Chapter 816: The Trio’s Turn (3)
The applause residue died mid-air.
Not dramatically. Not like a spell being snuffed. More like the amphitheater collectively rembered it had lungs and decided not to use them.
"I have a question."
Draven’s voice wasn’t louder than anyone else’s. It just arrived with the clean weight of authority—keyed to the hall, keyed to the people, keyed to the part of Aetherion that existed to amplify command. A few claps tried to finish themselves, late and embarrassed, and then even those stopped. The soft hiss of the water-manifold fountains along the walls suddenly sounded indecently loud. Quills froze over slates. A scribe in the upper tier held his breath so hard his cheeks puffed.
Amberine felt it first in her skin. The prickle. The pressure. The way her own heartbeat beca a private scandal, too audible in a room that had gone quiet.
Her heart lurched. Her palms went hot and slick at the sa ti. Her knees threatened a brief, humiliating betrayal.
Ifrit ticked inside her robe like an angry ember trapped in glass.
he warned, sharp and irritated.
Amberine swallowed. Her throat felt too small. She forced her fingers to loosen around the parchnt before she tore it. The edges had left faint red dents in her skin, little half-moons of stress.
Draven wasn’t on the stage.
That was the part that made it worse.
His voice ca from the constellation cluster—the VIP arc where the world’s gravity sat arranged like a ley-map of power. Kings with heavy rings and heavier silence. Queens wrapped in mantles that looked like living wards. Emperors from distant continents whose presence felt like a treaty being held in one hand. Archmages who radiated field pressure even while sitting. War heroes with scar maps on their knuckles and eyes that never stopped counting exits.
And there, among them, was Professor Draven Arcanum Drakhan.
Amberine’s eyes flicked to him almost involuntarily, like a student glancing up when chalk hits the floor.
He was seated among people who were supposed to be untouchable.
And then he stood.
The absurdity struck Amberine so hard she nearly laughed—except nothing in her body was brave enough to make sound. The keynote luminary rising from the sa tier as emperors as if the tier belonged to him too. As if hierarchy was sothing he could ignore because his mind already outranked it.
Regaria’s cluster shifted by a hair.
Queen Aurelia Thalassia Arctaris Regaria leaned back in her seat like she was bored of breathing. Her fiery red hair spilled over one shoulder, bright as a contained fla in an ocean-blue hall. Her posture said she’d rather be anywhere else, but her eyes said she was asuring everyone in the room and already bored with half of them.
She didn’t clap. She didn’t whisper.
She watched.
Not like a sovereign assessing a scholar.
Like a proud mother watching a son step into a room that might crown him or try to cut him.
Her lips moved without sound.
Bastard.
The word should have been insulting.
It sohow wasn’t.
Amberine bit the inside of her cheek hard enough to taste iron and keep her face from doing sothing stupid.
Elara stood at her right like a blade pretending to be a person—face neutral, jaw set. Still, Amberine caught the smallest tightening in her shoulders as Draven moved. Not fear. Preparation. The kind of readiness Elara carried into everything.
Maris was at her left, gentler, softer, but her eyes were sharp in a different way—tracking who leaned forward, who didn’t, which clusters went silent because they wanted to and which went silent because they were forced.
Professor Astrid hovered behind them with her hands clasped and her badge perfectly aligned. Her thumb still found the edge of the badge anyway, tapping once and then stopping herself as if she’d just caught her own heartbeat committing treason.
Draven stepped down from the VIP arc and began to walk.
He didn’t approach like a guest coming to congratulate students.
He approached like a professor walking down a classroom aisle to check your work.
Minimal steps. No wasted motion. His coat cut through the prismatic ocean-light like ink through water. His gaze was surgical—Amberine could feel it even before it reached her, the way it carved across the orb, the illusion overlay, the anchor points, their posture, their breathing. He saw the tiny tremor in Amberine’s wrist. He saw the way Elara’s golden mana still humd under her skin like a restrained sun. He saw Maris’s illusion anchors holding steady at the periter.
The room re-centered around him.
Power reacted like iron filings around a magnet.
Prince Caelum Aurelian Drakonis Regaria didn’t move, but his eyes tracked Draven’s path like a war room mind tracking a blade. Exits. Threats. Leverage. If Draven wanted the room, Caelum was already calculating what it would cost to let him have it.
