Chapter 119 - 118. New Era, New Empire - The Demon of The North - NovelsTime

The Demon of The North

Chapter 119 - 118. New Era, New Empire

Author: ToriAnne
updatedAt: 2026-01-20

CHAPTER 119: CHAPTER 118. NEW ERA, NEW EMPIRE

Six Months After the Fall of Erengard

History would later record that the day Dietrich Erengard died wasn’t just the end of an emperor; it was the moment an entire generation collapsed. His death severed the threads that had held the empire together through terror.

The first three days after the battle were marked by absolute silence. The palace had become a place of judgement. Roxanne de Borgia, the newly ascended Alpha Emperor, didn’t rush to claim glory. She ordered the Royal Palace to be cleared, every corrupted noble detained, and every guard who had knowingly supported Dietrich’s atrocities locked away for trial.

She placed her most loyal people, mixed-bloods, werewolves, demons, and beastkin, throughout the royal palace. Under her command, they began cleansing the imperial systems from the inside out.

Records are pulled from vaults, every ledger reviewed, and every merchant investigated. Corrupt traders who had exploited Dietrich’s regime for wealth and status received swift, precise punishment. Their fortunes are seized, their privileges revoked, and their networks dismantled.

Gerhard Eisenwald, who had walked a thin and dangerous line under Dietrich’s rule, publicly submitted himself for interrogation. His willingness to be examined, judged, and condemned if necessary set the tone for the new order.

Surprisingly, Duke Gerhard Eisenwald isn’t among the corrupt. While he had raised the price of the crops produced in his territory, long considered excessive by the other nobles.

And when confronted, Gerhard accepted the findings without resistance; his explanation was simple and verifiable: Eisenwald’s harvest was genuinely superior to the rest of the empire, grown from soil enriched over generations and tended with meticulous care.

Roxanne didn’t excuse it immediately. She reviewed the numbers, recalculated the trade ratios, and determined the fair market value. It turned out that although the Duke’s price was higher, it still corresponded proportionally to the quality and yield of his crops.

Then within the first week, the High Council, reconstructed under Roxanne, began methodically uncovering every piece of treason, corruption, and abuse hidden throughout the empire’s administrative body. Records of stolen funds resurfaced.

Lists of bribery, extortion, and exploitation unfolded like maps to the rot beneath the empire’s surface. Entire houses that had fed upon the suffering of commoners are exposed one by one, their secrets dragged from the safety of their nobility name into daylight.

By the end of the first month, the sentences are delivered.

Every noble family found guilty of corruption, cruelty, or direct involvement in Dietrich’s soul-harvesting practices is stripped of titles, lands, and wealth. Their estates are seized by the crown, their treasuries emptied and documented before being redirected to the victims and to the rebuilding of the land.

The families of the traitors and the corruptors themselves aren’t executed; the new emperor’s decree is clear. Death would be mercy. They’re exiled to the North, where the harsh climate and the guild’s grueling labor await them. They’ll be Maxim’s problem now.

The male will be sent to help fight the monster or butcher the monster for the products to be sold in the guild. The female and the children will be sent to a convent.

Parallel to this massive political purge is a quieter, far more somber duty. The recovery of the omegas’ bodies, which have been sacrificed by Dietrich for the sake of a short time of power.

Seventy-nine bodies were found across Dietrich’s hidden chambers, crypts, and sealed ritual halls. The process of retrieving them was slow and agonizing. Each omega had been robbed not only of life but also of dignity.

Vivianne led the rites herself, accompanied by Undine and the other spirit kings, their magic ensuring that everybody was preserved, cleaned, and freed from the remnants of Dietrich’s demon-binding rituals. Families from across the continent are summoned to reclaim their loved ones.

Some collapsed when they saw what remained. Some held the bodies in trembling arms as if they could warm them back to life. Some screamed curses at the dead emperor’s name. Vivianne stayed through every encounter, offering comfort where she could and silence where there were no words left to give.

The royal treasury paid reparations to every family—not symbolic, but life-changing. Homes rebuilt. Small land given. Education secured for children left behind. No monetary sum could restore the lives taken, but it ensured that grief did not spiral into further suffering.

