Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG]

Chapter 143: The Four-Headed Serpent


The air in our small, warded room at The Emerald Perch was thick with the weight of our new reality. The cheering for King Thalanil from the plaza below had long since faded, but the echoes of that zealous roar still seemed to press in on us. It was the sound of a countdown timer, ticking away the final days of Sylvandell's peace. An entire kingdom, an engine of war honed by a century of conquest and Kyorian philosophy, was about to be unleashed upon our friends.

"Four Sanctums," I said, the words feeling heavy on my tongue as I stared at the simple map Nyx had procured. The parchment, now marked with our intelligence, seemed to mock me with its stark, impossible geometry. Viridia. The Obsidian Citadel. The Crystal Spire. The Sunken Bastion. Four points of light, four nests of absolute power. "It's a hydra. We cut off one head, and three more will take its place, probably fighting each other for the right to burn our allies to the ground in a pointless war of succession."

"A conventional military response is feasible," Nyx stated, her voice a calm, analytical counterpoint to the storm in my own mind. She tapped a finger on the map, indicating the vast, sparsely populated lands between the four fortress-cities. "With your power, Rexxar's, and the support of our full team back at the Veiled Path, we could engage in a campaign of extreme harassment. We could strike their supply lines, sabotage their forges, assassinate key officers. We could bleed their army on its march to Sylvandell, forcing a retreat through attrition."

I considered it, running the scenarios through my mind. We were powerful enough. We could absolutely inflict devastating losses, using my [Ember's Leap] for impossible long range hit-and-run attacks, turning their long march into a month-long nightmare. "But it would be a bloody, protracted war," I countered, shaking my head. "We'd be risking elven lives, many of whom are just villagers, and it would take too much time. The collateral damage would be immense. And worse, a long campaign would be noisy. It could draw Kyorian attention on a scale we absolutely do not want. Remember the doctrines we read about? An 'Unforeseen Power Escalation' on a protectorate world is a Class-A trigger for observation, and we have no clue how many loyalists they still have here. It could potentially draw the eye of expert analysts, people far more dangerous than Vayne. We'd be caught between a hammer and an anvil."

"No," I decided, a new, more audacious idea beginning to form, an idea born from the ruthless logic the Kyorians themselves prized. "Fighting the army is the wrong paradigm. We think like them — brutally efficient. Why destroy the spear, when we can simply change the hand that wields it?"

Nyx tilted her head, her gaze sharp, following my train of thought perfectly. "You are proposing a regime change."

"More than that," I said, a slow, predatory grin spreading on my face as the full scope of the plan came into focus. I pointed a finger directly at the symbol for the royal palace in Viridia. "I'm proposing an acquisition. Nyx, your infiltration skills are unparalleled. Your mimicry is flawless. What if you didn't just imitate a captain or a vizier? What if you became the King, at least until we found one?"

For the first time since I'd known her, a flicker of genuine surprise crossed Nyx's features. "Assume the identity of a Tier 5 Sanctum Lord… My lord, the energy signature, the personal Domain… my current skill set could replicate his form, but his power is a different matter. His very soul resonates with the city-Sanctum. I could not maintain such a complex deception for long, especially under the scrutiny of his Royal Guard and his Diviners. The slightest inconsistency would be fatal."

"You wouldn't have to," I explained, the plan now flowing, a piece of lethal clockwork assembling itself in my mind. "Not permanently. Just long enough to get inside his head. To access his knowledge, his strategic plans, his deepest secrets. To understand the entire political and military apparatus from the very top." My voice grew lower, more intense. "If you control the King's persona, we control the kingdom. But what is the end goal? A puppet government? A destabilization leading to collapse? Installing a more... pliable monarch?"

This was the true heart of the problem. I had no desire to be an emperor in the shadows, pulling the strings of a kingdom. "We're not the Kyorians, Nyx," I stated firmly. "The goal isn't control for its own sake. It's security. Lasting security for our people and for the elves Thalanil is grinding under his heel. We need to leave this kingdom in the hands of someone who won't immediately start their own cycle of conquest." But who? We were outsiders, ghosts. We had no true knowledge of the noble lines.

I opened a quick, secure psionic channel, its signal routed through the Resonance Beacons and back to the Veiled Path, where Jeeves patched me through to Elder Valerius in Sylvandell. His weary, wise face appeared in my mind's eye. After I briefly, carefully explained the political situation and the choice before us, he was silent for a long moment, the weight of my words settling upon him.

