Chapter 109: Chapter 109: Trust me not
There was only silence for a while.
The silence of stone walls that had heard too many confessions. The silence of flickering torchlight that could not quite burn away the shadows.
The silence of men standing in the wake of disaster, each waiting for the other to break.
Baron Meliodas stood stiff, his jaw set so tightly it seemed his teeth might splinter.
Aethal shifted restlessly, his boots scraping against the polished floor, eyes darting to Aiden as if demanding sense be restored. And Aiden—
Aiden giggled.
The sound was small at first, a thin crack in the solemn air, like water dripping in an empty cavern.
Then it grew. The giggle thickened into laughter, spilling out of him in jagged bursts that carried no mirth, only madness. His shoulders shook.
His head bowed, hair falling across his face, and still the laughter swelled until it filled the chamber.
It was hysteria, pure and raw.
Aethal stared at him, bewildered. "Why are you fucking laughing?" His voice rose in disbelief. "A nun...no an abbess was just kidnapped. A valuable healer of the Church—taken, here, on imperial ground! Do you realize what this means, Aiden?
This could damage the empire’s reputation! A full-blown division if not handled. And you—" He seized Aiden’s shoulders, shaking him. "—you’re laughing!"
Aiden’s laughter faltered into ragged chuckles. He looked up, his eyes glittering with something sharp, dangerous.
The Baron’s fury broke.
He turned, cloak swirling, hand slamming against the stone table so hard the ink-pots rattled. "Enough of this farce!" His voice thundered like a war-drum. "Call all knights! Sound the horns! This is an emergency!" His knuckles whitened as he gripped the table’s edge.
"She has mocked us, used me, used the name of a Baron of the meliodos fief, twisted it for her own ends.
She dared to touch imperial ground and steal under my nose. I will crush the Slayer guild for this insult!"
The room vibrated with his anger. Even the torches seemed to hiss in their sconces, shadows leaping higher with each syllable.
But Aiden stepped forward, his laughter gone now, his voice low, steady. "Stop."
The word cut through the chamber like a drawn blade.
"Think, my lord....Think reasonably."
The Baron turned on him, fury smoldering in his eyes. But Aiden pressed on, unflinching.
"Here we stand, only three men. You are the highest in rank among us. If word spreads that a healer was stolen from under your watch, what will the other nobles say? The earls will whisper.
The other barons will accuse. They will not blame the Church. They will not blame the Slayer. They will blame ....you."
The Baron froze, his breath coming heavy, chest heaving beneath his embroidered doublet. Sweat traced lines down his temple.
Aethal’s brow furrowed. "If not the Slayer, then who? If not retaliation, then what, Aiden?" His voice cracked with frustration.
"The longer we sit idle, the worse this becomes. Each moment rots into scandal."
Aiden’s eyes lingered on the Baron, studying him as a hunter studies wounded prey. He saw it: the fear buried beneath his anger.
The man had already suffered the shame of Augustus’s judgment. He had already lost his son to cruel fate. His foundation was cracked. One more blow, and the entire edifice of his name might crumble.
Aiden smiled—not outwardly, not with his lips, but deep within, where ambition coiled like a serpent.
He knew why Arina had taken Amber. He knew her motives, her secrets, her shadows.
But he did not share them. Not yet. Truth was a blade, and a blade revealed at the wrong moment cut its wielder.
Instead, he made a deal.
"I...will bring the healer back," Aiden said softly, almost gently, like a promise whispered in the dark. Then his tone hardened, steel sliding free. "But on one condition. You will let me fly your sigil on my flag."
The words struck like a thunderclap.
Even Aethal recoiled. "You’re mad!" His voice cracked with disbelief. "Utter lunacy! You already bear the sigil of Leonidus, the lion of the north. You already bear the mark of Merlin, the sage eternal. And now you would add Meliodas’s crest?
Do you know what this means? Even as a knight, it would give you power that rivals the nobility itself. An imbalance. A provocation!"
Aiden ignored him. His gaze never wavered from the Baron.
"Do you understand what I ask, my lord?" Aiden pressed, voice calm but iron beneath the silk. "I will retrieve the healer, I will return her safely.
And in doing so, you gain none of the shame, none of the dishonor. But I need your banner, your name, to lend weight to the act.
Without it, the Slayer guild will laugh at us. Without it, your power—and mine—will falter."
The Baron’s hands clenched, white-knuckled, trembling. "And if I refuse?"
Aiden stepped closer. His shadow stretched across the floor, merging with the Baron’s. "Then you fall into scandal, my lord. You go down in shame while the story of your failure spreads across the empire."
The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating.
Baron Meliodas’s breaths rasped like bellows. His hand flexed against the table as though he might crush the oak itself.
Aethal hovered on the brink of protest, fists clenched, but he dared not break the taut string that held the moment.
Finally, the Baron’s voice came, low, broken, as though each word cost him a lifetime. "You... you would risk my name on this... gamble?"
Aiden nodded once. "I risk nothing you do not already risk. But I do ask for your trust—and your sigil. That is the balance."
The Baron’s eyes darted to Aethal. "Do you... agree?"
Aethal swallowed, then nodded stiffly. "I... I trust him, my lord. Only because he is Aiden. Only because failure is not his way."
The Baron exhaled, the sound like steam from a furnace. "Fine. The sigil... you may use it. But if this fails..." His voice broke. "If this fails, it will be your... head."
Aiden inclined his head, calm, almost casual. "Then I will not fail."
And with that, the serpent coiled tighter, fangs poised, the die cast.