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FREE USE in Primitive World-Chapter 292: Meeting in the High Hall
The descent from the Feline Spire was a quiet, methodical walk. Sol moved with the fluid, silent grace, his Void-Oak spear resting casually over his shoulder. Despite the outward calm of his posture, his internal state was a hyper-focused, calculating engine.
The atmosphere in the lower rings of the Veynar settlement had transformed completely. The joyous, vibrant celebration from the night before had been violently snuffed out by the arrival of the Zharun. Vanguard warriors stood in tight, tense clusters near the armories, their hands resting on the hilts of their bone-swords.
Women and children had been ushered indoors, the heavy wooden shutters of their huts closed tight against the suffocating, rotting gray aura that seemed to be seeped outwards.
Sol navigated the winding paths, heading directly for the massive, hollowed-out base of the Great Heartwood.
He didn’t need a special invitation to enter the High Hall. The Veynar, despite their primitive technology, possessed a surprisingly transparent societal structure when it came to matters of absolute survival.
It was an ancient, ancestral rule: when a meeting concerned the life or death of the entire tribe, any awakened warrior had the right to stand at the periphery and observe. It was a brutal form of accountability, ensuring that the Warchief and the Elders could not sell the tribe’s blood in the dark without the warriors knowing exactly what the price was.
Given his recent public display of holding Lord spirit, absolutely no one questioned Sol’s right to be there. The few guards stationed at the heavy timber doors simply bowed their heads respectfully, stepping aside to let the Divine One pass.
Sol slipped into the cavernous High Hall, intentionally avoiding the well-lit center. He moved toward the back of the room, leaning his broad shoulders against a massive, shadow-draped petrified pillar. From this vantage point, his enhanced silver-crimson eyes had a perfect, unobstructed view of the entire political theater.
The air inside the hall was thick, but the fragrant, medicinal smoke of High Shaman Zephyra’s blue-bone incense was currently fighting a losing battle against a foul, metallic stench.
In the center of the room, Warchief Veylara sat upon her elevated, carved wooden throne. She looked every bit the stoic, unyielding leader of the Veynar. Her storm-colored eyes were hard, her posture rigid, and her heavy obsidian spear rested across her lap.
Kira stood just a few paces to the Warchief’s right, her feline eyes narrowed into dangerous slits, her hand resting aggressively on the pommel of her bonesword. Other senior elders were seated in a semi-circle around the base of the throne, their golden-blue auras flickering with profound unease.
The heavy doors at the front of the hall groaned open, and Elder Thorne strutted in, acting less like a Veynar Elder and more like a herald for a conquering king.
Thorne guided Prince Gorr and a half-dozen high-ranking Zharun elders into the sacred space. The Zharun elders likewise were a nightmare to look at... gaunt, pale-skinned men draped in rotting pelts and bone-charms, their eyes carrying the same sickly, iridescent oil as their Prince.
As they walked, the ambient essence of the High Hall visibly recoiled. The warm, golden-blue energy of the Veynar tribe clashed violently against the jagged, rotting gray ash radiating from the Zharun, creating a metaphysical war of essences.
Prince Gorr strolled into the center of the room with an exaggerated, rolling swagger. His armor of bones clacked rhythmically in the tense silence.
He didn’t bow, nor did he offer a traditional warrior salute. Instead, he stopped at the base of the elevated dais, planted his hands on his hips, and offered an exaggerated, mocking inclination of his head.
"Warchief Veylara," Gorr rasped, his voice grinding like stones.
As he spoke, his oily, iridescent eyes brazenly raked up and down Veylara’s seated form. He didn’t bother hiding his greedy, predatory appraisal of her body, lingering on the curve of her hips and the swell of her chest beneath her tribal armor. It was a calculated, deliberate insult designed to strip away her authority and reduce her to a mere object in front of her own warriors.
"It is truly a profound shame that our two great tribes could not join our strength through the sacred bonds of marriage," Gorr continued, his bloodless lips pulling back into a grotesque smirk. "My father, the Chieftain, always held you in such... high regard. He has spoken often of how much he truly wanted to bring you into his personal tents. He lamented that a woman of your fierce beauty is wasting away behind these rotting wooden walls."
A collective, sharp intake of breath echoed through the High Hall. Several Veynar elders gripped their staffs so tightly the wood groaned. Kira took a half-step forward, her fangs bared, ready to draw her blade at the sheer disrespect shown to her Warchief. 𝒻𝘳ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝒷𝘯ℴ𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝑐ℴ𝑚
Gorr waved a heavy, gauntleted hand dismissively, his smirk widening. "But, alas, time passes. Since we are both human tribes facing the enemy alien tribe, and my father is a very generous, forgiving man, he has sent me here to make a deal to save your people."
From the shadows, Sol watched Veylara’s reaction. She didn’t flush with anger. She didn’t shout or draw her spear.
Veylara didn’t even look at him properly. She kept her gaze fixed on the space just above his shoulder, treating the Layer 2 Prince as if he were nothing more than an annoying, buzzing insect that had wandered into her hall.
"We are here to discuss a shield wall to hold back the Zerith coalition, Prince Gorr," Veylara said. Her voice was flat, carrying the icy, absolute chill of a winter storm. It cut through the hall with lethal precision. "Not your father’s pathetic, aging delusions. If the Zharun have come to offer blades, sit down. If you have come to share your father’s bedtime fantasies, the gates are behind you. The Veynar do not have the time or the patience to humor the ramblings of old men."
The silence that followed was deafening.







