Lucien took the ti to walk through the territory properly.
And what he saw pleased him more than he expected.
Lootwell was still growing.
The bones were already there. What remained was refinent, integration, and the slow, satisfying process of turning strength into permanence.
One of the first things that caught his eye was the chapel.
It was enormous.
Lucien stopped walking for a full second and simply stared at it.
The thing rose above one district like an argunt against moderation. Pale stone, high windows, layered arches, symbolic carvings, prayer halls, a central tower, side chambers, reflection pools, and enough decorative sincerity to make Lucien imdiately suspect Clara had described her dream with far too much enthusiasm and Anvil-Horn had taken it as a challenge.
He did not need to guess long.
Clara was standing in front of it with an expression of such complete, radiant happiness that Lucien almost laughed.
Lucien folded his arms and watched her for a while as she gave instructions to the finishing workers with solemn intensity, as if every column and every polished floor tile mattered to the taphysical defense of reality itself.
Knowing Clara, perhaps it did.
Anvil-Horn stood a little farther away, inspecting structural lines
Lucien walked over.
Clara turned, saw him, and imdiately brightened.
"My Lord," she said, "do you like it?"
Lucien looked back at the chapel.
Then at her.
Then at the absurd scale of it again.
"It is," he said carefully, "larger than I imagined."
Clara placed a hand over her heart.
"That ans I was right to scale it up."
Lucien looked at Anvil-Horn for support.
The old master only smiled into his beard with the quiet cruelty of soone who had clearly enjoyed the entire process far too much.
"It is sound," Anvil-Horn said. "Excessive. But sound."
Clara took that as vindication.
Lucien decided not to prolong the matter and moved on before she asked whether he wanted statues.
He absolutely did not want statues of him.
The farther he walked, the clearer it beca that the people from the small worlds had changed in the past month.
The training grounds had done what he expected them to do. Talent still mattered, yes. Affinity still mattered. Bloodline still mattered. But opportunity now mattered too, and for the first ti in many of their lives, opportunity had been distributed with sothing close to fairness.
Those with talent climbed faster.
Those without talent still climbed.
And that alone had changed the emotional atmosphere of the integrated territories.
People no longer carried the sa defeated acceptance they once had. They worked harder now because progress had beco visible. Their labor no longer fed only survival. It fed future.
Lucien watched sparring fields, practice zones, trade quarters, study halls, and modular construction points as he moved.
Then his attention shifted and he had to stop himself from smiling too obviously.
Sebas was training with Elunara.
The two of them were near one of the quieter fields, trading asured exchanges under the gaze of several shaless spectators.
The Five Beacons of Light were there too.
And of course they were making the situation worse.
Robin had an expression of criminal delight. Ronan looked like he was trying very hard not to laugh. Anya was pretending innocence with such transparent failure that even the wind looked embarrassed for her. Elias stood with his arms folded, managing to appear dignified while very clearly watching for entertainnt. Seren had already given up pretending subtlety altogether.
Sebas coughed into his fist after one exchange and offered Elunara his hand with the restrained elegance of a man who knew perfectly well he was being observed and therefore refused to lose composure first.
Lucien almost lost it there.
Because Sebas’s face remained mostly proper, but the suppressed smile at the corner of his mouth betrayed him completely.
Elunara was no better.
Her expression stayed flat in that particular elven way that always tried to suggest composure and superiority.
But her ears—
Her ears kept twitching.
Violently enough to expose everything.
When she and Sebas t eyes for one mont too long, they both froze just enough for the 5 people behind them to make identical, delighted noises of approval.
Sebas imdiately turned away with a dignity that fooled absolutely no one.
Elunara looked like she was deciding whether she should punish the five children.
Lucien walked away before his laughter beca visible.
He approved entirely.
...
Later, he passed another training ground and found a very different sight.
Midas. Augustus. Leo.
They were fighting.
Or rather, Midas was smiling while Augustus and Leo tried very hard to convince reality that teamwork might compensate for his instincts.
Augustus remained a long-range mage by preference, but he was no longer the aging holy figure Lucien had first known.
The transformation after shedding the mortal husk had been dramatic.
He looked younger now. Even his laughter carried differently. The years had not vanished, but their weight no longer bent him as harshly.
Leo, on the other hand, fought like a man who had finally been allowed to beco what his body had long been asking to be. He had integrated with the Law of Combat, and it fit him perfectly. Every motion flowed into the next with increasing confidence, every close-range exchange building pressure like he was negotiating directly with battle itself.
Midas was the problem.
He had always been dangerous.
Now he had beco elegant.
He moved between Augustus’s long-range light constructs and Leo’s close-range pressure with irritating ease, adapting to both at once as though the battle had already happened three tis in his head and he was only reenacting the version he liked best.
His Law of Clairvoyance had integrated cleanly, and with it ca a style of fighting that made him feel less like a man trading blows and more like a sovereign rearranging certainty to suit himself.
Augustus sent a volley of radiant spears.
Leo entered from the side on the sa beat, forcing a narrow angle.
Midas smiled.
Then shifted one step.
