The courtyard shifted beneath the weight of unspoken rules. Roots pulsed faintly under bare feet. Lantern-moss dimd just enough to mark attention. The Echo-Stone humd—but Rowan did not look at it. Its posture was no longer the question. The question was the people—and the choices they were about to make.
Thalanis Mossheartentered. Heartwood Guardian Commander, Elder-Grove Conclave Council. Every step asured. Every pulse of authority visible in the sway of his robes, the strike of his staff against living wood. Rowan noted how the Elders stiffened, how Vael’s poise wavered fractionally, how Kaithor’s hand remained flat against bark, calm but alert. The forest itself seed to recognize the shift.
He spoke.
“The Echo-Stone anchors Accord stability,” his voice carried over the canopy. “Its failure threatens political collapse, economic strangulation, and cross-factional conflict.”
Rowan did not flinch. Every word was data; every breath a variable. Seraphina, barefoot, heat haloing the roots in faint pulses, remained still. Her eyes tracked Thalanis for rhythm, for intent.
“I invoke Article Twelve of the Cross-Reaches Accord,” he continued. “Ergency inquiry. Containnt is required.”
Rowan’s jaw tightened imperceptibly. Containnt. Authority. Enforcent. She catalogued quills pausing, hands flexing, feet shifting. Every response mapped, every hesitation noted.
“…Containnt of what?” Seraphina asked, small, cautious.
“You,” Thalanis replied. Plain. Absolute.
The courtyard reacted. Roots shifted. Moss flickered. Ivy bridges swayed faintly. The Elders’ composure cracked under procedural inevitability.
“Thalanis,” Theros said softly, “you invoked Article Twelve.”
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“Yes,” Thalanis replied. “The Stone’s imminent collapse threatens Accord stability. Containnt is necessary.”
Vael of Embergarde inclined his head. “With respect, Elder, the Anomaly is not a saboteur. Invoking Article Twelve on a guest of Hearthwood violates multiple Accord clauses.”
Kaithor remained calm. “Silvanwilds concurs.”
Theros growled under his breath, tension coiling. Rowan noted it, cataloged it.
The pause stretched. Thalanis studied the Stone, pulsing faintly, listening, bracing. Then he stepped closer to Seraphina, eyes noting the ember-glow of her skin, the subtle heat she exuded, the slight flare of her mana.
Rowan’s pulse ticked. She cataloged the recognition in his glance, the way Class A perception skimd her façade. He knows sothing’s off. He does not need to na it.
“You are not of this world,” he murmured. “The forest recognizes your difference.”
“I… I didn’t an any harm,” Seraphina said. “I just… showed up.”
“That,” Thalanis admitted softly, “is the only reason the Courtyard is not sealed already.”
Rowan relaxed fractionally, though her gaze never left the Elders. Strategy dictated observation. Protection dictated proximity. Every decision a potential cascade.
“Prepare the Elder-Grove Conclave,” Thalanis said. “She will be examined.”
A ripple passed through the courtyard. Every Elder processed specialty: procedural logic, arcane regulation, environntal balance, civic consequence, diplomatic ramifications. Rowan noted, cataloged, integrated.
She stepped forward, voice low but firm. “She will not be hard.”
Thalanis t her eyes. Calm, unwavering, exacting. Recognition flickered—brief, precise, a reading few could match: intent and control laid bare. Rowan archived it silently. He can pierce more than most. And yet, he respects boundaries.
“She will not be mishandled. But she must be understood.”
Thalanis lifted his staff. “By Accord authority: Seraphina Cindershard, of no known realm, is temporarily placed under the Conclave’s custody for taphysical evaluation.”
Seraphina inhaled sharply. “…Custody? Again?”
Rowan’s hand brushed her shoulder. Grounding. Stabilizing. The dress adjusted subtly.
Lantern-moss flickered. Roots aligned. Ivy bridges swayed faintly. Breath, movent, magic—every elent held in suspension.
Unclassified. Uncontained. Unjudged.
Rowan’s gaze returned to Seraphina. Not demanding. Not defiant. Barefoot on living wood, mind already elsewhere, modeling outcos no council had yet admitted.
This was no longer about the Echo-Stone.
It was about Hearthwood’s ability to shape the very future it had only just t.
And whether it would have the wisdom—or the courage—to admit that, perhaps, it had not been ready for what had arrived.
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