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6:55 AM at Class A Dormitory — Communal Kitchen, First Floor.

The dormitory’s first-floor kitchen was not a formal dining space.

It was a narrow room beside the main common area with a cold-storage cabinet, a heating plate, and a kettle that ran on the building’s mana-infrastructure supply.

Most students used it for tea between als or for storing personal food items they had brought from the city.

It slled perpetually of the grain cereal that soone on the second floor heated every morning and of the dried herbs that a third-year student kept in a labeled container on the top shelf with a note that read: PLEASE DO NOT USE.

I used the kitchen because it was the only place in the dormitory with a kettle that was always on.

At 6:55 I ca up from the sub-level with my notebook full of observations from the 5:30 session, my mana channels warm from ninety minutes of ambient-draw cultivation, and a specific hunger for sothing hot.

Aiden had left at 6:30 to go shower before his regular morning training routine.

He had not said much on the way up — which was not absence of response but presence of processing.

He had the quality of soone who needed to sit with new information before he could speak about it.

I heated water, made tea, and sat at the small table in the kitchen’s corner with the notebook open.

The financial calculation was not an urgent problem.

But it was a problem, and I had been deferring it for three weeks in favor of more imdiately pressing ones.

Today I was going to address it.

Let explain the financial picture.

The academy provided room, board, and basic training materials as part of the enrollnt fee, which — for scholarship students, of which I was technically one, admitted under the talent-discovery provision — was subsidized to near-zero.

My out-of-pocket expenses since October had been: specialty docuntation supplies, two restricted-access texts from the library’s purchasing catalogue, the Taros Blackthorn commission, the cartography supplies, and the city trips for information gathering, including the Copper Kettle als that I was not going to categorize as operational expenses even though I occasionally gathered operational information there, because I refused to reduce eating a bowl of grain soup into a budget line item.

Seraphina Von Solaris had covered the Taros commission through the Solaris family research fund, which I had accepted without guilt because the commission was genuinely operational and she had offered it as operational cost-sharing rather than charity.

But the research fund had a stated limit, and I had been conscious of not exceeding it.

My own resources: minimal.

The scholarship covered basics. I had a small personal reserve that I had arrived with — in this body, a seventeen-year-old student from a mid-tier professional family in the Denmud Empire’s central provinces.

The reserve was enough for city trips and supplies. It was not enough for what I needed over the next six months.

The dungeon trial itself was funded by the academy.

But after the trial — if I survived, when I survived — there was the second sester, the technique developnt I needed for Class A performance, the possibility of the senior curriculum module that Instructor Brennan had recomnded, and eventually the equipnt upgrades that higher-tier cultivation would require.

All of that cost money.

I had been thinking about this since week three, when I had done the first rough calculation and understood that the scholarship stipend was designed to cover necessities and nothing more. The gap between necessities and what I actually needed was not catastrophic.

But it was real.

Here was the thing about being an author reincarnated into his own story:

I knew where things were.

Not everything. Not the things I hadn’t written. But the things I had written — the specific locations, the specific events, the specific objects that the story had placed in specific places at specific tis — those I knew with the precision of a cartographer who had drawn the map.

The question was: how to use that knowledge for financial gain without changing the story in ways that mattered.

The principle I had established for myself was the sa one that governed the Partial Harvest: take the thing that doesn’t break the tree. Not the protagonist’s resources.

Not the plot-critical items. But the world I had built was full of things I had placed and then moved past — rare materials in locations that the story never revisited, trade opportunities in corridors the main narrative walked through without stopping, information asymtries that existed because I had written a world with genuine geographic complexity and most characters in it didn’t know the world as well as the person who had made it.

I had a list.

I opened the notebook to the back section, where I kept the information I did not want visible in the forward pages, and reviewed it.

Item One: The Greywood northeastern section had a deposit of Silverite ore along the northeast ridge, approximately forty ters below the survey boundary the academy used for field exercises. I had placed it in a worldbuilding note and never used it in the narrative. It was not in any student’s exercise area. It was not connected to any plot thread. The Greywood survey map showed the area as "geologically undeveloped." The Silverre ore deposit sat there, unntioned, outside the story’s concern.

