NOVEL NTR: Barbarian Harem Conquest Chapter 59: Queen’s Speech

NTR: Barbarian Harem Conquest

Chapter 59: Queen’s Speech
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Chapter 59: Queen’s Speech

The Queen stood at the head of the hall like a living goddess.

Long golden hair flowed down to her waist, and her breathtaking beauty made Kane pause for a moment.

"Five hundred and twelve years ago," she began, her voice clear, "we created the Celestial Aurora not to celebrate our strength, but to measure it honestly. There is a profound difference. Celebration flatters us. Measurement challenges us. This empire has survived because we have always chosen honesty over comfort."

The grand hall was absolutely still.

"This year’s tournament has been... unusual," she continued.

"I’ll not insult your intelligence by pretending otherwise. The results have shattered expectations. Some of you are uncomfortable. Good. Comfort is for those who have stopped growing."

A nervous ripple ran through the noble sections.

Several high-born lords shifted uncomfortably in their seats.

The aristocratic lord sitting nearest to Kane’s end of the table stared intently at his roasted pheasant with the panicked intensity of a man desperately trying not to make eye contact with anyone at all. ƒrēewebnovel.com

"Beyond our borders, the Menual Empire is mobilizing," the Queen said, her tone turning cold.

"They are testing us, searching for weakness. They want to know if we are still the empire that conquered through merit, or if we have become soft and delusional."

The uncomfortable, squirming tension of nobles confronting tournament politics was instantly replaced by the terrifying stillness of people confronting the real possibility of a bloody continental war.

"What they will find depends on this tournament," she declared.

"Not the title or the gold, but the demonstration. An empire that allows politics to override true merit is an empire that can be taken. I want Menual to see exactly what five hundred years of honest measurement produce. I want them to feel terror at the thought of challenging us."

She looked slowly down the length of the long table.

Her eyes passed over Kane without stopping on him for even a second.

She was making a very clear point about his presence without explicitly pointing a finger at him.

"I want them to reconsider."

She sat down gracefully on her throne.

The grand hall stayed deathly silent for three full seconds before the noise finally returned.

Rutheus leaned slightly toward Kane without turning his head.

"She just used a tournament banquet to deliver a military statement."

"She just told Menual, through every foreign diplomat sitting in this room, that her empire is united enough to have this conversation completely publicly," Kane whispered back, swirling his wine.

"That isn’t political weakness. That is a kind of confidence they cannot fake."

"She’s also telling her own nobles that the tournament result will stand, no matter who wins. Changing the rules now would prove exactly what she just warned against."

Kane took a sip of his wine.

"She’s been planning this for months. The speech, the bracket changes, everything. She orchestrated it perfectly."

Rutheus looked at him sideways.

"You sound like you actually respect her."

"I do," Kane smiled.

"Doesn’t change what I’m going to do to her son tomorrow."

[Quest Completed: Meet The Elven Queen]

[Reward: You can choose any item from the inventory. Can be used only once.]

[Bonus: You have received 1,000 Gold Coins]

[New Quest Created: The Coming Storm]

[Objective: Help defend the Elven Empire from the Menual attack three days from now]

[Reward: 10,000 Gold Coins]

[Special Reward: Private audience with the Queen]

’Jackpot.’

The banquet continued, but the texture of the evening had permanently changed.

Three tables over, two Menual diplomats who were officially attending as tournament observers were speaking very rapidly and quietly to each other.

Lyssel appeared right at Kane’s elbow sometime during the third course.

"She has never done that before," Lyssel whispered, keeping her eyes on the crowd.

"Not at a tournament banquet. Major political statements always happen in closed council chambers, not over roasted pheasant and wine."

"She needed witnesses," Kane said calmly.

"Diplomats remember emotion better in a relaxed setting. She wanted them to feel the threat, not just hear it."

Lyssel looked impressed.

"You think about these things."

"I think about everything," Kane replied.

"The speech was partly about you," she noted.

"It was mostly about Menual," Kane corrected.

"I was just a convenient tool for the message she needed to send."

"You don’t mind being a political tool?"

"I mind being used without knowing I am being used," Kane said, leaning back in his chair.

Lyssel stayed quiet for a moment, listening to the ambient noise of the banquet around them.

"My father believes the tournament result should be contested if the prince loses tomorrow. He’s been talking to four other major houses about forming a coalition."

"I know," Kane said.

She looked at him sharply, her aristocratic mask slipping.

"How could you possibly know that?" freēwebnovel.com

"Because your father is a very careful man, and careful men always make their alliances before they actually need them rather than scrambling afterward," Kane explained.

"He started those conversations before the quarterfinals even finished. He’s been preparing for this exact outcome since the second round."

"And you aren’t concerned about a noble coalition?"

"Should I be?" Kane challenged.

Lyssel studied his relaxed face carefully.

"Five major noble houses coordinating a formal, legal challenge to the tournament results would create a constitutional problem that could take months to resolve."

"And during those chaotic months," Kane countered, "Menual sits back and watches an empire publicly argue about whether its own sacred tournament actually means what it says it means." He met her eyes directly.

"Your father is smart enough to have thought of the military optics."

A long pause hung between them.

"He has," Lyssel admitted quietly.

"That is exactly why those secret conversations stopped completely two days ago."

She was offering him valuable political intelligence without asking for anything in return.

"Why are you telling me this?" Kane asked softly.

She held his intense gaze without flinching.

"Because the queen’s speech was partly about you, and partly about Menual, and partly about something else entirely. And I just wanted to know if you understood what the third part actually was."

Kane let the silence stretch for a moment, processing the layers of the political game.

"She was telling her rigid court that an empire which only accepts strength when it comes from the expected, traditional places is an empire that has started believing its own mythology," Kane summarized perfectly.

"And empires that believe their own mythology are always the ones that fall first."

Lyssel looked at him for a long moment.

"My private rooms are located in the east wing," she murmured, her voice barely a whisper.

"Third floor. It has a lovely garden view."

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