Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 8: The Ranger from Aeterra: RuleBender, a Action novel by R. Cindralis.

The ranger regarded Seraphina with the unnerving composure of soone who had survived monster dens, court politics, and at least three attempted coups—and found all of them more decipherable than this.

Her posture was disciplined geotry: spine straight, shoulders squared, aura sealed with such precision it shimred faintly, cold as frost.

Heat from Seraphina’s earlier impact still warped the air. Between them, the Mossgrazer-shaped vacancy stead softly, carrying the faint sll of toasted herbivore.

Residual ember-tinged smoke curled toward the canopy.

The ranger stepped forward, boots whispering through charred grass. Not fearful—quiet, analytical, thodical.

Seraphina’s pulse jumped, and her fingers twitched against the scorched hem of her grass-wrap—half apology, half panic.

She studied Seraphina with the clinical curiosity reserved for rare, possibly venomous fauna.

Sowhere faint, almost imperceptible, leyline echoes hinted that distant Sylvanwilds observers might already be aware.

“I suppose,” she said at last, voice smooth as sharpened steel, “we should begin with nas.”

Grateful, briefly, for etiquette, Seraphina nodded.

The ranger extended a hand: steady, calloused, carrying unspoken authority. Her aura flickered faintly as if testing for residual mana.

The air hung heavy with faint ash. Heat shimred over scorched grass like a wavering lens.

“Rowan,” she said. “Hearthwood Ranger. Northward Ranger Station.”

Her appearance did nothing to lessen Seraphina’s suspicion that the ranger had been sculpted by a committee of unfairly gifted artists: midnight-black hair with a raven’s sheen, features arranged with architectural arrogance, and erald eyes—muted by glamour, yet still too sharp for comfort.

Seraphina quietly added “ask why an ‘ordinary ranger’ needs glamour” to her ntal list.

She accepted the handshake with caution reserved for unstable alchemical mixtures. Her fingers burned faintly from mana feedback as her grass-wrap hissed, briefly tightening around her wrist before rebraiding itself.

“Seraphina,” she managed. “Traveller. Transitional. Temporarily confused but maintaining dignity through sheer, weaponised stubbornness.”

The ranger’s eyebrow rose—by precisely one millitre. Apparently her version of laughter.

“A… pleasure,” she said after a brief inspection for signs Seraphina might explode.

Of course the ranger was taller. Because the universe enjoyed slapstick.

Seraphina felt the height difference like a personal insult—standing before an elegant architectural feature that had opinions about her combustion risk.

The ranger’s grip tightened slightly, reading pulse, balance, and potential for spontaneous arson. Right on cue, Seraphina’s grass-dress re-braided a smouldering hem with frantic dignity.

The ranger didn’t flinch. She rely gave a silent, eloquent look that translated to: Of course. Yes. Naturally. Your clothing is alive. Lovely. Do continue.

Then, politely: “As introductions go, Seraphina, this is certainly… unforgettable.”

Seraphina sniffed. “I do try.”

Taken from , this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.

“I can tell,” the ranger murmured.

She released Seraphina’s hand with a motion so refined it practically confessed to noble training. Hence the glamour. Or a childhood where even one’s shadow was expected to behave.

“You turned a herbivore into a mory,” she observed. “And your clothing is currently engaged in so sort of botanical hostage negotiation.”

Seraphina followed her gaze. Her grass-wrap re-braided a scorched seam with the frantic energy of an intern being evaluated by upper managent.

“Yes, well,” she said primly. “The Mossgrazer began the confrontation. My attire responded with… appropriate enthusiasm.”

“Herbivores do not ‘begin confrontations.’ They nibble.”

“That one nibbled strategically,” Seraphina countered. “A clear act of infrastructural sabotage.”

The ranger’s expression briefly resembled soone attempting to draft a diplomatic report while also being on fire.

A tiny ember drifted from the scorched ground. The faint sizzle of grass responded to residual heat.

“Fine,” she said. “Let us proceed systematically.”

Her gaze sharpened—educated, wary, far too perceptive.

“You didn’t rely fall,” the ranger continued. “The leylines bent toward you. As if acknowledging sothing. Only three beings command that reaction: world-tier monsters in tamorphosis, ancient spirits seeking dominion… or Awakened anomalies.”

Seraphina froze—the first honest stillness she’d managed since landing.

