El Poder Frente A La Fuerza -
Her council panicked. “We have three hundred soldiers against his three thousand! We should flee to the mountains.”
Serra did not move. “You have the power to kill us all,” she said calmly. “But you do not have the strength to make us hate you.”
One autumn, the river failed entirely. The north’s wells went dry. Vultur saw only one solution: invade the south, seize its springs, and enslave its people. “Power is a blade,” he declared. “It takes what it needs.” el poder frente a la fuerza
“Shoot,” Serra whispered to the wind. “And every branch will become a root. Every drop of blood will become a song. You will win this morning, Vultur, but you will lose every dawn after. Because power kills bodies. Strength plants gardens.”
“We will meet his power with our strength.” Her council panicked
King Vultur believed in poder —power over others. His army was vast, his dungeons deep, his laws written in blood. Every morning, he climbed his tallest tower and watched his subjects bow. “Fear is the only truth,” he told his generals. “He who can break bones, burn fields, and silence voices holds the world.”
Serra received his ultimatum at dusk. “Surrender or burn,” it read. “You have the power to kill us all,” she said calmly
One lasts a season. The other endures like a root splitting a stone—not by crushing it, but by being more patient than the dark.
In a sun-scorched valley divided by a dry riverbed, two kingdoms had stared at each other for generations. To the north, King Vultur ruled from a fortress of black iron. To the south, Queen Serra governed from an open plaza built into a living grove.
“Make way or die,” Vultur shouted from his war chariot.