Harem Master: Seduction System

Chapter 287: True Ruler Of Jorailian Kingdom



Chapter 287: True Ruler Of Jorailian Kingdom



The heart of Lysandra was a study in contrasts. The grand, sun-bleached stones of the Royal Plaza were scarred with the pockmarks of alchemical explosions and stained with soot from magical fires, grim reminders of the brutal civil war that had torn the capital apart. Yet, today, the plaza was packed with a throng of humanity, their faces turned upwards towards the grand dais erected before the Royal Palace, a mixture of exhaustion, apprehension, and a desperate, fragile hope in their eyes.


Atop the dais, draped in the deep crimson and gold of Jorailia, stood Lady Ondine Bellerose. She was a vision of regal strength and somber beauty. Her raven hair was woven into an intricate style, studded with obsidian and pearls, and she wore a gown of dark, flowing silk that accentuated her magnificent figure while conveying a sense of dignified mourning for the fallen king. She projected an aura of absolute control, her dark eyes sweeping over the silent, expectant crowd.


Beside her stood the pillars of her new regime: General Theron, his weathered face a mask of grim loyalty, representing the military’s endorsement; Lord Aethelred, his silver hair catching the light, symbolizing the support of the old, powerful noble houses; and the head of the Merchant’s Consortium, a shrewd man whose presence signified the backing of Jorailia’s economic heart.


"People of Jorailia! Citizens of Lysandra!" Ondine’s voice, amplified by a subtle magical artifact, rang out across the plaza, clear and powerful, yet laced with a carefully measured sorrow. "We gather today under a shadow of profound grief. Our kingdom bleeds. Our beloved King Rouben Yachvili, betrayed by vipers he welcomed into his own court, has been tragically stolen from us."


A low murmur of anger and sadness swept through the crowd.


"We have faced horrors," Ondine continued, her voice rising with passion. "The demonic tide in the east, and a traitor’s poison in our very capital! The alchemist Noah, a fiend in the guise of a savior, sought to tear our kingdom apart for his own twisted ambitions. He and his co-conspirators have been crushed, their rebellion extinguished!"


A ragged cheer erupted from the crowd, a release of pent-up fear and frustration.


"But the throne cannot remain empty!" Ondine declared, her voice ringing with conviction. "Jorailia cannot be leaderless in its darkest hour! With the support of our brave generals, our loyal nobles, and the pillars of our great kingdom, I, Ondine Bellerose, reluctantly but resolutely, take up this heavy crown. Not as a conqueror, but as a protector! A regent to guide us through this storm!"


She turned, and General Theron, with somber reverence, lifted the heavy golden crown of Jorailia from a velvet cushion and placed it upon her dark hair.


"Long live Queen Ondine!" Theron roared, his voice booming across the plaza.


The cry was taken up by the other nobles on the dais, then by the guards, and finally, by the crowd itself. "Long live the Queen! Long live Jorailia!" The cheers were not entirely joyful; they were tinged with desperation, a collective plea for the stability and strength this beautiful, powerful woman promised.


Ondine stood for a moment, basking in their adoration, her hand raised in a gesture of regal acknowledgement. Her expression was one of solemn duty, of a heavy burden accepted for the good of her people.


Internally, however, a cold, triumphant smile bloomed. ’Fools,’ she thought, savoring the moment. ’You cheer for a puppet. You have no idea whose hand truly pulls the strings.’ The ceremony was a necessary spectacle, a piece of political theater to legitimize her rule in the eyes of the masses. The true coronation, the real transfer of power, would happen later, behind closed doors.


The public ceremony concluded, and a sense of fragile order began to return to the capital. Queen Ondine, now the recognized ruler of Jorailia, wasted no time. Her first official act was to summon the true powers of the kingdom to a private council at the Bellerose Mansion.


The invitation was extended only to the most influential: the highest-ranking ministers who had survived the King’s purge and Noah’s rebellion, the patriarchs of the dozen most powerful noble families, the heads of the major merchant and artisan guilds, and the kingdom’s most formidable surviving military commanders, including the few remaining Grandmaster-level generals.


