Chapter 52: The Balance
Chapter 52: The Balance
"Did you read the assignment I gave you last week Esmerelda?" An aged voice of a forgotten face, from a long since remembered memory rung in her ears.
"Yes I did, but there was something I wanted to ask you about teacher." Her childish voice replied.
"Oh! And what is it?" The aged voice kindly asked.
"The author spoke quite dramatically and sternly about a balance that must be preserved under any circumstance, or else the world would witness more carnage than can be imagined only to achieve nothing, but he didn't say what that balance is, that must be protected."
"Ahhh." The aged voice exclaimed, as he asked "Tell me Esmerelda, do you still remember our lesson on Emperor Azrael the Second?"
"Of course!" Her younger self happily replied, before enthusiastically continuing "Emperor Azrael the Second was the father of our current emperor. He was also known as Azrael the Beloved of Battle, because during his entire three hundred year reign, he never once stopped waging war on our neighbors.
He also managed to double the size of our nation in the process.
And it's said that while the wider world breathed a deep sigh of relief as they celebrated his death, our people wept for days on end, mourning the death of a great warrior and emperor, who many considered to have brought a golden age through military conquest to the Eclipse Empire." She finished with a proud look on her face.
The aged voice happily laughed, as he said "Excellent! Excellent! You have learned well, little one. But did you know that another thing also perished that fateful day when Emperor Azrael the Second took his last breath?"
"Huh? What?" Her younger self asked curiously.
"An era." The aged voice replied.
"An era?" She asked, as she tilted her head in confusion.
"Indeed, an era. An era of ambition. An era of glory. An era of legendary characters, performing unimaginable feats of heroism and cruelty as they danced across blood curdling battlefields, in an ageless war that has long since transcended reality and into myth.
An era where geniuses and monsters were as common and numerous as blades of grass in a vast field. An era where the fate of the world hung on a needle's thread, and could fall into anyone's hand at any moment. The era now known as the Age of Tarnished Steel." The aged voice passionately narrated.
"...I see." She answered with a hint of discomfort, before asking "But what does that have to do with the balance?"
"My dear child, it has everything to do with it.
You see, after the end of the Age of Tarnished Steel, the heirs of the four greatest nations, the current leaders of the world, were unlike their fathers before them, and despised war and all that is associated with it, and so the world entered an era of relative peace, but by doing so they unintentionally created a system that we now call the balance.
A system in which the world was no longer swaying by a needle's thread, but instead held up by four mighty pillars that would collapse if any one of them grew too tall." The aged voice explained.
"Teacher, you're speaking in riddles again." Her younger self exasperatedly complained.
A hearty laugh escaped his mouth, before he continued patiently "Let's take the mighty and vast Boreas Empire in the north as an example. Territorially the biggest one among the other three, and yet the poorest among them all. Why?
Because despite it's vast resources and land, most of it's said lands are frozen hellscapes, with no future for development, leaving the powerful northern empire in a constant state of worry of when the next food shortage will happen, while also leaving the possibility of a long term campaign off the table entirely.
And now let's take a look at the flip side of the Boreas Empire, it's complete opposite the Luminous Empire, the richest and yet the smallest of all the great powers of this world.
The Luminous Empire is blessed with fertile fields, excellent and flourishing harbors, as well as many precious large mines, but even then they have the smallest amount of population among all their competitors, which forces them to reconsider any future wars they plan ten times over, for fear of not being able to recuperate those losses easily, leaving them possibly vulnerable to attack.
Do you understand now little one?"
"Yes I do teacher, but what about our nation and the Yue Dynasty, is it also the same?" Her younger self asked, enthralled by the subject.
"Of course.
The Yue Dynasty is the second largest, and has a massive population as well, in addition to many great rivers and mountains, ensuring no fear of famine or drought ever threatens the nation, but those same blessings are their curse, since it's these same flooding rivers and towering peeks that make it hard to easily control the vast land and population of the Dynasty, preventing them from fully taking advantage of their true power and resources, and instead keeps them occupied with maintaining what they already have.
And finally our own nation, which happens to be the third largest, who also has a large population, and ample amounts of food thanks to the Vitar River, but we lack many of the other resources, mainly precious and rare trade commodities, due to our land consisting of mostly barren deserts, leaving us with little room to enhance our economy.
And that's essentially what the balance is, four mighty nations that no one can dethrone and at the same time can't achieve hegemony over the others, forever doomed to remain trapped in this suffocating status quo.
Do you have any other questions?" The aged voice finally finished explaining, as he took a sip of water.
Her younger self seemed to hesitate for a moment, before timidly asking "Then is it true what the author of the book you told me to read said? That the world would suffer greatly if it was ever destroyed?"
The aged voice fell silent at this question, before gravely replying "Indeed it will, for our entire modern world rests upon this balance, and the moment it tips in any direction, our world we know today shall come crashing down in a wonderful, cacophonous explosion of an apocalyptic scale, where death and misery will be as mundane as clouds in the sky."
A grave and contemplating look appeared on her face upon hearing her respected teacher's words, but before she could explore her own thoughts any further she heard him say "But that doesn't mean it's exactly a bad thing."
"HUH?! How can something so awful not be bad?" She countered hysterically.
"Stagnation is death, my young student." He replied somberly, before continuing "Much like still water, our civilization would turn rotten and putrid if it remains without change for too long.
Yes, it will be a horrid time, filled with atrocities so grand it would make devils weep in despair, but it must be done non the less, for change is the sole constant of our world, do you understand little one?"
"Yes, teacher." She replied.
It was at that moment, even though she couldn't remember his face, she recalled the gentle smile he made that day as he placed his large, rough yet warm hand on her shoulder and said "Even if you forget all that this old fool has taught you, you must remember these no matter what.
If in the distant future you are unfortunate enough to see the downward stroke of change's sword, you must make sure that you never find yourself before it.
And if you're fortunate enough, by some twist of fate, to meet the one who shall wield that fearsome blade, you must promise me to support said figure with all your might no matter how painful it will be, for when the sword of change is drawn, it can never be sheathed again before it's task is done."
"...My lady?" It was at that moment my uncle's concerned voice finally unshackled her from the chains of her memory, allowing a small smile to appear on her lips as she replied "I'm fine Haytham.
And as for your concerns, I won't tell you they're unwarranted, but it's not our job to question the decisions of the emperor after they've been made. Our duty as both his subjects and family, is to simply support him no matter what.
But if you still find it difficult to silence your worries, then I suggest you work twice as hard to not let them come to pass, wouldn't you agree?"
A hilariously moronic expression appeared on his face, as he questions how such an obvious thing had slipped by him so easily, before an involuntary chuckle escapes him at his own stupidity, and replying as he felt alleviated of a great burden "I couldn't agree more, my lady.
I shall endeavor to work a hundred times harder to make sure his plans come to fruition, no matter the cost."
"Indeed, let us do so." My mother chimed, as they eagerly looked forward towards the coming future, regardless of what challenges it will posses.
But little did they know that the very first of those obstacles would challenge them more than they could have ever imagined, as it emerged from an area they could never have expected!