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Now reading: Chapter 278: The Book from I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities, a Fantasy novel by WhiteDeath16.

Twelve pages.

That was as far as he’d gotten, and even calling it "getting sowhere" was generous. It wasn’t twelve pages of actual understanding. It was twelve pages of recognizable script, a handful of identified words, and an ever-growing list of patterns he’d been painstakingly mapping against the Silver Wood glossary he’d found buried in the Academy library.

He’d been taking notes in the margins. His handwriting looked almost crude next to the elegant original text, but he didn’t care. These were the notes of soone learning to fight in a new style, breaking down the fundantal structures first before worrying about grace. Identify what holds everything up, then build outward. That was how he learned everything.

The book was sitting on his table when Isole knocked on his door.

She’d co to return the text she’d borrowed from his desk on the first day of the sester. Apparently, she’d finished it in four days. Four days. He’d been struggling with twelve pages for two weeks.

He opened the door, and her mismatched eyes, one red and one green, imdiately found the Silver Wood book on his table. She looked at it. Then she looked at him.

His stomach did sothing uncomfortable. "The marginal notes are mine," he said quickly. "I kept your original annotations intact."

Without a word, Isole walked to the table and picked up the book. She was always like this, moving with quiet purpose, never wasting motion. She turned to the first page and studied his handwriting in the margin. Then the third page. The seventh. The twelfth.

When she reached the page where he’d attempted to write an actual sentence in the Silver Wood script, she stopped. His characters were shaky, badly ford, struggling with a grammatical construction he clearly didn’t understand yet.

She stared at it for a long mont, and his heart was doing sothing complicated in his chest.

"You transliterated the naming convention," she said finally. Her voice was quiet, almost surprised.

"Partially." He tried not to sound as nervous as he felt. "The possessive structure was giving trouble. I think I have the root correct, but the inflection is wrong."

To his surprise, Isole sat down at his table like she planned to stay. She turned the book slightly, examining his clumsy attempt with those sharp, analytical eyes. "The inflection bends backward in the possessive. The root carries the object. The inflection carries the possessor." She set the book down carefully. "You had them inverted. It’s a common error. Silver Wood syntax runs opposite to most continental languages."

He sat down across from her, trying not to let his relief show too obviously. She wasn’t laughing at his terrible grammar. She was explaining it.

"How long did it take you to learn the continental script?" he asked.

"I arrived at the Academy already fluent in four languages." Sothing flickered across her face, too quick to read. "My mother ensured it. She considered linguistic precision a primary social defense."

The way she said it made it clear this hadn’t been a pleasant experience.

"I didn’t enjoy learning them," she continued, her voice going flat in that way it did when she talked about her family. "They were presented as obligations, not tools."

"And the Silver Wood script?" he asked carefully.

For the first ti since she’d arrived, sothing softened in her expression. "That I learned because I wanted to. It was the first thing I chose for myself rather than for them." A pause. "I was nine."

Nine years old, choosing to learn an ancient, complex language because it was hers, not theirs. He looked at her sitting across from him, staff leaning against the table, hands folded in her lap, posture perfect as always. Those mismatched eyes were fixed on the book, on his twelve pages of struggling notes, on his half-ford sentence in the margin.

"You’re learning my language," she said. It wasn’t a question. Wasn’t perford emotion. Just a statent of fact, delivered with that quiet intensity she brought to important observations.

"You gave the book," he said. "It seed right to learn what it actually said rather than just asking soone to translate for ."

Isole was quiet for a mont, and he could almost see her processing this. "Most people would have asked."

"Most people don’t care about the specific words. They care about the aning." He looked down at the book between them. "I care about the specific words. You were specific about choosing this language. That specificity matters."

The room fell into a comfortable silence. Outside, the Academy humd with mid-morning activity. Students moved between classes, voices carrying through the clear September air. The light streaming through Villa 4’s windows was bright and clean.

Isole looked at the page with his inverted inflection. Then, without asking permission, she picked up his pen from the table and made a correction. She didn’t cross out his attempt. Instead, she wrote the proper form above it in her own small, precise handwriting.

He leaned forward to study what she’d done. The difference was a single inflection mark, but it completely changed the weight of the sentence. His version had said sothing like: the flower possesses the giving. Hers said: the giving possesses the giver.

The realization hit him like a punch to the chest. "That changes the aning considerably."

"Yes." She set the pen down with careful precision. "The Silver Wood’s naming conventions aren’t transactional. The flower isn’t a thing given. It’s the act of giving made visible. The giver carries the weight of the declaration, not the object."

She looked at the page, and sothing vulnerable flickered across her face before she locked it down again.

"You had the grammar backwards," she said quietly, "but the intent was correct."

He stared at her. She t his gaze steadily, those mismatched eyes holding truths she didn’t know how to speak any other way.

"The intent was always correct," she added, even more softly. It was an echo of sothing she’d told him before, on the Silver Wood path during the second morning of the sester. She wasn’t repeating it for emphasis. She was saying it because it was still true, and Isole Sylvaris didn’t leave true things unsaid.

He looked at the book lying between them. Twelve pages of his ssy handwriting filling the margins. The corrected sentence in her elegant script, the inflection bending backward the way she’d described, all the weight falling on the giver instead of the gift.

His heart was pounding, but his voice ca out steady. "Will you teach ?"

She blinked. "The language?"

"Yes."

"It takes years to beco fluent."

"I know."

Isole went quiet, and he recognized the quality of her silence. She wasn’t performing thoughtfulness for his benefit. She was genuinely considering his request, turning it over in that sharp mind of hers. He’d learned over the past year, through Mourn-Hold and the library and dozens of shared monts, that when Isole was quiet, she was actually working through sothing real.

"You’ll need to start with the nurals," she said finally. "The Silver Wood nurical system runs on base eight instead of base ten. Most of the conceptual vocabulary derives from it." She looked at the book with sothing almost like fondness. "The naming conventions Chapter you’ve been reading assus the nurals as foundation. You’ve been trying to build the second floor before the first."

Relief and excitent flooded through him. He picked up his pen. "Then let’s start from the beginning."

Isole looked at him for a long mont. Sothing moved in those mismatched eyes, sothing real and unguarded that she usually kept carefully hidden. She didn’t try to perform anything about it. She simply let it exist between them.

Then she took the pen from his hand.

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