Journey to Become the Zenith

Chapter 141: The Queen’s Authority



The Queen’s Authority

"I didn’t wish to use this... but you people have given me no choice."

Videl spoke without hurry. Her words came slow, steady - like a breath held too long finally let go.

Too calm.

Slowly -

Her fingers lifted into the air.

Then he showed the ring.

Just then -

No one spoke.

A shine ran across it, thin lines catching the glow like they already knew what to say. Not loud. Nothing stretched beyond truth.

Yet it meant something.

A presence.

Something... unmistakable.

A quiet shift crossed Shawn’s face as he looked on. His gaze tightened at the edges, just a fraction.

Far off as it was, even from his spot -

Something stirred inside him.

The mana within the ring.

Distinct.

Refined.

Pure.

Royal.

That’s real...

He felt certain about it. That thought never crossed his path.

A mark appeared on objects made for royalty - quiet, almost hidden, impossible to copy even by the most practiced hands.

And that ring—

Had it.

A faint breath escaped him.

Not shock.

But acknowledgment.

So she’s backed by the Queen...

That changed things.

Completely.

Across the courtyard—

The nobles had gone silent.

Their eyes locked onto the ring.

Recognition flickered.

Then—

Tension.

They knew what it meant.

A ring like that—

Was not given lightly.

It was reserved for those acknowledged by the royal family.

Trusted.

Protected.

Untouchable.

And yet—

"That must be a fake!"

The voice broke the silence.

Sharp.

Desperate.

Another noble immediately followed.

"Yes—there’s no way a commoner like her could possess something like that!"

More voices joined.

"It’s a forgery!"

"A cheap trick!"

"Trying to scare us!"

The denial spread quickly.

Too quickly.

Because none of them wanted to accept the truth.

Videl didn’t argue.

Instead—

She moved.

With one smooth motion, she pulled Amura from the ground.

Shk.

The blade slid free effortlessly.

Then—

She began walking toward them.

Step.

Step.

Each movement steady.

Measured.

And with every step—

The nobles felt it.

That quiet pressure.

Not loud.

Not overwhelming.

But enough.

"Protect us!" one of them shouted, instinct kicking in as their guards immediately stepped forward, forming a barrier.

Weapons shifted.

Mana stirred.

At the side—

Shawn’s gaze sharpened slightly.

If she moved to attack—

He would step in.

Not for them.

But because chaos here—

Would spiral beyond control.

But then—

"No need to panic."

Videl’s voice cut through the tension.

She stopped.

Just close enough.

"I’m just going to show you people... that this ring is authentic."

Even as she said that—

The nobles didn’t relax.

Their guards remained tense.

Ready.

Because they had already seen what she was capable of.

And now—

Standing this close—

They saw it clearly.

The ring.

The engraving.

The faint pulse of mana.

Their expressions changed.

Subtly.

But unmistakably.

It’s real...

Some swallowed.

Others clenched their jaws.

But none of them spoke that truth aloud.

Because accepting it—

Meant surrendering everything.

"Hmph."

One of them scoffed, forcing confidence into his voice.

"Who are you trying to fool?"

His eyes flickered—just once—toward the ring before hardening again.

"That’s obviously a fake."

Others followed.

"Yes, a fake!"

"A well-made one, but still fake!"

They doubled down.

Because now—

They had already crossed the line.

Backing down—

Was no longer an option.

Inside their minds—

Plans formed.

Fast.

Desperate.

Take the sword first.

Deal with the consequences later.

If the Queen questioned them—

They could deny everything.

Say they never saw the ring.

Say she never showed it.

With enough voices—

With enough pressure—

Even the throne couldn’t easily dismiss them.

It was a gamble.

A dangerous one.

But the reward—

Was worth it.

That sword—

Was worth everything.

Videl watched them.

Quietly.

And understood.

So that’s your answer.

Her fingers tightened slightly around Amura’s hilt.

Not enough to draw.

Just enough to remind everyone in that room that the blade existed.

That it was real.

That she was.

Then—

She spoke again.

"The Queen also said this—"

Something in her voice shifted.

It didn’t rise.

Didn’t sharpen.

It settled.

Like weight pressing down on the chest. Like the quiet before a verdict is passed.

"To me who mischief seeks..."

The words left her lips slowly, each syllable measured, deliberate.

The air itself seemed to hesitate.

Breaths were held—not consciously, not intentionally—but because something deeper told them to stop.

"...shall mischief fall."

A faint tremor ran through the gathered nobles—not visible in grand gestures, but in the smallest betrayals of control.

A tightened jaw.

A flicker in the eyes.

A hand that stilled mid-motion.

She didn’t rush.

Didn’t fill the silence.

She let it stretch.

Let it sink in.

"There comes an hour..."

Her gaze moved.

Not quickly. Not sharply.

It swept.

Across faces lined with pride, arrogance, calculation—now touched by something else.

Something colder.

"...that recompenses all."

Silence.

Not the casual kind.

Not the kind born from hesitation.

This was the kind that fell.

Heavy.

Absolute.

It wrapped around the hall, settled into the bones of everyone present.

This time—

No one interrupted.

No scoffs.

No whispers.

No clever remarks hiding behind false confidence.

Because they knew.

Every single one of them.

Those weren’t just words.

They had heard them before.

Some in court.

Some in stories.

Some—

Too close.

That phrase—

Wasn’t poetry.

It wasn’t tradition.

It was a sentence.

A declaration.

The words the Queen spoke—

Right before traitors lost their heads.

The realization didn’t explode.

It crept.

Like cold seeping through armor.

A noble near the back swallowed hard, his throat suddenly dry.

Another shifted his stance, one foot sliding back half an inch—as if distance could somehow soften implication.

Eyes that once looked down on her now avoided hers entirely.

Their earlier arrogance—

Didn’t shatter.

It cracked.

Thin lines spreading beneath polished surfaces.

Because now the equation had changed.

Completely.

If they pushed further—

This wouldn’t be a matter of pride.

Or insult.

Or politics.

This would cross into something far more dangerous.

They wouldn’t just be challenging a student.

They would be standing against someone recognized by the Queen.

Sanctioned.

Protected.

Marked.

And in doing so—

They would be stepping into a line no one crossed lightly.

A line drawn in blood.

Because opposing that authority...

Wasn’t defiance.

It was treason.

And treason—

Didn’t come with warnings.

Only endings.

Final.

Absolute.

Unforgiving.

No negotiation.

No mercy.

Shawn’s eyes flickered.

Now—

This had gone beyond a simple dispute.

If anyone acted rashly here—

He would not hesitate.

Because loyalty to the throne—

Came before everything.

The nobles understood that too.

Their thoughts raced.

Some still wanted it.

Desperately.

But not like this.

Not in the open.

Not in front of Shawn.

Not after that warning.

Because the moment they stepped forward now—

They wouldn’t just face Videl.

They would face him.

And Shawn—

Would kill them without hesitation.

One by one—

They stepped back.

Not openly.

Not dramatically.

But enough.

The tension shifted.

Retreat.

For now.

But not surrender.

Because in their eyes—

The greed was still there.

Burning.

Waiting.

If not here...

Then somewhere else.

If not openly...

Then from the shadows.

They had already made their decision.

They would not stop.

Not until that sword—

Was theirs.

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