Chapter 98: The Cost of Choosing
They didn't speak much on the way back.Not because there was nothing to say.But because there was too much.
The road to Solaryn felt different this time.Not tense.Not calm.
Just… weighted.Seris walked ahead, as always—Silent, unreadable.
Varyn stayed beside Kael
Not watching him directly
But aware of him.
And Kael carried the outcome with him.
Not pride.Not doubt.
Just the understanding that a decision had been made—
And now it would be judged.
Return to the Palace
The gates opened without delay.
They had been expected.
Aegis guards stepped aside instantly.
No questions.
No inspection.
Because the King's Guard didn't report to them.
They answered to one person.
And he was already waiting.
The Report Chamber
This wasn't the throne room.
Smaller.Quieter.
More personal.
A long table stood at the center—
Not for ceremony—
But for truth.
King Godfrey Solvayne stood at the far end.Not seated.
Not elevated.Present.
Astra was already there.
The rest of the Guard began to enter, one by one.
No formation.
No announcement.
Just presence filling the room.
Kael stepped in last.
And for a brief moment—
It felt like stepping into judgment again.
The Report Begins
"Report," the King said.
No greeting.No delay.
Seris spoke first.Direct.
"Village compromised."
"Population affected by low-level Devourer influence."A pause.
"Source identified and eliminated."
The King nodded slightly.
"Casualties?"
A moment.Small.
But noticeable.
"None," Seris said.
That shifted the room.
Subtly.
Because that wasn't expected.
The Friction Surfaces
Kaelen leaned forward slightly.
"None?" he repeated.
A pause.
"That's inefficient."
Varyn didn't react immediately.
Then—
"It was controlled."
Kaelen's eyes moved to Kael.
"It was slow."There it was.
Not an accusation.
A statement.
"We don't move slow in contamination scenarios," Kaelen continued.
"We end them."
Thorne spoke from the side.
"Would've been cleaner."
Lyra frowned slightly.
"Cleaner doesn't mean better."
Kaelen didn't look at her.
"It means contained."
Kael Steps In
Kael didn't wait.
"They weren't gone," he said.
The room shifted again.
Because now—
It was direct.
"They were still alive."
Kaelen's expression didn't change.
"Barely."
A pause.
"And that's enough to hesitate?" he asked.
Not mocking.
Genuinely questioning.
Kael met his gaze.
"It's enough to check."
Silence.Not agreement.
But engagement.The Real Argument
Elric spoke next.
"You assumed a centralized source."
A pause.
"You were correct."
He tilted his head slightly.
"But if you were wrong?"
Kael didn't answer immediately.
Because that mattered.
"Then we would've adapted," he said.
Elric's expression didn't change.
"After losing time."
"After losing control."
"After risking spread."
Each point landed.
Not aggressively.
But precisely.
Where It Gets Real
Varyn stepped in
Not to defend
But to ground it.
"We had time," he said.
"The influence wasn't escalating."
Kaelen shook his head slightly.
"You didn't know that."
"We read it," Varyn replied.
"You trusted his read," Kaelen said.
A pause."That's the problem."
Now it wasn't about Kael.
It was about trust.And whether he had earned it.The King Listens
Through all of it—King Godfrey Solvayne said nothing.Didn't interrupt.
Didn't guide.He simply listened.
To every word.To every angle.
To every flaw.Because this
Was the real report.
Not what happened.
But how it was understood.
The Turning Point
"I made the call."
Kael's voice cut through the room.
Clear.Grounded.
"Not them."That shifted everything.
Because now
Responsibility had a direction.
"I saw the pattern," Kael continued.
"I felt the source."
"And I chose to act on it."A pause.
"If it was wrong"He didn't hesitate.
"then it's on me."Silence.Not dramatic.
Real.
Because that's how responsibility sounds.The King Speaks
Finally
The King moved.
Not much.Just enough.
"You preserved lives," he said.
A pause."At the cost of certainty."
He looked at Kael."Why?"
Kael didn't look away.
"Because they weren't the enemy."
Simple.
Unfiltered.
The King held his gaze.
Longer this time.
Measuring something deeper.
Then
"And if next time they are?" he asked.
That question mattered more than anything before it.
Kael didn't answer immediately.
Because there wasn't an easy answer.
"Then I won't hesitate," he said.
A pause.
"But I won't assume it either."
The Judgment
The King nodded slightly.
Not approval.
Not rejection.
Understanding.
"Good."
He turned slightly
Addressing the room.
"Efficiency matters."
"But so does judgment."
A pause.
"One without the other"
His voice lowered slightly.
"is failure."
That settled across everyone.
Including Kaelen.
Who didn't argue.
But didn't agree either.
After the Room Clears
The meeting ended without ceremony.
As it always did.People left in silence
Or in thought.Kael stepped out last.
Varyn walked beside him.
"You handled that well," he said.
Kael exhaled slightly.
"Did I?"
Varyn nodded.
"You didn't try to be right."
A pause.
"You just stood by your choice."
That mattered more.
Seris passed by them quietly.
"You'll get someone killed one day," she said.A pause.
"But not today."And she kept walking.
The Divide Remains
Kaelen stood further down the hall.
Waiting.
Not for them.
For Kael.
"You made the right call," he said.
Kael blinked slightly.
"Doesn't sound like you mean that."
Kaelen's gaze didn't shift.
"I mean you got the right result."
A pause.
"That's not the same thing."
He stepped closer.
"Out there, results matter."
"Not intentions."Then he turned
And walked away.Leaving Kael with that.Final ThoughtThat night
Kael didn't train.Didn't rest easily either.
Because now
He understood something important.
It wasn't enough to choose.
He had to be ready for what those choices cost.Because next time
The line might not be as clear.
And when it wasn't
He wouldn't just be judged by the outcome.But by the lives that didn't make it through.