Silvermite was a premium mana-conductive material used in high-grade technique tools and artificer work. At current Aldenre market prices — which I had confird during the city trip through the supply shop’s catalogue — a single refined unit sold for approximately forty gold marks. A rough deposit of the size I had placed in the worldbuilding note, if I could confirm the location and bring a sample to an assayer, would be worth considerably more than forty gold marks.

I could not mine it myself. But I could sell the location.

Not to a large guild — that would draw attention and create a thread the story had not planned for. But to an independent assayer or a small-scale resource trader who operated below the institutional radar, soone who would investigate the tip without it becoming a significant event.

Taros Blackthorn, I suspected, knew the right person.

Item Two: The restricted-access trading catalogue that the academy library maintained for student use had a quarterly update schedule. The previous quarter’s catalogue had listed a specific type of mana-filtering crystal — the Vel’mar grade, produced in the eastern highlands near Rainfield — as out of stock, with no projected availability. I knew it was not out of stock. I knew where the current production batch was sitting: in a storage facility in the Rainfield trade quarter, held by a mid-tier rchant family while they waited for prices to rise.

I knew this because I had used the exact sa market-hold as a background detail in Chapter Four of the original manuscript, three sentences that established the rchant family’s patience and the crystal market’s volatility, and I had never ntioned them again.

If soone bought out that inventory before the price correction — which, by my tiline estimate, would happen in approximately six weeks when the academic institutions’ end-of-year procurent cycle began — they would realize a return of approximately two-and-a-half tis their investnt.

I did not have enough money to buy inventory. But I could sell the information to soone who did.

Seraphina Von Solaris’s family had comrcial interests. More to the point, Seraphina herself had a specific quality I had co to recognize: she was not simply a resource conduit. She was intelligent, comrcially educated, and had been waiting since October for to offer her sothing useful rather than only receiving her family’s operational support.

A trade information tip — comrcially verifiable, low-risk, with a six-week return horizon — was the kind of thing she could take to her family’s trade departnt and validate before acting on. If it checked out, the Solaris family made money. If they chose to share a finder’s percentage with the source of the information, that was their discretion.

I was not going to ask for a percentage in advance. But I was going to be clear that I had other information, and that this was not the last instance of it.

Item Three was in the dungeon.

The dungeon trial’s northeast corridor — the route to Chamber Seven — passed through a section of the dungeon that I had written as geologically significant without making it narratively significant. Specifically: the northeast corridor’s lower wall, approximately sixty ters from the junction where Chamber Seven was located, had a natural alcove that I had placed as a geographic feature and never used. Inside the alcove, in the worldbuilding notes, I had placed a small sealed Foundation-era cache — a practitioner’s ergency kit from the pre-transformation period, containing, among other things, two Vel’mar-grade crystals of the type that were currently being held off the market in Rainfield.

Those crystals were mine, in every sense that mattered. I had placed them there. The story had never sent anyone to retrieve them. They were sitting in the dungeon in a place that no plot thread touched.

All I needed to do was pick them up during the trial.

Not everything needed to be complicated. So things just needed to be picked up.

I wrote in the notebook: Financial plan — three items. Silvermite location tip, Vel’mar information sale via Seraphina, dungeon cache direct retrieval. Execute in order. Do not accelerate any item to the point of creating market-visible events.

Below that: I am not doing this because I am desperate. I am doing this because being financially limited in a world I built is an indignity I am choosing to address thoughtfully.

I finished the tea.

Then I went to the dining hall for breakfast because it was 7:10 and the porridge was ready and I was hungry, and being hungry was also an indignity, and so indignities were more imdiately addressable than others.

**

Main Academic Building — Class A Dining Hall.

Maris was at the corner table when I arrived. She had the tactical analysis notebook open, a cup of tea going, and the expression of soone who had been thinking since before she sat down.

I got the porridge — it was the good morning, the kitchen had made the thick version with the pressed grain base rather than the watered-down variant they produced when the kitchen ran late — and sat down across from her.

She looked at . Then at the notebook in my hand. Then back at .

"You’ve been in the sub-level," she said. Not a question. She could tell from the cold-stone quality that clung to clothes after ti in the basent levels, the faint mineral trace that the Foundation material’s mana interaction produced at the surface level.

