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Chapter 269: Chapter 264: The Wrong Answer (Part 2)

Location: Mid Realm — Temple of Light

Date/Ti: 19–28 Emberrise, 9939 AZI

Realm: Mid Realm / Radiant Realm

The quotas didn’t care about logistics.

Sharlin had explained this to every new operative who joined the program, and she explained it now to the twelve senior priests seated around the briefing table in the Temple’s eastern planning chamber. The entity she served — the thing that lived in the spaces beneath the Temple, in the formations older than the institution above them — required a specific volu of essence-cultivated material per quarter. Five hundred souls. Not four hundred and ninety-nine. Not "as many as we can manage." Five hundred.

Last quarter, she’d delivered three hundred and twelve. The entity had not complained. The entity didn’t complain. It simply... waited. And the weight of that waiting pressed on Sharlin’s mind like stone on bone — a patient, ancient pressure that didn’t threaten, didn’t punish, rely communicated through silence that the next delivery would need to compensate for the shortfall.

"The mixed-blood communities are gone," Sharlin said. Her voice carried the sa clipped precision she used for all operational briefings — warm enough to suggest competence, cold enough to discourage questions. "Eight hundred thousand people relocated by unknown actors. Our Riftmaw operation has sealed that route. But the source is lost, and the program requires replenishnt."

Twelve faces. So old, so young. All wearing the white-and-gold robes of Temple senior staff. All aware — at varying levels of specificity — of what the "program" entailed.

"The solution is straightforward." Sharlin activated the formation-etched map embedded in the table. The Mid Realm blood in light — five kingdoms, disputed territories, outcast lands, trade routes. She tapped the southern edge. The Lower Realm appeared below it, vast and comparatively empty. "We expand recruitnt to the Lower Realm."

***

The plan had the elegance of simplicity.

The Temple of Light already operated a youth cultivation program in the Mid Realm. Free training, free housing, free als — offered to families too poor to cultivate their children independently. It had been running for millennia in various forms — her father’s design, refined by Sharlin’s hand — and the pipeline was well understood. Children arrived. They were tested. The talented ones were separated for "advanced instruction." The rest were sorted by utility.

Nobody questioned it. The Temple’s reputation was spotless. Generations of families had sent children willingly, gratefully, and the children who returned — the ones who WERE returned — spoke glowingly of their training. Excellent facilities. Kind instructors. Opportunities they’d never have had otherwise.

The ones who didn’t return were attributed to the standard attrition of cultivation training. A percentage of students always died during advancent. Everyone knew that. Everyone accepted it. The Temple published tasteful morial notices and offered condolences, and the families grieved and were grateful for the chance their child had been given, and nobody asked why the "attrition rate" at Temple academies was four tis higher than anywhere else.

Now, the program would expand south.

"Lower Realm recruitnt requires a different approach," Sharlin continued. "The Mid Realm families are our direct constituency — they see Temple priests daily, attend services, send donations. The Lower Realm is different. The upper classes worship us — they’ll trample each other for Temple favour, anything to improve their chances of ascending to the Mid Realm. The rchant classes know our na, but we’ve been out of their reach. And the poor..." A smile touched the corner of her mouth. "The poor have heard of the Temple of Light, the way a beggar hears of a king’s feast. Distant. Impossible. Nothing to do with them."

She let that settle.

"We’re about to change that. When the Temple of Light — the most prestigious institution in three realms — arrives in a Lower Realm city offering FREE cultivation testing for their children, every poor family within a hundred leagues will co running. We won’t need to recruit. They’ll queue."

She outlined the operation with the practiced efficiency of soone who had been running logistics campaigns for millennia.

Phase one: presence. Temple scouts dispatched to every major Lower Realm city and settlent. Not priests — not yet. Scouts. Quiet, professional, mapping the territory. Where were the largest populations? Which cities had functioning Kindling Day assessnts? Where were the families poorest, the children most abundant, the local cultivation infrastructure weakest?

Phase two: the offer. Temple representatives arriving in those cities — real priests this ti, in white-and-gold robes, with the full weight of the Temple’s reputation behind them. Free Kindling Day testing. "Let us check your child’s potential. It costs nothing." For families who’d never been able to afford a proper assessnt, who’d watched their children register as Ashborn because they couldn’t pay for anything better, the Temple’s attention would feel like divine intervention itself.

Phase three: recruitnt. "Your child has been selected for a special program. The Temple of Light recognises potential that others have overlooked. This is an opportunity your family could never provide on its own."

The upper classes would send their children eagerly — Temple connections, Temple training, the prestige alone was worth more than gold. The rchant families would feel honoured. And the poor — the poor would weep with gratitude. Their child, noticed by the Temple. Their child, given a future.

Poverty and reverence did the rest.

"Target demographics." Sharlin tapped the map. Two categories are highlighted in different colours. "Category one: children aged six to twelve who score above the seventy-fifth percentile on Kindling Day assessnts. High essence potential. Strong cultivation channels. These are priority acquisitions."

She moved her hand. The second colour pulsed.

