CH313 Alex, the Fury Diplomat
***
Earl Kellerman stared at Alex for a long, heavy momentâthen shifted his gaze to Grand Mage Taman. Eventually, he exhaled and withdrew his Saintly aura.
"I apologise. I lost control of myself for a moment," the Earl said, bowing his head ever so slightly.
"Humph!" Grand Mage Taman snorted coldly before turning to Alex. "Young Master Alex, as the offended party, you may decide whether the Earl should be punished for his misconduct."
Alex, who hadnât moved a muscle since the beginning, waved his hand dismissively.
"No matter," he said with a faint smile. "I can understand the Earlâs position."
Then his tone subtly shiftedâstill calm, but colder.
"However, that said, I should still address your earlier outburst."
He tilted his head slightly. "You asked if I was mad?"
The soft smile he always wore slowly turned unsettling. His eyes deepened in darker shade of crimson, gleaming faintly even under the hallâs lighting.
Calm Madness!
"What do you think?"
A visible shiver ran down Earl Kellermanâs spine.
That face... that look... those eyes... They were the same as his. The man he loathed. The man he fearedâEarl Drake Fury.
Alex continued, his voice steady yet sharp enough to cut through steel.
"You asked if I was threatening you..."
He leaned forward ever so slightly, locking eyes with the Earl. His expression was eerily composed, but behind that calm gleamed a predatory hungerâquiet, deadly, and unblinking.
"I am Fury," he said slowly, every word deliberate. "We do not threaten. We donât warn. We make promises."
He pausedâlong enough for silence to grow heavy.
"And we always keep... our promises."
There was no magic in his voice, no concepts or compulsionâjust words. Yet, the calmness in his tone made the blood run cold in everyoneâs veins.
For those familiar with Earl Drake Fury, the resemblance was too closeâtoo terrifying.
For a fleeting moment, they swore it was the Mad Earl himself speaking through the boy.
But Alex wasnât finished.
"While weâre on the topic of etiquette..." Alex began again, his tone cooling into something almost diplomatic. "My father is a Legendâand the Guardian of the North. His responsibilities to the Empire stretch far beyond that of a mere Earl. It is both impossible and, frankly, ludicrous to expect him to abandon his duties just because you decided to attend these talks in person."
Though polite in delivery, the message was clear enough for everyone present to understand:
âWho the FxCK do you think you are?â*
Earl Kellermanâs expression darkened into a storm of icy rage. If looks could kill, Alex would have been torn to shreds. Yet, to his credit, the man managed to restrain himselfâbarely.
Alex pretended not to notice. Folding his right leg over his left, he maintained his composed demeanour and continued evenly,
"Besides, I believe thereâs something youâre misunderstanding, Earl Kellerman. The forces your men attacked werenât my fatherâs soldiers."
He leaned back, smiling faintly.
"They were mine."
The words dropped like thunder.
Both the Kellerman delegation and the mediators blinked in disbelief.
Grand Mage Taman adjusted his spectacles, studying Alex with renewed curiosity.
"Can you expatiate on that, Young Master Alex?" he asked.
Alex nodded. "I was originally tasked with leading the task force to clear the Kellerman fief of its Wildkin problemâan assignment entrusted to my family by the Imperial Sun. But when we confirmed a sub-Legendary power was involved, I stepped back. My father, Earl Drake, took direct command while I retreated to the Northern Dankrot Fort to coordinate the supply lines."
He met the Earlâs eyes. "At the time your forces attacked, that fort was flying my flag. In short: you attacked my command, not my fatherâs."
"There is a ruleâno, an ironclad law in my family: âYou keep what you killâ." Alexâs tone was light, yet sharp. "Because I controlled the fort during your House forcesâ invasion, and because the invasion was driven back under my command, whatever follows belongs to meâincluding the honour of victory... and this negotiation."
He let the statement hang for a heartbeat. "My fatherâs letterâthe one you just crushedâwas meant to save your face. Since youâve rejected it, let us deal with facts."
Alex leaned forward, both forearms on the table, speaking like a man offering practical counsel.
"You have two options. First: you walk out and the negotiation collapses. If that happens, word will reach my family that during what was supposed to be a mediated discussion, you tore up the letter, inadvertently insulting our family patriarch. That gives House Fury every legitimate reason to invade your lands."
"You would get what you soughtâmy father and our Counts at your gatesâbut they would come with their personal legions and the full force of our house."
Grand Mage Taman interrupted, voice clipped. "Young Master Alex, please avoid statements thatâ" He stopped, reconsidered, and softened the rebuke. "âthat could be construed as threats. And since you are the affected party, refrain from invoking external parties; doing so will influence and impede these talks."
"Understood, High Arbiter." Alex inclined his head, then turned his attention back to Earl Kellerman, who now wore a complicated mask of rage and unease.
"Allow me to restate my words." Alex said, " If you leave and these talks break down, then note thisânot as a threat, but as a promise. I will inform my family that your house is hostile and should be treated as an enemy."
"Then," Alex continued evenly, "I will make a public statement that the Kellerman forcesâled by your heir, Josiah Kellermanâinvaded our lands after my family answered your plea to the Empire for military aid against a Wildkin incursion.
"That, after being defeated, and after we adhered to noble etiquetteâcapturing your heir without retaliating by invading your fiefâyou refused to negotiate or reach a fair settlement for the assault. I will also reveal that you hired a Legendary-ranked Assassin to kill me during the war, a blatant violation of the Rules of War."
He gave a small shrug, voice still calm and conversational. "All of which my family and I, in good faith, have kept from the public.
"And it just so happens," Alex added, leaning back slightly, "that in the coming days, every major power will gather in the Enclave for the auction. A rather perfect stage to make such revelationsâdonât you agree?"
Earl Kellermanâs composure finally cracked.
"Oh, and by the way," Alex said offhandedly, as if recalling an afterthought. "Iâll also personally decapitate your son and send his head back to youâfor causing the deaths of my men."
"You wouldnât daâ!"
The Earl stopped himself mid-outburst as Alexâs staring crimson eyes and the memory of his earlier words returned to him.
âI am Fury.â
Three simple wordsâbut they carried the weight of generations. And when paired with the lucid, unnerving calm in Alexâs eyesâthe mark of the Furor Bloodlineâs Calm Madnessâthe threat... no, promise became all too real.
Alex saw the flicker of fear in the manâs face. He had achieved his goal. Taking Esmondâs earlier advice, he eased the pressure in his tone.
"However," he said smoothly, "we can avoid all of this. Option twoâyou remain seated, and we continue this discussion. We reach an agreement, and everyone goes home happyâor at least, as happy as they can be."
He adjusted his posture, leaning back into a neutral position before continuing.
"Between losing a little face by negotiating with the heir of a Guardian family âwhoâs still wet behind the earsâ, and having your familyâs honour dragged through the mud before being crushed beneath an overwhelming military force..." Alex let his gaze sweep across the room. "I think everyone here knows what the sensible decision is."
He gave the Earl a faint, encouraging nod.
Then, gesturing toward the empty chair, Alex said softly, "So, Earl... if you please."
Earl Kellermanâs breathing quickened.
The message was clear enough: âGet your damned ass back in that seatâ.
Only Alex had said it with the polish of diplomacy.
All eyes turned toward the Earl, the room holding its collective breath.
After a long, tense silence, Earl Kellerman did the unexpected.
He swallowed his prideâ
and sat back down.
***