The laboratory had been sealed for years—ever since the Fourth Princess’s mother died and her research was classified as "imperial property pending review."
Elara broke the seals herself with her household authority ring. The door groaned open, releasing stale air thick with dust and the faint tallic tang of residual magic.
Inside, the space was exactly what she’d hoped for: comprehensive. Stone workbenches lined three walls, surfaces marked with burn scars and chemical stains. Glass apparatus hung from ceiling racks—distillation columns, resonance chambers, containnt vessels. Shelves held reference materials: grimoires, formula compilations, experintal logs written in her mother’s precise hand.
At the far end, a large slate board still showed the last equation her mother had been working on. Unfinished. Chalk dust had settled into the grooves.
Elara closed the door behind her and locked it.
For the next four hours, she read. Her mother’s notes were ticulous—theory, application, failed attempts, revised approaches. The food preservation spell appeared in three different versions, each iteration refining the magical structure.
The principle was elegant: magical resonance matched to organic decay frequencies, inverted to create a stabilization field . By targeting the specific vibrational patterns of decomposition, the spell could effectively "freeze" organic matter at its current state without actual temperature manipulation .
Understanding the theory: straightforward.
Actually casting it: problematic.
Elara set up the first test just before midnight. She placed a cut apple slice on the workbench—already browning at the edges—and positioned herself in front of it. Her shoulder ached from hours of reading. She ignored it.
The spell required three components: verbal invocation to establish intent, gestural pattern to shape the energy flow, and ntal visualization to anchor the resonance frequency.
She spoke the activation phrase—words in an ancient dialect that ant roughly "hold, preserve, suspend."
Nothing.
She tried again, adding the hand gesture: fingers spread, palm down, circular motion to define the boundary of effect.
A faint shimr appeared over the apple slice, flickered, and died.
Elara frowned. The magic was responding, but her control was unstable. This body had the capacity—she could feel the power there, coiled sowhere behind her sternum—but accessing it precisely was like trying to thread a needle wearing thick gloves.
Third attempt. She slowed down the gesture, focused harder on the visualization: decay as vibration, preservation as counter-resonance, harmonics canceling out—
The shimr solidified briefly, a soap-bubble film over the fruit. Then it collapsed inward with a soft ’pop’, and the apple slice turned completely black, rotting through in seconds.
Worse than nothing.
Elara made notes in a blank journal: ’Overcorrection. Inverted frequency too aggressive. Need finer calibration.’
She tried seventeen more tis over the next three hours.
Attempt eight produced stable preservation for forty seconds before failing. Attempt twelve worked perfectly—until she tried to expand the field beyond a single apple slice, at which point the entire spell destabilized and took three minutes to disperse. Attempt fifteen gave her a splitting headache and left her fingers numb for twenty minutes.
By the ti pale dawn light crept through the high windows, Elara had achieved controlled preservation on a single test subject for exactly four minutes and thirteen seconds.
Insufficient. But progress.
She sat on the floor with her back against the workbench, injured shoulder screaming, and calculated requirents. For comrcial viability, the spell needed to last at minimum seventy-two hours. Ideally, one week. It needed to scale to cargo-hold volus. And it needed to be simple enough that non-mages could activate pre-prepared spell anchors.
Current capability: four minutes on one apple slice.
Gap between current and required: catastrophic.
But the theory was sound. The chanics worked. She just needed better control—which ant practice, refinent, and ti she might not have.
Elara pulled herself upright, cleaned the workspace thodically, and locked the laboratory behind her. Her head throbbed. Her shoulder felt like ground glass. She’d been awake for twenty-six hours.
Acceptable cost.
She had seven days to make this work. Ti to find out if determination could substitute for natural talent.
.....
Five days later, Dimitri knocked on Elara’s office door with unusual urgency.
"Your Highness, he’s here."
Elara looked up from the spell diagram she’d been revising. "The rchant representative?"
"Yes. But Your Highness, he’s... not what I expected."
"Explain."
"He’s young. Mid-twenties at most. Junior partner in his family’s trading company. I was hoping for soone senior with actual authority to negotiate contracts."
Elara set down her pen. "Did you explain who was requesting the eting?"
"Yes. The senior partners declined. Sent him instead." Dimitri’s expression was tight with embarrassnt. "I think they’re testing whether this is legitimate or a waste of their ti."
"Efficient. Minimize risk exposure while gathering information." Elara stood, adjusting her sleeve to cover the fading bruises on her arm. "Perfect. Bring him in."
Dimitri’s ears flattened slightly in confusion but he bowed and left.
Two minutes later, he returned with a young man who looked profoundly uncomfortable in formal visiting clothes. The rchant had dark hair pulled back practically, callused hands that suggested he’d loaded cargo himself, and sharp eyes that were currently taking in every detail of the princess’s office with the careful assessnt of soone used to evaluating value.
He bowed—correctly, but with the slight stiffness of soone who’d practiced recently. "Your Highness. I’m Kael Verin, of Verin & Sons Shipping. My family asked to... discuss your proposal."
"Sit." Elara gestured to the chair across from her desk. "Tea?"
"No, thank you, Your Highness."
She poured tea for herself anyway, using the motion to study him. Nervous but not intimidated. Skeptical but not dismissive. Soone who’d been sent to determine if this was genuine opportunity or elaborate prank.
"Your family ships food products," Elara said. It wasn’t a question.
"Yes, Your Highness. Primarily grain from the eastern provinces to the capital markets. Also dried at, preserved fruit, so dairy when the season permits."
"And your annual loss to spoilage is approximately fifteen to twenty percent of total cargo value ."
Kael’s expression shifted—surprise that she knew specific numbers. "Closer to eighteen percent, Your Highness. Though in sumr it can reach twenty-five."
"Which represents direct financial loss, plus opportunity cost from inability to guarantee delivery tilines, plus reputational damage when contracted goods arrive spoiled." Elara set down her teacup. "What if I could reduce that loss to under two percent?"
Silence.
Then: "Your Highness, with respect, every rchant in the empire wants that. If such a thod existed—"
"It does. I have it." She opened a drawer and removed a small glass vial containing what appeared to be a plain clay disk about the size of a coin. "This is a preservation anchor. When activated, it creates a stabilization field that prevents organic decay . Effective radius: three ters. Duration: ninety-six hours."
Kael leaned forward despite himself. "Magic."
"Applied magical theory, yes. The principle has existed in academic literature for decades . No one’s bothered to comrcialize it because court mages don’t concern themselves with rchant logistics."
"And you do?"
"I concern myself with practical problems that have profitable solutions." Elara slid the vial across the desk. "Test it. Take it to your warehouse. Put it next to your most perishable inventory and activate it by pressing your thumb to the seal and speaking the word ’preserve.’ Four days later, examine the results."
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