"5:30 session," I said. "Aiden ca."

A pause. "How did that go?"

"He found the current by the forty-minute mark. First attempt." I poured tea. "He’s an extrely good practitioner. The thodology is genuinely new to him, but his sensing baseline is high enough that the adjustnt is faster than it would be for most."

"Is that good for us or complicated for us?"

I thought about this honestly. "Both. Aiden learning ambient draw makes him a stronger asset for the dungeon trial. It also ans he’s going to understand the draft-reading component of my technique system well enough to start asking questions about its range."

"And when he asks about the range?"

"I’ll tell him the truth. Interdiate wind affinity in the dungeon’s enclosed environnt gives twenty-two ters of mana-field awareness." I t her eyes. "I won’t tell him about the Narrative Sense. That stays internal."

Maris nodded once. She picked up her tea, looked at it, set it down without drinking. "The evidence package update. I sent the revised session-fourteen analysis to Vorn’s contact at 11 PM last night."

"Already?"

"The acceleration pattern justifies the urgency." She opened the tactical notebook to a specific page. It had a tiline on it — not my tiline, hers, built from her own analysis of the evidence docuntation. "The final infusion session, based on the acceleration rate and the remaining sessions before threshold, falls in a window of three days.

Till that Day it will be his 130 days and it was five days away.

"That’s inside the placent window for the recording device," I said.

"Yes." Her voice was level. "If Taros can’t deliver before Day 128, we either place an interim device with partial functionality or we don’t capture the final session on record."

"I’m going back to the workshop today," I said. "I’ll ask him about the interim assembly option. He ntioned partial functionality is possible — it’s the calibration stage that takes the most ti."

"When are you going?"

"After morning lectures. I’ll take the transit bridge at noon." I looked at the remaining porridge. "I want to stop at the cartography society’s reference archive on the way back. There’s a Foundation-era survey of the dungeon’s northeast section that the library has on file. I need to cross-reference the corridor dinsions with W. Maren’s route."

Maris made a notation. "I’ll cover your afternoon seminar absence."

"Tell Instructor Breen I had a restricted library appointnt. He won’t check."

She gave the look that ant she would tell him whatever she considered most accurate and efficient, which might or might not be what I had suggested, and I accepted this because Maris’s judgnt on interpersonal logistics was generally better than mine.

We ate for a few minutes in the comfortable silence that was one of the things I genuinely valued about working with Maris. Most people filled silence. She let it exist.

"One more thing," I said. "I need to talk to Seraphina today. Can you send her a note through the Class B network that I’d like to et after the afternoon period? The east garden. The usual bench."

Maris’s expression shifted slightly — not surprise, but the recalibration of soone absorbing a new piece of information and updating their model. "You’re finally moving on the financial question."

I looked at her.

"You’ve been doing calculations in the back of that notebook for three weeks," she said. Not accusatory. Just — observational, in the way Maris was observational about everything. "I didn’t ask because it’s yours to manage. But you’ve been doing them."

"Yes," I said.

"The Vel’mar crystal situation."

I stared at her.

"Seraphina ntioned the Rainfield supply chain to last month," Maris said, with the equanimity of soone delivering information that should not have been surprising but apparently was. "She has comrcial education from the Solaris family’s trade departnt. She noticed the sa hold on the catalogue update that you noticed." She picked up her tea. "She was waiting to see if you would bring it to her."

A pause during which I processed that Maris had known about this for a month and had not ntioned it, and that Seraphina had identified the sa market opportunity independently and had been waiting for to initiate, and that both of them had simply — let work through it at my own pace without prompting.

"Was anyone going to tell ?" I said.

"You tell us things when you’ve finished thinking about them," Maris said. "We extend the sa courtesy."

This was, I reflected, one of the more quietly flattering things anyone had said to in four months. I put it in the place where I kept things that deserved to be rembered.

"Send her the note," I said.

"I sent it twenty minutes ago," Maris said. "She confird the eting."

I looked at her.

She looked back with complete composure.

"Eat your porridge," she said. "It’s going cold."

I ate my porridge.

To be Continued..

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