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Now reading: Chapter 49: The patriarch (2) from Harem Of Eternal Yandere Beasts: My Legendary Wives, a Fantasy novel by Lawrencexooo.

"Strength," Orion said. "Real strength. Not borrowed from a summon. Not from family na." He held Magnus’s gaze. "Mine."

The study was quiet for a mont.

"The Sovereign Core," Magnus said.

Orion went still.

Not visibly. Nothing changed in his face or posture. But internally sothing rearranged.

"You know," he said.

"I recognized the mana quality the day you arrived in the main hall," Magnus said. "I’ve seen it before." He paused. "Once. Forty years ago. A woman who stood in a summoning circle at her ceremony and produced nothing and beca the most dangerous person I had ever encountered by the ti she was twenty."

Forty years ago, yes forty years ago.

Orion thought about the hidden room. About writing two hundred years old. About the diagram and the book and the old bastard’s very long setup, setup.

"What happened to her," he said.

Magnus was quiet for a mont. "She disappeared," he said. "Into the northern territories. We heard from her occasionally for a decade and then nothing." He looked at the window. "She left sothing behind. So of her work. Research into the nature of the attribute." He paused. "And a note that said the next one would find it."

Orion thought about the orange cat on the wall.

About the passage behind the patchwork stone.

About the room and the pulsing book and the words on the wall, he thought about alot.

For the one who summons without summoning. The next step is yours.

"She left it for ," Orion said.

"She left it for whoever ca next," Magnus said. "She believed the attribute was not as rare as the historical record suggested. That the summoning ceremony simply couldn’t asure it correctly and so it was repeatedly recorded as failure." He looked at Orion directly. "She believed this family had produced several Sovereign Core users who were never identified as such."

Orion thought about Doran.

About a slow deep blue-silver glow in a summoning circle that lasted ninety seconds and produced an Abyss Stag with an anomalous classification and still-growing antlers.

He said nothing.

Magnus was watching his expression with the precision of soone who had been reading people for decades.

"Doran," Magnus said.

"I don’t know," Orion said. "I have a theory."

"As do I," Magnus said. He was quiet for a mont. "I did not summon you here to discuss Doran." He leaned forward slightly, the first shift from his default settled stillness. "I summoned you here because in two days you will enter a trial that has been compromised."

The air in the room was very still.

"Elder Crane," Orion said.

Sothing crossed Magnus’s expression. Not surprise. Sothing older and less simple. "You know."

"I’ve known for two weeks," Orion said.

A pause. "And you said nothing to ."

"With respect, Grand Duke," Orion said carefully, "I wasn’t certain of your position."

Magnus looked at him.

"Crane has been in this family for thirty years," Orion said. "He controls resources. He controls relationships. He moves carefully and builds redundancy and operates through deniable chanisms." He held the Patriarch’s gaze. "And you have spent three weeks watching from windows rather than acting on whatever you observed. I didn’t know whether that ant you were waiting to see what I would do or waiting to see whether I was worth protecting."

The study was very quiet.

Then Magnus said, in a voice that had sothing in it that was almost not the Grand Duke and almost was just a person: "Both."

Orion looked at him.

"Both," Magnus repeated. "I wanted to know what you were before I decided what I was willing to do about what was being arranged against you." He paused. "A failure doesn’t deserve protection. An Ashbourne does."

"And now," Orion said.

"Now," Magnus said, "I know what you are."

He stood up. Walked to the window. Looked out at the training ground visible in the eastern grounds.

"I am not going to intervene in the trial," he said. "Not directly. Crane has built this carefully and any action I take against him before the trial needs evidence that cannot be explained away." He turned. "Evidence that a trial incident, handled correctly in front of an Imperial Evaluator and the assembled family, would provide."

Orion understood imdiately. "You want it to happen."

