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Chapter 72: What Cos After (II)

"And you chose to save it."

"I chose to save the people in it. The world was incidental."

He sipped his tea. The garden’s impossible stream flowed uphill beside us. The trees chid.

"I’ve lived a very long ti, Mr. Ashborne. Centuries. I’ve seen transmigrations before — though not from the kind of existence you describe. Souls displaced across worlds are rare but not unheard of. What’s unprecedented is the nature of your original world’s relationship to this one."

"You an the ga."

"I an the observation. Your world observed ours — through a dium you call a ’ga.’ A structured simulation that captured so elents of our reality while missing others. The question that interests

is not how this observation occurred. It’s what it implies."

He set down his cup.

"If your world could observe ours — even imperfectly, even through a simplified lens — then the boundary between our realities is thinner than either of us assud. And if a dying boy could cross that boundary through a chanism neither of us understands —"

"Others might cross too."

"Others might cross. In either direction."

The implication settled between us like a stone dropping into deep water.

"I don’t share this concern to alarm you," Orvyn said. "I share it because you are, to my knowledge, the only person in this world who has experienced both sides of the boundary. Your perspective is unique. And uniqueness, in my experience, tends to beco important at exactly the mont when the world needs it most."

"You think more crossings will happen."

"I think the boundary between observation and existence is less stable than it appears. I think the ’ga’ your world created was not a creation but a window. And I think windows, once opened, tend to let things through in both directions."

He stood. Slowly. The ancient body cooperating with the request the way ancient things cooperated — with patience rather than enthusiasm.

"But that is a concern for another day. Today, the containnt is stable. The academy is safe. And a young man who doesn’t belong to this world has made it a better place than he found it."

He looked at . The closed eyes sohow conveying more warmth than any open gaze I’d encountered.

"You asked

once — through Veylan — for permission to operate. I gave it. You asked

— through the concert — for institutional support. I provided it. Now I’m asking you for sothing."

"What?"

"Stay. Not because the academy needs you — though it does. Not because the containnt requires monitoring — though it will. Stay because the person who saves a world deserves to live in it. Not as a visitor. Not as a transmigrated consciousness wearing a borrowed face. As a resident. A student. A young man with friends and a future and the particular right — earned, not given — to call this place ho."

Ho.

The word that I’d felt on Cloud Terrace Four. The word that ant not a place but a people. Ren’s tea station. Liora’s challenge. Elara’s flowers. Nyx’s loyalty. Valeria’s steel. Seraphina’s golden eyes. Nihil’s sardonic warmth.

"I’ll stay," I said.

"Good." He walked toward the garden’s impossible door. "Classes resu tomorrow. The ranking battles are next week. And Mr. Ashborne?"

"Yes?"

"The tea improves with the second cup."

He left. The door closed. The garden remained — impossible, beautiful, a space where the rules were kind because the person who made them chose kindness.

I drank the second cup. He was right. It was better.

---

The afternoon was mine. No crisis. No intelligence briefings. No concerts, no corrections, no confrontations with Monarch-rank fathers.

Just — ti. The rarest resource in a life that had been spent sprinting since the Prologue.

I found Liora on the Cloud Terraces. Not Four — the public terraces, where students trained during daylight hours. She was running forms with a practice greatsword — the full-weight version of Crimson Oath, three tis heavier than a standard blade, wielded with the particular grace of soone who’d made strength look easy because the alternative was admitting how hard she’d worked for it.

She saw . Stopped mid-form. The amber eyes tracked

as I approached — not with hostility. With anticipation. The expression of a cat that had been watching a mouse hole and had just seen movent.

"You look different," she said.

"Different how?"

"Lighter. Like soone took a boulder off your shoulders."

"Soone did. Seven soones."

She twirled the greatsword — one rotation, the heavy blade spinning like it weighed nothing. "The containnt."

"Ninety-four percent."

"I heard. Ren wouldn’t stop talking about the harmonic coefficients at breakfast. I understood approximately twelve percent of the words and one hundred percent of the excitent."

She planted the sword. Point in the stone. Crossed her arms on the poml.