They gathered in the Bellerose grand council chamber, a vast room dominated by a massive, circular table of polished obsidian. The air was thick with tension and whispered speculation. They had all sworn fealty to their new Queen, but they were seasoned players in the game of power. They knew this sudden summons, so soon after her coronation, was significant.


Ondine entered the chamber, her presence commanding immediate silence. She wore a different gown now, one of deep black and silver, elegant and authoritative. She took her place at the head of the table, her dark eyes sweeping over the assembled men, each a pillar of Jorailian society.


"My Lords, my Generals, honored Guild Masters," Ondine began, her voice calm and measured. "I thank you for answering my summons so swiftly. What I have to say is for your ears only. It concerns the true future of our kingdom, a future that requires a... deeper understanding of the new reality we face."


A murmur of confusion went through the room.


General Theron, now Ondine’s staunchest military supporter, spoke up. "Your Majesty, we are with you. We will follow your lead to crush the demons and rebuild Jorailia."


"Your loyalty is commendable, General," Ondine replied, a faint, almost pitying smile on her lips. "But you misunderstand. I am not the one who will lead us to salvation. My power, as significant as it may be, is merely a reflection of a far greater authority. An authority to whom I, and soon, all of you, owe our absolute allegiance."


Before the assembled lords could process her baffling words, the large doors at the far end of the council chamber swung open silently.


A figure stepped through.


He was young, impossibly handsome, dressed in simple but exquisitely tailored dark clothing. His short blonde hair seemed to catch the light, and his ruby eyes, holding an unnerving depth, swept over the council, lingering on each powerful man for a fraction of a second, an assessment that was both casual and utterly absolute. He radiated an aura of calm, predatory power that made the very air in the room grow heavy.


It was Alaric Steele.


A collective gasp went through the room. What was the Lord of the Steele Family doing here?


Ondine rose from her seat. Her movements were fluid, graceful, yet imbued with a reverence that stunned the onlookers. She walked around the table, her gaze never leaving Alaric, her expression one of profound, unwavering devotion.


She stopped before him. Then, in an act that shattered the foundations of every man’s understanding of power in that room, Queen Ondine Bellerose, the newly crowned ruler of Jorailia, sank to her knees before Alaric Steele.


She bowed her head, her raven hair spilling across the polished floor.


"My Lord Alaric," Ondine’s voice, clear and resonant, echoed in the stunned silence. "Your Queen, your humble servant, welcomes you. The lords of Jorailia are assembled, as you commanded."


The council stared, utterly speechless. Their Queen... kneeling? Calling this young foreign lord... her Lord? It was unthinkable. A madness.


General Theron looked as if he had been struck by lightning, his jaw slack, his eyes wide with disbelief. Lord Aethelred’s face went pale. The Merchant Guild Master’s shrewd eyes were now filled with a dawning, terrified comprehension.


Alaric looked down at the kneeling Queen, a faint, satisfied smile on his lips. He reached out, his hand gently cupping her chin, tilting her face up to meet his gaze. "You have done well, Ondine," he purred, his voice a low, possessive rumble. "A truly magnificent performance on the plaza. And a loyal, obedient gathering here."


He leaned down and gave her a slow, lingering kiss on the lips, a kiss that was not one of passion, but of ownership, a public branding of his possession. Ondine closed her eyes, melting into the kiss, her body trembling with a mixture of submission and ecstatic pleasure.


He broke the kiss and straightened, his gaze sweeping over the council of stunned, horrified men.


"My Lords," Alaric said, his voice calm, almost casual, yet carrying an unshakable weight of authority. "It seems there has been a... misunderstanding... regarding the recent transition of power in Jorailia. Queen Ondine," he gestured towards the still-kneeling woman, "is indeed your ruler. Your regent. But she, like all of you, serves a higher authority."


His ruby eyes met theirs, one by one. "She serves me. And from this day forward, so do you."


A splutter of outrage came from a portly, red-faced Baron. "This is... this is treason! Preposterous! You are an outsider! A Steele! You have no claim, no right—"


Alaric didn’t even glance at him. He simply flicked his wrist. An invisible wave of pure arcane force slammed into the Baron, lifting him from his chair and pinning him against the far wall with a sickening crunch. The Baron gasped, his face turning purple, his eyes bulging.


