Harem Master: Seduction System - Chapter 318
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- Chapter 318 - Capítulo 318: Cooperation With Dwarves
Capítulo 318: Cooperation With Dwarves
The heavy velvet curtains of the Jorailian pavilion were drawn, shutting out the moon and the prying eyes of the Conclave. The master chamber, which had been a war room and a den of debauchery in equal measure, was now a silent, focused hub of intelligence analysis.
Alaric, Ondine, and Priscilla sat around a large, polished table, a map of the valley spread between them. The air was thick with the scent of old parchment and fresh ink as they reviewed the information they had gathered, cross-referencing it with the secrets brutally extracted from the mind of Captain Wei.
The revelations about Qi and the terrifying potential of a Domain had fundamentally shifted Alaric’s priorities. The Rimefrost Imperium’s technology was a marvel, a long-term goal. But the martial secrets of the east… that was a matter of immediate, existential importance for the women he cared for most.
“A Domain,” Priscilla murmured, her voice filled with a scholar’s awe as she read through the transcribed interrogation notes. “To impose one’s will upon reality itself… it’s the theoretical pinnacle of both martial and magical arts. The Royal Archives spoke of it only in the most fragmented, mythological terms. To think it is a real, attainable power…”
“And a power we are dangerously behind on,” Ondine added, her expression grim. Her political mind was already calculating the terrifying strategic implications. “If Emperor Huang Long can truly create a space where he is a god… no army, no artifact we possess could stand against him in a direct confrontation. We would be… helpless.”
Alaric simply nodded, his ruby eyes fixed on the map, a thoughtful, calculating expression on his face. He was not afraid. He was intrigued. It was a new mountain to climb, a new power to conquer and make his own.
The quiet, intense atmosphere was broken by a sudden, almost imperceptible shift in the shadows near the far wall. A moment later, Zylle Mordan materialized, stepping out of the darkness as if she were a part of it. Her movements were utterly silent, a ghost in the candlelight.
She carried with her a palpable aura of cold, ruthless efficiency. Her face was a mask of professional indifference, but her obsidian eyes held a dark, triumphant glint. She had been hunting.
“Master,” she said, her voice a low, cool murmur that cut through the silence. “I have information.”
Alaric leaned back in his chair, a faint, expectant smile on his lips. “Speak, my little spymaster. What whispers have you plucked from the wind?”
Zylle placed a thin, leather-bound dossier on the table. It was filled with her own neat, precise script. “The Conclave is a web of minor intrigues, as expected,” she began, her tone that of a lecturer presenting a dissertation. “The Suntouched Confederacy, desperate after their recent… setbacks… at our border, are secretly attempting to purchase cryo-suppression technology from the Rimefrost Imperium. They believe it can be used to counter the Sea Monsters’ abyssal frost magic. A foolish hope, but their desperation makes them predictable.”
“And the Empress Anastasia sells her technology to her sworn enemies?” Ondine asked, her eyebrows raised in surprise.
“Of course,” Zylle replied with a faint, contemptuous sneer. “She sells them an older, less efficient version of the technology, at an exorbitant price. It will be just effective enough to prolong their war with the Sea Monsters, bleeding both sides dry, while she reaps the profits and watches her two southern rivals weaken each other. It is a simple, elegant, and utterly ruthless strategy.”
Alaric chuckled softly. “I approve. What else?”
“The Dragon Emperor and the Shogun of Yamato are engaged in a quiet, vicious bidding war,” Zylle continued, flipping a page in her dossier. “Not for territory, but for the exclusive mining rights to a small, seemingly insignificant island off the southern coast. My sources indicate the island is the world’s only known source of ‘Adamantine Heart Ore’, a metal that, when properly forged, is rumored to be indestructible.”
“Indestructible,” Priscilla breathed, her eyes widening. “The legends are true… such a metal could be used to create weapons and armor that would be… unstoppable.”
“A worthy prize,” Alaric mused. “And one we will have to acquire for ourselves at a later date. But these are the games of lions. What of the rats scurrying in the shadows?”
Zylle’s expression hardened, the professional detachment replaced by a cold, burning anger. “The Radiant Theocracy,” she said, her voice dropping, becoming a low, venomous hiss. “They are moving against you, Master. But not directly. Their methods are… insidious.”
She paused, her obsidian eyes meeting Alaric’s. “They are targeting the dwarf, Borin Stonehand.”
A sudden, chilling silence fell over the room.
“Explain,” Alaric commanded, his voice now devoid of its earlier amusement.
