Daniel
Daniel found himself sitting and trying to listen as his incredibly striking wife slipped into what could only be described as lecture mode.
Vivian's violet eyes seed particularly bright in that mont. She tapped the side of her mouth as she considered sothing only she could see, her back turned to him as she stood near the window.
Daniel was not staring at her legs.
No matter how smooth and, objectively, perfect they were. That is absolutely not sothing that he would do.
Vivian turned and caught him looking, which did not seem to faze her in the slightest.
"I am a little surprised you don't already know this," she said, her tone asured but not unkind. "But I haven't seen any of your writing outside your published papers, and let's be honest, you cannot know everything."
Ethan snorted. It sounded incredibly smug. Daniel ignored him.
"So," Vivian continued, "let's talk about magic, or power, or whatever term you prefer. Mystic energy, broadly speaking, falls into three categories. Divine, Chaos, and Mana."
Daniel's attention sharpened imdiately.
"To be very clear," Vivian said, "Divine and Chaos are not variations of mana. They are separate sources of power that can be expressed through it, but they do not originate from the sa place."
Daniel watched her carefully. "Then teacher Vivian, what are they exactly?"
"Divine energy is ordered," she said. "It is aligned with structure, intent, and continuity. It reinforces what already exists and cos from the higher planes of the Divine. When used properly, it stabilizes, preserves, and strengthens. It binds things together, body, mind, and will, into sothing more coherent than they would be on their own."
She paused, then added, "That is why divine techniques are often associated with healing, protection, and authority. But this shouldn't be confused with benevolence. Inherently, divine power is used to impose order."
Daniel considered that. "So it doesn't create. It refines."
"It can create," Vivian said, "but only within a frawork that already makes sense. Divine power does not tolerate contradiction well."
"And Chaos?"
Her expression shifted slightly.
"Chaos is the opposite in function, but not in importance," she said. "Where Divine reinforces structure, Chaos breaks it. It disrupts patterns, dissolves boundaries, and introduces instability into systems that rely on predictability."
Daniel frowned. "That sounds... dangerous."
"It is," she said. "But it is also necessary. Without Chaos, systems beco rigid. Without disruption, nothing adapts. Chaos allows for change, but it does so by forcing the system to survive it."
He leaned back slightly. "I understand, but that doesn't really tell anything, right? Only that Divine preserves, Chaos disrupts."
"That is the simplest way to start to understand it," Vivian said. "Both can be explored through mana, which is why people confuse them. But the intent behind them, and the effect they produce, are fundantally different."
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Daniel glanced toward the window, thinking through it.
"And Aether?"
"Aether belongs to a separate category connected to the individual," she said. "Divine and Chaos are external. They have to co from an outside source. I have heard rumors of so getting Chaos and Divine cores, but I have never seen it in my lifeti. Chaos and Divine are not tied to the person. They are like the embodint of their principles."
Daniel exhaled slowly.
"So mana is the dium," he said. "Aether is the individual. Divine and Chaos are... rules."
Vivian inclined her head slightly.
"As you probably know, Mana is the most widely used and the least precisely defined," she continued. "The cultivators of the Empire, the Seran Resonance, the Murai Spirit Swords, the Calot Oath-Bound, and the Orcs' Pulse all use mana in so form. There are others as well that the Empire has less connection with that all operate with so form of Mana. The traditions of the sea peoples, the dwarves, the elves, the Anatoli, and the Aya all fall within that category. They all use so variation of mana."
She paused briefly, letting the structure settle.
"Aether also falls within mana," she continued, "but it is not ambient in the sa way. It is not sothing you draw from the environnt or cycle through the body. It is tied to the individual. To their structure. Their state. Their existence."
Daniel folded his arms slightly.
"But that still doesn't make sense," he said. "Those are definitions, not explanations. Mana can be moved, manipulated, changed, and adapted. You have a core in your body that stores it. A core in which you can purify, attach intent to. Empower. Can Aether do any of that?"
"A distinct yet parallel expression," Vivian said. "Intent coupled with mana is really the basis for all cultivator-based spellwork. Aether behaves differently enough that treating it like mana leads to errors. As far as I know, it can only be used with mana, not independently of it."
Behind his thoughts, Ethan stirred.
Makes sense to , he said. I've always believed that mana existed on a spectrum, that all of these different thods were, at their core, different flavors of the sa cheesecake.
Daniel glowered. You got that from my mory.
If we ever make it to Earth, I want to go to the Cheesecake Factory. That is not negotiable.
What are you, a suburban mom from Wisconsin? The Cheesecake Factory sucks. That is a terrible idea.
I don't understand that reference and you will take that back, Daniel. I will totally fight you.
Daniel resisted the urge to sigh and instead focused back on his wife.
When Daniel looked up, Vivian was right in front of him.
She had stepped into his space without him noticing, one leg drawn up beside his hip as she leaned in, close enough that the shift in distance registered before his mind caught up.
It was at that mont that his brain stopped functioning.
Vivian's face was intent, her gaze steady and far too aware.
"So now you know, husband," she said quietly, leaning in. She was close. Too close. Way too close. He could feel the heat of her body and sll her perfu. "What are you going to do about it?"
Daniel, despite himself, felt his cheeks warm. "Uh—I... I was—"
She smiled. "About Aether, I an. What are you going to do about Aether..."
A sharp knock cut through the mont.
Before either of them could respond, the door opened.
Princess Sophie stepped in first.
Her composure was intact, but only just. Her eyes narrowed the mont they landed on the two of them, the irritation there far less concealed than she usually allowed. She took in the distance, the posture, the context, and whatever conclusion she reached did not improve her mood.
Ani followed a step behind, far less restrained. Her gaze moved between Vivian and Daniel once, slow and assessing, before a small, knowing smile settled into place.
"Apologies," Sophie said, though there was nothing apologetic in her tone. "We would not have interrupted if it were not necessary."
Daniel forced his thoughts back into alignnt.
"What happened?" he asked.
Sophie did not look away from him.
"Your parents and your younger brother have arrived."
Daniel sat up straighter. Oh shit. I forgot they were coming.
Ani shifted her weight lightly, folding her arms as she leaned against the doorfra. "And they didn't co quietly, husband-of-the-Crane," she added. "You might want to decide how you're greeting them before this turns into a spectacle."
Daniel closed his eyes for half a breath.
He opened them again, looking between the two of them before his gaze flicked briefly to Vivian.
"Where are they?" he asked.
"At the outer reception court," Sophie said. "They arrived sooner than expected."
There was still tension in her posture, sothing tighter than the words themselves.
Daniel nodded once.
"Then I should go et them."
Ethan stirred. Well, he said, this is about to get interesting.
Daniel exhaled slowly.
That was the understatent of the morning.
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