The ranger’s voice turned cool and clean as drawn steel. “You are neither monster nor spirit. Which leaves one option.” A beat. “Should I be concerned?”

“Imnsely,” Seraphina admitted. “Though not for the reasons you think.”

The ranger folded her arms, posture crisp enough to slice bread.

“Why are you here? And where did you co from?”

Seraphina inhaled with the dood poise of soone inventing an origin on the spot.

“I… fell.”

The ranger blinked. “Fell.”

“From the sky.”

“That is not an origin,” the ranger said. “That is a trajectory.”

“It was an excellent trajectory,” Seraphina retorted. “Until the ground misbehaved.”

The ranger stared. “You consider crashing an equation.”

“It involved velocity and acceleration. Honestly, the most mathematically coherent part of my day.”

Her mana flared—anxious, involuntary—like a smoke detector doing a performance review.

The ranger tracked the flicker. “…You are leaking.”

“I am not leaking,” Seraphina said, leaking harder. “rely experiencing a minor emotional derivative spike.”

“A what.”

“A transient instability in internal mana equilibrium,” she said quickly. “Perfectly normal. I’m fine. I’m—oh gods the shrubbery—”

A nearby bush let out a worried sizzle.

The ranger shut her eyes briefly. “So. You fell from the sky with unstable fire magic and the self-control of an overburdened abacus.”

Seraphina bristled. “My self-control is exemplary. The universe simply refuses to align with my calculations.”

“Yes,” the ranger said. “A common refrain among people who crater into sacred landmarks.”

Seraphina folded her arms, incandescent with embarrassnt. “In my defence, the ground failed to solve for .”

“It nearly did,” the ranger replied.

“That,” Seraphina muttered, “is gravitational malpractice.”

A beat. The ranger inhaled—professionally tired.

“And before the sky? What border did you cross? Who sent you? What faction claims you?”

“No one sent ,” Seraphina insisted. “I appeared. Dramatically. With panache.”

“That is not comforting.”

“It wasn’t ant to be.”

“Are you a fugitive? Warlock? Cultist? Dissident?” The ranger gestured at her entire existence. “This region attracts… complications.”

“I am none of those. Probably none.”

The ranger’s eyebrow perford a small seismic event.

“What class are you?”

Ah. The fatal question.

Seraphina cleared her throat. “My class is in a transitional state.”

“That is not a class.”

“A hybrid prototype?”

“No.”

“A versatile anomaly?”

The ranger’s gaze swept over her—sparking hair, living dress, scorched earth, general aura of magical tax evasion.

“…That one is plausible.”

Seraphina sighed. “Look, I had classes. Builds. Optimisation strategies. Very scholarly violence.”

“None of that made sense.”

“It barely makes sense to .”

“Summarise simply.”

Seraphina straightened. “…I’m very good at fire.”

A grass-fibre crisped, hissed, and obediently re-braided.

“I had gathered,” the ranger said dryly.

Silence settled—heavy, watchful. The ranger asuring every flicker; Seraphina desperately trying not to commit further ecological arson.

“Hearthwood will not allow border passage without a registered class,” the ranger warned.

“That is difficult,” Seraphina pointed out, “as I currently resemble a fireworks undergoing an identity crisis.”

The ranger gave her the look rangers reserved for bandits claiming stolen goods had simply followed them ho.

“You erged in a Convergence,” the ranger said slowly. “You have no class, no faction, no origin. And you radiate the mana signature of a minor celestial event.”

“My power is perfectly—mostly—under control.”

A spark. A scorch. A tired hiss from her dress.

The ranger watched the cycle with the calm resignation of soone observing an animal attempting to self-immolate politely.

“Yes,” she said. “I can see that.”

Her gaze sharpened.

“And you glow.”

“I do not glow.”

“You are literally smouldering.”

Seraphina looked down. Her footprints breathed smoke. “…Oh.”

Sowhere, unseen, a subtle resonance answered her flare. She wasn’t alone.

You are reading Aeterra: RuleBender Chapter 8: The Ranger on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Timeless Assassin cover
Trending now

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

I Have a Golden Crow cover
Trending now

I Have a Golden Crow

Great Yu ·Eastern

DuYuhasnoclueabouthowhehastransmigratedtoaworldofdemontaming.HeisalsoinastateofconfusionwhenhecontractstheGoldenCrowthatwasliterallyasun.“Areyoufro...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.