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Corruption Of Champions All Text Apr 2026

“I can’t,” he said. “I’m sorry.”

“I am asking you to become a king,” she said. “A good one.”

“This is theft, Your Grace,” Valerius said quietly.

He went to the king. Not to yield—to negotiate. A compromise: reduced seizure, compensated seizure, a public audit. Orran smiled, agreed, and three days later, the three merchants were found dead in their homes. “Suicide,” the royal proclamation read. “Overcome by guilt.” corruption of champions all text

The Champion’s Descent

He was incorruptible. Everyone knew it. He knew it. That was the first crack.

“You are the only one who can stop this,” she said. “But you cannot do it lawfully. The courts are his. The army is his, except for the veterans who would still die for you. Take them. Seize the palace. Install a regency. Save us.” “I can’t,” he said

Valerius stared at her. “You’re asking me to become a usurper.”

“He’s going to arrest me tomorrow,” she said. “For conspiracy. It’s a lie. But the judge is his cousin. I need you to stand with me. Publicly. Just once more.”

But the whisper had entered. That night, he dreamed of the children in the Marches—their ribs like cage bars, their eyes like dead stars. And he woke with a terrible thought: What if the king is right? What if virtue is just a slower way to watch people die? He went to the king

Valerius laughed. It was the ugliest sound he had ever made. And he kept walking, into the palace, into the hearings, into the long, slow, comfortable death of everything he had once been. The city still called him champion. The children still waved. And somewhere, in a cell beneath the palace, Elara was beginning to understand that the most terrible corruption is not the fall of a good man, but his gentle, gradual, reasonable decision to stop getting up.

So he did nothing. He told himself he was biding time. He told himself he was preserving peace. But the truth was simpler: he was afraid. Not of death—of failure. Of becoming the man who broke the city he had saved.

Valerius looked at her. He saw the fire she had lit in him—the fire that had made him a champion. And he felt nothing. Not courage, not fear, not even the dull ache of shame. He felt the heavy, warm numbness of a man who has replaced every hard decision with a comfortable silence.

He woke, and the first light of dawn bled through his curtains like a wound. He rose, dressed in his old champion’s armor for the first time in months, and walked to the palace. Not to save anyone. Not to confess. He walked because the king had asked him to be present for the morning’s “administrative hearings”—which was the new word for the trials of the innocent.

He took it. And the moment he did, the king’s messengers began arriving at odd hours, asking for “small favors.” A word in a general’s ear. A quiet visit to a judge. A letter of endorsement for a royal cousin’s appointment. Each request, by itself, was almost virtuous. Each refusal would have cost him nothing but comfort. Each acceptance cost him a splinter of his soul.