"Category two: young adults, seventeen to twenty-five. Healthy. Talented. Strong essence signatures." She didn’t use the phrase she’d used in private — breeding cattle. These priests didn’t need the language. They needed the logistics. "Long-term investnt. These individuals will produce the next generation of high-potential children under controlled conditions. Establish dedicated facilities — repurpose the old garrison complexes along the northern wall."

One of the priests — younger, newer, with the particular pallor of soone hearing operational details for the first ti — opened his mouth.

Sharlin’s green eyes found him. He closed it.

"Additionally." She turned back to the map. Her finger traced the passages connecting the Mid Realm to the Lower Realm — ancient portal structures, maintained by the kingdoms, used for trade and travel. "Every Mid Realm passageway to the Lower Realm cos under Temple jurisdiction. Effective imdiately."

"High Priestess, the kingdoms—"

"The kingdoms will be inford that the Temple is implenting security asures in response to the recent mass disappearance. Eight hundred thousand people vanished — soone had to move them through controlled territory. The passageways are potential security breaches." She let the logic settle. It was convincing because it was partially true. "Nobody moves between realms without Temple knowledge. Nobody."

The passageways served a second purpose. Once recruitnt began in the Lower Realm, the children would travel north through those passages. Controlling the routes ant controlling the flow. And if anyone — any family, any local authority, any inconvenient questioner — tried to follow their children to the Temple facilities... the passage would be closed for "security maintenance."

"Tiline," Sharlin said. "Scouts deploy within the week. Testing teams within the month. First recruitnt cohort arrives before Ashbloom."

***

The facilities tour took the afternoon.

Sharlin walked through the converted compound on the Temple’s northern periter — a forr garrison that had housed Vanguard-class soldiers during the last territorial dispute with the Ironveil Kingdom. Now it housed sothing else.

The conversion was nearly complete. Builders had transford barracks into dormitories. Training yards into assessnt courts. Storage rooms into processing chambers that Sharlin inspected with the focused attention of a craftsman examining their workshop.

Everything was clean. White stone. Gold trim. Divine symbols carved above every doorway — the radiant sun of the Temple of Light, warm and welcoming. The dormitories had beds with actual mattresses. The dining hall could seat three hundred. There was a courtyard with a fountain, where children could play between assessnt sessions.

It looked like a school. It looked like the finest school most of these children would ever see.

Sharlin ran her fingers along a dormitory wall. Smooth stone, recently plastered. No chains. No cells. Nothing that would alarm a visiting parent. The sorting happened elsewhere — in the sub-levels, behind doors that didn’t appear on any map shown to the public.

"Father Sorien."

The priest responsible for the recruiter program stepped forward. Older. Warm-faced. Silver hair, kind eyes, the deep laugh lines of soone who smiled easily and often. The particular bearing of a man who had spent decades being trustworthy, who radiated competence and compassion the way other people radiated body heat. He was perfect for this work precisely because nothing about him suggested it. Sharlin had selected him personally — not for his cultivation, which was modest, but for his voice. He had the kind of voice that made people lean forward. That made children feel safe.

"The recruitnt language," Sharlin said. "Show ."

Sorien produced a sheaf of parchnt — scripts, tested and refined over years of Mid Realm recruitnt. Sharlin read through them while walking. The words were precisely calibrated. She’d written the originals herself, thousands of years ago, and they’d been polished by iteration since — every phrase tested against response rates, every opening line asured by how many families said yes.

Your child has been noticed by the Temple of Light.

Not selected. Noticed. Selection implied authority. Noticed implied the child was special — that the Temple had been paying attention, had seen sothing remarkable, had co specifically for THIS child.

We recognise potential that the standard assessnts often miss.

Flattery. Every parent wanted to believe their child was exceptional. The standard Kindling Day tests asured essence channels — crude, basic. The Temple’s "advanced assessnt" was more thorough, more detailed, and parents who’d been told their child was rely average would hear that the Temple thought otherwise.

This is an opportunity your family could never provide on its own.

True. Devastatingly true. The families they targeted couldn’t afford cultivation instruction. Couldn’t afford pills, formations, instructors, equipnt. A child with genuine potential, born to a family without resources, would spend their life as an Ashborn — cultivating the bare minimum, never advancing, never reaching what they could have been.

The Temple was offering to change that. For free.

"Good," Sharlin said. She handed the scripts back. "Ensure every recruiter morises them. No improvisation. The language works because it’s been tested. Change it, and you risk the response rate."

"Of course, High Priestess."

She continued through the compound. Assessnt rooms. dical examination chambers. The courtyard with its fountain. Everything bright, clean, and welcoming.

In the sub-level corridor — accessible only through a formation-sealed door behind the kitchens — she paused. Checked the processing infrastructure. The drainage channels. The formation arrays built into the floor, designed to extract, compress, and concentrate. The white pills in their sealed containers, each one representing—

She didn’t linger. She’d inspected processing facilities hundreds of tis. They functioned. The output was consistent. The thodology was older than she was — her father’s design, perfected over twenty thousand years before she’d inherited it — and didn’t require improvent.