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"A heavy burden you carry, Lord Eren," he finally sent, his thought-voice heavy with sorrow and an ancient wisdom. "To hold the fate of a kingdom in your hands. A military man like General Arion may bring stability, but a wolf is still a wolf, even on a leash. If you seek true peace… you must look to the past. Before the Crown's blood-soaked rise, this land was a council of noble houses. Thalanil's father framed the House of Silvanus for treason, accusing them of attempting to poison the royal line. It was a lie to remove his most respected rivals. They have lived in quiet disgrace for generations, but the common folk who remember the Old Ways still whisper their name with respect. They are the only house with no blood on their hands from the Unification Wars. Perhaps them. They are the past that could be this land's future."

The link ended, leaving me with a new, more hopeful path. "A restoration, not just a coup," I said to Nyx.

"A noble goal," she replied. "But how to grant them legitimacy? Power respects power, not noble intentions. A simple royal appointment would be seen as weakness, and they would be torn apart the moment our influence waned."

"Then their authority won't come from a simple decree," I countered. "It will come from tradition. You, as the King, mourning the 'loss' of your heirs and seeking a new path for your people, will reinstate the ancient Council of Elders, a tradition Thalanil's father abolished to consolidate his power. You will place the Head of House Silvanus as its first speaker. We give them a platform backed by resurrected law, not just a title." This was how we avoided being puppet masters; we would restore a system, then walk away.

"It could work," she conceded. "But Thalanil's sons will not stand by and allow their inheritance to be given to 'peaceful gardeners.'"

"Then we will ensure they have no choice," I said. "Our plan needs more precision." The new objective slotted into place, refining our strategy into a razor-sharp instrument. The decapitation wasn't just about killing a king anymore; it was about performing a radical, life-saving surgery on an entire kingdom.

"Phase One: The Enucleation," I began. "The Royal Guard. You identified four personal bodyguards, all peak Tier 4. They are his eyes and ears. They have to go." My eyes glowed with a faint violet light. "We identify their patrol shifts, their moments of isolation. One by one, I will pull each guard into my Domain and hold them in stasis. They won't be harmed, as long as they cooperate, merely… removed. Temporarily, forcing them to sign contracts under the new administration."

"Phase Two: The Acquisition," I continued. "With his watchdogs gone, we proceed. We lure the real King Thalanil to his secure study. Rexxar provides overwhelming force as a containment measure against the marching army, while I handle the king personally. Once he is dealt with, you assume his identity."

Nyx nodded. "I will need time in his persona. At least one full day-cycle. To access his archives, review all documents in his study, and understand the complete political landscape from his perspective."

"You'll have it," I promised. "Which leads to Phase Three: The Summons. You, as King Thalanil, will orchestrate the 'discovery' of a plot against the crown, supposedly led by his most fanatical general. You'll restore the House of Silvanus to a position of minor authority as a reward for their 'loyalty.' Then you will issue a royal summons to each of your 'sons.' One by one. Prince Valon, Prince Aelion, Prince Lynon. An urgent, private council with their father to discuss this 'treason.'"

The princes would walk, willingly, into a fortress that was no longer their father's. They would enter a private meeting from which they would not emerge unchanged.

"And when they arrive?" Nyx asked, her voice a placid sea belying the violent undercurrents of our planning.

"We present them with a new reality," I said, my voice hardening into iron. "They will be offered a choice. Swear a binding, soul-level oath — guaranteed by the Prime System — a contract sworn on their very life, to the new order under the House of Silvanus. They will be forced to open their dungeons to more citizens of their territories, breaking their monopoly on power. In exchange, they may live out their days as lords of their existing cities, their power checked and their ambition chained. Or… they can choose to be removed from the board. Permanently."

The final piece was the Glimpse. "But I won't do it blind," I said. "There are too many variables. Hidden artifacts, the King's true combat prowess, the Diviners… One mistake, one miscalculation, and the entire plan collapses. I'm using my precognition."

Nyx gave a single, slow nod. "A wise precaution, my lord. The long cooldown is a risk, but ensuring success in this operation is paramount."

It felt right. Using my most powerful strategic tool to ensure the flawless execution of a conspiracy. I would become a monster to kill a tyrant. A necessary evil to protect a greater good. I thought of the conscripted soldiers who would be saved, the conquered clans who would be freed, and the hope that could be restored.

"Get the others ready," I said, my voice a low command that resonated with the full power of my soul. "Jeeves, Rexxar, prepare for remote deployment. Nyx, begin your final preparations for undertaking the persona. It's time to take out a king. We start tonight. I need to see the path."

I sat on the floor of the room, closed my eyes, and reached for the shimmering, temporal power within me. The world outside, the bustling, doomed city of Viridia, faded away as I prepared to Glimpse the future, to watch a king's guards vanish, his identity stolen, and his kingdom be remade, all before he even knew his doom had arrived.

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