Chapter 78: Leverage
Two weeks into rebuilding and we had foundations laid for three new buildings when the visitors arrived—not Fae, not hostile, just five representatives from supernatural communities we’d never heard of asking for an audience with the Hybrid Queen who killed The Root.
Apparently word had spread. Fast.
"They’re from the Western Council." Morgana briefed us before the meeting. "Witch coalition. Been operating independently for centuries. Want to discuss alliance terms."
Alliance terms. Right. Because killing primordial darkness and escaping a Fae prison made us a hot commodity apparently.
"How many others?" I asked because five representatives from one council felt like the beginning not the end.
"Twelve more groups have sent requests." She pulled up a list. "Three vampire covens. Four wolf packs. Two witch councils. A coven of seers. A coalition of independent supernaturals. And—" She paused. "The Unseelie Court."
The Unseelie Court. Right. Because dealing with one Fae court hadn’t been enough apparently we needed to consider both.
"We’re not allying with more Fae." Kael’s voice was flat. Final. "Ever."
"Agreed." I didn’t even have to think about it. "The Seelie Court nearly destroyed us. We’re not repeating that mistake."
Not repeating mistakes. Right. That was growth or trauma or both.
The Western Council representatives were exactly what I’d expect from a centuries-old witch coalition—powerful, cautious, and very interested in what we’d accomplished.
"Hybrid Queen." The lead representative—a woman who looked about fifty but was probably way older—inclined her head. "We’ve heard remarkable things. The demon binding broken. The Root destroyed. A Fae prison shattered from within. Quite the resume."
Quite the resume. Right. When summarized like that it sounded almost impressive instead of traumatic.
"What do you want?" Direct question because thirty years of tactical thinking had taught me to skip pleasantries.
"Alliance." Simple answer. "The Western Council has remained independent for three centuries. But recent events have shown the value of coalition. We’d like to discuss terms."
Terms. Right. Except this time I wasn’t desperate. Wasn’t scrambling. Wasn’t about to sell myself to anyone for help.
This time I had leverage.
"What are you offering?" I leaned back and through the bonds I felt all four mates ready to support whatever I decided. "Because alliance means resources. Training. Mutual defense. What does the Western Council bring to the table?"
The representative’s expression shifted into something that might have been respect.
"Three hundred witches. Extensive magical archives. Warding expertise. Ritual knowledge dating back two millennia." She listed it clinically. "And no political entanglements with other factions. We’re independent. We’d like to stay that way while also supporting your coalition."
Three hundred witches. That was—that was significant. We had ninety-three fighters total. Three hundred witches would triple our numbers.
"What do you want in return?" Because nobody offered that much without expecting something.
"Training." She gestured to me. "You mastered temporal magic. Killed The Root from within its prison. We want you to teach our combat witches. Share your knowledge. Help us prepare for—" She paused. "Whatever comes next."
Whatever comes next. Right. Because killing The Root had created a power vacuum and nature hated vacuums.
"The Root’s death left a gap." Another representative spoke up. "Smaller entities are emerging. Testing boundaries. Nothing as powerful as The Root but constant. Persistent. We need fighters who can handle threats like that."
Smaller entities. Constant harassment. That matched what Morgana had warned about—power vacuum creating opportunity for lesser evils.
"Three days." I heard my voice go firm. Decisive. "You have three days to observe our operation. See how we train. How we function. If you like what you see, we discuss formal terms. If not, no hard feelings."
Three days to evaluate each other. That was—that was reasonable. Professional. The kind of negotiation I’d never have managed before thirty years of tactical experience.
The Western Council agreed and left, and I just sat there processing that I’d negotiated from a position of strength instead of desperation.
"That was well done." Draven’s clinical assessment. "You gave them enough to be interested but didn’t commit to anything. Maintained leverage. Very tactical."
Very tactical. Right. Because thirty years fighting The Root had taught me how to think strategically instead of just reacting.
"Six more factions are arriving this week." Morgana pulled up the schedule. "All want to discuss alliance. All heard about The Root. You’re—" She paused. "You’re a legend now. The Hybrid Queen who survived everything."
A legend. That sounded exhausting and also kind of terrifying because legends had expectations I wasn’t sure I could meet.
"We handle them the same way." Kael’s voice was certain. "Three days evaluation. No commitments without observation. We build alliances on actual compatibility, not desperation."
Not desperation. Right. That was new. Different. Better.
Over the next week seven more factions visited. Three wolf packs. Two witch councils. A vampire coven. A coalition of seers.
We showed them our operation. Our training. Our structure. How ninety-three fighters operated as a unified force.
I demonstrated temporal magic—freezing time, accelerating aging, reversing damage. Thirty years of practice making me absolutely proficient.
Four of the seven wanted formal alliance. Three decided we were too intense and left politely. ƒreewebηoveℓ.com
By the end of the month we had five new faction alliances. Four hundred thirty-two total fighters. Resources tripled. And a coalition structure that was actually sustainable instead of desperate.
"You did this." Isabelle’s voice carried pride. "Built something real. Something that lasts."
Built something real. Right. Except I hadn’t built it alone. We’d built it. All of us. Together.
Through the bonds I felt all four mates and thirty years of unified experience, and maybe—maybe we’d actually survived enough to build something good.
But that’s when Morgana appeared with an expression that meant bad news.
"The Western Council brought a warning." Her voice was grim. "There’s something emerging. Not Root-level but—significant. They call it The Fracture. Says it’s drawn to places where reality was damaged. Where dimensional barriers were weakened."
Where dimensional barriers were weakened. Like where we’d broken a Fae prison and shattered reality bringing ourselves back.
"How long?" My voice came out resigned because of course we couldn’t just have peace.
"Weeks. Maybe a month." She pulled up readings. "It’s coming here. To this exact location. Because this is where you broke through."
Coming here. To our stronghold. To attack the place we’d just started rebuilding.
Because apparently surviving everything wasn’t enough. We had to keep surviving.
No rest for the Hybrid Queen.
Or her mates.
Or the alliance we’d built from ruins.