t react imdiately. He rely observed.
Strax took another step forward. "I don’t trust soone who asures usefulness based on titles and brute force."
Scarlett smiled slowly. Tiamat seed imdiately more awake. Ouroboros closed her eyes for a second, anticipating the inevitable clash.
Strax continued, without raising his voice. "Since I arrived here, everything revolves around the sa logic. Monarch. Hierarchy. Strategic value. Who serves, who obeys, who can be used, who threatens the structure." He tilted his head slightly. "You’re too intelligent not to realize that this rots any system over ti."
The Emperor held his gaze, silent.
"You offer partnership," said Strax. "But the foundation remains the sa. You want to fit everything into categories that keep your center intact. I have no interest in that."
Tiamat let out a small laugh. Scarlett crossed her arms, satisfied. Ouroboros watched them both as if witnessing the inevitable clash between two incompatible philosophies.
"Besides," Strax added, shrugging, "I’m better off alone."
The silence that followed was long enough to be felt by all.
There was no explosion of power. There was no threat. There were no advancing guards. The hall itself seed to await the response of the man seated in the center.
The Celestial Emperor then sighed.
It was a small gesture, almost too human for soone who until then had seed above common irritations. His fingers touched the side of the seat as he looked away for a brief mont, like soone who recognizes the difficulty of convincing an indomitable force.
"You are consistently difficult," he said finally.
Scarlett chuckled softly. "That was kind."
Strax made no comnt.
The Emperor looked back at him. "Understand sothing. I didn’t offer you a position out of institutional vanity. I offered it because there are storms coming that are bigger than disputes between cities, monarchs, or personal pride. If you truly intend to confront gods, you will need more than individual power."
"Perhaps," Strax replied.
"Perhaps?" the Emperor repeated.
"Perhaps I need allies. But allies don’t own each other."
The Emperor nodded slowly. "I agree."
"Then stop trying to appoint ."
The answer elicited a hearty laugh from Tiamat this ti. Scarlett had to suppress her own. Ouroboros rely brought a hand to her face for a mont.
Curiously, the Emperor also seed amused, albeit minimally. A slight trace of a smile appeared and disappeared almost instantly.
"You interpret titles as chains," he said.
"Because they usually are."
"Not always."
"Almost always is enough."
The dialogue continued like blades exchanged slowly. Neither yielded, but both showed enough respect to continue.
After a few seconds, the Emperor spoke again. "Very well. You will not be Monarch."
Scarlett raised an eyebrow. Tiamat uncrossed her arms. Ouroboros opened his eyes more attentively.
"But that doesn’t solve the problem," he continued. "You occupy empty territories, alter trade routes, inspire opportunists, frighten nobles, and attract ancient eyes. Even without a title, you already affect the order."
Strax nodded. "I imagine."
"Then I need to know," said the Emperor. "Do you intend to continue expanding?"
Strax thought for a mont.
"I intend to continue doing whatever is necessary."
"Vague answer."
"Broad question."
Scarlett smiled with imdiate approval.
The Emperor accepted the exchange without irritation. "If I leave you in peace, will you leave my borders in peace?"
Strax answered with brutal honesty. "If your borders leave in peace, probably."
"Probably?"
"It depends on who is hiding armies behind them."
Tiamat let out a satisfied sound. Ouroboros shook her head in silent resignation.
The Emperor leaned back again. "You turn any negotiation into unstable ground."
"Only for those who negotiate in bad faith."
There was another pause.
Then the Emperor spoke in a calr tone than before. "Very well, Strax. I will not insist on the title. I will not demand an oath. I will not ask for submission."
Scarlett leaned slightly forward. Tiamat narrowed her eyes. Ouroboros remained motionless.
"But I ask one thing."
Strax waited.
"When the war against the gods truly begins... do not appear as an enemy of this continent."
The entire hall seed to hold its breath.
Strax observed the man for a few seconds that were far too long to be comfortable. Then he answered simply.
"That depends more on you than on ."
The Emperor let out another sigh, smaller this ti.
"I figured."
Scarlett laughed. Tiamat smiled slightly. Ouroboros finally relaxed his shoulders.
The audience hadn’t officially ended, but sothing essential had been decided. Neither would bow to the other. Neither would leave as a subordinate or a clear victor. Still, both had recognized the other’s true weight.
And, in that kind of world, that was worth more than treaties.
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