The great hall felt different to Margret as she entered for the second day of proceedings. The marble pillars still stretched toward their vaulted heights, the gold veins still caught the morning light, but now she saw them for what they truly were—a stage.
Once more, she took her seat among the elven delegation, the gossar robes settling around her. Yesterday, she had fidgeted with the unfamiliar fabric. Today, her hands remained still, folded in her lap. All tension had left her with the uncertainty of the future.
The Empire will win.
The words echoed in her thoughts as she watched the delegations file in. The Empire's representatives moved with the sa military precision, but now she noticed their subtle confidence for what it was: Certainty.
Otto Geistreich's shoulders sat relaxed beneath his formal robes. The four Elders chatted quietly among themselves, their postures speaking of n and won attending to formality rather than crisis.
And Azra von Hohenheim—Margret's eyes tracked him as he took his seat. Yesterday, she had seen polish and calculated charm. Today, she recognized the predator's patience in his movents, the way his gaze swept the room, cataloguing every detail while maintaining that pleasant, diplomatic smile.
The Alliance representatives arrived in a similar fashion to the day before. The Storm Exarch moved with the asured calm of gathering clouds, the Light Exarch of Equinox held herself with rigid control, and Aurelia Thorsten glided between them like a pale specter. But now that Margret knew what to look for, she saw the subtle signs: the way none of the Exarchs quite t the eyes of the elven or dwarven delegations, the careful distance they maintained.
"Unbelievable," Margret murmured, the realization striking her like cold water.
"What was that?" Lyriel asked softly beside her.
"Nothing," Margret replied, but her gaze remained fixed on the Alliance delegation. She had not been told how the talks from the day before had ended, but judging by the apparent distance, it was clear they had not reached an accord. She hoped this didn’t an what she feared it might.
Soon after, Midas entered with his three guardians, taking his position at the head of the assembly. The childish form of Sheol Veylor had already claid the isolated chair, grey eyes bright with what might have been amusent. Today, the King of the Dead had brought a different book, one she recognized from her lord’s study. And not for the first ti, Margret asked herself what this formidable being was doing here, observing these aningless proceedings.
"We reconvene to address the matter of Exarch deploynt," Midas began, his voice carrying that sa neutral weight. "The positions were made clear yesterday. I trust the night has brought... clarity."
The word hung in the air like a challenge. Margret watched as the Exarchs remained still, seemingly no longer in the mood to argue. Instead, it was a younger Korrovan diplomat who rose—soone Margret vaguely recognized from yesterday's proceedings.
"We have considered the Empire's argunts," the diplomat said, his voice carrying carefully rehearsed notes. "We maintain concerns about the precedent of Exarch deploynt."
"Yet the legal frawork remains clear," Azra von Hohenheim replied smoothly. "The Accord's language is unambiguous in its scope."
And there it was: the crux that her lord had identified. The subordinates danced around the point while their masters sat in regal silence. The Accord of Limitation applied only to its signatories. The elves had never signed.
Since the beginning, the Alliance had never challenged that assertion. Was it because they couldn’t? She had thought so, once, but now she saw behind that facade. The Alliance didn’t want to escalate the war. At least, not over a few dead elves.
"Perhaps," another Alliance representative interjected, "the empire should at least state their position on the nature of their plans? Will Exarchs’ deploynts stay defensive?"
Margret's attention sharpened. The Alliance wasn't even trying to win anymore. They were fishing for information, pressing for commitnts that might benefit them later. She glanced at Lady Goldleaf, noting how the Matriarch's eyes had narrowed almost imperceptibly.
Azra von Hohenheim leaned forward slightly, his reasonable smile never wavering. "The Empire remains committed to continental stability. We seek unity, not destruction."
"Through the deploynt of your most destructive assets?" the Alliance diplomat pressed.
"Through the proportionate defense of our forces," Azra countered smoothly. "But as we've established, this is a matter of interpretation best resolved through expanded agreents."
"The elven position?" one of the Alliance diplomats prompted, turning toward their delegation.
Lady Goldleaf remained silent for a long mont, forcing the subordinate to wait. When she finally spoke, her words were asured. "We seek justice for our slaughtered kin."
"By what ans?" the diplomat pressed, showing more boldness than wisdom.
"That be our own business," Lord Stoneforge rumbled before Goldleaf could answer. "As it always has been."
