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Now reading: Chapter 286: Brass and Bronze from Reincarnated as a Femboy Slave, a Fantasy novel by DarkSephium.

I moved through the inner circle of the city, my hips swaying with deliberate rhythm as I navigated the crowds that packed the streets in their eternal press of bodies, ambition, and barely restrained chaos.

The city breathed around —literally breathed, if you listened closely enough, the massive ventilation systems that kept air circulating through this underground world creating currents that pushed and pulled at clothing and hair with the regularity of lungs expanding and contracting.

Steam vents hissed their approval at regular intervals, releasing pressure in plus that caught the light from countless lanterns and glowed like captured ghosts before dissipating into the perpetual haze that hung at street level.

The air itself was alive with competing scents—roasted nuts from vendor carts mixing with expensive perfus wafting from passing nobles, the sharp tang of ozone from magical demonstrations blending with the earthy sll of human sweat and the sweet decay of discarded flowers trampled underfoot.

My heart hamred against my ribs with an anticipation that bordered on anxiety, each beat counting down the monts until I reached my destination and discovered whether the information I sought would be worth the risk I’d taken to obtain it.

Street perforrs lined every available corner and alcove, each one competing for attention and coins with increasingly desperate displays of talent that ranged from genuinely impressive to deeply concerning.

A fire-breather sent columns of fla spiraling into the air, the heat washing over nearby spectators who gasped and applauded with enthusiasm that suggested they’d forgotten this was the third ti they’d seen this exact trick in the past hour.

An acrobat twisted herself into shapes that human spines absolutely shouldn’t have been able to achieve, her body folding and contorting with boneless fluidity while her assistant collected coins in a hat that was already overflowing.

A musician played sothing that might’ve been a violin if violins were designed by people who’d only heard descriptions of the instrunt secondhand, the resulting sounds sowhere between music and the dying screams of small animals, yet sohow a crowd had gathered to listen with rapt attention.

I slipped past a cluster of nobles blocking the walkway—three n in elaborate coats discussing so business venture with the kind of affected boredom that suggested they were each trying to prove they cared less than the others—and let my hand trail along the nearest one’s arm with just enough pressure to be noticed but not quite enough to be definitively intentional.

He turned sharply, eyes tracking with interest that shifted quickly to desire as he took in my appearance, and I threw him a smile over my shoulder that promised absolutely nothing while suggesting everything.

His companions laughed at whatever expression had crossed his face, their voices carrying even as I disappeared into the crowd and left him standing there trying to decide if he’d just been propositioned or mocked.

The inner circle at night—which was always night down here, ti asured by shifts and schedules rather than the sun we’d never see—transford into sothing out of fever dreams and artistic manifestos.

I passed beneath an elevated walkway just as soone above dropped a glass of wine—whether accidentally or deliberately I couldn’t tell—and dodged the falling liquid with enhanced reflexes that made the movent look choreographed rather than reactive.

A woman nearby wasn’t so lucky, the wine splashing across her expensive dress and drawing a shriek of outrage that probably registered on seismographs in distant districts.

I kept moving, not out of callousness but because stopping would have ant getting involved in whatever scene was about to unfold, and I had neither the ti nor the inclination to play diator in disputes over ruined clothing.

The crowds grew denser as I approached the central plaza where street perforrs gathered in the highest concentration, drawn by the foot traffic and the promise of generous tips from nobles who wanted to be seen as cultured patrons of the arts.

Just then, soone grabbed my arm—not aggressively, just seeking attention—and I spun with a laugh that sounded delighted rather than annoyed, taking in the young nobleman with more money than sense written across his eager face.

"Dance with !" he called over the ambient noise, already reaching for my waist.

"Maybe next ti, sweetheart," I called back, extracting myself from his grip with a twist that left him holding empty air while I slipped away into a gap that had opened in the crowd.

His disappointed expression followed for three steps before soone else caught his attention, the city’s endless appetite for distraction already moving past our brief interaction.

