Home My Goblin System : Levelling up with my SSS Class Devouring skill Chapter 515
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Chapter 515: Chapter 515

He stood when Satou entered, and to his credit, he kept his composure.

Most humans flinched at Satou’s current appearance—the scales, the transformed eyes, the residual presence that clung to him since consuming Khar’razoth. Edric’s eyes widened for just a moment before he locked it down. Trained. Deliberate.

"Lord Satou," Edric said, inclining his head in a respectful but not submissive bow. "Thank you for agreeing to meet with me."

Satou said nothing. He sat. He waited.

Edric understood the signal and sat across from him, placing both hands flat on the table—visible, open, a deliberate non-threatening gesture.

"I’ll be direct," Edric said. "The Aldenmere Free Cities are a confederation of seven city-states in the western territories. Unlike most human kingdoms, our cities have always operated under a policy of racial inclusion. We have non-human citizens. We have non-human city council members. We have trade relationships with monster settlements that the Church has condemned for three generations."

He paused. "That last fact means the Church considers us heretics. And after what happened to the army they sent east..." He met Satou’s eyes carefully. "Word travels, Lord Satou. The Church dispatched four thousand soldiers and four Holy Heroes to destroy your settlement. They didn’t come back."

Lyra spoke from where she stood against the wall. "That information reached your cities already?"

"Survivors talk," Edric said simply. "Scattered human soldiers making their way back west through our territory, half-mad with fear, talking about a demon lord who fought through five days of siege and killed an Ancient God." He paused. "We didn’t know what to believe. So our High Council sent me to find out if it was true."

"And?" Satou said. The first word he’d spoken since entering.

Edric looked around at the settlement visible through the window—the construction, the mix of races, the scale of what was being built. He looked at Lyra, and at Vessa positioned near the door with her transformed serpentfolk frame.

"It’s clearly true," he said.

Satou held his gaze without expression. "Why does that matter to your cities?"

"Because the Church has been building pressure against Aldenmere for twenty years. They want us to purge our non-human citizens, close our mixed councils, align with Holy doctrine." Edric’s voice was measured but carrying real weight underneath. "We’ve refused each time. But our refusals have consequences. Church trade embargoes. Political isolation. Pressure on neighboring human kingdoms to cut ties with us."

He leaned forward slightly. "A demon lord who survived an assault that would have destroyed any other monster settlement isn’t just significant militarily. It’s significant politically. If Aldenmere could demonstrate a formal partnership with a power the Church failed to eliminate—" He stopped himself, recalibrating. "What I mean to say is that our High Council believes mutual recognition between your settlement and the Free Cities could benefit both parties significantly. Trade. Intelligence sharing. Political cover. We have human allies and infrastructure you don’t. You have military capability and non-human alliances we lack."

He finished and sat back. Watching Satou carefully. Reading the room the way a trained diplomat read rooms.

The room gave him nothing back.

Satou looked at him for a long moment. Not aggressively. Not dismissively. Just the flat, steady assessment of someone who’d survived five days of impossible siege, consumed an Ancient God, and was currently sitting on power that Edric couldn’t fully comprehend from across a table.

Then Satou released his aura.

Not fully—not the killing pressure he’d exerted against enemies. Just enough. Just a fraction of the presence that had broken generals and made Holy Heroes hesitate.

It filled the room like weight.

Like the air itself thickened and pressed down on everything inside it, and the source of the pressure was the being sitting across the table, and that being was fundamentally not human and had not been fully human for a long time and had recently become something significantly beyond that.

Edric’s composure lasted approximately four seconds.

His hands, flat on the table, began to shake. Then his shoulders. His careful diplomatic expression collapsed into something rawer—the face of a person whose body had made an accurate assessment of proximity to something very dangerous and had decided to override all training in favor of biological honesty.

His eyes went wide. His breath came short.

And then—quietly, without drama, in a way that Edric would spend the rest of his life trying to forget—he lost control of his bladder entirely.

