The Combat Grove humd with subtle energy before Selene stepped inside. Not bustling. Not ceremonial. Simply prepared—elderwood pillars standing in patient arcs, runes etched deep where generations of disputes had ended without war. A faint scent of sap and aged wood lingered, carried on the low, steady draft threading between the pillars. The air vibrated lightly from wards and lattice, like a quiet heartbeat.
Tall and poised, Selene moved with quiet authority. Every gesture was deliberate—a study in control and presence, marking her as both Empress’s niece and Grove’s arbiter. Her lineage and poise carried weight even before a single word was spoken. The soft scuff of her boots against polished stone echoed faintly, absorbed quickly by the living floor beneath.
She stopped just inside the boundary line. The Grovekeepers sensed her before they saw her.
“I want second-ring configuration,” Selene said, voice low and even. “Standard dueling lattice. No amplification. No external focuses. Environntal dampening at sixty percent.”
A Grovekeeper inclined her head. “Witness wards?”
“Passive. Record everything. Interfere with nothing unless containnt fails.”
“And dical thresholds?”
“Automatic only. No discretionary overrides.”
The wards ca online without spectacle. Air settled. Distances clarified. Lines of engagent resolved. Combat Grove: ready. A faint tang of ozone and warm wood filled the air, the subtle noise of arcane current threading through the lattice.
Along the approach paths, whispers began—not cheers. Numbers.
“I’ll take Emberlane at six-to-one,” murmured soone, slate half-hidden.
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“Too steep,” another replied softly. “She’s unranked, not untested.”
“I heard she calculated Veylan’s Core capacity.”
“That wasn’t a fight.”
“Yes. And?”
A Pearl Coast student adjusted her grip on her slate. “Prudent wager. Adept.”
Gold and silver committed. Runes dimd. Devices slipped away as if nothing had occurred. No public display. No projection. Only private ledgers updating in quiet consensus. Faint clicks and pulses from the slates filled the background—an undercurrent to the Grove’s quiet hum.
Selene stood near the outer ring, hands loosely clasped behind her back. The echoes of the Communal Hall had faded. Only the hum of wards and the faint lattice pulse remained. She did not watch wagers. She did not watch the duelists. She watched her mory play back, eyes narrowing at subtle imperceptible cues.
Most freshn reacted predictably. They flinched. They froze. They apologized. Or they escalated—emotion overrunning discipline. A faint shuffle of robes, a whisper, the scrape of a chair—small, telling, human noises—accentuated their unease.
Seraphina did not. She had adjusted one millitre. No one noticed; she had hidden it entirely. Not reactive. Not defiant. Fractional. Precise. asured. Her boots barely compressed the living floor; a near-imperceptible shift in her weight balanced her center.
Selene felt it imdiately. No spike of fear. No flicker of wounded pride. No tremor of inexperience. Only calculation.
That was not normal.
Arrogance pushed back. It sought dominance. It demanded recognition. She acknowledged nothing, murmuring only about numbers.
This had been sothing else.
Reduction: Seraphina had not disrespected Jared. She had categorized him. And categorization shifted power.
Selene allowed herself a quiet assessnt. This duel was necessary. Jared would feel disrespected—even though she had done nothing but process him. He would not understand. Could not understand.
When the fire ca, she did not brace. Did not posture. Did not perform courage for an audience. She shifted—fractional, precise. The air near her moved subtly as she micro-adjusted balance and weight distribution, undetectable yet intentional.
Jared expected compliance, recognition, obedience. Most would quake under his aura alone. Most would fail the microsecond the first fireball passed.
Selene’s pulse altered—not from danger, but from recognition.
She allowed herself a faint, almost imperceptible smile. She had seen this look before. In generals. In tacticians. In minds that had already solved the equation before writing the first line.
Seraphina had not challenged Jared. She had processed him.
That made her dangerous.
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