"I want it to fail," Magnus said precisely. "In front of witnesses. Publicly. In a way that cannot be attributed to family politics because an Imperial Evaluator was present and the chanism’s failure is docunted." He looked at Orion steadily. "After that I have everything I need."

"You’ve been waiting for him to overcommit," Orion said.

"For three years," Magnus said. "He has been careful for three years. This is the first ti he has committed to sothing large enough to be undeniable." A pause. "And he committed because he thought you were manageable."

Orion thought about that.

About Crane looking him in the eye on the garden path and telling him surprises were part of the test.

About three layers of chanism built against a target who was supposed to be a fifteen year old failure with a lucky summon.

"He doesn’t know what I am," Orion said.

"No," Magnus said. "He knows what you were." He looked at Orion with those sharp cold eyes. "Can you handle it."

"Yes," Orion said.

No hesitation. No qualification.

Magnus studied him for a mont.

"The Sovereign Core," he said. "The woman who left you that room. She wrote that it developed differently from standard attributes. That it made its users more themselves over ti rather than more powerful in any asurable sense." He paused. "Do you understand what that ans."

"I’m starting to," Orion said.

"It ans," Magnus said, "that in twenty years I am not going to be able to predict what you are. Not even approximately." He looked at the window. "That is either the best thing or the worst thing this family has seen in a generation." A pause. "I have decided it is the best."

He turned from the window.

"Two days," he said. "Handle Crane cleanly. Let the Imperial Evaluator see what she ca to see." He paused. "And after the trial we will discuss what cos next."

The eting was over.

Orion stood. Walked to the door.

"Orion," Magnus said.

He stopped.

"Doran trains with you every morning," Magnus said. "He walks differently than he did three weeks ago."

Orion looked back.

The Patriarch was looking at the window again. His expression was doing sothing that was not the Grand Duke’s expression and was not anything Orion had a na for.

"Yes," Orion said. "He does."

He walked out.

The guard was waiting in the corridor. The walk back to the manor was quiet and he let it be quiet, processing the weight of the conversation rather than rushing past it.

Luna was on the front step when he arrived. She’d been there for a while, judging by the specific quality of her waiting posture.

She looked at him. "Well."

"The Patriarch knows," he said.

"About the chanism."

"About everything," he said. "He’s known about the Sovereign Core since the first day."

Luna was quiet for a mont. "And."

"He wants Crane to go through with it," Orion said. "He needs the trial incident to happen and fail publicly. That’s the evidence he needs."

She looked at him. "Master is being used."

"Master is being given an audience," he said. "There’s a difference."

She considered that. "And if it goes wrong."

"Then it goes wrong," he said. "Sa as before he told any of that." He looked at her. "Nothing about what we’ve built changes because the Patriarch is also waiting for the outco. The chanism still fails the sa way. Cipher still deploys. Crane still fires every lever and gets nothing."

She was quiet for a mont longer. Then she pressed her face against his arm in the way that ant she was filing sothing and had decided on a position about it. "Master was right not to count on him," she said.

"He’s useful," Orion said. "Not reliable."

"Different things," she agreed.

He sat down on the front step beside her and looked at the estate in the late morning light. At the training ground visible past the eastern hedge. At the main building’s windows.

Two days.

He pulled up the status.

◈ COMBAT INSTINCT ◈

Basic >> Interdiate: 91%

◈ STAGE 2 REFINENT ◈

First breakthrough: Approaching

◈ DAYS TO TRIAL ◈

2, just 2, wow.

◈ HOST NOTE ◈

The Patriarch knew.

He waited to see if you were worth it.

You were.

Now perform accordingly.

◈ ◈ ◈

He closed it.

"Training ground," he said.

Luna stood up.

"Eyes open or closed," she said.

He thought about the fourth combination elent. About trusting instinct over visual in the half-second where they conflicted. About ninety one percent on the way to Interdiate.

"Closed," he said.

She smiled with all her teeth.

"Good," she said, with a grumpy smile on her face.

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