Chapter 112

The execution had been swift.

At dawn, Lord Sareth had been dragged to the palace's grand courtyard, where nobles and commoners alike had gathered to witness his fate. The traitor's last words had echoed through the space, carried by the wind like a curse: You think this is over? You will never be rid of us.

Tharx had been unmoved, his golden eyes unreadable as the sentence was carried out. Blood had stained the white marble of the execution platform, and with it, any lingering doubt that his rule was unshakable.

But Aeliana had known, even as she watched Sareth's body fall lifeless to the ground, that the danger had not died with him. His words had been a warning. A reminder that shadows did not die so easily.

The court had been silent after his death. Not in mourning. Not even in shock.

In fear.

Aeliana had felt it in the way they had stood frozen, how their gazes had flickered to one another, as if weighing their own allegiances, measuring their own risks.

She had seen it before-in the eyes of rebels, of men who had fought for their fallen kings, of warriors who knew their side had lost, but would never admit it.

And that was the most dangerous kind of enemy. The kind that did not know when to stay buried.

So even as they secured the empire, even as the last known traitors were hunted down and executed, Aeliana knew this was not the end of their war.

It was simply a pause.

Tharx, however, did not see it that way.

He moved through the next few days with relentless efficiency, strengthening his rule, consolidating his power. The nobles were summoned, one by one, and forced to declare their loyalty openly before the court. Those who hesitated were quietly removed. Some were stripped of their titles. Others simply disappeared.

No one questioned it.

And then, once the court had been cleansed, Tharx prepared for his final decree.

An empire-wide address.

It had been years since he had spoken to the people directly. He had never needed to. His victories, his conquests, had spoken for him.

But now, the empire stood at a crossroads.

And Seraphina's future depended on what happened next.

The plaza was overflowing.

Thousands had gathered at the heart of the capital, stretching beyond the palace gates and into the city streets. The crowd was a sea of expectation and uncertainty, voices rising and falling in hurried whispers.

It was not just nobles.

It was soldiers, merchants, scholars, laborers.

All waiting to hear their emperor.

Aeliana stood beside Tharx on the elevated balcony, the vantage point allowing them to see the full scope of the empire they ruled.

Seraphina was not with them-she was too young, too vulnerable to stand before the masses just yet. But Aeliana knew that one day, she would.

And when that day came, she needed the people to see her as their ruler, not just their emperor's daughter.

Tharx's gaze swept over the crowd.

Then, without ceremony, he spoke.

"This empire has stood for centuries," he said, his voice carrying across the square, low and commanding. "And for centuries, it has endured war, rebellion, and the hands of weak rulers who sought to claim power but did not have the strength to hold it."

A murmur ran through the crowd. Some nobles stiffened, their expressions unreadable.

"I will not allow that to happen again."

Silence.

Aeliana watched the way they listened. The way the people held their breath, waiting.

"My rule is not questioned," Tharx continued. "And neither will my daughter's."

The murmurs grew louder now, an uncertain ripple of reaction that spread through the assembly.

"You may wonder," Tharx went on, "what will become of this empire under Seraphina. You may think she is different. That she is not like me."

He let the words settle.

"Good," he said finally. "Because she will be more."

Aeliana's breath hitched.

The crowd had stilled.

"I have forged this empire through fire and conquest," Tharx said. "She will rule it with something greater."

There was no roar of approval.

No cheers.

Instead, there was a quiet kind of acceptance.

A silent understanding.

And Aeliana knew, in that moment, that this was the moment the empire began to change.

After the address, the nobles gathered in the great hall, lingering longer than necessary. There were no whispers, no plotting. Just a heavy sort of tension, a new awareness that something had shifted.

Aeliana stood at the far end of the chamber, watching them. Measuring them.

She could feel it-the way the court was adjusting, the way the old rules were beginning to crack.

For the first time, they were not just afraid of Tharx.

They were afraid of her.

And that, more than anything, meant she had succeeded.

But fear was not enough.

She needed loyalty.

That night, she summoned the heads of the remaining noble houses-those who had remained silent, those who had neither condemned nor supported Sareth.

She did not offer them threats.

She offered them a choice.

"This empire will not be ruled by fear alone," she told them. "You will swear loyalty to Seraphina because you believe in her. Not because you fear what will happen if you don't."

They did not answer immediately.

But then, slowly, one by one, they knelt.

And Aeliana knew she had won.

The celebrations lasted for days.

Seraphina was still too young to understand what had happened, why there was laughter in the streets, why there were fireworks illuminating the night sky.

But Aeliana saw it.

She saw the way the people began to embrace her daughter's existence, the way the commoners, the soldiers, the empire itself was beginning to look forward, not backward.

For the first time, Seraphina was not seen as an uncertainty.

She was seen as the future.

Tharx watched from the balcony that overlooked the festivities, his arms folded, his expression unreadable.

Aeliana joined him, leaning against the stone railing.

"You did well," she said.

Tharx huffed softly, though there was the barest trace of amusement in his golden eyes. "I do everything well."

Aeliana smirked. "Humble as ever."

They stood in silence for a while, watching the empire they had secured together.

And then, Tharx said, "Do you think we made the right choice?"

Aeliana turned to him, studying him.

She knew what he meant.

Did they make the right choice in sparing some of the nobles? In offering a new path forward instead of ruling through fear alone?

Did they make the right choice in betting everything on their daughter's future?

Aeliana exhaled softly.

"I think," she said, "that we finally gave them something to believe in."

Tharx studied her for a long moment, then turned back to the city, to the fire-lit streets below.

"I suppose that will have to be enough," he murmured.

Aeliana reached for his hand, lacing her fingers through his.

"It will be."

And as the sounds of the empire's celebration filled the night, she allowed herself to believe, if only for a moment, that their war was truly over.

But deep down, she knew the truth.

Peace was never permanent.

And soon enough, the empire would be tested once more.