The smell confirmed it before his expression did.

Satou released the aura.

The air lightened immediately. The pressure vanished as if it had never been there.

Edric sat rigid with humiliation, his face cycling through shame and shock in rapid sequence, his diplomatic composure in complete ruins.

Satou’s expression hadn’t changed throughout.

"I don’t make partnerships with envoys," Satou said. His voice was completely level. Calm, the way deep water was calm. "If your High Council wants to discuss terms, your king comes here himself. Not a representative. Not a letter. The king. In person."

Edric swallowed. "I—our High Council would need to—a formal delegation would require—"

"I don’t negotiate terms with intermediaries," Satou said again, simple and final. "Your king comes, or there are no terms to discuss."

He stood.

Edric scrambled upright as well, instinct overriding everything else.

"You’ll be given food and a change of clothes before you leave," Satou said, without a trace of mockery in his voice. Not cruelty—just acknowledgment of the practical reality of the situation. "The road back to the western territories is long."

He moved to leave, then paused at the door.

"Tell your High Council this: I have no particular hostility toward humans who have chosen a different path than the Church. What happened here was the Church’s choice, not humanity’s." His flame-like eyes settled on Edric one last time. "But I have been given abundant reason not to trust humans who arrive with words and intentions I can’t verify. Your king’s presence would be the beginning of that verification. An envoy’s words are not."

He walked out.

Vessa held the door for him without comment, though her gold-patterned scales carried the faint impression of contained amusement in the way they moved.

—---------

Lyra caught up to him in the corridor.

"That was deliberate," she said quietly. Not a question.

"Every part of it."

"The aura release. You wanted him to go back to Aldenmere having experienced that personally." She kept pace beside him. "Not just having heard that you defeated an army. Actually understanding, in his body, what you are."

"If their king comes," Satou said, "he’ll come knowing exactly what kind of being he’s negotiating with. No illusions. No comfortable human assumptions about what a demon lord is." He glanced at her. "If Aldenmere still wants partnership after their envoy’s report, then they want it genuinely. Not because they think they can manage me."

Lyra was quiet for a moment, turning this over.

"And if the king doesn’t come?"

"Then the offer wasn’t genuine to begin with, and we’ve lost nothing."

She considered this, and he watched the tactical assessment run behind her golden eyes—risk analysis, political implications, long-term calculations. Then she nodded once, the nod that meant she’d found the logic sound.

"You could have been more subtle about it," she said.

"I could have," Satou agreed. "I chose not to."

Jessica was waiting for them at the junction ahead, having finished with the refugees. She read their faces with the ease of someone who knew both of them very well.

"How did it go?" she asked.

"An envoy from the Aldenmere Free Cities wants a partnership," Lyra said.

"They want the Church’s enemy as their ally," Satou clarified.

Jessica looked between them. "And?"

"And their king is welcome to come discuss it," Satou said. "If he’s brave enough."

Jessica absorbed this with the quiet practicality she applied to most things. Then: "Was the envoy alright? Physically?"

"He’ll need a change of clothes," Satou said simply.

Jessica blinked. Then, reading his expression and Lyra’s, she decided not to ask for further clarification.

She fell into step beside them instead, her hand finding Satou’s as they walked back through the settlement toward the work that still needed doing.

Forty minutes later, Edric walked out through the main gate in a borrowed set of clean settlement clothes, his diplomatic composure rebuilt into something more brittle than it had been on arrival.

The guards watched him go without comment.

He walked west at a pace that was almost, but not quite, running.

—------

Edric walked for three hours before he stopped shaking.

The western road stretched through open country between the settlement and Aldenmere’s nearest city-state—Goldveil, the trading hub that served as the Free Cities’ eastern gateway. Three days’ journey on horseback. He’d left his horse at a waypoint two miles from the settlement, not wanting the animal’s smell to attract attention during his approach.

He reached it now, untied the reins with hands that were steadier than they’d been but not yet steady, and climbed into the saddle.

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