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Corruption Of Champions: All Text

His name was Valerius, and for twenty years, he was the sun around which the city of Aethelburg orbited. He had pulled the drowning from the river, carried children from burning tenements, and, with a single, impossible lunge, driven his sword through the Tyrant of the Iron Crag. Statues wept marble tears in his honor. Beggars named their sons after him. When he walked the colonnades, the very light seemed to bend toward him, as if the world was grateful.

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? corruption of champions all text

“This is necessity ,” Orran replied, and his voice had the texture of rust. “The merchants paid for your statue. They did not pay for my army’s loyalty. I need you to stand beside me when I break them. Not for me. For the starving children you once carried from fires.” His name was Valerius, and for twenty years,

The third crack was gold. Not a bribe. A pension. The king, in a gesture of “gratitude for continued counsel,” assigned Valerius a stipend large enough to maintain his estate, his servants, his aging mother’s physicians. Valerius almost refused. But his mother’s tremors had worsened. The physicians were expensive. And hadn’t he earned this? Hadn’t he bled enough? Beggars named their sons after him

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.