She locked the sub-level door behind her and walked back into the sunlit courtyard.

***

lindra was waiting in the courtyard.

The old advisor sat on a stone bench near the fountain, ironbark cane across her knees. She’d been present for the briefing. She’d said nothing — not during the operational outline, not during the demographic targeting, not during the phrase "long-term investnt" applied to human beings between seventeen and twenty-five.

She said nothing now.

Sharlin stood beside her. For a mont, neither of them spoke. The fountain murmured. Builders’ hamrs rang from the eastern wing, where the last dormitory conversion was underway.

"You have sothing to say," Sharlin said. Not a question.

"Would it matter?"

"No."

lindra’s grey eyes watched the fountain. Her hands — liver-spotted, trembling slightly with age — rested on the cane. "I’ve served you for sixty years, High Priestess. I’ve watched you make decisions I disagreed with and said my piece and accepted the outco. That’s the arrangent."

"It is."

"This is different."

"It isn’t."

lindra looked up. Their eyes t — green and grey, power and its servant, the woman who ordered and the woman who watched.

"You’re targeting CHILDREN, Sharlin."

First-na basis. Sixty years of "High Priestess" and lindra chose now to use the na. Sharlin noted it the way she noted all breaches of protocol — filed, assessed, and assigned a threat level. Low. lindra had earned certain liberties. And the old woman was too useful to discipline over a pronoun.

"I’ve always targeted children," Sharlin said. Simply. Without emphasis. The way soone might state that water ran downhill. "My father built this program. I inherited it. Ten thousand years, I’ve been refining his thods — the eastern provinces, the coastal settlents, the border communities. The mixed-bloods were a recent addition — six weeks of planning, gone before I could act. But the thodology is older than most kingdoms on this continent. The source has changed. Nothing else has."

"The scale—"

"Is larger. Yes. The entity’s requirents have increased. The previous source was eliminated by forces outside my control. Adaptation is not cruelty, lindra. It’s competence."

The fountain murmured. A builder’s hamr struck stone.

lindra’s hands tightened on the cane. The knuckles whitened. For a mont — a fracture of a mont — sothing moved behind those grey eyes that wasn’t professional distance or calculated silence. Sothing that rembered what children looked like. What they sounded like. What it ant to know where they were going and say nothing.

Then it passed.

"I’ll review the logistics reports," lindra said. Her voice was level. "The passageway jurisdiction transfer will require formal docuntation. I’ll have the papers drawn up by morning."

"Thank you."

lindra rose. Her cane tapped marble as she crossed the courtyard. She didn’t look back. Didn’t pause. Walked with the steady, unhurried pace of a woman who had made her calculation a long ti ago and was simply continuing to pay the cost.

***

Sharlin stood at the window.

Below her, the Temple compound spread in ordered precision — white stone and gold trim catching the afternoon light. To the east, the converted garrison. To the south, the main Temple complex where seers worked, and priests prayed, and the public face of divine service operated with the serene confidence of an institution that had outlasted kingdoms.

The scouts would deploy tomorrow. Within a month, Temple representatives would appear in Lower Realm cities — Millhaven, Port Astara, and the settlents along the Scorchwind Coast. Kind faces. Warm voices. Free Kindling Day testing for any child whose family wanted to know their potential.

In the Mid Realm, every passageway to the Lower Realm was being staffed. Temple guards in white armour, positioned at the ancient portals, checking docuntation, noting faces. Security asures. Perfectly reasonable. The mass disappearance justified caution.

The queen-prophetess hunt continued. Agents deployed. The Riftmaw warded. Every lead pursued.

Everything was running smoothly.

Sharlin breathed. The afternoon air tasted of cut stone and incense — the permanent fragrance of a Temple that burned offerings to gods it didn’t believe in, perford rituals it didn’t need, maintained a faith that served only as cover for the machinery beneath.

She thought of the dormitories. The beds with real mattresses. The courtyard with its fountain. The dining hall that would seat three hundred children who had never been offered anything in their lives, who would arrive wide-eyed and grateful, who would eat full als for the first ti and sleep in real beds and believe — truly, genuinely believe — that soone had finally seen their worth.

No one would stop her. The kingdoms wanted the mixed-bloods gone — they’d welco the Temple’s "generosity" toward Lower Realm children. The Lower Realm had no power to resist, no awareness of the program’s true purpose, no institutional mory of what had happened to the eastern province children a century ago. And the silver queen-prophetess, wherever she was hiding, had taken the mixed-bloods but couldn’t take everyone. Couldn’t take all the children in all the realms. Couldn’t outrun a program backed by the oldest, wealthiest, most trusted institution in Doha.

The Temple of Light had endured longer than dynasties, longer than kingdoms. It would endure this, too.

"Beautiful potential," she whispered.

The words settled over the compound like dust over a grave.

Below, a builder paused to wipe sweat from his brow, then returned to hamring the final doorfra of a dormitory that would welco its first children before spring ended.

Sharlin watched. And was satisfied.

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