It is estimated that he died on the day he was summoned. Director Ken summoned Alexander the Great with only one ending, that is, he was killed by Alexander the Great, and he didn't live the next day. Historically, when Iskander was a prince, he shot him in the head with a wine glass just because of his disrespectful words, and the Thebans said that he was a little boy and he slaughtered the city of Thebes. Philotas was stoned to half death and buried alive just because he was "suspected of rebellion", and Kretas followed the emperor for half his life, and was stabbed to death by Iskandar on the spot after drinking a few more nonsense at the wine table.
Alexander is a very ** tyrant! Director Ken dared to speak out, and he would definitely be dragged to death by Iskandar behind the ox cart! The Emperor doesn't talk about allegiance! On the side, Webb stole his things and gave him a life. Moreover, Director Ken's self-management spell and wife's demon offering system were simply prepared for Alexander to kill him. As for the servant not being able to kill the master, the spell or something, that thing couldn't have restricted Alexander at all. There is a story that Persepolis was the capital of the Persian Empire, but submitted to Alexander.
Alexander's numbers were not enough to stay, and I don't know how many people in the city were anti-minded, maybe Alexander's army would turn back when they left. However, Persepolis is an ancient capital, a famous city, and if it is destroyed, it will have a bad reputation, and if it is not destroyed, it may become a base camp for the rebels. Then Alexandre ** chose: a big banquet, the officers and soldiers were drunk, and then in the confusion, I don't know who threw a torch on a thatch piled there in Persepolis for some unknown reason, the fire was ignited, Alexander asked the soldiers to put out the fire, and the soldiers rushed in.
The next day Persepolis was in ruins, and the people burned in an uproar, and Alexander was ashamed of himself and said that his lax military discipline led to the fire, and he punished himself with three cups, and the officers and soldiers should also remember that this time they are not to blame. So Alexander opened the king's army, and then a soldier put Kenneth down with a javelin, and the other chopped off the part of his body with the spell, and it was over, what kind of spell contract magic, that thing wanted to restrain Alexander the Great, this old fritter chopped the lord is a joke.
Then the Emperor would bury the lower half of Kenneth's half-dead body in the earth, and then severely rep his wife in front of him for punishing the man's rudeness, which was what Alexander would do. Director Ken's summoning of Alexander was himself a matter of death.
The Emperor will probably not look down on Kenneth. In the end, there was a brutal defeat. But at least it won't be green. Don't look at Director Ken's dignified monarch, who kills whom in mercury dress up (not) But the Emperor doesn't care at all about the reputation and glory that Kenneth dreamed of, the Emperor's dream is just to travel. Regardless of whether the director understands the emperor's ambition or not, but as a magician, he is still the kind with great dignity His natural configuration is not as good as that of a happy priest and a righteous partner.
Not to mention that the Great Emperor will not exert his serious strength with Kong Ming. Probably just sigh before disappearing: Director Ken, you don't understand people's hearts. Ten thousand steps back, Director Ken has really become a person like Weber, fighting side by side with the Emperor, it doesn't make much sense, or the sad monarch and minister on the bridge, the twinkle plus hour or the pleasure duo can simply flatten their ideals. (I'm not Flash, but Shining was oversized in that war) The Emperor was destined to be difficult to win in that war, and Shining would become an obstacle to the Emperor's victory, and the key restraint was too outrageous. I can only hope that Crazy Lan can kill Flash, but I can't do it in the wild goose night.
The emperor's high emotional intelligence accelerates Director Ken's hard power, and I am actually very optimistic. Maybe the Emperor will bow to Director Ken's knowledge. In a sense, Director Ken is the same as Yan Feng Qili in the Five Wars, destined to die in the confinement of the world line.