Duchess Malesya Nortuis von Blackthorn smiled the way a woman smiles when she’s deciding whether to buy a thing or break it so no one else can.
Sophie von Icevern sat upright, hands folded. Her expression was tense in a way Amberine understood: justice trying to decide whether this was fair. Her eyes flicked once toward Amberine and back to Draven, hopeful and anxious at the sa ti.
Annalise leaned toward Sophie like a shadow that loved too hard. Her bright eyes didn’t watch Draven first.
They watched Sophie watching Draven.
Amberine’s instincts itched.
Then the air tightened.
Aetherion’s defense field perford a subtle synchronization pulse as Draven crossed the floor. It was so faint most people wouldn’t notice, but Amberine felt it along her teeth, a shimring ripple through the amphitheater. Conduit lines under the crystal platforms brightened for a heartbeat and steadied. Disguised constructs embedded in pillars adjusted their posture by a fraction.
System-priority actor.
The fortress treated Draven like a key.
Ifrit hated it.
he hissed.
Amberine breathed through her nose and pretended her heart wasn’t trying to escape through her throat.
Draven reached the edge of the dais.
He didn’t smile.
He didn’t soften.
He looked at the orb still hovering—crimson and azure braided under the golden calibration ring—and then he looked at Amberine.
Just once.
It felt like being pinned to a board by a professor who already knows the answer and is deciding whether you do.
"You called it ’emotion,’" Draven said.
His voice was calm.
Cold.
Efficient.
And every syllable landed with the weight of a grading rubric.
"You claid asurability," he continued, eyes unblinking. "Define the signal. Without poetry."
Amberine’s lungs forgot how to work.
For half a heartbeat she was back in a classroom, notebook open, Ifrit grumbling under her robe, Draven standing over her shoulder asking for a number she didn’t have.
Then she rembered she was standing in front of queens.
Her mouth opened. Her voice cracked like a traitor.
"It’s—"
She swallowed hard enough to hurt.
Elara didn’t rescue her.
Maris didn’t rescue her.
Astrid didn’t rescue her.
They let her stand.
Because she had nad it.
Amberine forced breath into her chest. "Cognitive stimulus produces a patterned mana response," she said, words coming faster as she found footing. "We asure it through phase drift, amplitude variance, and stability retention under load. The field reacts predictably when stimulus is standardized."
Draven didn’t nod.
He didn’t praise.
He just said, "Good."
The single word made Amberine’s stomach flip because it sounded like she’d barely t minimum requirent.
Then he added, almost conversationally, "Now remove the human. What remains?"
Amberine blinked.
Her mind wanted comfort—intent, feeling, the operator’s heart.
Draven’s gaze cut that path off.
He was testing whether their model collapsed without mysticism.
Astrid behind them adjusted her glasses again. Too quick. Too often. Sweat glinted at her temple.
Maris t Amberine’s eyes for a fraction of a second.
No touch.
Just the look.
Anchor.
"A signal envelope," Amberine said, slower now. "A resonance pattern that can be induced by standardized prompts or equivalent structured inputs. It’s a asurable response curve, not a mood."
Draven’s eyes shifted a hair.
Like a blade deciding the material isn’t worthless.
He lifted one hand.
Minimal movent.
No showmanship.
The air above the dais folded.
Their model appeared again.
Cleaner.
Stripped.
Colder.
Overlay lines recreated in a single sweep, crisp and cruel. The jitter spikes returned, precise and ugly. The golden ring stabilizer ford with exact phase alignnt.
"This," Draven said, "is your claim."
A murmur rippled through the amphitheater—thrilled and insulted at once.
Because he had duplicated months of work like copying a line of chalk from a board.
Scholars leaned forward, so offended, so hungry.
Nobles leaned forward because if he could replicate it this fast, so could others.
Sophie’s eyes brightened with sothing like relief—competence, proven.
Ifrit muttered resentful admiration.
Amberine felt both proud and violated. Proud because their work was worthy of being treated seriously. Violated because it was being handled like a specin.
Draven’s fingers shifted.
The simulation’s water pressure increased.
Not by much.
Just enough.
The orb’s stability band shivered.
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