“My initial surveillance of their pavilion revealed… an unusual level of interest in the dwarven delegation,” Zylle began, her voice a cold, precise narrative. “They were arrogant, as expected. But their arrogance was focused. I knew they were hostile to you, Master, to our entire kingdom. I decided a more… direct… approach was necessary to uncover their true intentions.”
She looked at Alaric, her eyes holding a flicker of something… a grudging, professional pride. “I targeted their agents. Not the high-ranking cardinals, but the lesser priests. The ones whose faith is strong, but whose discretion is weak.”
“I had my agents follow a group of them to a tavern in the lower valley,” she continued, her voice a low, chilling whisper. “They drank cheap wine and spoke of a ‘glorious opportunity’ to bring a ‘lost flock’ back to the light. They were careless. They believed their god protected their whispers.”
“I chose one,” Zylle said, her voice dropping even further, becoming a cold, flat, almost inhuman tone. “A young, zealous acolyte named Brother Michaelus. My agents isolated him on his way back to the Theocracy’s pavilion. He was… persuaded… to have a private conversation with me.”
Ondine and Priscilla exchanged a nervous, fearful glance. They could only imagine what Zylle’s ‘persuasion’ entailed.
Zylle seemed to read their thoughts, a faint, cruel smile touching her lips. “He was surprisingly resilient,” she admitted, her voice a low, almost conversational murmur. “His faith-based mental resistance was… noteworthy. But the human nervous system is a beautiful, predictable instrument. Pressure point application to the trigeminal nerve, combined with a carefully administered dose of a truth-serum I… acquired… from my former associates… is remarkably effective at bypassing even the most fervent devotion. He sang like a choir boy in the high cathedral.”
The chilling, clinical detail of her description sent a shiver down even Alaric’s spine. He was reminded, once again, of the beautiful, deadly weapon he now held on his leash.
“And what did he sing of, my dear Zylle?” Alaric asked, his voice a low, dangerous purr.
“A plot,” Zylle stated simply. “A plot of exquisite, pious cruelty. They have dispatched their most renowned healer, an Inquisitor named Theron, to approach Master Forgemaster Borin after the Conclave. He will offer to ‘cure’ his daughter’s illness.”
“A simple play for his loyalty?” Alaric asked, his eyes narrowing.
“It is worse, Master,” Zylle replied, her voice a low, venomous hiss. “So much worse. The ‘cure’ he offers is a ritual. A holy blessing they call the ‘Blessing of the Eternal Sun’. According to the blubbering priest, it does not just heal the body. It… purifies the soul.”
“Brainwashing,” Priscilla breathed, her face pale with a horrified understanding.
“Precisely,” Zylle confirmed, her eyes burning with a cold, contemptuous fire. “It will heal the girl, yes. But it will also subtly, irrevocably, rewrite her mind. It will erase her personality, her memories, her love for her father, and replace it with a singular, all-consuming, fanatical devotion to the Radiant God. She will become a puppet. A holy doll.”
The sheer, monstrous evil of the plan was breathtaking.
“And they intend to use this… doll… to manipulate her father,” Zylle continued, her voice a low, angry growl. “She will become their most potent weapon. Healed by their ‘miracle’, her soul ‘purified’ by their ‘blessing’, she will convince her father, and through him, the entire dwarven race, that their destiny is to serve the Radiant God. To turn against you, Master, and your ‘blasphemous’ creations. To become a holy army in the hands of the Theocracy.”
Ondine let out a soft, horrified gasp. “To use a sick child in such a way… it is… it is beyond monstrous.”
“It is how they operate,” Zylle stated coldly. “Their faith is a weapon. And they are not afraid to aim it at the hearts of children.”
Alaric was silent for a long moment, his fingers steepled before him, his ruby eyes narrowed in thought. He was not shocked. He was not outraged. He was… impressed. It was a brilliant, evil, and utterly effective plan.
“Why were we able to uncover this, Zylle?” he asked finally, his voice a low, analytical hum. “If their plan is so crucial, why were they so careless?”
“Because of their faith, Master,” Zylle replied instantly. “It is their greatest strength, and their most profound weakness. They believe their mission is divinely ordained, divinely protected. Their arrogance makes them careless. Their agents speak too freely in the taverns, they boast of their god’s coming triumph, because they cannot conceive of a world where their god does not prevail.”
She looked at him, her obsidian eyes hard as flint. “The Empress Anastasia, the Dragon Emperor Huang Long… they are far more dangerous. Their plans are hidden behind walls of power and silence. Their agents are professionals, not zealots. Their arrogance is a cold, calculating thing, not a fiery, self-righteous one. Of all the great powers, only the Theocracy was foolish enough to let me see their hand.”
