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Now reading: Chapter 30: Fractures and Foundations from Aeterra: RuleBender, a Action novel by R. Cindralis.

The courtyard held its breath. Not relaxed. Not neutral. Not polite. Like a city that had survived an earthquake—and was still counting the cracks, asuring whether the ground might swallow it whole. Every leaf, every root, even the twitching dust of lantern-moss seed to hold its weight, waiting.

Heat flickered along Seraphina’s skin; the Living Dress intercepted it with quiet professionalism. Hum. Smooth. Subtle redistribution of residual energy. Salary-worthy competence. Its fabric shimred faintly, tracing her shoulders and spine like liquid tal, adjusting with every micro-flicker of emotion. She could feel the pressure in the air—Marrowen’s aura looming like a final boss in an unwinnable cutscene—and her chest tightened, just a little, a reminder that even observation could bend reality.

She glanced at Rowan.

“That's a win: not exiled, imprisoned, dissected, or fed to a tree. Bad news: the High Elder just asured my soul with a tectonic plate.”

Rowan’s mouth twitched.

“ans he liked you.”

“Marrowen’s aura… it feels like the ground itself would obey him if he willed it. Patient, precise, terrifying. One wrong move, and he could end everything geologically. Honestly… he’s like the final boss you hope you don’t have to fight.”

Seraphina’s chest tightened again—this ti sharper, a tangible pulse reminding her that presence could be pressure, and pressure could bend reality. The courtyard seed to sense it, every root, every leaf pausing with her.

The dress shifted subtly, humming, absorbing excess energy. Almost like a nod. Quiet approval.

“Marrowen doesn’t threaten,” Rowan said. “He lets consequences compute themselves.”

“Perfect. My anxiety performing at full capacity,” Seraphina replied, waving toward the dispersed Elders. “Ceremonial restraint—or symposium on How Not to Panic Publicly?”

“Both. Heartwood excels at optics.”

“Right. Half vibrating like finely tuned instrunts—the kind that make you worry if physics might snap under your existence.”

You might be reading a pirated copy. Look for the official release to support the author.

“They’re recalculating. You invalidated several lifetis of certainty.”

“Unintentional. It’s my brand.” Her eyes scanned the courtyard. Roots shifted underfoot. Standing still felt accusatory—the bark beneath her fingers pulsing faintly like a heartbeat in sync with the courtyard itself.

“That one,” she murmured, voice low, “Natural Disaster Pending Review. Quill nearly sentient from stress.”

“Accurate. Neither likes variables that argue back.”

“I argue back. Sotis I… stop.” The dress redistributed heat, subtle but attentive, faint sparks of blue threading along its weave.

“Don’t.”

“Don’t stop?”

“Don’t diminish. They’re unsettled because you clarify assumptions too well.”

“Oh. Explaining is my social skill.”

“That explains a lot,” Rowan said dryly.

A crisp voice cut across the courtyard:

“Conclave convening in one hour. Better eat while waiting—it’s past lunch already; don’t starve before chaos.”

Captain Kael appeared at the edge of the courtyard—posture formal, presence subtle but unmissable. His eyes were sharp, alert; his words clipped but practical.

Rowan murmured, “Lunch. Eastern bough. No coin required.”

“Charity or surveillance?” Seraphina asked.

“Yes.”

Lantern-moss flickered in acknowledgnt. Roots shifted slightly, subtly repositioning themselves in the courtyard’s unconscious calculations. Hearthwood recalibrated quietly, correcting where certainty had failed. The Living Dress humd against her—discreet, vigilant, unflappable, managing the residual heat of her aura without fuss.

“What got ? Not Marrowen. Expected. Ancient authority, eyes like audit reports. Silence afterward—no chains, no ‘remove her.’”

“Because they can’t,” Rowan said.

“Because admitting fear is… relatable,” Seraphina added. The dress absorbed a pulse of her amusent.

Rowan slowed. “You understand what that ans.”

“Mm-hmm. I’m not expellable. I’m a problem on their schedule.”

“You’re a responsibility,” Rowan said, clipped, precise.

“Least flattering welco ever,” Seraphina laughed softly. Aura stabilizing, heat contained. She scanned the courtyard—the ancient wood, cautious peace, systems adjusting invisibly around her, light shifting on every curve of bark, glinting off faint veins of mana in stone and moss.

“Well, if I’m going to be an institutional headache, I’d like lunch first. Starving. Broke. Statistically improbable hardship, honestly.”

Rowan started walking. “Eastern bough. Eat while we wait.”

“Disruptive. Calculated. Mostly well-fed after lunch,” Seraphina quipped. She flicked a glance toward the Eastern bough. Open. Not safe. Not settled. But open.

And in that pause—the quiet stretch of possibility—the courtyard waited, watching, listening, slowly folding her into its ancient rhythms. Hearthwood didn’t relax. It rely acknowledged: so things could not be asured entirely. So chaos had a thod. So headaches were worth keeping.

Ahead: open. Uncertain. Uncontained. And entirely, magnificently, hers to navigate.

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