Just a day ago I’d received a letter delivered through channels so secret I’d had to burn it after reading to ensure no trace remained—the two Velvets I’d appropriated from Oberen’s defeated operation, the ones I’d stationed to keep watch over Mavus Grey and report back on his movents and machinations.

The ssage had been brief, almost cryptic, containing nothing but coordinates, a code, a ti, and the kind of urgency that made my instincts scream warnings I’d learned to heed.

Now I was heading toward that eting point with my heart racing and my mind cycling through possibilities that ranged from revelations that would change everything to traps that would end with my body feeding whatever creatures lived in the city’s deepest shadows.

The library erged from between two larger buildings like an afterthought that had sohow beco architecture, its entrance marked by twin pillars of dark tal inlaid with geotric patterns.

The Gilded Athenaeum, the brass plaque beside the door proclaid in letters that glead despite the perpetual haze.

I paused at the threshold to take it in properly.

The building itself seed to defy several principles of structural engineering I’d always assud were non-negotiable—walls that curved at angles that shouldn’t have been stable, windows positioned asymtrically in ways that created visual tension, decorative elents that jutted out at forty-five degree angles like frozen explosions of brass, copper, and dark wood.

The doors were massive things of reinforced glass etched with patterns that depicted books transforming into birds taking flight, and when I pushed through them they swung open with chanical smoothness that suggested regular maintenance by people who took their work seriously.

The interior hit like a physical force—not with size, though the space was certainly larger than the exterior had suggested, but with sheer concentrated atmosphere compressed into architectural form.

The ceiling soared overhead in a vault of dark wood ribbed with brass supports that branched and divided like tallic trees, each junction marked by light fixtures that hung suspended on chains and glowed with steady warmth.

The walls were lined floor to ceiling with bookshelves carved from the sa dark wood, their surfaces inlaid with geotric patterns of lighter wood and tal that created hypnotic designs when you let your eyes drift across them.

But it was the details that really sold the space—the way railings curved in art nouveau flourishes before snapping into sharp angles more typical of industrial design, the light fixtures that combined organic flowing lines with chanical precision, the floor tiles arranged in patterns that shifted from curves to angles to curves again as they spread out from the entrance.

Everything felt simultaneously ancient and modern, organic and chanical, warm and cold, like soone had taken opposing design philosophies and forced them to coexist in the sa space through sheer stubborn determination.

At the front desk sat an old man who looked like he’d been specifically designed to complent the library’s aesthetic.

His attire was black and gold—not the cheap gold of costu jewelry but the deep, rich gold of actual precious tal worked into fabric through techniques I didn’t understand and couldn’t afford to ask about.

His face was a study in controlled aging, wrinkles that suggested wisdom rather than decay, and across his features ran decorative elents that had been applied with artistic precision—thin lines of gold leaf painted across his cheekbones in geotric patterns, small brass studs set into his earlobes in ascending sizes, a monocle that wasn’t just functional but genuinely beautiful in its construction of crystal and tal.

His hair was white and swept back from his forehead in a style that probably required daily maintenance, and his hands when they moved across the desk’s surface did so with the deliberate precision of soone who’d spent decades mastering the art of aningful gesture.

He looked up as I approached, eyes that were still sharp despite his obvious age tracking my movent with the assessing quality of soone who’d learned to read people the way others read books.

I reached the desk and leaned against it with casual confidence I only partially felt, letting my smile curl into sothing that was friendly without being overly familiar.

"Good evening," I said, pitching my voice to carry just to him and no further. "I’m looking for sothing specific. A particular volu on advanced economic theory."

His expression didn’t change beyond the slight lifting of his eyebrow.

"We have many volus on that subject," he replied, his voice carrying the kind of cultured accent that spoke of education and refinent. "Perhaps you could be more specific about which text you’re seeking?"