The implication was clear. They had uncovered one plot. But there were others, more subtle, more dangerous, moving in the shadows around them.
Alaric leaned back in his chair, a slow, cold, predatory smile spreading across his handsome face. He did not look angry. He did not look concerned. He looked… excited.
“They think they’re playing a game of faith?” he purred, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. “Excellent. It seems we have a race on our hands. A race to see whose ‘miracle’ is more potent.”
He rose from his chair, his presence suddenly filling the room with a palpable, electric energy. The game was afoot. And he was ready to play.
He looked at Zylle, his ruby eyes gleaming with a new, focused intensity. “Zylle. I need every detail on the girl’s condition. Every symptom, every scrap of information you can find. I want to know the exact nature of this magical curse. Is it demonic? Is it arcane? Is it divine? I want to know everything.”
“It will be done, Master,” Zylle replied, a flicker of her old, professional pride in her eyes.
He then turned to Priscilla. “Priscilla. The moment we return to the Azure Fortress, I want every text on curse-breaking, on soul-purification, on advanced alchemical healing, from the Eloriath Royal Archives laid out in my private lab. I want every precedent, every theory, every forgotten ritual. We will find a cure. A real one.”
“Yes, my Lord,” Priscilla whispered, her own mind already racing, her scholarly instincts overriding her fear and submission.
Finally, he turned to Ondine. “Ondine. Prepare a gift for Master Forgemaster Borin. Something magnificent. A set of our finest enchanted tools. A rare, fire-aspected gem from the heart of a demonic general. Something that speaks of our respect for his craft. We will visit him tomorrow. We will offer him our condolences. And our help.”
The three most powerful women in his new empire moved to enact his orders, their movements a symphony of quiet, efficient purpose. The Conclave was no longer just a marketplace, a stage for political posturing. It was a battleground of covert schemes and counter-schemes.
Alaric now had a clear path to securing the dwarven alliance by saving Borin Stonehand’s daughter. He had a direct, unavoidable conflict with the Radiant Theocracy. And he had a burning, insatiable desire to acquire the martial secrets of the east.
The sun rose, painting the peaks of the Conclave in hues of rose and gold, but within the Jorailian pavilion, the atmosphere was one of cold, hard steel. The intoxicating haze of the previous night had been banished, replaced by the sharp, focused energy of a predator preparing its next hunt.
Alaric, Ondine, Priscilla, and Zylle had their plan. The Theocracy’s insidious plot had been exposed, and Alaric’s counter-gambit was already in motion.
First, the gift.
Ondine, her face a mask of regal diplomacy, personally oversaw the selection. It was not a simple chest of gold or a rare wine. It was a gift designed to speak directly to the soul of a master craftsman.
A set of enchanted forging tools, crafted by the Steele Family’s own artisans under Iridelle’s direct supervision. The hammer’s head was forged from a meteorite ore that hummed with a faint, stellar energy, its haft wrapped in the cured hide of a lightning drake. The tongs were charmed to be impervious to any heat, their tips capable of gripping a mote of molten steel with the delicacy of a surgeon’s scalpel.
And at the center of the velvet-lined chest was the true prize: a single, magnificent, fire-aspected demonic core, taken from the heart of a slain Archdemon general. It pulsed with a deep, inner fire, a contained sun of raw, untamed power.
“A perfect offering, my Lord,” Ondine said, her voice a low murmur of appreciation as she inspected the gift. “It speaks of respect for his craft, and a subtle, undeniable demonstration of our own power.”
Alaric simply nodded, his ruby eyes gleaming with a cold, calculating light. “Let us see if the proud Master Forgemaster is as pragmatic as his reputation suggests.”
The Ironhelm encampment was a stark contrast to the opulent pavilions of the human kingdoms. It was a place of function over form, a series of low, sturdy structures carved from the living rock of the mountain, their entrances reinforced with massive, intricately carved gates of black iron. The air here was thick with the smell of coal smoke, hot metal, and the sweat of honest, hard labor.
Dwarven guards, their beards braided with iron rings, their axes resting easily on their shoulders, watched their approach with stony, suspicious eyes. They did not trust humans, especially not the smooth-talking, elegantly dressed humans of the southern kingdoms.
But the banner of Queen Ondine Bellerose, and the sheer, palpable aura of power that radiated from Alaric and his two Archmage attendants, was enough to grant them an audience.