Two months into the restoration, the empire felt different. Not whole, but healing. Merchants reopened their stalls. Children played in the open again. Even the weather felt subtly altered, as though the land itself had taken its first breath of relief in decades.

Maxim is given a noble name; now Maxim de Roderion, once a knight and now Viscount of the North, returned to the North with authority stronger than before. Under Roxanne’s decree, he’s given full governance over the land she used to govern.

His mission is to maintain stability in the North, oversee the exiled nobles’ sentences, and strengthen the borders against threats from the monsters’ invasion.

Previously, it had been the proud Principality of Borgia, a place where honor and loyalty held deep meaning. Under Roxanne’s new reign, the new empire transformed into the Viscounty of Roderion.

Maxim isn’t alone in this endeavor. More than half of Roxanne’s knights returned with him, not because Roxanne as the new emperor told them to, but because the North still needs their strength and they have families back in the North. Without these warriors, the North would struggle to endure.

Those knights who remained in the capital did so by choice. Unmated, they sought to forge their future under the new empire. They would serve under Mara, still the Crimson Fang of Borgia. She stayed not just for duty, but because Marvessa refused to leave Vivianne.

Roxanne appointed Mara as the new General of the Imperial Guard, entrusting her with the task of reforging the empire’s military, transforming it into a force founded on discipline, merit, and solid leadership. Under Mara’s command, the guard shed its legacy of petty power struggles and unchecked brutality.

Bullying is outlawed; insubordination meets swift, decisive reprisal. Every soldier, human or shifter, mixed-blood or pure, is held to the same exacting standard. Though a beta, Mara’s presence alone cowed even the most arrogant alpha captains. Those foolish enough to test her soon discovered that raw strength is but one measure of power and rarely the most lethal one.

By the fourth month, the empire unveiled its new crest, a black wolf entwined with a demon’s wing, crowned by the ancient sigil of House Borgia. It blazed across banners, stamped documents, adorned fortress gates, gleamed on armor, and even graced the humblest market stalls. A symbol heralding a new era, honoring the emperor who had united the continent beneath one banner, Borgia.

The dominions bent their knees, one by one. Fenclade, once an independent beastman dominion, became the Fenclade Principality under the empire. Its ruler, Leonhart, surrendered his title of king after losing a fight with Roxanne, accepting the title of Grand Duke Leonhart of Fenclade.

His people embraced the change: a new emperor with her omega who’s embraced by the spirit kings. Now, they stood as equals within a greater realm, their borders secure, their voices heard.

With the blessing of the Luthens, guardians of the sacred forest and keepers of ancient oaths, Roxanne carved a direct route between the Borgia Empire and Fenclade. The Luthens pledged their loyalty as long as there are still descendants of Vivianne de Borgia within the imperial succession.

For the first time in centuries, the dense, shadowed woods parted, allowing safe passage between human, beastkin, and shifter lands.

Erevalis, the demon kingdom that had long hidden behind its arcane fortifications, also bowed, becoming a principality under the empire. Roxanne’s father, Ashkareth, once the Demon King, now takes the title of Grand Duke of Erevalis.

He opened a portal, bridging his realm to the imperial capital, a gateway open to all races. Roxanne’s decree abolished the deep-rooted prejudice against mixed bloods.

"If a mixed-blood emperor cannot protect her own kind," she declared, "she has no right to rule a continent." Her words became law, immutable as stone.

By the fifth month, Leonhart and Ashkareth arrived in the capital for their formal inauguration. With Ashkareth came a figure long absent from the empire: Morwenna, once exiled, now returned as Morwenna de Erevalis, the grand duke’s wife.

Her arrival stirred reverence, hushed whispers, and awe. The old nobles of the old empire still remember her as the powerful omega that ruled with wisdom, not idiocy. And how her suffering is a grim tale woven into history.

The moment she saw Roxanne, she didn’t hesitate. Morwenna rushed forward, seizing her in a tight embrace, her voice trembling despite her usual composure.

"You made it," she whispered, clutching Roxanne as though she might vanish. "You truly did. The things we couldn’t achieve... the battles we lost... you conquered them all. Thank you, my child."

Roxanne did not break easily, yet she did in Morwenna’s arms. For a fleeting moment, she isn’t the emperor; she lets herself be a daughter of her mother.

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