Rafael had known this event would not go as planned. No plan ever survived contact with Vivisari. Still, he’d expected they would at least make it through the canned opening before things went off the rails. Instead, she had apologized for her tardiness and then failed to so much as deliver that carefully worded introduction before she’d been challenged by the Gale of Blades.
The interruption as a whole, he had expected. He had even anticipated the Gale herself being the one to voice her doubts. What he hadn’t predicted was that the woman would insist, even after the teleportation magic that served as undeniable proof of identity by itself. Rafael had clearly underestimated the Gale’s desire to duel a legendary figure, and, in retrospect, he could only bla himself for that.
But then Vivisari had not just accepted, but also invited all other Titled into the brawl. As always, she exceeded Rafael’s expectations, even when he would really rather she didn’t for once.
There were many Titled who had attended, and Rafael kept an eye on all of them, but the Archbishop was who he scrutinized most closely. High Prince Adrian had spoken to the de facto leader of the Church to ease the zealot into the idea that it had been Vivisari, not the gods, that had saved ridian from the void invasion. But with how much of a grand announcent the religious leader had made of his claims, Rafael could see the man being slow to accept the truth of the situation… if he ever did.
The Archbishop, dressed in his bright white robes and tall hat presenting a golden star, had watched Vivisari’s arrival and the developing events with a carefully controlled expression, deep blue eyes cautious and appraising. That was neither the best-case nor the worst-case scenario. Rafael would have preferred more overt displays of acceptance, and certainly a less guarded appearance so that he could read the man more easily, but at least the Archbishop was not purple in the face and denouncing Vivisari for stealing the glory of the heavens.
Rafael had a lot of opinions on Archbishop Augustine, most of them conflicted. He couldn’t not have so respect for the Archbishop, given the man’s past. Two hundred years ago, the newly promoted Archbishop—the second-highest position of the Church, beneath only Cardinal—had uncovered an underbelly of corruption operating in the shadows of their organization, of such heinous activity that even Rafael’s normally cool thoughts grew agitated when he recollected the details. Within that very sa hour, Augustine had slain the offending Cardinal, a Titled nearly three hundred levels higher than him, along with two other Archbishops in the sa fight. A feat so utterly absurd and nigh unmatched in all of history that even Rafael could only accept Augustine’s own explanation that he had been a burning conduit for the heavens’ long-due wrath.
In the ensuing purge of the Church, nearly a third of ridian’s clergy died—the smoke from the Church-turned-pyre had allegedly been seen from a city away. Afterward, Augustine collected the necessary evidence, provided it to the crown still drenched in the blood of his once-colleagues, renounced his title as Archbishop, then demanded he be imprisoned and a trial be held for his own gross misconduct—said misconduct apparently being that he hadn’t rooted out the evil sooner. Despite extensive negotiations with the man, when the crown tried to pardon the Archbishop, he imposed his own sentence and spent a decade in the Palace prison behind a cell door the crown refused to lock.
The man underwent so manner of crisis of faith in that ti, Rafael understood, but when Augustine returned to the Church—refusing to accept his previous rank and instead working his way back up from acolyte—he made it his ultimate priority to reform the organization he’d once held in great regard. And succeeded. It would not be an exaggeration to say that the Church’s status as one of the least corrupt organizations in the kingdoms was thanks predominantly to the fervent efforts of a single man.
In short, Augustine was the zealot that most other zealots wrongly perceived themselves as. Which was both praise and condemnation, because by definition zealots were uncompromising fanatics—and the Archbishop’s actions were not those of a level-headed and rational man. Even so, if that fanaticism was wielded with true belief, by a person who didn’t bend their principles and was not a hypocrite, could such a trait truly be condemned?
At the very least, it made for a complicated person to deal with. The man had a fire within him, and righteous though it might be, all flas could consu.
Rafael waited to see how the assembled Titled would respond to Vivisari’s offer.
Aeris spoke first. “If an exhibition match between allies is inevitable,” he said slowly, “I would not refuse it. But I strongly advise against this course of action.”
Lysander huffed. “I will co to watch the yapping dog be silenced, but will not participate myself,” he stated, calr, but with anger still smoldering. The Gale made a rude gesture at him, strangely not seeming much bothered by the insult. From what Rafael understood of the swordswoman, she had been born and raised in a particularly rough environnt and found ‘banter’between allies routine. So she likely didn’ttake offense at Lysander’s words. And perhaps didn’t an much by her own.
