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PeaceMaker

The Aucacia Empire had always been a put together kingdom. The commoners relied on their king just like the king relied on his people, there was no rumor the king didn't know about and there was nothing the commoners weren't informed of. It was the perfect give and take relationship a kingdom should always have. But perfect things tend to have greedy eyes watching them. A perfect environment has no worries about sudden attacks. The same peace of mind that gave the kingdom a blanket of comfort was only the only thing that was imperfect and the only thing that should have never gotten out of the castle walls. But evil has its way of breaking down barriers. A perfect environment is a fragile one. The gentle air shrouded in glass, ready to be shattered with the wrong move. One that the greedy hands were ready to take and one that young prince, Dominic, would have the displeasure of witnessing. Now with the passing of the king of the Aucacia kingdom, cracks start to form in the fragile walls protecting the crown and the people ruled by it. With the days of his enthronement around the corner, the growls of hunger from the greedy eyes grown louder. How long can the kingdom stay put together? Who will tip over the shaky foundations of the kingdom? Who will be the PeaceMaker? cover art: Day.n

totalnoob · LGBT+
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256 Chs

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Adia froze, gazing at Litian, everything seemingly pausing as tension flowed in. They stared for a few more seconds before she smiled, changing her stance to face Litian. "When did you get over there?"

"Answer my question," Litian pressed as she continued to hold the sword up in the direction of Adia, her grip on its hilt strong.

Adia looked down at Litian's sword and then back up to her. "Do you plan on attacking me from there?" she asked with a light chuckle.

Litian didn't answer back but Adia knew the answer. Judging by those stoic eyes and the grip on her sword, she was very well ready to attack at any moment. Adia looked at the spot where Litian once stood and then back up to her. 'And judging by how I didn't even notice her moving, she would have no problem getting to me from that distance.'