The radiant spears passed where he had been, Leo’s follow-up hit empty space, and Midas touched Leo once on the shoulder and Augustus once on the wrist before stepping clear again.
"Again," Midas said.
Augustus straightened and actually laughed.
"Midas, one day I will blind that smugness out of you."
Midas raised an eyebrow.
"You may try."
Leo rolled his shoulders and grinned.
"We almost had him."
"No," Augustus said imdiately. "You almost had yourself. I was doing excellent."
Lucien watched the next exchange for a while in quiet satisfaction.
Midas was indeed the most talented among the newer wave of climbers, but what pleased Lucien more was the fact that all three of them had changed without losing themselves.
Augustus had the Law of Light. Leo had the Law of Combat. Midas had the Law of Clairvoyance.
And none of them had beco lesser n for becoming stronger ones.
That was always the better outco.
...
The changes in hierarchy across the small worlds had beco obvious too.
Equality had not erased difference. It had erased stagnation.
The old structures built entirely on inherited distance had weakened under the pressure of opportunity. People still respected strength, wisdom, age, and authority. But now there was movent.
A laborer could grow. A guard could ascend. A scholar could beco dangerous. A chief’s child and a stablehand now shared at least one terrifying truth:
If they worked hard enough under Lucien’s system, the future might actually answer them.
That had done more for social order than any speech could have.
Needs were t. Jobs were aningful.
Even the sheer scale of Lootwell in the Big World had begun feeling less impossible to the small world people.
The first ti they learned how large it truly was, many of them had simply stared.
Now they were getting used to it.
Even with modified airships, it still took months to properly traverse the greater territory from one extre to the other. But the shock had faded into adaptation.
The integrated peoples had begun touring the other small worlds as well, learning customs, habits, and absurdities not originally their own.
And to Lucien’s quiet relief, they were mostly getting along.
The people under Morveth integrated better than expected too. Most of them had once belonged to worlds associated with Sylra’s, though Sylra herself had long insisted she held no personal attachnt to them.
Sylra had once told him plainly that she never showed herself publicly and that the people of those worlds had loved an idea of her more than the woman herself. In that sense, yes, she felt distant.
But Lucien had watched the way she quietly checked on their settlent progress.
He had noticed the way she stood slightly nearer when reports about them arrived.
He had also noticed the more private part of the issue.
Sylra was, in so ways, closer to Marina’s personality than she would ever willingly admit.
Introverted and dangerously capable of feeling too much and then hiding it behind stillness.
Marina had changed after eting Lucien. She had beco bolder, warr, more willing to move toward people rather than away from them.
Sylra, he suspected, was beginning to want sothing similar.
She had even admitted as much once, though in the driest possible way.
Lucien had let her take that path at her own speed.
Her androphobia had not vanished. She still kept distance from most n and behaved normally only around Lucien, with everyone else treated through layers of asured caution.
That was fine.
Healing did not beco more real by becoming fast.
•••
Later that day, Midas approached him.
Lucien knew from the expression alone that this was not going to be a trivial request.
Midas has a big smile on his face.
"I want to go out," he said.
Lucien tilted his head.
"To the Big World."
There it was.
Lucien had known this would co eventually.
Midas had never been made for confinent. Power, to him, was not sothing one simply possessed. It was sothing one tested against greater and greater ceilings.
Lucien looked at him for a long mont.
Then smiled slightly.
"You’ve been patient."
Midas’s mouth curved.
"Patient enough."
Luke and Cienna had already gone out before to strengthen their laws. Others would follow eventually. Now that the western fronts were relatively stable and the greater threats had beco less imdiate on the surface, there was room to loosen the boundaries.
And with Midas’s skill, law, and temperant, very few in the Big World would kill him easily unless he sought out trouble on purpose.
Which, unfortunately, Lucien suspected he might.
Still.
Midas had to be allowed to beco what he could beco.
Lucien nodded.
"I won’t keep you."
Midas’s eyes brightened at once, though his posture barely changed.
Lucien raised a hand before that excitent could spread into premature triumph.
"But not carelessly."
Midas waited.
Lucien said, "If anyone from the small worlds wants to experience the Big World, I’ll allow it on one condition."
Soon after, he made the announcent broadly enough that the relevant worlds heard it clearly.
Any who wished to leave and step into the Big World may do so.
But only after reaching the Fifth Stage of the Transcendent Realm.
It was strict enough to feel real, fair enough to be respected, and dangerous enough that no one could pretend it was a casual excursion.
Lucien did not want children of new strength wandering into an uncaring world and mistaking survival for guaranteed hospitality.
The Big World was vast, beautiful, absurd, and rciless. It had to be entered with enough strength to endure both its opportunities and its contempt.
When the announcent settled, Midas exhaled slowly and gave Lucien a look of clear approval.
"Reasonable," he said.
"That’s why I’m still alive," Lucien replied.
Midas actually laughed.
Around them, the territory kept moving.
And Lucien, watching all of it, felt the quiet satisfaction of a man who had died once, returned improperly, and found that the world he ca back to was already trying very hard to beco worthy of what ca next.
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