Margret saw it then, the trap her lord had described snapping into focus. The Alliance wanted the elves and dwarves to demand action, to force escalation that the human powers could then reluctantly support. But more than that, they wanted commitnt. They wanted the non-human races to finally, officially, choose a side.
"Surely," another Alliance representative tried, "the continental community must stand together—"
"Must we?" Lady Goldleaf's tone remained pleasant, but Margret heard the steel beneath. "We held our peace while you humans waged your wars for centuries. Now you invoke community when it serves your purpose?"
The Alliance diplomat faltered, glancing toward his silent masters for guidance that wouldn't co. The Exarchs had delegated this performance to their subordinates, maintaining their dignity while the necessary words were spoken.
"You are free to join a new Accord," Azra von Hohenheim said, filling the awkward silence. "We propose comprehensive talks, new fraworks that include all peoples—"
"Under yer guidance, no doubt," a dwarven representative spat.
"Under mutual cooperation," Azra corrected gently. "Unless others prefer the current ambiguities?"
The morning wore on, and with each exchange, Margret saw more clearly the elaborate dance being perford. The Alliance pressed, but not too hard, their representatives careful not to overreach. The Empire defended, but magnanimously, offering solutions to problems they had created. Both sides were maintaining the fiction that this was genuine negotiation rather than choreographed theater.
Through it all, the Exarchs remained largely silent. These were beings who could reshape the land with their will, who ruled nations and commanded armies. They would not lower themselves to bickering over semantics. That was what subordinates were for.
"Perhaps," Midas said into a lull, "we should move toward resolution. The positions seem clear."
There were no dissenting voices. All that could be said had been.
"If there are no further substantive argunts," Midas continued, "we shall proceed to judgnt."
"Korrovan maintains its position," Bijal Raja said, speaking for the first ti today. His voice rumbled like distant thunder, carrying the weight of his station. "The Accord stands as written."
Just that. No passion, no fury, no demand for justice. Simply an acknowledgnt of legal reality that absolved them of responsibility while leaving the door open for future maneuvering.
The Light Exarch nodded once, sharp and decisive. Aurelia Thorsten rely blinked slowly, like a cat acknowledging the obvious.
The formal voting proceeded with chanical precision. The Empire voted for its own innocence. The Alliance representatives, following their masters' lead, voted the sa.
Not guilty.
Not guilty.
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Not guilty.
Margret's fingers tightened in her lap. So this was how the powerful played their gas: not with righteousness or fairness, but with calculated moves designed to trap others. The Alliance couldn't force the elves and dwarves to join them, but they could create situations where neutrality beca increasingly untenable.
"The verdict is unanimous," Midas announced. "The Empire's deploynt of an Exarch against elven forces did not violate the Accord of Limitation, as the affected parties were not signatories to said Accord."
"However," Midas continued, "this hearing has highlighted significant gaps in our continental agreents. I propose the formation of a special committee to draft expanded accords, with representation from all affected parties."
More committees. More talks. More opportunities for the great powers to maneuver while Rukia bled out.
As the delegations began to rise, maintaining the sa dignified order they'd shown throughout, Margret caught sight of the Alliance Exarchs. No fury marred their features. No disappointnt weighted their shoulders. They moved with the satisfaction of pieces successfully played, their gambit complete even in apparent defeat.
The elves and dwarves had been shown, in no uncertain terms, that the human powers would not protect them, that laws and accords ant nothing when push ca to shove. The ssage was clear: choose a side, or stand alone against whatever ca next.
"Halt."
The single word, spoken in a soft tone by an immature throat, brought the entire hall to a standstill. Every delegation froze, heads turning toward the isolated chair where Sheol Veylor had finally closed the book.
The King of the Dead rose from the chair with the easy grace of a child stretching after a nap. Those grey eyes swept the room, and Margret felt the temperature drop several degrees.
"Since we’ve now established that I, too, am not protected by your laws," Sheol said, each word precise despite the childish voice, "I find myself in need of an... alternative arrangent."
A piece of parchnt materialized in those small hands, appearing from nowhere with casual impossibility. With a gentle push, it floated through the air to land on the table before King Midas.
The veiled figure leaned forward to read, and even through the obscuring fabric, Margret saw the sudden tension in those shoulders. Midas read the docunt once, then again, his stillness speaking volus.
