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Now reading: Chapter 688: Half-Breaths Buy Rooms (2) from The Eccentric Entomologist is Now a Queen's Consort, a Action novel by Arkalphaze.

"Listen," he said. His voice re-found that small teacher tone that made people lean without realizing. "We have to finish this the way we started. No big heroics. We are not hamrs."

Her chin lowered a milliter: go on.

He drew breath and pitched his words to the nearest captains watching his hand, not his face. His fingers talked in clean lines. "No kill‑rush," he said. "We cradle the limiter first. Then we take the head."

From other nets and perches, small signals answered—palms opened, two fingers raised, a bow lifted and tilted. Agreent moved like a wave rolling the bones of a fish.

Bright hearts had rolled into a shallow cup of stone near the crack, shining through dust like coins at the bottom of a well. They seed to glow brighter because the room had dimd. A crown flickered toward them out of habit and stopped when Mikhailis raised two fingers without looking.

"Invest only for archer velocity and rim re‑knit," he said, the words flat as rules on a page. "No glamour. No swelling crowns. One‑cycle delay holds."

The nearest lich set a bony hand over its own crown, a gesture like smoothing unruly hair, and returned to tagging cores with the neat patience of a clerk. The Myco‑Archivist made a dry double‑tap with its tool—approval—then, almost primly, pushed a sour heart away with the back of the tool as if shooing a rude insect.

Thalatha’s shoulders eased by a hair’s breadth. It was barely movent. He felt it as pressure easing off bone more than he saw it. "Order with rcy," she breathed, small enough that the line would hear the sense without being asked to admire it.

He let himself be pleased, then let the pleasure go. There was quiet work to do.

"Moth," he said, pitched for that shadowy pinpoint drifting the ring’s edge, "outer glyphs. One stroke only. Make them rember rain."

Mothcloak’s wingtip brushed a vertical seam six body‑lengths away. The sar didn’t erase; it persuaded. A glyph lost its hunger, as if yawning and deciding spellwork was for younger jaws.

"Sky," he called, "jaws shy—not kills. Keep their mouths closed."

From the higher net, two arrows rose on the lamp swell and fell with bored accuracy. A Skullcaster flinched its jaw shut for a breath it could not afford. That was enough. Silk popped a thimble‑bell over the two glyphs that tried to scuttle free like roaches.

"Scurabons," he said, "right elbow taxes continue. Every swing pays."

Four knife‑forms unfolded from shadows and drifted along the Juggernaut husk’s reach, tapping tendon‑points in bone logic with the backs of their sickles. Tap, tap—small insults that stayed in the joint even as pride forgot it had been stung.

"Tangles," Mikhailis added, "last links only. Make the arm lie to the shoulder."

Blue lines snapped, humd, and returned. A chain that had started to think like a limb beca a nervous accessory again.

Rodion put numbers in his periphery in tidy, indifferent script.

"Embarrassnt is a powerful spell," he whispered, and felt the sling vibrate with Thalatha’s almost‑huff—the closest she allowed herself to laughter mid‑fall.

He opened his left hand and let the lotus chain drape across his palm until the tal’s inner warmth found his skin. Contract authority woke in the links—a soft recognition. He did not pull. He asked.

Permission, not force, he told himself. Librarian’s stamp, not thief’s pry.

The crack across the mask pulsed once. The sensation wasn’t sound; it was like a caged bird putting its beak to wire. A plea. A test. He kept his breath even.

"Crymber," he said, and for once the word was not an order but a request, "give a cradle. Frost first. Then Ember. Gentle."

The Twins obeyed like good weather. Frost moved along the fissure with a breath so light it made the air taste of clean stone. A feather‑thin rim of white ford, not rigid, simply present. Ember followed with two careful taps that spread warmth like tea in a cold belly. The white did not lt. It settled.

"Sli," he said, "anchors. Pins only. Keep the heat where it belongs."

Low plates skidded along, bellies kissing stone. Tiny beads of gel popped into the seam’s corners like neat rivets. No shine—just a matte honesty that heat liked.

"Silk," he finished, "breathing cloak. Flex, don’t freeze."

A thin veil sank over the fissure, exhaling when the room inhaled, taking up slack when the room exhaled. It didn’t trap; it accompanied.

"Hold him," Mikhailis told the wedge captains, and though they were in scattered nets now, the ssage traveled. Shields leveled. Rims pressed. The line rembered how to be a wall without needing a floor to pretend to be ground.