Archbishop Augustine strode up next, and Rafael suppressed a grimace. He couldn’t say he was surprised, but he would have preferred that Vivisari and the Archbishop not fight in anycapacity, ‘friendly duel’ or ‘proof of identity’ included.
“In my years,” the white-robed man said calmly, “I have learned that it is always better to confirm rather than trust blindly. Even the truths we hold most sacrosanct can be overturned. I cast no doubt on your claims, Sorceress, but I would accept further proof if you are offering it freely.”
The Gale smirked. “You can just admit you want to see what that holy fire of yours can do against the Sorceress’s shields. I’m sure the heavens will look away as their favored son indulges, just this once.”
Which was an astoundingly poor choice of words considering whom she was speaking to, and even the Gale—inept at reading a room as she was—seed to realize it. She cleared her throat. “Just a joke, of course.”
“Blasphemy in jest remains blasphemy,” the Archbishop said in a tone heavy with disapproval, but zealot he might be, he wasn’t so unhinged as to lose his composure over poorly chosen humor. Especially since the Gale of Blades wasa hero dedicated to using their strength to benefit the world, as all the Titled present were—if in varying scales.
The fifth Titled to accept Vivisari’s offer was the newest and weakest, not one Rafael had expected to impose himself. The Silver Squire had likely only added a dozen levels at most since his official naming, which had happened at the precise one-thousand mark. A half-elven boy in full knight’s armor and with short, lustrous gray hair hurried up to the front of the courtyard, and he bowed as deeply as he physically could, trying to touch his nose to the floor.
“Lady Sorceress and other esteed Titled,” he began. “I know this offer wasn’t made with in mind, and that I do not belong in a dueling arena with a single one of you. But if the offer was truly open to any of the Titled gathered—ager as my accomplishnts are—I request the privilege nevertheless.”
“Oh, grow a spine, boy,” the Gale of Blades said, but with plain fondness in her words. The two Titled had history, Rafael knew, though the exact details were vague. The boy had trained under her briefly as a favor to the Queen of the Eastern Kingdom. “A person is only as good as their word; the Sorceress surely ans what she says. So say you accept and leave it at that.” She snorted and clapped him on the shoulder. “And try not to die in a single attack. She might go easy on you, but if you get in my way, I certainly won’t.”
The Squire glanced up, saw Vivisari nod at him, then straightened out with obvious excitent. “Yes, Lady Gale! Thank you, Lady Sorceress!”
Vivisari appraised the crowd, waiting for any other accepters, then nodded. “As I said, I apologize for the delay. We won’t be long.”
And with a wave of her staff, the Sorceress ferried away the five Titled and herself, leaving the rest of the assembled to stand in silence.
Rafael stepped up to the center of the dais. “I will have a word with the High Prince, then will address any questions you might have,” he told the crowd with a voice that projected as much unbothered confidence as he could muster—which was quite a lot. “Indeed, I already intended to do so on my lady’s behalf, as she is not one who could be considered… loquacious.” He smiled, and the joke managed to produce so polite chuckles, if halfhearted and nervous.
He walked over to Adrian and allowed the Prince to summon a silencing bubble.
“How much of that was planned?” Adrian asked in a much less congenial tone than in their previous conversations. His patience had frayed; that was easy to tell. Rafael couldn’t bla him.
“My lady is at tis difficult to predict.” He bowed. “No insult was ever intended against the crown or you, High Prince. My deepest apologies.”
Adrian raised an eyebrow at the obvious non-answer. He opened his mouth to speak—
And a boom shook the entire domain of the Ashen Hierophant, rocks falling from the ceiling to patter off the shimring shield the Sorceress had left behind. The hairs on Rafael’s arms stood on end as a distant mana source burning like the sun triggered even his weak mana-sensing abilities.
The High Prince closed his mouth, then, perhaps expectedly, forcibly returned to the polite deanor from earlier. “Apologies are unnecessary. The crown looks forward to fostering a deep alliance between the Central Kingdom and Vanguard.”
Rafael had to fight to keep his amusent from showing. Sensing far-away spells that could reduce entire forests to ash did help readjust attitudes—even the royal family’s. Not that he wanted to flaunt the Sorceress’s power. That ca with its own problems, particularly once the void threat had been eliminated.
“I feel the sa way, High Prince Adrian, and I am sure Lady Vivisari does as well. I will address the gathered on behalf of my guildmaster now, if you do not object.”