"What is the aning of this?" His facade had cracked, revealing sothing close to alarm.
"Exactly what it says," Sheol replied, moving to the center of the room with skipping steps that sohow made the gesture more nacing than any dramatic stride. "My proposed andnt to the Accords. No Exarch may approach my domain—offensively, defensively, or for any other purpose."
The Light Exarch recovered first. "You can't simply make such a demand."
"No?" Sheol tilted that young head, grey eyes bright with amusent. "You've just established that agreents only bind their signatories. I'm proposing to beco one. Surely that's... reasonable?"
Otto Geistreich rose slowly. "Lord Veylor, such restrictions would be unprecedented. The movent of Exarchs has never been—"
"Restricted by written law?" Sheol finished. "How fortunate that we're drafting new ones."
"This is absurd," Azra von Hohenheim said, his diplomatic composure finally cracking. "You cannot simply demand—"
"I'm not demanding." The childish voice had taken on an edge that made Margret's teeth ache. "I'm offering. Sign, and be protected by the sa laws you've just used to justify slaughter. Refuse..." A shrug, casual as a child dismissing a broken toy.
"And what?" Azra pressed, and Margret had to admire his courage even as she questioned his wisdom. "What could possibly—"
"Is that your answer?"
The words were soft, but Azra went rigid. His face paled, lips pressing together so tightly they turned white. His hands gripped the edge of the table as if fighting against so invisible force.
"Perhaps," Sheol continued conversationally, "I should clarify."
The King of the Dead raised one small hand, and Margret felt power gather, not the structured force of a spell, but sothing grander, deeper, as inevitable as death itself. A mont later, the hall was engulfed in that sa force.
Margret couldn’t even feel her Core anymore. The wind, which had been her constant companion for decades, was silent and unreachable. For the first ti in a long ti, she felt completely helpless. The only thing that allowed her to hold on was the faint aura of Life shielding her.
Lady Goldleaf had risen, her own Domain protecting her delegation from the worst of the effects. Yet the look on her face was anything but calm. It was clear that maintaining this defense required her full concentration.
The other Exarchs weren’t faring much better, each caught in their own state of disarray. Aurelia Thorsten, despite not being an Exarch herself, held up the best. The black crow on her left shoulder seed to feed on the baleful energy as if it were its favorite al, allowing her people to breathe more easily than the others.
"So many beautiful cities," Sheol mused into the silence. "So full of life, of ambition, of carefully laid plans. Arkanheim’s twin spires. Equinox's rainbow gates. Korrovan’s golden palace."
Each na fell like a stone into still water, the implications rippling outward.
“Stay away from my people,” the Storm Exarch growled.
Those grey eyes found him a mont later. "Stay away? But I am already there. Have been there for quite so ti. Watching. Waiting."
"You're bluffing," the Light Exarch said, but her voice lacked conviction.
Sheol's smile was terrible on that young face. "I've reaped more souls in a single day than you've seen in your lifeti, child. What's a few more?"
The silence that followed was absolute. Margret could hear her own heartbeat, wild and frightened. This was no negotiation. It was a demonstration of power so complete that resistance beca aningless.
"You wouldn't," soone whispered. Margret couldn't tell who.
"No?" Sheol turned in a slow circle, addressing them all. "You've proven that laws only matter when enforced by strength. Very well. Here is my strength. Here is my law."
"This is... this is extortion," Azra muttered. For once, he had no clever retort.
Sheol shrugged as if he couldn’t even be bothered to argue.
anwhile, the parchnt still lay on the table, innocuous yet damning. Margret watched the delegations wrestle with the impossible choice: submit to demands backed by naked threat, or risk the annihilation of everything they sought to protect.
"I will sign," a voice interrupted the stalemate.
Aurelia Thorsten stepped forward, took a feather from her robe, and bent down to sign her na on the paper.
"Beware," Sheol said before she could put ink to parchnt. "This is no simple contract; breaking your word will an your life is forfeit."
Aurelia paused for an instant, hesitated, and then continued to sign. "…In the na of Invocatia, we accept the extended Accord."
Without another word, she turned and walked toward the exit, her delegation scrambling to follow. The door closed behind them with a sound like finality.
The dam broke. Argunts erupted from all sides: protests, threats, desperate attempts to find another solution. But Sheol simply stood in the center of it all, patient as death itself, that terrible child's smile never wavering.
