The Vorn estate had an apothecary.
Not a proper one — nothing so useful. The family didn’t bother with herbology or pill refinent. That was common work, beneath the notice of a dynasty that ruled thirteen worlds through raw power and political dominance.
But tucked behind the eastern servants’ quarters, in a cramped room that slled of dried moss and mildew, sat an old woman nad Maren.
She’d been the estate’s informal healer for forty years. No one rembered who hired her. No one particularly cared. She patched up servants, dispensed headache redies, and occasionally brewed a fertility tonic for wives desperate to produce an heir the Patriarch would actually acknowledge.
Kael had never visited her.
Until now.
The door creaked as he pushed it open. Shelves lined every wall, cramd with jars of unlabelled herbs, crushed powders, and murky liquids that glowed faintly in the dim light. A cauldron bubbled in the corner. A cat that might have been dead or sleeping occupied a chair.
Maren looked up from her mortar and pestle.
"Oh," she said flatly. "A Vorn."
"Just one."
"They’re all just one until they beco a problem." She went back to grinding. "What do you want?"
"Information."
"Information is free. Good information costs."
Kael set a credit chip on the counter. Maren didn’t look at it.
"I said good information, boy. That’s pocket change."
He set down a second chip. Then a third.
Maren glanced at the pile. "Better. Talk."
"Alchemy," Kael said. "Pill refinent. Herb cultivation. Tell all about it."
Maren stopped grinding.
She looked at him — really looked — with eyes that were far sharper than they had any right to be in a face that wrinkled.
"Alchemy," she repeated slowly. "You’re asking about alchemy."
"Is that strange?"
"In this family? Yes." She set down the pestle. "The Vorns don’t refine pills. They don’t cultivate herbs. They don’t bother with anything that requires patience when they can just punch harder instead."
"But other families do."
"So." Maren leaned back. "The Ashbury family maintains the largest alchemical operation in the Thirteen Worlds — pills, elixirs, spirit dicines. They supply half the academies. The Du Lac family focuses on healing herbs — their agricultural worlds produce raw materials that alchemists pay fortunes for. The Morrison family doesn’t practice alchemy directly, but they control the trade networks that distribute finished products."
"And pill grades? How does that work?"
Maren’s lips twitched — almost a smile.
"Now you’re asking the right questions."
She reached beneath the counter and pulled out a worn leather journal, flipping to a page covered in cramped handwriting.
"Pills follow the sa grading system as techniques. Mortal Grade at the bottom — basic healing, minor mana restoration, nothing special. Earth Grade above that — standard combat buffs, moderate healing, useful but unremarkable. Heaven Grade is where it gets interesting — pills that can accelerate cultivation, repair ridian damage, temporarily boost talent sensitivity."
"How much do Heaven Grade pills cost?"
"More than you can afford. More than most people can afford. A single Heaven Grade Mana Condensation Pill sells for roughly 200,000 credits on the open market. A ridian Stabilization Pill runs closer to 500,000." Maren closed the journal. "Above Heaven Grade, you get into Mystic Grade and beyond. Those are controlled by the Great Families and never sold publicly."
Kael filed the numbers away. 200,000 credits. He had roughly three hundred to his na.
"And raw herbs? If soone wanted to refine pills themselves?"
Maren laughed — a dry, rasping sound.
"You want to be an alchemist now?"
"I want to understand the option."
"Fine. Raw herbs are graded by potency: Common, Refined, Rare, Unique, and Legendary. A skilled alchemist can take Refined herbs and produce Earth Grade pills. Rare herbs can yield Heaven Grade. Unique and Legendary herbs are so scarce that entire wars have been fought over them." She fixed him with a knowing look. "But here’s the part that matters: pill refinent isn’t just about ingredients. It requires comprehension. An alchemist has to understand the fundantal nature of what they’re creating — the interaction between herb properties, the flow of mana during refinent, the intention behind each step. Two alchemists with identical ingredients can produce wildly different results."
"Like Core Formation."
"Exactly like Core Formation." Maren leaned forward. "Which tells you’re not asking about alchemy for fun. You’re preparing for a breakthrough, and you don’t have the resources to do it safely."
Kael said nothing.
Maren stared at him for a long mont.
"I’ll tell you sothing for free, boy. Not because I like you — I don’t know you well enough to like you — but because I’ve watched this family chew through children for forty years, and you’re the first one who’s ever co in here asking how things work instead of demanding I fix sothing."
She pulled a small pouch from beneath her cloak and set it on the counter.
"Starwhisper Root. Rared grade. When brewed into a tea, it heightens mana perception — makes it easier to comprehend the nature of mana flow. It won’t replace proper ridian conditioning, but it’ll accelerate the process." She pushed the pouch toward him. "Three doses. That’s all I have."
"How much?"
"Nothing. Consider it an investnt." Her eyes glittered. "If you survive what’s coming, I’d like to think I helped."
