Supreme Spouse System.

Chapter 467: The Choice of Loyalty



Chapter 467: The Choice of Loyalty



The Choice of Loyalty


He approached nearer, the distant ring of his boots the sole noise remaining within the crater.


The earth beneath him was warm, exhaling faint wisps of smoke and sorcery. The air clung to his lungs like a heavy, metallic shroud of soot and blood and something older, the dying thrum of energy that had once ripped this field apart. Above, the moon was low and pale, casting its silver light across the broken earth like an unfeeling witness.


Leon’s eyes met Aden — the man kneeling at his feet, chest bowed but refusing to crumple. His armor was cracked and blackened, his hands trembling, but there was still pride hidden somewhere deep beneath that fatigue. Everywhere else, the world waited with bated breath. The soldiers, the knights, even the wounded men scattered across the ruins — all waiting. Between the two men, the silence was more potent than any sword ever had been.


Leon stepped one more time, his own shadow out to the dirt until it hit Aden’s knees. He halted there, close enough for his words to be heard without having to be yelled. When he spoke, it was softly — too softly for the savagery that had spilled over the night only seconds prior.


"I want..."


The words carried on the wind and hung there, quivering like a half-finished knife. For an instant, Leon could not continue — not because he had no idea what to say, but because the emotion behind it was too raw to identify. His breathing stabilized, gaze fixed on the man who had once been his peer.


Aden finally raised his head. His eyes were tired, blank, but under the tiredness, something else was visible — quiet acceptance. Not defiance, not surrender... just a man who knew what was going to come, and no longer had the strength to flee from it.


Leon took a steady breath. "I want your loyalty. Absolute loyalty."


The words landed and the air changed. It was like someone had dropped a stone into a still pool; ripples ran out, and everything that had been moving stopped to listen. Night tightened around them, colder, as if the stars themselves leaned back to watch.


Soldiers moved where they were standing, steel sounding. Leon’s men—the ones who had bled with him and learned to obey without hesitation—swapped glances that carried old camps and older oaths. Aden’s warriors locked up the same: hands gripped hilts harder, jaws clamped shut. None of them drew breath for an instant that dragged on too long.


It was loyalty. It was not a deal of blood or blades. It did not reek of surrender, nor did it threaten death. It was a possession of the will, a leash for the heart. That one word meant more than any banner of triumph or stack of corpses.


Aden’s face was a topography of restraint. He blinked slowly, as if roused from a peaceful sleep into a foreign tongue. The look that came after was illegible—shock and calculation intertwined. He opened his mouth, but the noise did not reach him. Silence held him for a breath, then for two.


Leon’s eyes stood firm. There was peace in them, but there was no softness. He had worked on this stillness; he had worked on command until it seared hot iron into his skin. The marching years, the nights of decision and renunciation, had hollowed out this moment from him. He wasn’t requesting. He was announcing a law.


The world buzzed around them with tiny sounds: a flapping banner, the heaving of a horse, a shout in the distance snatched and gulped. That small soundtrack made the request seem greater. The men who had promised to die with Aden were divided; obligation tugged at them from both sides like two hands.


Leon recalled how loyalty had been devalued in the past—bought for gold, for fear, for dawn promises that were empty. He thought of those who died because someone held on to something less than truth. He recalled the nights when only the memory of those who stood with him was warm enough to move him forward.


He did not smile. He did not shout. The steel in his voice was subdued but unyielding, a thing that lopped off negotiations like a knife through fabric. The alternative he presented was plain and hard: remain and lock yourself to me, not as a captive but as part of a chain that wouldn’t snap, or walk away and take what dignity you can yourself.


"Sir Aden, I can kill you where you stand. You know that. You’ve witnessed what I’m capable of."


Leon spoke it without drama — a flat, soft truth that fell across the burned earth like ash. His boots did not sound on the broken ground; only the far-off moan of a dying breeze replied to him. At close range, the battlefield warmth still clung to him, sweat darkening the collar of his tunic, a smudge of dirt across his cheek that gave his jaw a harder look. He stood observing Aden as though considering an old IOU.


But when I saw you leave your sword to defend your people... when you put their lives ahead of your own pride — that said more about you than any fight ever could.


The words fell between them and lingered, obstinate as smoke. Aden’s eyes flashed — rage, perhaps, then something else, a vulnerability that had no relation to honor and everything to do with loss and fear. Beside them the field was a cemetery of little things: here, a banner ripped asunder; there, a helmet dropped, half-buried in the dust; under someone’s boot, a child’s wooden toy crushed. Every ruin enlarged, made the decision Leon had spoken of feel heavier, broader.


The breeze stirred, sweeping dust off the burned earth. The terrain behind them was a wasteland etched by their fight. Craters smoldered and fumed. Shattered blades caught feeble glints of light in the night.


Leon’s voice grew grimmer. "Men like you... fighters for a cause greater than themselves — they don’t come often. Most men want power, or renown, or revenge. But you—



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