The elders departed in deliberate intervals.
Roots withdrew. Wards rethreaded themselves into a quieter, less certain lattice.
Hearthwood’s living walls exhaled faint hums, absorbing echoes of discussion without judgnt. Leaves trembled slightly, as if sighing.
At the chamber’s heart, only Taldridge and High Elder Morrowen Vir lingered.
“You moved too quickly,” Taldridge said.
His shoulders were square. Staff planted firmly before him.
The hem of his robes brushed the elderwood floor with a soft whisper.
His gaze was sharp. Steel behind eyes tempered by age and calculation.
“Principles precede evidence. That is backward.”
Morrowen inclined his head slightly, fingers brushing along a carved rail of living bark.
“Principles define how evidence is interpreted,” he replied, gaze steady.
Taldridge exhaled through his nose, shifting weight from one foot to the other.
“We have two days of academy observation.
No artifact interaction. No reconstruction. No proof.”
“Correct,” Morrowen said evenly,
“that was intentional.”
Taldridge’s grip tightened on his staff.
“Then why formalize reconstruction doctrine at all?”
“Because the Stone has already rejected our prior doctrine,” Morrowen said calmly.
“The event occurred. Our response lags.”
“You are proposing structural change based on correlation.”
“Based on stress response,” Morrowen corrected,
“First-Era Containnt provoked lattice refusal. That is not speculation.”
Taldridge paced a short arc across the elderwood floor, boots quiet against living bark.
“We speak of a world-anchor, not an experint. Yet your language tolerates failure.”
“It tolerates learning,” Morrowen replied. “There is a difference.”
Taldridge’s eyes flicked toward a low, steaming tray of Elderwood Tea, leaves infused in amber liquid.
He lifted a cup, fingers brushing the rim, exhaling as the scent rose: earthy, faintly sweet, tinged with residual mana.
Morrowen’s hand hovered over a matching cup. He dipped a finger into the liquid, tasting warmth and subtle tannin.
“Do you believe the Stone will catastrophically fail if untouched?”
“No,” Taldridge said. “It will endure indefinitely under correct containnt.”
“And if the next stressor exceeds tolerance?”
Taldridge did not answer.
“That,” Morrowen said,
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“is why we are not proceeding yet.”
Silence settled.
Outside, in the Heartwood Central Courtyard, the Echo-Stone pulsed faintly, its lattice humming quietly, responding to the Conclave’s deliberations.
Tiny shifts of mana ran along its surface, a micro-sense awareness of the room, of the debate, of Seraphina Cindershard’s distant presence.
Not judgnt, not action—simply observation.
“And the student?” Taldridge asked.
“Is being observed.”
“Two days. No authority. No interaction." His voice hardened slightly. “She holds no rank. No clearance. She has not touched the Echo-Stone. There is no precedent for involving her.”
“Which is why,” Morrowen said evenly, “she is not involved in reconstruction.”
Taldridge turned sharply.
“Then say that clearly. What you issued implies future reliance.”
“It implies possibility,” Morrowen corrected. “Not authority.”
“Possibility becos inevitability.”
“Which,” Morrowen said,
“is why we bound the principles.”
Taldridge studied the Stone’s pulse from the courtyard, perceptible only through subtle mana resonance. Hairline seams traced its surface—not cracks, but allowances.
He set his cup down gently, the faint clink resonating in the chamber.
“You are betting,” he said slowly,
“that restraint will hold.”
“I am betting,” Morrowen replied,
“that ignorance will not.”
“And if the student fails?”
“Then nothing changes. Reconstruction does not occur. Doctrine remains theoretical.”
“And if she succeeds?”
Morrowen t his gaze.
“Then we proceed with our eyes open.”
Taldridge exhaled, lifting the tea to his lips and letting a slow sip anchor his patience.
“I will not endorse this.”
“I know.”
“But I will observe,” Taldridge added, setting the cup down carefully. “Closely.”
Morrowen inclined his head.
“That is all I ask.”
The Echo-Stone humd faintly in the courtyard—not active, not reactive. Waiting. Not for power. For understanding.
He tapped his staff again.
“Assistance is not authority,” he murmured.
“Observation alone cannot repair a Keystone. Principles alone do not prevent failure. Hearthwood cannot afford to look irrelevant.”
Morrowen lifted his cup, swirling the tea gently, tracing a pattern in the liquid with his finger before drinking.
“Then we asure, and we wait. Reconstruction is not yet required. Intervention occurs only under codified judgnt. Observation layers must thicken invisibly. Patience is our instrunt.”
A subtle pause. A leaf shivered, as if leaning closer.
“Two days,” Taldridge muttered.
“She is a variable we watch… not a hand we employ,” Morrowen said evenly.
Taldridge inclined his head once.
“Restraint bought ti. Nothing more. Containnt is not restoration.”
The chamber settled into quiet.
The Echo-Stone thrumd faintly in the courtyard. Dormant fractures traced in subtle light.
Its micro-sense still reached the chamber, recording, feeling, nudging the Conclave’s awareness.
The lattice waited—not for compliance, not for haste, only for prudence.
Morrowen’s eyes drifted across the chamber, tracing invisible ley lines.
“The Combat Grove,” he said finally, voice low, “has observed her duel. Its lattices failed to calibrate.”
Taldridge stiffened.
“You an it could not predict her output.”
“Exactly.” Morrowen’s fingers brushed lightly across the air.
“The system perford flawlessly for every heir, every adept… until Seraphina Cindershard.”
“She is unasurable,” Taldridge said flatly.
“And the Grove itself acknowledged it.”
“Not acknowledged,” Morrowen corrected.
“Exposed. Every ward, every predictive matrix, every safeguard faltered in principle.
Jared survived because she restrained herself.
The Combat Grove… cannot guarantee such restraint. Not universally. Not reliably.”
Taldridge’s jaw tightened.
“Then she is a danger. Even passive, her presence is a stressor.”
“Observation alone tells us this,” Morrowen said evenly.
“Intervention is unnecessary—so far.
The lattice remained contained, but its limit is now known.
And Hearthwood’s authority must account for that limit.”
Taldridge exhaled again, lifting tea.
“Then we watch.
Closely.
She won’t be allowed to duel within seven days, so we observe.
No exceptions. Protocols are absolute. Containnt over enthusiasm, always.”
Morrowen’s gaze remained steady.
“The lattice, the Stone, the Grove—they all respond to observation. Her actions will be asured, her potential recorded, without imdiate engagent. Understanding is incomplete; risk remains. Protocols must be enforced. No unsanctioned duels. No independent testing. Containnt, restraint, and observation remain our instrunts—until we know what she can and cannot do.”
He paused, voice low but precise.
“Adjust her sche. Include her Adventurer Guild activities in our observation matrices.
She moves outside the Academy now. Her missions, her alliances, her successes—all will be data.
We must anticipate how external engagent might stress the lattice, influence containnt, or alter her behavior.”
Taldridge’s eyes narrowed, mind cataloguing logistics.
“Guild activity is… less controllable than duels.”
“Precisely,” Morrowen said.
“And that is why it must be tracked, codified, and layered into her observation.
We do not intervene. We only ensure the lattice, the Stone, and Hearthwood’s stewardship remain aligned.
External variables are now part of the calculus. Her progression will be mapped, her impact asured, her risk accounted for.”
The Echo-Stone pulsed faintly in the courtyard.
Waiting. Observing. Teaching in silence.
The chamber’s quiet reinforced the rules:
No deviation, no premature confrontation, no unsanctioned escalation.
Duel protocols remained absolute. External engagent would be accounted for. Observation would govern all.
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