"So. The crisis is over."

"The crisis is over."

"And you owe

a fight."

The words landed with the particular weight that Liora gave to everything important — direct, unadorned, carrying no subtext because Liora Ashveil didn’t do subtext. She did text. Loud, clear, unapologetic text.

"I owe you a fight," I agreed.

"Not a seminar spar. Not a ranking battle. A real fight. Full output. No masks. No controlled losses. No strategic calculations about what to show and what to hide."

"No masks."

"You at your best.

at mine. And we find out who’s stronger."

"Liora—"

"Don’t ’Liora’

like you’re about to negotiate. I’ve been waiting since the second week. You told

to get stronger. I got stronger. I fought at a hundred percent during the concert sessions and I’ve been training every morning since and I am telling you, Cedric Valdrake, that I am ready and I am not patient and if you make

wait one more week I will challenge you through official channels and the entire academy will watch

beat you into the stone."

The forge-fire was blazing. Full output. Not combat aggression — passion. The particular intensity of a woman who’d found the person she wanted to test herself against and refused to accept delays or deflections or the particular brand of protective strategic thinking that she correctly identified as my default response to everything.

"Tomorrow," I said.

The fire dimd. Not dampened — surprised. She’d expected resistance. Negotiation. The Valdrake strategic dance.

"Tomorrow," she repeated.

"Cloud Terrace Four. Ninth bell. No audience. No evaluators. Just you and

and whatever happens."

The smile that appeared on Liora Ashveil’s face was — I searched for the word. Not fierce. Not competitive. Not the warrior’s grin she’d shown during training.

Joyful.

Pure, uncomplicated, radiant joy. The expression of soone who’d been promised the thing they wanted most and believed the promise.

"Tomorrow," she said. "Ninth bell. And Valdrake?"

"What?"

"Bring the sword. The real one. Not a practice blade."

"Nihil is a Mythic-grade weapon. Using him against a practice greatsword—"

"Did I say practice?"

She reached behind the equipnt rack. Pulled out a weapon I hadn’t seen before — a greatsword, but not the academy-issue training model. This blade was real. Forged steel, not enchanted wood. The tal was dark red — Infernal-forged, Embercrown techniques applied to Ashveil iron, the particular color that steel turned when it was hamred in fire that wasn’t entirely natural.

Crimson Oath. The real one. Not a practice replica.

"Valeria helped

finish it last week," Liora said. The blade caught the afternoon light and turned it red. "Embercrown forging techniques applied to commoner iron. Nobody told

that combination was possible. Nobody told Valeria it was allowed. We did it anyway."

The commoner and the Ducal heir. Forging a weapon together. The swordswoman and the villainess, united by the particular bond that ford between two won who’d both been told their power was too much and had decided, independently and then together, that "too much" was exactly the right amount.

"Tomorrow," I said.

"Tomorrow."

She sheathed the blade. Walked away. The forge-fire trailed behind her like a cape — warm, bright, the energy signature of soone who burned with everything she had and refused to apologize for the heat.

"The loud one is magnificent," Nihil said.

"Stop calling her ’the loud one.’"

"She IS loud. Loud and magnificent. These are not contradictions."

"Nihil."

"She forged a greatsword with Embercrown techniques. That blade will test even my edge. Tomorrow will be — " A pause. The particular relish of a weapon anticipating combat. "— delicious."

I walked back to the Iron Wing. The sun was setting. The islands caught the light — amber and gold and violet at the edges where the Aether storms refracted the last rays into colors that didn’t have nas in any language I’d spoken.

Six weeks ago, I’d died at a desk with an empty energy drink in my hand.

Now I was walking through a floating academy that I’d helped save, carrying a sentient sword that wouldn’t stop talking, heading toward a room where a scholar was making tea and a notebook was waiting and tomorrow held the promise of the best fight of my life against a woman who burned like a forge and laughed like freedom.

The villain’s story was supposed to end in Chapter 30.

It was Chapter 36.

And the story — the real one, the one that the Script hadn’t written and the ga hadn’t coded and the system couldn’t categorize — was just beginning.

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