Yilore interprets the Nine in the Second of The Army as 'Hearts United Under One Banner.' This is the card of the ideal leader — the person who stands at the center of a community not through force or title but through earned trust.
The card captures a moment of profound unity: soldiers gathered around their commander, not because they must but because they choose to. The 'triple decoration' from the king is merely the formal recognition of what everyone already knows — this person is the heart and soul of the army.
The card's deepest teaching is about the nature of true authority. The most powerful leaders are not those who demand obedience but those who inspire it. When people follow you because they genuinely believe in your competence and care for their wellbeing, you possess the kind of power that no title can grant and no rival can take away.