A terrified silence fell over the room.


"I have the only right that has ever truly mattered in this world, my dear Baron," Alaric said conversationally, his gaze still sweeping over the others. "The right of power. I can end any one of you with a thought. I can shatter your armies, burn your cities, and salt the very earth of your ancestral lands. The demons are a force of nature, yes. But I," he smiled, a chilling, predatory expression, "am a force of will."


He gestured again, and the Baron was released, slumping to the floor in a whimpering, unconscious heap.


"Now," Alaric continued, as if nothing had happened. "Let us discuss the new order of things. Jorailia is now, for all intents and purposes, a vassal state of the Steele Family. Your resources, your armies, your wealth, your knowledge... they are all now assets to be deployed at my discretion for the greater good of our... mutual survival."


He began to pace slowly before the stunned council. "The war against the demons continues. And now, under my... guidance... Jorailia will become a far more effective instrument in that war."


He outlined his plan. "I will be advancing the production of my artifacts. Not just the trinkets you have seen, but more powerful, more devastating weapons. Your mines, your forges, your resources, will fuel my workshops. My head artificer, a genius in her own right, will oversee the establishment of new production facilities here in Jorailia, managed by Bellerose assets, to accelerate the process."


"Your armies," he looked at General Theron, whose face was now a mask of grim, unwilling acceptance, "will be retrained. They will learn new tactics, new disciplines, provided by my own commanders. They will be equipped with my artifacts. They will become a true demonic-slaying force, not the disorganized rabble the late King Rouben threw away."


He paused, a thoughtful expression on his face. "Speaking of which... General Tauron. A competent, if overly loyal, commander. I had intended to have him... retired... for his stubborn adherence to a failed monarch. However," he chuckled softly, "it seems he has saved me the trouble. My agents report he has fled."


A young general, one of Tauron’s former subordinates who had thrown his lot in with Ondine, spoke up, his voice trembling slightly. "Fled, Lord Steele? Where?"


Alaric shrugged. "East. Towards the Celestial Dragon Empire, it seems. A foolish move. The Dragon Emperor does not suffer rivals, especially foreign ones with their own ambitions. Tauron has simply traded one master for another, far more demanding one. He is no longer our concern. His absence removes a potential obstacle to our... reorganization."


He then turned his attention to the Grandmaster mages present, including a formidable-looking woman with graying hair and sharp blue eyes, Grandmaster Priscilla of Jorailia’s Royal Mages, not to be confused with the Archmage Priscilla of Eloriath who was still at Alaric’s northern fortress. "Your magical orders will be... restructured. You will learn new spells, new techniques, from the archives I have... acquired. Your power will be focused, directed. No more wasted energy on courtly intrigue."


His gaze was absolute. His plan, comprehensive. He was not just claiming Jorailia; he was remaking it in his own image, transforming it into a powerful, efficient component of his growing empire.


The lords and generals listened, their initial shock giving way to a dawning, terrifying realization. They had no choice. Ondine, their new Queen, knelt at this man’s feet. Her formidable army was his. His own power was clearly beyond their comprehension. To resist was to share the fate of the unconscious Baron on the floor. Or the fate of the late King Rouben Yachvili.


General Theron was the first to break. He stood slowly, his weathered face grim, and knelt on one knee. "Lord Alaric Steele," he said, his voice heavy but firm. "The armies of Jorailia... await your command."


One by one, the others followed suit. The powerful nobles, the wealthy merchants, the Grandmaster mages. They knelt before their new, unseen King.


Alaric watched them, a faint, satisfied smile on his lips. Ondine, still kneeling at his feet, looked up at him, her dark eyes shining with a mixture of adoration and triumphant satisfaction. Her gamble had paid off beyond her wildest dreams. She was Queen of Jorailia. And she belonged, body and soul, to the magnificent, terrifying man who was now the true King of Kings.


"Rise," Alaric commanded softly. "And get to work. We have a war to win. And an empire to build." The conquest of Jorailia was complete. Not with a grand battle, but with whispers, shadows, and the absolute, undeniable assertion of a single, extraordinary will.



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