They were led not into a throne room, but into a grand forge, a cavernous space where the heart of a mountain had been hollowed out, the walls glowing with a network of molten rock that served as both light and heat. The air was hot, ringing with the rhythmic, musical sound of hammers on steel.
Master Forgemaster Borin Stonehand stood before a massive, rune-etched anvil, his face grim, his powerful arms slick with sweat. He was a mountain of a dwarf, his fiery red beard a magnificent, braided cascade, his eyes the color of tempered steel. He did not stop his work as they entered. He brought his massive hammer down on a glowing ingot of steel one last time, the impact sending a shower of sparks into the hot, dim air.
Only then did he turn to face them, his expression a mask of gruff, weary indifference.
“Queen Bellerose. Lord Steele,” he grunted, his voice a low, gravelly rumble. “My forge is a place of work, not of politics. State your business.”
Ondine, ever the perfect diplomat, stepped forward, her voice a smooth, respectful balm against the dwarf’s gruff exterior. “Master Forgemaster Borin,” she said, her smile warm, her curtsy a gesture of genuine respect. “We come not to talk of politics, but of mutual respect and admiration. We have brought a small gift, a token of our esteem for the master craftsmen of Ironhelm.”
She gestured to her guards, who brought forward the magnificent, velvet-lined chest. They opened it, revealing the gleaming, enchanted tools and the pulsing, fiery heart of the demonic core.
A flicker of genuine surprise, of a craftsman’s pure, unadulterated appreciation, sparked in Borin’s stony eyes. He stepped forward, his gaze sweeping over the tools. He reached out a calloused hand, his fingers tracing the intricate runes on the meteorite hammer.
“Lightning drake hide,” he murmured, his voice a low, appreciative rumble. “And the core… from a true Archdemon. The purity of its fire… it is… remarkable.”
He looked at Alaric, his expression softening almost imperceptibly. “A fine gift, Lord Steele. A gift that speaks a language I understand.”
Alaric simply nodded, his expression one of quiet, respectful understanding. “A great craftsman deserves great tools, Master Forgemaster. And a great people… deserve a future.”
The words hung in the hot, ringing air, a subtle, deliberate shift from the language of craft to the language of survival.
Borin’s face hardened once more, his brief moment of pleasure replaced by the heavy, weary weight of his grief. “The future is a luxury we dwarves can no longer afford to dream of, Lord Steele,” he said, his voice a low, bitter growl. He turned, gesturing towards a heavy, rune-etched door at the far end of the forge. “My own future… lies in that room. Fading. Turning to stone.”
The raw, undiluted pain in his voice was a palpable thing.
Alaric’s expression softened, his voice now a low, sympathetic murmur. “I have heard of your daughter’s plight, Master Forgemaster. A terrible tragedy. A magical curse, I believe?”
Borin’s head snapped up, his eyes narrowing with a renewed suspicion. “And what would a human lord know of dwarven curses?”
“I am not just a lord, Master Forgemaster,” Alaric replied, his voice calm, his Archmage aura flaring for a fraction of a second, a subtle, undeniable declaration of power. “I am an alchemist. A scholar. And the nature of your daughter’s illness… it is a puzzle that intrigues me.”
He stepped closer, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial, almost academic, tone. “The petrification begins in the extremities, does it not? A slow, creeping coldness. And there is a faint, almost undetectable aura of… negative spiritual energy around her. Not demonic. Not necrotic. Something… else.”
Borin stared at him, his mouth agape. Alaric had just described his daughter’s symptoms with a terrifying, impossible accuracy.
“How… how could you possibly know that?” the dwarf stammered, his gruff exterior crumbling.
“Because, Master Forgemaster,” Alaric said, his voice a low, hypnotic whisper, “I have seen this kind of magic before. In the deepest, most forbidden sections of the Eloriath Royal Archives. It is an ancient curse, a soul-binding petrification ritual. It does not just turn the body to stone; it traps the soul within, a conscious, terrified prisoner in a cage of its own flesh.”
The sheer, monstrous horror of his words slammed into Borin like a physical blow. He staggered back, his face a mask of pure, unadulterated terror.
“No…” he whispered, his voice a ragged, broken sound. “No, that cannot be…”
“It is,” Alaric stated simply, his voice now filled with a genuine, heartfelt sympathy. “And I am sorry, Master Forgemaster. Truly.”
He paused, letting the full, horrifying weight of the truth sink in. Then, he offered the first, tantalizing flicker of hope.
“But it is not unbreakable,” he said, his voice a low, confident murmur. “The ritual is complex, but it has a flaw. A key. A way to reverse the process.”
Borin looked at him, his eyes wide with a desperate, frantic hope. “You… you can cure her?”
