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Now reading: Chapter 726 from The Guardian gods, a Fantasy novel by EmmanuelOnyechesi.

From the gathered assembly, fourteen figures slowly moved to the center of the island. They ca from every corner of the godling hierarchy apeling, werewolves, rfolk, harpies, and a few others whose presence alone shifted the air. Though they represented different peoples, their steps were in harmony.

When they stopped, the offenders stood shoulder to shoulder, forming a line that stretched across the clearing. One of the apeling, the tallest among them, raised his voice so all could hear.

"We have co forward," he began, "not to boast, nor to seek pity. But to make things easier for our leader and to show the proper respect to Xerosis. Her dignity must remain intact, above all else."

A harpy stepped forward next, wings folding neatly behind her. "We trust our leader fully. They have prepared defenders for us, to show we are not abandoned. We have no fear in our hearts, the weight of our actions rests with us, and we bear it willingly."

A rfolk spoke, voice deep and resonant. "Let it be known, we do not regret what was done. Every elent stirred, every disaster brought forth, it was necessary. And if the opportunity arises again, we would act without hesitation."

A werewolf growled low, emphasizing his words. "We are accountable only to ourselves, our leader, and the principles we uphold. The unity of our people is not diminished by this distinction. But we will not allow misunderstanding to obscure the truth."

The apeling gestured to the others. "Fourteen of us. The ones who acted, the ones who shaped what occurred. We claim it fully, and we accept any consequence that cos with it. Let this clarity serve as a sign of our respect and discipline."

A hush fell over the island as the assembly absorbed the words, a shown of respect and recognition of the offenders resolve.

One of the harpies let out a sharp, approving cry. "It pleases to see such conviction. None of you waver, none of you hide. That is the mark of true strength."

The apeling inclined his head. "Strength, yes, but also trust. Trust in our leader, in Xerosis, and in one another. We acted because it was necessary, and we stand today because our people stood with us. That is all we owe anyone."

The fourteen offenders straightened, voices unified as they spoke their final affirmation:

"We do not regret. We do not hesitate. We act with clarity, with purpose, and with respect. Our deeds are ours alone to bear, but the dignity of Xerosis and the unity of our people cos first."

Zephyr and the others were taken aback when letters arrived bearing the seals of their own people who still were on their journey back. The responses ca at the right ti. Whatever uncertainty had lingered was swept away by the contents of those letters.

The matter, it seed, had resolved itself in the best way possible.

The true offenders had stepped forward.

They did not attempt to hide behind interdiaries or denials. Instead, they made their presence known openly, declaring their actions and standing by them with a defiance that left little room for reinterpretation. Their appearance shifted the entire weight of the case, drawing a clear line between the accused and the innocent.

With no ti to waste, legal proceedings were set in motion. Lawyers were swiftly assigned to each godling, advocates well-versed not only in mortal law but in the intricate, often rciless precedents of Xerosis’s court. Communication was established almost imdiately. Across great distances, godlings and their legal representatives conferred, dissecting testimonies, reviewing evidence, and determining which argunts could withstand the scrutiny of a court that answered to no single moral frawork.

Xerosis’s court was infamous for its unpredictability. Its judgnts were not bound by compassion nor restrained by tradition. Punishnt could range from reparations to eternal binding and no sentence was ever truly revealed until the final verdict was spoken aloud before all parties.

The outco would be decided only after every voice had been heard, every account weighed, and every contradiction laid bare.

Amid this growing tension, Erik received his own summons.

He was not nad as an accused. No charges had been brought against him, nor was he listed among the offenders. Yet the petition for justice had been filed by his people. Their suffering, their grievances, and their testimonies ford the backbone of the case itself.

More troubling still was the fact that both sides, the godlings and the humans had ntioned Erik repeatedly in their reports. Both parties seem to bla him for all that was takin place.

Whether intentionally or not, Erik stood at the heart of the dispute.

It was only right, then, that he appear before the court, not to defend against an accusation, but to speak for himself.

Since every victim hailed from the Western Continent and it was its people who formally called for justice, it was only fitting that the trial be held on Western soil. To do otherwise would have been seen as another act of dismissal, another decision made about them rather than by them.

The nobles who had taken the victims under their protection spared no expense in preparation. Vast open-air courthouses were erected specifically for the trial, structures of stone and steel designed not only to host proceedings, but to be seen by all. They were places of visibility and declaration, where judgnt would be rendered beneath the open sky, witnessed by gods and mortals alike.

Among all the kingdoms of the continent, it was the Sun Kingdom, the current largest, and most militarily formidable that made its position unmistakably clear.

They formally swore to the protection of the victims, not only for the duration of the trial, but for the uncertain days that would follow. Their proclamation was firm and unambiguous: the godlings were no longer to be regarded as nobles in the Sun Kingdom’s eyes.

Whatever reverence or privilege they once held had been forfeited. Trust, broken so violently, could not be restored by titles or blood alone especially when there remained the risk that the godlings might lash out again.

This declaration sent ripples across the continent.

Alongside it ca a phrase that began as a rallying cry and soon grew into sothing far larger:

"For humanity."

It appeared on banners, was whispered in markets, and spoken aloud in courts and councils. As the trial date drew closer, the slogan gained montum, not rely as an accusation against the godlings, but as a statent of unity among mortals who had long lived beneath beings they were expected to revere without question.

Far from the Western Continent, the godlings had all returned to their respective domains.

Sha clung to them like a shadow.

The journey ho forced them to confront the weight of their actions in a way distance and authority never could. The looks they received from their people, the unspoken questionse, ach served as a reminder that they had crossed a line that could not easily be erased.

They had disobeyed a direct order from their leaders.

No matter how justified they believed their actions to be, no matter the reasoning or emotions that drove them, the fact remained unchanged.

Zephyr, alongside the other godling leaders, had addressed their people with unusual severity before all this began. They made it clear that no further action would be tolerated. The matter was to be kept as far from their people as possible, so that their people would not be dragged into a growing storm of resentnt and bla.

Yet the mont they were beyond their leader’s sight, so of them did precisely what they had been told not to do.

And that spark beca a fuse.

Humans seized upon it without hesitation. Fingers were pointed, accusations appeared, and what little doubt remained about the godlings intentions began to rot away. To the public eye, it was no longer a matter of isolated offenders or poor judgnt. It was proof, proof that godlings could not be trusted to restrain themselves, even when commanded by their own.

Their actions did more than worsen public opinion. They placed their own people and their relationship with the Ascended Gods into an impossible position.

Xerosis was forced into a role she had hoped never to occupy. She was now expected to judge her own.

The other Ascended Gods, Flowua, Tide, even Ikem made no effort to hide their displeasure. This was not the direction they wanted events to take.

So frowned upon the precedent such a trial would set. Others worried about the long-term fracture it could create between divinity and worshippers. None of them liked the growing implication that even gods could be held publicly accountable.

But of them all, it was Xerosis who felt the weight most keenly.

From the very mont of her ascension, it had been made clear that her divinity would be... inconvenient. Her domain was not comfort, nor conquest, nor balance, it was judgnt. Her power placed her in direct opposition to complacency, even among the divine.

Conflict with the other gods had never been a question of if, only when.

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