"I'm already changing it," Satou said. He leaned forward slightly, warming to his argument. "In my settlement, goblins and orcs work together. Not through domination or slavery, but through genuine cooperation. We have laws that protect all races equally. We've rescued kidnapped women and given them their freedom instead of exploiting them. We're building something that's never existed before, a place where being strong doesn't mean you have the right to victimize those weaker than you."
"How idealistic," Seraphine purred. "And how naive. The strong always prey on the weak. That's the natural order."
"Is it?" Satou challenged. "Then why are you all sitting here at a council table instead of constantly trying to kill each other? You're the strongest beings on the continent. By that logic, you should be at each other's throats constantly, trying to prove who's the most dominant."
"We have agreements," Nyxara the Shadow Weaver said, her voice seeming to come from multiple directions at once. "Understandings reached through centuries of conflict. We learned that cooperation, in limited circumstances, can be more beneficial than constant warfare."
"Exactly," Satou said. "You learned to cooperate because it made you stronger collectively. I'm doing the same thing, but on a larger scale. Instead of eleven isolated demon lords, imagine a coalition of settlements working together. Sharing resources, coordinating defenses, building an actual civilization instead of just territories held through force."
"You speak of civilization," Nexus the Thousand Eyed said, hundreds of eyes blinking independently as they focused on Satou. "But civilization requires structure. Laws. Systems of governance that go beyond the will of a single powerful individual. Do you truly believe monsters are capable of that?"
"I know they are," Satou replied. "Because I'm building it right now. My settlement has laws that everyone follows, not because they fear me, but because they understand the laws protect them. We have democratic elements in our governance, councils where different voices are heard. It's not perfect, and we're still learning, but it works."
"For a single settlement," Grimfang growled. "You've built one functioning village. That doesn't qualify you to sit with us."
"No," Satou agreed.
"But what I'm building can scale. Give me time, give me resources, give me the legitimacy that comes with being recognized as a demon lord, and I can spread this model. Other settlements can follow the example. Instead of scattered monster tribes barely surviving, we can create a network of allied communities. Strong enough to defend themselves. Organized enough to negotiate with human kingdoms as equals instead of prey to be hunted." Said Satou
"You want to unite the monster races," Malakor said. It wasn't a question.
"Not unite them under my rule," Satou clarified. "Unite them through shared interest. Shared protection. Shared prosperity. I'm not looking to become a tyrant who controls everything. I'm looking to create a system where monsters don't have to be monsters. Where we can be people with agency, with rights, with futures beyond simple survival."
Thalassian the Star Forged spoke for the first time, his voice carrying harmonics like distant music. "And you believe the humans will accept this? That they'll negotiate with monsters as equals?"
"Some will," Satou said. "Some won't. But right now, they don't have to negotiate at all because we're not organized enough to force them to. We're easy prey, scattered and weak. But if we present a united front, if we show them that attacking us will cost them more than it's worth, then they'll have to at least consider alternatives to extermination."
"You killed a hero," Chronus said coldly. "That guarantees the humans will see you as a threat. They'll send more heroes. Stronger ones. Your idealistic little settlement will be burned to the ground, and all your pretty words about civilization will die with it."
"Then I'll need allies," Satou said, looking directly at Chronus. "Powerful ones who can help defend against that threat. Allies who understand that having a stable, organized monster population in the southern territories is better for everyone than constant chaos and conflict. Allies who might benefit from having a demon lord who's actually building something new instead of just maintaining ancient territories through fear."
He turned his gaze back to Malakor. "That's what I bring to this table. Not just power, though I have some. Not just ambition, though I won't deny that either. I bring the possibility of changing the fundamental relationship between monsters and the rest of the world. Of creating something that could last beyond our individual lifespans. Of building a legacy that isn't just about how many enemies we killed or how much territory we controlled, but about actually making the world better for those who come after us."
Silence fell over the table.
Satou had made his case. Now it was up to them to decide if they believed him, if they cared, if they thought his vision was worth supporting or just the naive dreams of someone too young to understand how the world really worked.
Loki was smiling slightly, pleased with Satou's answer even if the outcome was still uncertain.
Chronus looked disgusted, as if Satou had just proposed something fundamentally offensive to his worldview.
Seraphine was studying Satou with renewed interest, though whether it was his ideas or something else entirely was unclear.
The others showed various degrees of interest, skepticism, and calculation.
But Malakor, the one whose opinion mattered most, remained perfectly still. Silent. Unreadable.
Finally, after what felt like an eternity, the Lord of Undeath spoke.
"Interesting," Malakor said. "You don't seek power for its own sake. You seek power to build something. That is... unusual. Most who sit at this table, including myself, rule through dominance. We maintain our positions because no one can challenge us. But you propose ruling through cooperation. Through offering something valuable enough that others choose to follow rather than being forced."
"Yes," Satou confirmed.
"And if they choose not to follow? If they reject your idealistic vision and prefer the old ways?"
"Then they're free to do so," Satou said. "I'm not trying to force anyone to change. I'm offering an alternative. Those who want it can join. Those who don't can stay as they are. But I think everyone wants something better than they're willing to admit. They just need someone to show them it's possible."
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