Corruption Of Champions All | Text

Valerius stared at her. “You’re asking me to become a usurper.”

Valerius read the fine print. The grain would be taken at sword-point. Three merchants would likely resist, and their households would be declared traitors. Their wealth would then “administer” the relief effort—under royal oversight. corruption of champions all text

He refused again. But that night, he did not sleep. He walked the empty training grounds, running his thumb along the edge of his old sword. If the law is already corrupt, is it not the highest virtue to break it? He had spent his life defending the idea of Aethelburg. But if the idea was a lie, then what was he defending? His own legend. Valerius stared at her

“This is necessity ,” Orran replied, and his voice had the texture of rust. “The merchants paid for your statue. They did not pay for my army’s loyalty. I need you to stand beside me when I break them. Not for me. For the starving children you once carried from fires.” Three merchants would likely resist, and their households

“You are the only one who can stop this,” she said. “But you cannot do it lawfully. The courts are his. The army is his, except for the veterans who would still die for you. Take them. Seize the palace. Install a regency. Save us.”

“The Border Marches are starving,” Orran said, sliding the parchment across the oak table. It was a decree authorizing the seizure of grain from the southern granaries—grain belonging to the merchant-lords who had funded Valerius’s own victory parade. “They hoard while children swell with empty bellies. Sign it.”

He woke, and the first light of dawn bled through his curtains like a wound. He rose, dressed in his old champion’s armor for the first time in months, and walked to the palace. Not to save anyone. Not to confess. He walked because the king had asked him to be present for the morning’s “administrative hearings”—which was the new word for the trials of the innocent.