Zilton Walker stood at the head of the table. He had sent word to five people fifteen minutes ago. He had not sat down while he waited.
They arrived within minutes of each other, entering through the hall's single door in the order they had been summoned.
Elder Garan ca first. He was the oldest of them—late sixties, thin through the shoulders, and slightly stooped in the way that years of intensive cultivation sotis produced in n who had pushed their bodies harder than their fras fully agreed with.
His robes were dark and well-kept but old, the fabric worn to a particular softness at the cuffs that spoke of long use rather than neglect. His face was deeply lined, his hair white and thin, but his eyes were completely and entirely sharp—the eyes of a man whose body had conceded things to ti that his mind had refused to.
He moved with the caution of soone who had learned decades ago not to waste anything, including movent.
Elder Tom followed close behind. He was mid-fifties, average in height and build in a way that was so complete it seed almost deliberate—the kind of man who disappeared into a crowd of two because there was nothing about his appearance that demanded registration.
His robes were plain, his face unremarkable, his expression permanently set to a neutral that revealed nothing and never changed, regardless of what was being discussed. He had spent his entire life in the Walker Clan, using that quality to considerable effect.
Elder Mara entered third. She was in her early sixties, straight-backed and silver-haired, wearing her years with the particular composure of a woman who had been right about enough important things over enough ti that she no longer needed to announce her authority — it simply preceded her into rooms.
Her robes were the sa Walker Clan grey as the others, but worn with a precision that the others did not match. She took her seat without looking to either side.
Elder Rael ca in moving slightly faster than the others, the way he always did — late forties, lean and angular with a fighter's fra that had gone slightly leaner as the years reduced what was unnecessary and left only what was functional. His hands settled on the table in front of him, but did not stay entirely still. They rarely did.
Elder Rian was last. Early forties, the youngest of the five and the broadest through the chest and shoulders, with a patient, settled expression that ca from a genuine habit of listening before speaking rather than simply the performance of it. He closed the door behind him and took his position without hurrying.
All five of them looked at Zilton.
The room with six people in it felt different from the room with one. The collective attention had weight. The lamp flas held steady in the air that had gone very still.
Zilton spoke without opening remarks. Next month, there will be a Forest Hunt Competition held in the Magical Forbidden Forest outside the city of Magical City. Two cultivators per participating clan. Age restriction — both entries must be twenty-five years of age or below.
The competition was being conducted directly by Grey Shadow Hall, operating out of Celestial Brook City. He delivered each piece of information at the sa pace, at the sa level, without marking any of it as more significant than another. He let the full shape of it arrive before anyone responded.
The silence that followed lasted several seconds.
Elder Garan's fingers moved once against the table surface — a small thing, barely visible. Elder Rael's posture shifted slightly. Elder Rian looked at the table for a mont and then back up at Zilton. Elder Mara's expression did not change, but sothing behind her eyes processed the information with visible efficiency. Elder Tom looked at the wall across from him as though reading sothing written there that only he could see.
Then Elder Garan spoke. His voice was unhurried and carried easily through the quiet hall.
He said two nas.
Harvey Walker. Aaden Walker.
Both under twenty-five. Harvey was currently at Spirit Root Realm Level 7 Low Stage. Aaden sat at Level 6 Low Stage. Elder Garan spoke about them with the quiet, grounded confidence of a man who had observed both for years and who had arrived at his assessnt through accumulated evidence rather than preference. Their training over recent months has been consistent and producing results.
One month of focused preparation with properly allocated resources would have a asurable impact on both. He said it plainly and without embellishnt because it did not require embellishnt.
The room received the two nas with a stillness that was its own form of agreent. Elder Rael and Elder Rian exchanged a brief glance — not a question, more a confirmation of sothing already understood between them. No voice of disagreent rose. The selection had the feeling of sothing that had always been going to be this answer once the question was properly ford.
Then Elder Tom spoke.
His voice carried the sa flat, unremarkable quality it always did — the tone of a man delivering information about weather or road conditions rather than anything that required particular weight. He noted that the Osborn clan from Magical City would almost certainly be participating in the competition. He noted that, based on available information, Robert Osborn would be one of their two entries without question. He paused for exactly one breath.
Then he said, without raising his voice or altering his expression in any observable way, that the Forbidden Forest was a place where things happened that were difficult to account for fully afterward.
He stopped there. He did not add to it. He looked at the table surface with the sa neutral expression he had worn since entering the room.
The hall was very quiet.
Nobody objected. Nobody confird it directly either. The statent sat in the room like an object that had been placed on the table—present, acknowledged, requiring no further discussion.
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