"The one discussing the redistribution of wealth through unconventional channels," I said carefully, each word chosen from the coded language I’d morized from the letter I’d received. "Specifically the Chapter on shadow markets and their impact on traditional power structures."

Understanding flashed across his features so quickly I might’ve missed it if I hadn’t been watching for exactly that reaction.

He nodded once—a single deliberate dip of his head that acknowledged both my request and his comprehension of what I was actually asking for—then stood from his chair with movents that were surprisingly smooth for soone his age.

"Ah yes," he said, his tone shifting into sothing that sounded perfectly natural to anyone who might be listening but carried layers of aning to . "That particular volu is kept in our special collection on the second floor. Follow , please."

He moved from behind the desk and began walking toward a staircase I hadn’t initially noticed, carved from the sa dark wood as everything else and spiraling upward in a graceful curve that defied my expectations for how staircases should behave.

The second floor opened into a labyrinth of bookshelves that seed to have been arranged by soone with either a very specific organizational philosophy or absolutely no organizational philosophy whatsoever.

We moved deeper into the maze, taking turns that felt random but which the old man navigated with absolute confidence, passing through sections dedicated to subjects that ranged from mundane to deeply concerning.

I caught glimpses of titles as we passed—treatises on advanced mathematics sitting next to guides for summoning entities from dinsions that probably shouldn’t be nad, historical accounts of wars long forgotten shelved beside what appeared to be cookbooks written in languages I didn’t recognize.

Finally we arrived at a door that absolutely shouldn’t have existed based on the spatial logic of the building as I understood it.

It was positioned in a wall that by all reasonable architectural principles should have been an exterior wall, which ant we should’ve been looking at brick or stone rather than an ornate portal carved from dark wood and inlaid with brass in patterns that hurt slightly to look at directly.

The door itself seed to pulse with barely contained magic, wards and protections layered so thickly I could feel them pressing against my skin like atmospheric pressure changing before a storm.

The old man produced a key from sowhere in his clothing—I genuinely didn’t see where it ca from, it simply appeared in his hand as though summoned—and inserted it into a lock that I would have sworn wasn’t there a mont ago.

He turned it with deliberate slowness, and I heard chanisms engage that sounded far too complex for any normal lock, followed by a sound like breaking glass that made my teeth ache.

The wards dissolved with visible reluctance, leaving behind a faint shimr in the air that gradually faded. He withdrew the key, returned it to wherever it had co from, and gestured toward the door with one elegant hand before stepping back into the shadows between bookshelves and effectively vanishing from my awareness.

I stood there for a mont, staring at the door and running through all the reasons this could be a catastrophically bad idea while simultaneously acknowledging that I was absolutely going to open it anyway because turning back now would an admitting fear and I’d built my entire survival strategy on refusing to do that.

I readied myself for a grand entrance—because even potentially walking into disaster deserved style points—squared my shoulders, arranged my expression into sothing between confident and slightly amused, then pushed the door open with more force than strictly necessary.

The room beyond defied my expectations so thoroughly I actually stopped moving for several seconds just to process what I was seeing.

The space was circular, which already violated the architectural logic of the rectangular building it supposedly existed within. The floor was polished black marble shot through with veins of gold that ford patterns too deliberate to be natural, creating what looked like a map of sothing when viewed from above.

Around the periter stood seven pillars carved from what appeared to be solid blocks of crystal, each one glowing with internal light that shifted through colors I didn’t have nas for.

In the center of the room sat a table carved from a single piece of dark wood so massive it must have co from a tree that would dwarf most buildings, its surface polished to mirror brightness and covered in papers, books, and what looked like alchemical equipnt arranged with obsessive precision.

Then I noticed it.

My heart froze in my chest, stopped completely for one terrible mont as my brain caught up to what my eyes were showing .

Instead of finding the two Velvets I’d sent to spy on Mavus Grey, instead of receiving the report I’d been expecting, I found Mavus himself standing in front of that impossible table with his hands clasped behind his back in a posture of patient waiting.

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