Chapter 468: The Choice of Loyalty [Part-2]
Chapter 468: The Choice of Loyalty [Part-2]
The Choice of Loyalty [Part-2]
Leon’s voice grew deeper. "Men such as you. fighters who fight for something other than themselves — they’re not common. Most men want power, or glory, or revenge. But you—
He did not complete the sentence the way anyone might hope. Instead, he leaned forward by an inch, sufficient that Aden might notice the weary creases at the edge of his eyes, the small scar etched across his knuckle like a recollection. There was no triumph about him; only a stark, awful sort of respect, the sort that comes in winters and in errors.
He waved one hand in a light gesture. "You loved. You guarded. Even at the cost of losing."
Aden’s hand drifted over the hilt of his sword, as if recalling what it had been like to have the blade in his hand when hope had still been a luxury they could both afford. The metal was cold, scarred and blunted, the scent of oil and blood clinging to it like an unshakable past. His chest moved up and down unevenly; pride fought with fatigue in the sharp set of his shoulders.
"You imagine that loyalty is something you can just... present," Aden whispered, his tone husky, the burden of weariness and skepticism seeping into every sentence. His eyes remained trained on the charred earth between them, as if looking into Leon’s would shatter whatever pride he had left. "Do you have any idea what you’re requesting, Leon?"
Leon’s boots moved across the broken ground, slow and measured. With each step, he pressed further into the hush, until his shadow fell across Aden’s bowed head. There was a whisper of wind that carried the smell of ash and blood, a reminder of the fight that had just finished — and the two men who’d made it through.
"I’m not asking," Leon declared, his voice low but firm, "for the allegiance of a soldier with honor left in him." His gold eyes blazed with silent conviction, the kind which did not have to scream to be heard. "I don’t want an injured soldier... or a scared man. I want the soldier who fought me — and didn’t flee."
The words hung in the air, charged and heavy. The battlefield, which a moment before had seethed with rage and bedlam, was now as quiet as a temple — hushed, sacred, and excruciatingly tight.
At the edge of the crater, Nova and the others stood stock-still. Nova’s green eyes flicked between the two men, her breath stuck halfway between awe and alarm. At her side, Rias folded her arms, red eyes focusing tightly — not with anger, but intensity of deep, piercing consideration. Aria’s face relaxed, a faint glimmer of respect flashing in her violet eyes, as Syra’s lips curled with an understanding smile, catching on the odd connection before everyone else did.
Aden at last raised his head, a twisted smile playing at the edge of his mouth. "You’re crazy," he grunted, shaking his head with a tired laugh that didn’t reach his eyes. "You win a war, and in place of ending my life, you desire my loyalty?"
Leon answered without delay, his voice slicing through the thick air like a cut.
"Yes."
The word hit like a spark in the quiet.
A ripple coursed through the line of soldiers, their armor clanking as they looked at each other in shocked surprise. Whispers ran through the ranks, brittle and nervous, on the cold wind’s breath. Even Leon’s own men — his most trusted generals, those who had fought with him through flames and blood — gazed at him as though he’d just violated the silent rules that kept empires running.
But Leon didn’t falter.
He stood in the moonlight, his face composed, inscrutable, his whole manner exuding silent confidence. He wasn’t intimidated by the doubt in their gazes. He knew precisely what he was doing — and why.
Aden was not merely an adversary who’d died in battle. He was a man who’d stood up for what he believed, even when there was no hope of victory. That was the sort of conviction, Leon recognized, that was not acquired through crowns or manufactured through fear. It was won, lived, and died for. And in a world where kingdoms rose and fell like waves against the beach, conviction was the one thing that could be trusted.
Leon’s eyes locked on Aden, his voice lowering, leveling — the kind of tone that had impact. "You’ve fought alongside me, Aden. You’ve followed me. I’m not doing this for one realm. Galvia’s just the start."
The whispers around them died as his words gained traction.
"There are four great kingdoms still out there," Leon continued, his eyes narrowing, gold light flickering faintly beneath his lashes. "Each of them old, bloated with pride, rotting under their own corruption. I’ll face them all — one by one. I’ll conquer them, not to sit on a throne..."
He stepped closer, his shadow crossing Aden’s face.
".but to create something better." His tone dropped, but it burned quietly. "To command, yes — but not as your monarch."
The corner of his mouth crested, just enough to show the man behind the myth.
He leaned forward, the soft shine of his golden eyes reflected in Aden’s shocked stare.
"As your equal."
Aden raised his head, his gaze narrowing as unbelief trembled just beneath the weariness on his eyes. "Equal...?" he echoed, the word feeling strange on his lips — as if he wasn’t sure whether to laugh or scorn.
Leon’s response was serene and absolute, his voice conveying that inner strength that didn’t have to be shouted to be heard. "A warrior does not kneel to weakness," he said. "You know that. But loyalty — true loyalty — is not weakness. It’s a decision. You’ve already made one today. I’m offering you the opportunity to make another.
Aden exhaled a slow, ragged breath through his nostrils. His shoulders dropped a fraction of an inch, as if the burden of years weighed on them. Quiet hung between them, dense but not vacant. His face changed — doubt clouded first, then pride, then the bright flash of shame. Each emotion passed like shards of shattered steel; shards of his pride cast at Leon’s feet.
When he finally spoke, his voice had levelled, although the edges were rough with fatigue. "Victorious Leon..." He gave a low, humourless laugh. "Perhaps my ears do not work so well any longer."
A faint smirk pulled at the corner of his mouth, dry, self-disparaging. "Did you just ask a beaten man — the same man you almost burned alive — for loyalty?"
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