From across the alcove, another prominent observer had been listening to this exchange with complete attention.
Chiron Stormblood, the most powerful lightning user in all of Draconia, a man whose family had ended the Dragon Wars centuries ago, a friend to powerful houses, and a political force that rivaled Council authority.
He approached the conversation, and his presence commanded imdiate respect.
When he spoke, even the skeptical rchant lord quieted to listen.
"I concur with the lady," Chiron said, his voice carrying the authority of soone accustod to having his judgnt trusted implicitly. "I am also placing substantial wealth on erald. And I am also offering contracts to their team mbers."
The rchant lord stared at him in absolute shock.
"You? The Stormblood himself? Betting against Byron? Against the Rank #1 student from Sanctorium?"
"The lady is correct," Chiron replied, his gaze lingering on the hooded woman with the fan for just a fraction of a second.
A mont of recognition so subtle that only those watching for it would have noticed. "Team composition, leadership capability, and cohesion are far more valuable than raw individual power in dungeon trials. The Erald team has all three."
He paused, and when he spoke again, he started to chuckle.
"And I have always trusted the judgnt of those with access to better information than the rest of us."
His eyes flicked toward the hooded woman again, and this ti the ssage was unmistakable: he knew exactly who she was.
The woman’s composure didn’t shift, but there was a fraction of a mont where her hand, gripping the fan, tightened almost imperceptibly.
Another noble, a wealthy trader from the central territories, leaned toward the rchant lord with urgency.
"If Stormblood is betting on erald, we should reconsider our positions. Chiron doesn’t make careless wagers. If he’s backing the half-blood’s team, there’s sothing we’re missing."
"But Byron is Rank #1," the rchant lord protested weakly. "The golden child of Sanctorium. His team should be dominant..."
"Should be," Chiron repeated, his voice carrying gentle finality, "is not the sa as will be. The lady and I have made our calculations. I suggest you make yours accordingly."
He walked away, leaving the rchant lord standing in stunned silence, rapidly reassessing decades of assumptions about how magical hierarchies functioned.
Duke Asher was watching this exchange with growing unease. He understood that sothing was happening beyond his comprehension.
Soone was backing the half-blood, the sa person who’d sohow manipulated the basin assignnts, with enough confidence to publicly wager significant wealth and contract team mbers before the trial even began
And that soone was currently standing twenty feet away from him, completely obscured, communicating through the most subtle language possible. Soone with enough authority that even Chiron Stormblood deferred to her judgnt.
The woman in white leaned slightly toward her companion, her voice barely more than a whisper, audible only by supernatural ans.
--------
The palace corridors at dusk carried a particular quality of silence that only existed in spaces designed for power.
The white stone walls reflected the amber light filtering through tall windows, casting everything in the golden hue of late afternoon.
Sariel Nyctelios moved through these corridors with the asured pace of soone who had walked them for centuries, his ancient elven features composed in that serene expression that had beco his permanent mask.
He found them in the western corridor, near the administrative wing where the Council’s lesser chambers occupied space between the throne room and the vault below.
Myrine Archon walked slightly ahead, her silver hair catching the light. Fauna ridan moved with the languid confidence that characterized her presence. Gale Ashwood’s massive fra filled the space, his hands occasionally clenching and unclenching at his sides in the rhythmic pattern he had from his OCD.
They had just erged from a eting with the kingdom’s defense coordinators. Sariel could read that much from their posture, from the weight on their shoulders.
"A word," Sariel said, his voice cutting through the ambient palace sounds without volu, simply through the absolute certainty of its projection.
The three Council mbers turned in unison, recognition flickering across their features.
Myrine’s expression remained neutral. Fauna’s lips quirked slightly upward. Gale’s jaw clenched tighter.
"The border reports," Sariel continued, advancing towards them with a asured pace, "have beco concerning. The patrols are detecting organized movent in the borderlands. Sothing is drawing creatures from across the territories toward Caeloria’s eastern periter."
"We’re aware," Myrine replied bluntly. "The defense coordinators have raised concerns about resource allocation. If the reports prove accurate, we may need to mobilize additional military units from the interior."
"Which would weaken the capital’s defensive posture," Sariel observed, positioning himself with perfect equanimity between the three Council mbers. "And create political complications that our current faction... can ill afford."
Fauna’s eyes narrowed slightly. Gale’s massive shoulders tensed.
"What are you suggesting?" Gale asked, his voice carrying the aggressive tone of soone who had learned that directness served better than political dancing.
"I am suggesting," Sariel replied, his ancient eyes moving from one Council mber to the next, "that we examine the situation with clinical precision rather than emotional reaction. The creatures gathering at the borders did not erge spontaneously. Sothing drew them. Sothing called them toward this kingdom specifically."
Myrine’s expression shifted. Her mind was calculating, processing implications.
"You’re suggesting the gathering is targeted," she said quietly. "That sothing within Caeloria attracted them."
"I’m stating it with absolute certainty," Sariel corrected, his tone brooking no argunt. "The magical resonance patterns detected by our scrying arrays indicate a specific point of origin within the palace itself. A signature that calls to draconic creatures with irresistible force."
Fauna’s voluptuous fra stiffened. Her hand moved to her throat, fingers splaying across her collarbone in a gesture that betrayed her sudden understanding.
"Jack Kaiser," she whispered.
"The human carries integrated draconic essence within his body," Sariel confird. "You saw the reports of the Azure Gate. He destroyed it with a dragon from inside his body. The gathering at our borders is not an invasion driven by territorial aggression or hunger. It is convergence driven by that signature. They co because he is here."
Gale’s massive fists clenched completely, his knuckles turning white against his palms.
"You’re telling us," Gale said, each word carrying the weight of dawning realization, "that a foreign variable walked into our capital carrying a beacon that attracts apex predators. That his presence here has drawn a horde of creatures that now threaten our kingdom’s infrastructure and our people’s safety."
"I am telling you," Sariel replied with perfect calm, "that the kingdom faces a crisis created entirely by Jack Kaiser’s existence within our borders. The creatures gathering are not here for conquest. They are here for him. They are hunting sothing they can sense but cannot yet reach."
Myrine’s hands clasped together, her fingers interlacing with the kind of tension that suggested her mind was racing through strategic implications.
Her political experience was sufficient to understand what Sariel was implying before he needed to elaborate.
"If he remains in the capital," she began carefully, "the creatures will not stop coming. They will continue to gather, press against our defenses, and threaten the kingdom indefinitely. The only way to resolve this is to remove him."
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