Rebirth System: Blood and Ash

Chapter 122 Go Alone



Chapter 122 Go Alone

The Draken envoy moved through the dense, shadowed forests of Valeria with an air of calculated confidence. Six riders in total, their mounts expertly guided along the uneven terrain, their heavy cloaks shielding them from the biting wind. WIthing the carriage rode Envoy Marek Valtor, a seasoned diplomat with sharp eyes and sharper instincts.

Two guards flanked a covered carriage carrying their most precious cargo: letters, artifacts, and a prepared dossier—evidence that could dismantle Sylas Valerian's ambitions in an instant.

Marek turned to glance at the carriage, a satisfied smirk playing on his lips. "The Valerian court will be in disarray the moment this reaches the Emperor," he said, his voice carrying just enough volume to be heard by the others.

One of the guards snorted. "You make it sound too easy, Valtor. We're still in enemy territory."

"Enemy?" Marek chuckled, shaking his head. "Valeria is a fractured empire, its court a nest of vipers. Trust me, when this is over, they'll thank us for revealing Sylas's betrayal."

The guard said nothing, though his skeptical glance lingered on the diplomat. Confidence was one thing, but underestimating Valeria's chaotic politics was another.

The convoy pressed on, the clatter of hooves breaking the silence of the forest. Marek's mind raced ahead to the moment he would stand before Emperor Xavier, presenting his damning evidence.

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He could already picture the ripple of shock across the court, the gasps of betrayal, the fractured alliances that would leave Valeria vulnerable to Draken influence.

It was a masterstroke, orchestrated with precision.

———

The study was tense, the kind that made the air feel heavier than it had any right to be. Aric stood at the head of the room, his hands resting on the dark wood of the table as his trusted court trickled in.

The soft murmurs of conversation and the sound of boots against the stone floor filled the space as they arrived, each one sharp-eyed and curious.

Maxim entered first, his dark cloak swirling around his legs as he moved to the far side of the room.

His face was as unreadable as ever, the only sign of his focus the way his gloved fingers tapped a steady rhythm on the hilt of his blade.

Next came Mandel, ever the picture of casual brilliance. He strolled in with a lazy confidence, his long coat dusted with ash from whatever tinkering he'd been doing before being summoned.

He gave Aric a quick nod, his piercing eyes already scanning the room as if he could read the walls themselves.

Serina followed, her sharp features softened by the glow of candle. She settled into her seat with a quiet grace, her gaze flitting between Aric and the others as though piecing together the puzzle before the meeting even began.

"I am," Aric replied evenly.

Serina frowned, leaning forward. "That's reckless, even for you. Why would you take such a risk?"

For a moment, Aric didn't answer. He let the question hang in the air, the tension building. Then he straightened, his expression hard and unyielding. "Because terror is a tool," he said, his voice steady.

"And I intend to use it."

The room buzzed with unspoken reactions. Fear? What did he mean by that? Maxim shifted slightly, his hand brushing the hilt of his blade as though considering something. Lerai muttered under his breath, too quiet to catch, but his expression was one of disbelief.

Aric stepped away from the table, pacing slowly as he spoke. "The Draken envoy expects resistance, yes. But they expect armies, politics, drawn-out strategies. They don't expect me. A single man, walking into their path, turning their confidence into doubt and their doubt into panic."

"You're betting on intimidation?" Lerai asked, one brow raised.

"I'm betting on certainty," Aric shot back, his voice sharp. "They need to see, to feel, that their actions come at a cost. They need to understand that this empire doesn't belong to them. It belongs to me."

"And what happens if it goes wrong?" Serina pressed, her tone unusually sharp.

"It won't," Aric said simply.

The room fell silent again, the weight of his words pressing down on them. It wasn't arrogance—it was conviction. Aric wasn't asking for permission or approval. He was informing them of what was to come.

Maxim broke the silence, his voice steady. "My men will find the envoy's route. You'll have the information by morning."

Aric nodded once. "Good. The rest of you, prepare contingencies. If something goes wrong—"

"Which it won't," Lerai interjected, smirking faintly.

Aric allowed himself a small grin. "If something goes wrong, you'll be ready to move. Understood?"

One by one, they nodded, though the tension in the room remained.

The meeting ended shortly after, the weight of the plan settling over them all like a storm cloud. As the others filed out, Aric remained behind, his gaze fixed on the map spread across the table.

Fear was a tool. A weapon. And soon, the Draken envoy would know exactly how sharp it could be.


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