Kael took the pouch.
"Why?"
"Don’t ask" Maren turned back to her mortar. "Now get out. You’re disturbing the cat."
LATER — SOPHIE’S QUARTERS
Kael knocked twice.
No answer.
He knocked again.
"Go away," Sophie’s voice ca through the door — muffled, strained. "I’m not feeling well."
"It’s Kael."
Silence.
Then footsteps. The door opened a crack. Sophie’s face appeared — pale, eyes red-rimd, hair disheveled. She looked like she hadn’t slept in days.
"What do you want?" Her voice was hollow.
Kael held up the pouch of Starwhisper Root.
"I need your help."
Sophie stared at the pouch. "What is that?"
"Starwhisper Root. It accelerates mana comprehension. I need soone to brew it into tea — the preparation process requires precision, and I don’t know enough about herbology to do it correctly." He paused. "Your family has a scholarly background. I thought you might know how."
Sophie’s brow furrowed. "The Mann family studied herbology generations ago. I know the basic principles, but I’m not an alchemist."
"Basic principles might be enough. The old healer in the servants’ wing gave instructions — I just need soone steady to follow them."
"Why not do it yourself?"
"Because I’ll be ditating while the tea brews. The Starwhisper Root needs to be prepared within a specific ti window, and the brewer needs to monitor mana infusion throughout the process." He t her eyes. "I need soone I can trust."
The words landed like stones in still water.
Sophie’s breath caught.
"Co in," she whispered.
Two hours later, Kael sat cross-legged in Sophie’s private ditation room — a small, windowless space with padded floors and dim lighting. The air slled like lavender and old books.
Sophie knelt beside a small burner, following Maren’s instructions with trembling hands. The Starwhisper Root had dissolved into a pale blue liquid that shimred faintly as mana infused through it.
"Concentration needs to hold for thirty more seconds," she murmured, eyes fixed on the liquid. "Then reduce heat by half and stir counterclockwise seven tis."
"Good." Kael’s voice was distant, his eyes closed. "Keep going."
Sophie completed the sequence.
The liquid turned a deeper blue — almost violet — and began to emit a soft glow.
"It’s done."
Kael opened his eyes and accepted the cup she offered. The tea was warm, faintly sweet, with an aftertaste that tingled on his tongue.
He drank it in one swallow.
The effect was imdiate.
His perception of mana sharpened — not gradually, but violently. Every thread of energy in the room beca visible, tangible, almost audible. He could see the mana flowing through Sophie’s body, could trace the pathways of her ridians, could see the faint golden glow of her Truth Sense pulsing in her skull.
Kael closed his eyes and forced himself to focus.
"Sophie."
"Yes?"
"How long have you felt this way about ?"
The room went silent.
"I... I don’t know what you—"
Kael stood slowly, setting the empty cup aside. He walked toward her — each step deliberate, asured, inevitable.
"Look at ."
She couldn’t. Her eyes were fixed on the floor, tears spilling down her cheeks.
"Look at , Sophie."
She raised her gaze.
Kael stopped directly in front of her, close enough that she could feel the warmth of his body, close enough that his silver-flecked eyes filled her entire vision.
"I know," he said quietly. "I’ve known since the garden."
"Then why—"
"Why co here? Why ask for your help?" He tilted his head. "Because I need you. Not just for this — for everything that’s coming. I need soone in this family who would burn the world for ."
"Kael..."
"This doesn’t change what I said before. I can’t give you what you want. I won’t be yours — not the way you need."
Sophie’s heart shattered at the words.
Then he leaned closer.
"But I’m not cruel enough to leave you drowning either."
His thumb traced her cheekbone.
"Tonight, you brew the second dose. And the third. And whatever else I need." His voice dropped. "And in exchange, I won’t pretend I don’t see you. I won’t look away when your heart beats too fast. I won’t pretend this doesn’t exist."
Sophie’s breath hitched.
"What are you offering?"
"Sothing worse than love." His eyes glead. "I’m offering you honesty."
He released her face and stepped back.
"Now please brew the second dose. I have work to do."
Sophie knelt before the burner with shaking hands.
Her heart was breaking and nding simultaneously.
[STATUS WINDOW]
Na: Kael Cassian Vorn
Age: 14
Realm: Mana Gathering (Rank 6)
Soul Integrity: 49%
Talent: Orange (Suppressed) | White (True — Locked)
Shadow Points: 450
Active Effects:
Starwhisper Tea (Dose 1/3) — Mana comprehension heightened. Duration: 6 hours.
Resources:
Grade 2 Spirit Stones: 0/2 (ETA 4 weeks)
Starwhisper Root: 2 doses remaining
New Note:
Associate Sophie Mann — Emotional state: Compromised. Loyalty: Absolute. Utility: High.
System Observation: You’re playing a dangerous ga, Fragnted One.
I know.
Are you going to finish it?
Kael closed the window without answering.
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