“I can try,” Alaric corrected gently. “A curse of this nature is a matter of magic, of science. It requires careful study, a precise, alchemical counter-agent. It is not a thing to be wished away with simple prayers.”
He paused, his ruby eyes meeting the dwarf’s, his next words a subtle, insidious poison. “One must be wary, Master Forgemaster, of those who offer simple prayers for complex ailments. Their price… is often the soul.”
He did not mention the Radiant Theocracy by name. He did not have to. The seed of doubt was planted.
Borin stared at him, his mind a chaotic whirl of terror, hope, and a new, dawning suspicion of the handsome, charismatic Inquisitor who had offered him a simple, easy miracle.
“What… what would you ask of me in return, Lord Steele?” the dwarf asked, his voice a low, cautious rumble.
Alaric smiled, a slow, disarming expression. “Nothing,” he said simply.
Borin stared at him, stunned. “Nothing?”
“I am a scholar, Master Forgemaster,” Alaric explained, his voice a smooth, reasonable purr. “The chance to study, and to defeat, such a rare and powerful curse is a reward in itself. All I ask… is a research partnership. Your permission to study your daughter’s condition. Access to your libraries, to your knowledge of ancient dwarven runes and earth magic. And in return, I will devote my full resources, the knowledge of my Archmages, the skill of my alchemists, to finding a cure.”
It was a brilliant, irresistible offer. A partnership of equals. A shared quest for knowledge. A thinly veiled, iron-clad alliance.
Borin Stonehand, a proud, honorable dwarf, a desperate, loving father, looked at the handsome, powerful human lord before him. He looked at the promise of a real, scientific cure. And he looked at the memory of the Inquisitor’s too-easy promises, his too-perfect smile.
He made his choice.
“You shall have your partnership, Lord Steele,” he declared, his voice a deep, resonant boom that echoed through the forge. He held out a calloused, powerful hand. “And you shall have the eternal, unwavering gratitude of the Ironhelm dwarves.”
Alaric took his hand, his grip firm, his smile triumphant. The second pillar of his new empire had been laid.
As the day’s diplomatic triumphs concluded, Alaric’s thoughts turned to a more… personal… form of negotiation.
He found Princess Eleanor in the Strathmore encampment, a place of faded banners and a palpable, weary despair. She was alone, gazing out at the setting sun, her expression a mixture of anxiety and a thrilling, illicit anticipation.
He did not announce his presence. He simply appeared behind her, a ghost in the twilight, his arms circling her waist, pulling her back against his hard, powerful body.
She gasped, a soft, startled sound, but she did not struggle. She leaned back against him, a shiver of pure, electric pleasure running down her spine.
“You came,” she whispered, her voice a little breathless.
“I keep my promises, Princess,” he murmured against her ear, his lips tracing the delicate shell of it.
He fucked her there, in the deepening shadows of her own crumbling kingdom’s pavilion. It was a quick, silent, and utterly possessive claiming. He took her from behind, her simple gown hiked up around her waist, her hands braced against the cold stone of a balustrade, her soft cries of pleasure muffled by his hand.
He moved with a raw, efficient power, his thrusts deep and punishing, a constant, glorious reminder of his ownership. He brought her to a swift, shattering orgasm, her body convulsing against his, her inner muscles milking him in a series of desperate, delicious spasms.
He came inside her with a deep, guttural groan, his seed flooding her womb, a hot, possessive brand marking her, once again, as his.
He pulled out, leaving her trembling and breathless, her legs weak. He calmly adjusted his trousers, his expression one of satisfied, almost casual, possession.
“A delightful… progress report,” he purred, his hand landing on her magnificent, bare buttock with a sharp, stinging smack that made the flesh jiggle.
She moaned softly, a sound of pure, blissful submission.
“Now,” he said, his voice a low, commanding whisper. “Go to your father. Tell him of my new partnership with the dwarves. Tell him our alliance is growing stronger. Tell him it is time for him to choose a side. The winning side.”
He gave her another hard spank. “And I will see you again tomorrow night, my dear Princess. We have many more… negotiations… to conclude.”
He melted back into the shadows, leaving her a trembling, sated, and utterly, hopelessly, devoted slave to his cause.
Alaric returned to his pavilion, a triumphant, predatory smile on his face. The dwarves were his. The princess was his. The Theocracy’s plot was in tatters.
He found his three magnificent Archmages waiting for him, their expressions a mixture of awe, respect, and a deep, burning hunger.
He looked at them, his ruby eyes gleaming with a new, insatiable ambition.