Awakening Domination System: But I'm a Slave?-Chapter 328: Weeks [2]

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Vesperine's jaw tightened. A muscle jumped in her cheek, the only visible sign of anger breaking through her controlled exterior.

"Then what," she hissed, her voice dropping lower but carrying edge that could cut, "do you want to do? Hmm? Please, enlighten me with your brilliant strategy, Your Majesty."

She took a step forward, her green eyes blazing now.

"Engage in war? Do you even comprehend what we're facing? It's not just Lioren demanding justice. It's not just one kingdom we've offended!"

She began counting on her fingers, her voice rising with each item.

"The Theocracy of Lioren, who controls half the continent's religious authority. The Beastkin Confederation, whose warriors could tear through our borders in days if they unified. The Elven Courts of Silvermere, who've been looking for excuse to reclaim the Whispering Woods for three centuries. The Vampire Dominion, whose raiders are already bleeding into our territories."

She paused, drawing breath, then delivered the final count.

"And the Kingdom of Hisor our fellow human kingdom, who've decided this is perfect opportunity to renegotiate trade agreements in their favor while we're weak!"

Her hands clenched into fists at her sides.

"You think we can engage in war against all of them and survive? You think our military, strong as it is, can withstand coordinated assault from five different powers simultaneously?"

Zardric moved toward her, closing the distance until they stood barely a foot apart. His face was flushed with rage, his eyes wild.

"What do you suggest then?" His voice was low now. Dangerous. "Because there is no way... no way I am kneeling to those bastards who've been waiting for this moment!"

Silence fell between them.

The crisis had been building since the Academy attack six weeks ago.

In the immediate aftermath, while bodies were still being counted, while survivors were being treated for trauma both physical and mental, the other kingdoms had acted swiftly.

Students were recalled by armed escort within days.

Then came the councils.

Joint sessions held in neutral territories, where representatives from five kingdoms gathered to discuss "appropriate response to the Phoenix Academy tragedy." Vedgard had been invited to send diplomats. What they'd gotten instead were demands.

Reparations for the families of dead students, sums that would cripple the royal treasury if paid in full. Formal apologies acknowledging "catastrophic failure of duty." Territorial concessions, the Elven Courts wanted the Whispering Woods returned to their control, the Beastkin wanted expanded hunting rights in the northern ranges, Lioren wanted permanent Church observers stationed throughout Vedgard "to ensure proper spiritual guidance."

And underlying it all, barely concealed beneath diplomatic language, was the glee. The satisfaction of rivals who'd been waiting years for Vedgard to stumble, who saw opportunity in tragedy, who were already calculating how to carve up influence once the kingdom showed weakness.

King Zardric had attended too.

And it had been... disasterous.

The Lioren had suggested, in tones of exaggerated concern, that perhaps Vedgard's leadership had grown too comfortable, too complacent to properly protect the continent's future generations. And even their own capital.

That maybe fresh perspective in the kingdom's administration would prevent future tragedies.

The Beastkin representative had been more direct, stating flatly that weak kings breed weak kingdoms, and weak kingdoms become prey.

Zardric had exploded.

Shouted that they were vultures circling wounded prey. That they'd contributed nothing to them, sent no aid during any of the attacks, offered no assistance in the aftermath, yet now demanded recompense as if Vedgard had personally murdered their children.

He'd called the Archbishop a "sanctimonious parasite hiding behind religious authority." Called the Beastkin "barely civilized savages looking for excuse to raid." Declared that Vedgard would pay "not one copper, not one acre, not one ounce of dignity" to kingdoms that saw this as opportunity.

Then he'd walked out.

The diplomatic fallout had been immediate and severe.

Trade agreements were reconsidered. Border patrols increased. Military exercises began being conducted suspiciously close to Vedgard's territories. And the demands, rather than softening... intensified.

Now, six weeks later, Vedgard stood isolated. Surrounded by hostile powers. Facing either humiliating capitulation or unwinnable war.

Well, the attack and tragedy were just an excuse... to do what they actually wanted to do.

"I don't want war," Vesperine said quietly. Her hands moved unconsciously to her stomach, old habit, gesture left over from pregnancy years ago. "We almost lost—"

She cut herself off. Drew breath. Steadied.

I almost lost my children. Zilan survived, but so many didn't. I can't—I won't—risk that again.

"We can't win alone against them all," she continued, her voice firmer. "You know this. Our military is strong, but not strong enough to fight on five fronts simultaneously. Our economy is robust, but not robust enough to sustain extended conflict with trade routes cut and merchant partners withdrawing."

Her eyes pleaded with him to see, to understand, to let logic override pride.

"We need to resolve this peacefully. Through negotiation. Through concessions that sting but don't cripple us. Through—"

"Through surrender," Zardric finished bitterly.

"Through survival!" Vesperine's control finally cracked slightly. "Through ensuring our kingdom, our people, don't become casualties in war started by your pride!"

She turned away from him, her hands clenching and unclenching at her sides as she fought for composure.

Why can't he see? Why can't he understand that being right doesn't matter if we're dead? That pride is luxury we cannot afford?

Behind her, Zardric resumed his pacing. Muttering. Working himself deeper into righteous fury.

Vesperine closed her eyes, drawing slow breath.

I'm so tired. Tired of this. Tired of him. Tired of fighting the same battle over and over while he refuses to hear reason.

Her thoughts drifted, unwelcome, but persistent.

If only there was someone else here. Someone who understood. Someone who could navigate this crisis with actual strategy instead of wounded pride.

She thought of her advisors, competent, but ultimately unable to override the king's authority.

Thought of the court, full of sycophants who told Zardric what he wanted to hear rather than what he needed to know.

If only—

No.

She stopped that line of thinking immediately. Pushed it down. Locked it away.

Because that way lay treason. Lay thoughts that couldn't be unthought, desires that couldn't be unfelt.

She was Queen. Wife to the King. Mother to the heirs. And she would fulfill those duties regardless of personal feelings.

Even if part of her—growing larger each day—wondered what the kingdom could be under different leadership.

Under someone who valued strategy over stubbornness.

Survival over honor.

She opened her eyes and turned back to face her husband.

"We will find a solution," she said, her voice carefully neutral. "Together. But it requires you to actually listen to counsel instead of dismissing everything as weakness."

Zardric's jaw clenched. But he said nothing.

Just resumed his pacing, his muttering, his slow spiral into fury that would solve nothing.

And Vesperine watched him with green eyes that held thoughts she could never voice.

Not yet.

Maybe not ever.

But they existed nonetheless.

Growing stronger each day her husband proved himself inadequate for the crown he wore.