"I would rather die than give in to threats," Otto said, but sweat beaded on his forehead.
"I'm not threatening you," Sheol replied. "I'm threatening Arkanheim. Your capital. Your people. Your Emperor." Those grey eyes glinted. "Speaking of which, shouldn't he be making this decision? Fetch him."
"The Emperor does not—"
"Fetch. Him."
The words carried such weight that Otto actually took a step backward. Then, remarkably, the chancellor's spine straightened. His hand moved to a pendant at his throat, fingers tracing a pattern Margret couldn't follow.
"No need," Otto said in a strange tone, more resonant, carrying an authority that made the previous version seem like a pale shadow. "I am here."
Margret's breath caught. The Emperor. Augustus Geistreich was speaking through his subordinate, strings of Mind Magic allowing him to project his will across impossible distances.
"Veylor," the Emperor's voice said through Otto's lips. "This is in poor taste."
"I would agree," Sheol replied, seeming more delighted than intimidated. "Unfortunately, it seems you children get overconfident if I don’t raise my voice now and again."
"You overstep."
"I step where I want." The child giggled. "Unless you're saying power isn't its own justification? That would be quite the reversal."
Otto—no, Augustus—remained silent for a long mont. When he spoke again, resignation colored his words. "Your terms?"
"Simple. No Exarch approaches the Deadlands. Ever. For any reason." Sheol gestured to the parchnt.
"And if circumstances—"
"There are no circumstances." The playfulness vanished, leaving sothing ancient and unwavering. "This is not a negotiation. Sign."
The possessed chancellor moved forward with chanical precision. As Otto's hand took up the quill, Margret saw it tremble. Whether it was from the strain of distant control or the Emperor's reluctance, she couldn't tell.
"In the na of the Empire," Augustus said through his proxy, "we accept."
The signature was sharp, aggressive, nothing like Otto's normal hand. The mont it was complete, the chancellor sagged, catching himself on the table's edge as the Emperor's presence withdrew.
After that, the rest fell like dominoes. Faced with the reality that even the Emperor had bent so easily, the other powers had no choice. One by one, they approached the parchnt. One by one, they signed.
The Storm Exarch's hand shook with suppressed rage as he wrote his na. The Light Exarch looked as if she'd swallowed poison. Even King Midas, when his turn ca, moved with the careful precision of one handling a venomous snake.
Through it all, the elven and dwarven delegations stood forgotten. No one asked them to sign. No one offered them the protection of this new accord. They had been deed irrelevant to human law, and now that sa irrelevance excluded them once more.
"Excellent," Sheol said when the last signature was complete. The parchnt vanished as suddenly as it had appeared. "I do so enjoy unanimous agreents."
The King of the Dead turned those grey eyes on the elven delegation, and for a mont, Margret thought she saw sothing almost like pity there. "You see the difference?”
Lady Goldleaf said nothing, her ageless face a mask of perfect composure. But Margret saw how her hands had clenched in her lap, knuckles white beneath the skin.
"The strong do what they will," Sheol continued, addressing the dwarves now. "The weak suffer what they must."
Lord Stoneforge's response was a growl too low for words, but his aning was clear enough.
"This hearing is concluded," Sheol announced, having assud the role of host. "You are free to depart."
The exodus that followed was nothing like yesterday's dignified withdrawal. Delegations fled as if the hall itself had beco cursed ground. The Empire's representatives moved with the haste of those who'd won a victory that tasted of ash. The Alliance mbers departed in bitter silence, each nursing their own humiliation.
The trial had ended with no one satisfied.
The Empire had won its verdict but suffered humiliation. The Alliance had avoided direct confrontation but was forced to bow to naked threats. The elves and dwarves had been shown just how little their grievances mattered in human politics.
And above it all, the King of the Dead had made one thing clear: in a world where might made right, death itself held the ultimate authority.
Margret pulled her robes tighter as a chill swept through the streets. She needed to report to her lord, to help him understand what had transpired. Though knowing Ezekiel, he had probably predicted this too.
The thought brought her more comfort than she expected. In this shifting world of uncertainty, it was deeply reassuring to follow soone who seed able to see through the whims of fate and defy common sense.
If anyone could safely navigate these troubled waters, it would be him.
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