“By all ans.”
Rafael returned to the center of the dais and did just that. Perhaps Vivisari’s brief disappearance could even be construed as a benefit. As the Adventurer’s Guild head, he had worked with most, if not all, of the individuals present at one ti or another, and they would be far more willing to speak frankly with him than they would with Vivisari—even if Vivisari had rely been standing silently by his side.
As he opened his mouth, so other distant spell shook the arena. He let the area fall silent again, smiling patiently in the anti.
“What is the aning of this, Rafael?” the head of the Blacksmithing Guild asked. “Was the teleportation to the… to this… arena necessary?”
“I apologize on behalf of my guildmaster,” Rafael began both confidently and unapologetically, “and would like to once again emphasize that Vanguard is deeply thankful that so many prominent individuals have co to greet us. I assure you your ti is not being wasted; I needed to speak with you as the Steward of Vanguard regardless. I will summarize the crucial matters that Vivisari has discovered in her ti away.”
He paused, though not because he was gathering his thoughts. He almost never had to do that. Simply giving proper breathing room to his next statent.
“There is a new threat, and I am afraid Vivisari has not contained it in its entirety. As many of you no doubt have surmised, the breach in the Adventurer’s District was not a portal to a realm of our world, but outside it. Vivisari pursued our opponents into that gateway once ridian had been safely defended, and what she found there was, for lack of a better term, a Void—where many more of those creatures exist, so more powerful even than what assaulted the capital. Perhaps much more so. The full extent of the crisis remains in question, as well as the urgency required.”
The audience responded to that statent with dead silence, as was appropriate. Rafael continued after a mont.
“She has already begun developing thods of breaking through their resistances; her results were shared with the Thaumaturgical Institute, and we hope strides will be made swiftly in that regard. She has also, as she herself ntioned, placed anchors on the various capital cities so that she can respond should another breach occur. To that end, we will need to develop a ans to alert her. I’ve outlined a preliminary approach and will have reports sent to the relevant parties before the day’s conclusion.”
It was a trickier problem than it might seem to the uninford. Magic, while versatile, did have limitations, like how warping required anchors. Even Vivisari in all her might couldn’t appear wherever she wanted in the world without first having visited. Likewise, long-range communication—the sa as most long-rangemagic—had constraints. Scrying required specially constructed devices that, like a warp anchor, could not be moved once positioned and linked. Neither was there a universal [ssage] spell to alert Vivisari wherever she might be in the world.
Ironically, the most efficient system to draw her attention that he’d conjured up would harken back to more primitive technologies. Long-range magical flares, to catch Vivisari’s gaze even at incredible distances. Combined with swift scrying responses between major cities. The exact details didn’t matter at the mont. It would likely be tweaked and adjusted over the coming days, or perhaps so other plan would be proposed. Rafael had been quite busy and had only been able to spare partial focus on that project.
“As you might expect, with Lady Vivisari’s return, Vanguard also intends to reerge to the world at large—with its doors thrown open. We will seek to fill our ranks in the coming months. This has not been announced publicly, so we humbly request your silence until that date.”
With how many individuals were present, he didn’t trust that there wouldn’t be leaks before the day was out, but there was no reason not to ask. At a minimum, the news probably wouldn’t spread to commoners.
“Lastly, at least so far as I am willing to speak on my lady’s behalf”—because Vivisari’s opinion on certain issues was best delivered from her own mouth—“I wish to speak on how Vanguard wishes to integrate with the world at large, since I am sure it is a question on many minds.” None more so than High Prince Adrian’s, Rafael suspected. “The Sorceress’s actions say everything one needs to know. She fought off several imminent Cataclysms in defense of ridian to imdiately dive into the birthplace of that threat, then a few days later returned and protected Prismarche from a second catastrophe of similar scale. Afterward, despite suffering manaburn, she flew across the human kingdoms to set warp anchors to ensure the defense of your holands. Her nature has not changed, fundantally, across the century.”
And do all you can to ensure that benevolence of hers never wavers, Rafael didn’t say, nor even imply, but any individual with the slightest caution would surely have the thought. Or perhaps he was especially pessimistic. Only an idiot wouldn’t tread carefully when it ca to dealing with the closest thing this world had to a living, breathing goddess of magic.
“Now,” Rafael said, smiling. “Are there questions?”
As expected, there were many.
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