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SSS Talent: From Trash to Tyrant-Chapter 374: A Meeting Between Two Powers [VI]
Elenara did not move from where she stood.
"The spoils," she said.
The word settled into the garden with weight, but without urgency. It was not framed as a demand, nor as an opening for debate. It was a reality that would follow the war whether they acknowledged it or not.
"When Kaedor falls and the Thal’zar are placed under control," Elenara continued, her gaze steady on Valttair, "the matter will surface immediately."
She lifted her hand slightly, palm open, as if enumerating facts already accounted for. "Artifacts recovered from the core. Items tied to their bloodline. Accumulated resources. Secondary territories taken during the campaign."
Her tone remained calm. Informational.
"These are the assets that will be discussed," she said. "Not because Morgain or Sylvanel require them, but because the others will."
The garden remained still.
"Five allied houses will expect compensation," Elenara went on. "They have committed troops and authority under our banner. Leaving them with nothing would strain loyalty, even if the outcome is already decided."
She lowered her hand.
"I do not speak of appeasement," Elenara added. "Only of management. The alliance must be maintained once the fighting ends."
Her eyes returned to Valttair.
"The question is not whether opinions will be voiced," she said evenly. "It is how much of that pressure we choose to absorb."
Valttair listened without visible reaction.
When he answered, his voice held the same measured calm it always did when the subject turned from people to structure.
"We do not divide them," he said.
Elenara did not interrupt, but her eyes narrowed slightly, attentive.
"If we strip the Thal’zar of their assets," Valttair continued, "we weaken them, yes. But the power does not vanish. It moves to the other houses."
He looked at her directly. "Artifacts taken become leverage for another house. Inherited items become new bloodline advantages in unfamiliar hands. Resources become influence. Territory becomes votes."
His tone stayed even, almost clinical. "The Council’s balance will shift. Not gradually. Immediately."
A short pause followed, then he went on, pressing the point with quiet certainty rather than force.
"Seven houses enter a war, five of them expect compensation, and suddenly the spoils turn into a contest between allies," Valttair said. "Resentment forms. Rivalries sharpen. New ambitions appear. You do not end a war. You reorganize it."
His gaze did not soften.
"A Thal’zar house reduced in standing but left intact is controllable," he said. "A house carved down to bone becomes unstable. Desperate. Unpredictable."
He let the words settle.
"We are not seeking to erase them," Valttair added. "We are seeking to hold them."
His hands remained behind his back, posture unchanged. "So we leave their holdings in place. We bind their authority, restrict their movement, supervise their assets. Political control, not plunder."
He met Elenara’s gaze calmly.
"They remain the weakest of the Eight," he concluded. "And they remain useful, because they still have something to lose."
Elenara was quiet for a moment.
Then she inclined her head slightly.
"Your reasoning is sound," she said. "Control is worth more than immediate gain."
Her gaze drifted briefly across the garden, thoughtful. "Leaving the Thal’zar intact keeps the balance where it belongs. I see that."
She looked back at Valttair. "You are not shielding them. You are preserving the structure."
A faint pause followed.
"That said," Elenara continued, her voice lowering, "some houses will not accept this easily." She exhaled softly. "There will be dissatisfaction. Resistance within the Council."
She did not frame it as a concern. Just a reality.
"They will demand something tangible," she went on. "Even if the logic is clear."
Her shoulders eased a fraction as she sighed. "If that burden must be carried, then I will carry it."
She met Valttair’s eyes again. "Compensation will come from my side. Resources. Funds. Assets drawn from Sylvanel holdings."
Another brief pause.
"It will not please everyone," Elenara said. "But it will be enough."
The garden remained still.
"We secure control," she concluded. "And I will ensure the alliance does not fracture over rewards that were never meant to exist in the first place."
The conversation eased into silence, the kind that followed resolution rather than tension.
Elenara allowed it to linger.
Then she spoke again, her tone lighter, almost incidental, as if the subject had surfaced on its own rather than been carefully chosen.
"There is something else," she said. "Unrelated to Thal’zar."
Valttair did not respond. He did not need to.
"The Morgain family," Elenara continued, her gaze drifting across the garden as though her interest lay elsewhere. "There have been... murmurs."
She turned back to him, her expression composed, observant rather than inquisitive. "That your first wife is unwell."
The air shifted.
"More than unwell," Elenara added calmly. "Confined. Removed from public sight. In a place not spoken of."
Valttair’s aura changed.
It did not flare outward, nor did it break control. It compressed. The mana around him tightened, dense and violent beneath the surface, enough that the flowers closest to him stiffened, their stems drawn taut as if resisting an unseen pressure.
Elenara noticed. She did not react.
"There are rumors," she went on, unhurried, "that this confinement is not merely for her protection." Her eyes met his again. "That it is connected to the Ninth Heir."
She paused, just long enough for the name to matter.
"Trafalgar du Morgain."
The garden was utterly still now.
Valttair did not speak. His expression remained unreadable, but the pressure did not ease.
Elenara felt it then, with absolute clarity.
So there it is.
Something beneath the structure. Beneath the calculations. Something Valttair did not expose, did not trade, did not place on any board.
Interest sparked behind her calm exterior, sharp and precise.
’You do care,’ she thought.
Enough to react.
Enough to be dangerous.
She let the silence stretch, offering him space he did not ask for.
"I do not bring this as an accusation," Elenara said at last, softly. "Only as an observation."
She smiled then. Small. Knowing.
"It seems," she added, "that the House of Morgain still has secrets capable of shifting the balance."
Valttair did not answer.
And Elenara, watching him closely now, understood that she had found something worth remembering.