A Hypnoveil lifted its mantle and showed the Juggernaut’s logic a simple, honest picture: the chain that had failed to find a mouth, the hook that had kissed iron and co away with nothing. The boss corrected in the wrong direction the way old habits do.

"That’s our inch," he said, mostly to the breath in his chest. He touched the lotus seal to the crack, a librarian closing a ledger at the end of a long day.

What held inside did not explode; it exhaled. Warden script loosened out of bone like a braid undone by patient fingers. Threads of living wood slid toward the elvish river thread he had tracked earlier in dust and guesswork. The stag mask’s frown relaxed into sothing like apology. The ribplate harness lost its authority in one sigh and buckled inward like scaffolding finally told it didn’t have a permit.

The sound it made—book‑spine, not bone—ran through his teeth and out into the do.

The room’s bass dropped a register. It didn’t vanish. It simply stopped pretending to be bigger than lungs.

From the wall, in the breath that followed, ca the smallest sound. Not air. Not stone. A tiny string, plucked, damped by blankets. He felt it more than heard it.

I didn’t imagine that, he told himself, and because hope is fragile when it is small, he decided to believe his own report for once.

They did the aftermath without greed. Librarian hands—bone-slim, steady—tagged clean and sour with a clerk’s economy of motion. When a core rolled, a lich caught it as a shopkeeper catches a coin from a regular: neither eager nor slow, simply correct. Only strict drift rose: a rim plug here, a spear filler there, two archers to stitch a hole that had annoyed everyone in silence. No plates. No plaques. Nothing that slt of nas.

Mikhailis selected one permitted splinter, a crescent of lacquered bone with a seal cut clean through its middle. He pinched it between forefinger and thumb, turned it once so the seal-light winked, then slipped it into the small inside pocket he kept for promises, not prizes. The habit steadied his hands. Proof for Elowen, not a story for my ego.

Rodion recorded the room’s signatures with a chill exactness that never changed. The data lay in Mikhailis’s periphery like frost.

Thalatha stood beside him and refused to look at the dead thing. Her gaze tracked wrists and knuckles, not crowns. She watched the way a lich set a core down, how another’s finger paused half a breath over a jar and moved on—no hunger. "The elder necromancer I trusted," she said, voice as low as a secret that had learned to walk upright, "would have liked this."

He didn’t look up. He kept his eyes on the next small task: a bowstring re-twist, a shield’s leather loop tightened by a notch. "I’ll try to deserve that," he answered, sa size, because anything larger would turn the sentint flimsy. Save the big words for rooms that aren’t listening, he warned himself.

The Whiteways listened anyway.

The first warning ca like a throat being cleared by the building itself, a bass tremor felt more in teeth than ears. Dust on a broken plinth woke and lifted, motes turning in a slow, puzzled dance. Then the world leaned, not a lurch but a patient tilt, as if a great animal had shifted its weight and rembered it had bones.

"Nope," Mikhailis said, too quietly for wit. "I don’t like that word."

He saw it then with ugly clarity: the mandala had never been a carpet; it had been a keystone. They had unbraided the warden heart and set it free and the structure above, robbed of its lie, was asking itself what it had ever loved about balance. Ribs groaned—a long ship’s timbers in a bad storm. Hairline seams unzipped with a sound like paper being torn by steady hands. Plinths drifted as if the floor had beco a slow river and they were polite boats.

"Shields roof!" Thalatha’s voice cut the chamber cleanly. Tower shields rose and t, rims kissing into a single dark ceiling. Silk breathed out and threw a do low and flexible; its lattice sang a taut, thread-thin music. Sli plates skated, painting two dull skid lanes where bodies were already going: a safer path chosen before fear could pick the worse one. Tanglebeetles dug anchors into a pair of ribs still pretending they had a job, blue lines stitching into bone with a humming finality.

"Inside, inside!" Mikhailis used his whole arm, the broad wave of a harbor master, to sweep liches and loose bones toward shelter. Crowns dimd to worklight. The Myco-Archivist clutched its toolkit flat against its chest, gills fanning to taste the dust for poison while its thin feet found the least treacherous angles. Archers dropped bows and beca catchers; hands that knew bowstrings learned wrists and elbows with the sa care. The Crymber Twins moved along the do’s seams, Frost tracing a pale assurance, Ember touching it with warmth, making flexibility a promise instead of a hope.

For one strange heartbeat he felt proud of how boring they were—no glory, no panic, only practiced kindness. Then the room made its decision.

The chamber sheared.

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