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Now reading: Chapter 258: The Petition from The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality, a Fantasy novel by VedScans.

Grand Ordinator Harven Brightforge had read twelve petitions this morning. Eleven of them had been forgettable — infrastructure requests, temple staffing rotations, a dispute over grazing rights between two abbeys that had been arguing over the sa pasture for thirty years. Standard administrative erosion.

The twelfth petition was three pages long and written in handwriting so unsteady it looked like the author had been composing during an earthquake.

He read it twice.

Then he sent for Cardinal Vessen.

The Cardinal arrived within the hour. He was a tall man — Human, mid-sixties, lean in the way that lifelong ascetics were lean, with close-cropped silver hair and hands that moved with the deliberate precision of soone who asured every gesture. He wore the crimson sash of the Cardinalate over standard Crucible robes and carried nothing. Vessen never carried notes. He rembered everything, which made arguing with him both more efficient and more exhausting than arguing with anyone else in the Dominion’s religious hierarchy.

"You’ve seen this," Harven said, sliding the petition across his desk.

Vessen sat. Read the petition at a asured pace — not slowly, but with the careful attention of a man who understood that haste in reading often ant haste in judgnt. When he finished, he set the pages down and aligned their edges with his fingertips.

"Elaya Thornwick," he said. "Records hall. Third-tier scribe."

"Knowledge-blessed."

"I’m aware of her blessing. It doesn’t make this petition less dangerous."

Harven leaned back. His office in the Iron Citadel’s administrative wing was functional — stone walls, iron desk, the Cog-and-Fla banner behind his chair. He was seventy years old, and the office reflected a man who had spent forty years in administration: organized, practical, entirely without vanity. "Walk through your objection."

Vessen did not hesitate. He’d been expecting this conversation — possibly for longer than the petition had existed. "The Crucible’s authority over doctrinal texts rests on the chain of transmission. Every copy of every scripture is produced by a licensed scribe, approved by a Deacon, and distributed through temple channels. This chain ensures doctrinal consistency. Every citizen who reads the Forge Catechism reads the sa Forge Catechism — not an interpretation, not a paraphrase. The original text, in the original words."

"The printing device produces identical copies."

"The printing device produces identical copies of whatever text is placed in its fra." Vessen let the distinction settle. "Today, the Foundational Prayer. Tomorrow, what? Theological comntary? Political pamphlets? Private interpretations of scripture that no Deacon has reviewed?"

"The petition requests licensing. Not deregulation."

"Licensing is the first step toward deregulation. We license the press. Then soone petitions to expand the list of approved texts. Then soone petitions to allow private production under license. Then soone publishes without a license and claims the precedent supports it." Vessen folded his hands. "I’ve served the Crucible for forty-one years, Grand Ordinator. I have seen what happens when we open a gate and assu we can control the flood."

Harven studied the Cardinal’s face. Vessen wasn’t angry. He wasn’t defensive. He was afraid — and Vessen expressed fear through exactitude, which made it easy to mistake for rigidity.

"Cardinal," Harven said carefully, "what would you have do? The device exists. Thornwick has demonstrated its function. I can suppress the petition, confiscate the press, and reassign her to a provincial records hall where she’ll spend ten years copying grain tallies. I can do that."

"But."

"But the Design doesn’t favor suppression."

The Design. The unspoken architecture that the Grand Ordinator served — the divine will, translated into institutional policy. Every Grand Ordinator since the office’s founding understood that Zephyr’s intent favored innovation, even when innovation was uncomfortable. The Forge domain was not a taphor. It was a mandate: build, improve, advance. Suppressing a tool that multiplied knowledge production a hundredfold would be a direct violation of the mandate that justified the Grand Ordinator’s office.

Vessen knew this. The muscles along his temple flexed once — the only physical concession to disagreent his discipline would permit.

"Then I recomnd constraints," the Cardinal said.

"Na them."

"First: the Crucible holds the primary license. All initial printing is conducted under religious authority — we control the first texts, the first distribution, the first public exposure. The population’s introduction to printed material will co through our hands.

"Second: the First Forge Academy receives a secondary license — academic production only, reviewed by a Crucible liaison before publication.

"Third: all private printing is prohibited without Cardinal-level approval. No exceptions. No precedent for expansion for a minimum of five years.

"Fourth: the scribe — Thornwick — is reassigned to the Crucible’s printing operation. She built the device. She maintains it. Under our supervision."

Harven considered. The constraints were restrictive but defensible. They preserved the Crucible’s oversight while allowing the technology to exist — a holding pattern, a responsible first step rather than a permanent answer.

"Agreed," he said. "With one modification."

Vessen waited.

"Thornwick stays in the Hall of Records. She reports to both the records administration and the Crucible liaison. Shared oversight, not sole custody. I won’t have a Knowledge-blessed scribe treated as if she’s committed an offense."

Silence. Vessen’s hands remained folded. The calculus was visible behind his eyes — what he could accept, what he could tolerate, what he could survive politically within the Cardinalate.

"Acceptable," the Cardinal said.

Harven pulled the petition toward him. Signed it. Applied the Grand Ordinator’s seal — the Cog-and-Fla in wax, heavy and final.

Vessen stood. Adjusted the crimson sash. Walked to the door. He paused with his hand on the iron handle.

"Grand Ordinator."

"Cardinal."

"Rember today." Vessen’s voice was quiet. The asured cadence hadn’t changed, but sothing underneath it had shifted — sothing older than strategy, closer to grief. "This is when we lost control of the word."

He left the chamber without waiting for a response.

Harven sat with the signed petition. The wax seal cooled. Outside the window, the Cog-and-Fla spire of the Grand Cathedral caught the midday light and cast a shadow across the courtyard where, forty years ago, he’d taken his oath of office.

He had the unsettling certainty that Vessen was right.

He filed the petition anyway.

The filing process was chanical — three copies, hand-stamped, distributed to the Crucible’s administrative archive, the Hall of Records directorate, and the Grand Ordinator’s personal cabinet. Harven completed each step with the deliberate attention of a man who understood that bureaucracy was not the opposite of action. Bureaucracy was how action survived the people who perford it. The petition would exist in three locations, signed and sealed, after Harven was gone and after Vessen was gone and after Thornwick’s trembling hands had gone still. That was the point. The decision had to outlast the decision-maker.

He sat with the empty desk for a mont. The ironwood surface was clean — he’d always kept it clean, a habit Elara had started and he’d continued without examining why. The Cog-and-Fla carving looked back at him from the front panel, the left side worn smooth by Elara’s wrist, the right side beginning to show his own pattern. Two Grand Ordinators. The sa desk. The sa impossible job of steering a civilization that was accelerating faster than its institutions could adapt.

Vessen was right about one thing. They had lost control of the word. Today was rely the formalization — the loss had happened the mont Elaya Thornwick pressed her first page and realized that the knowledge she’d been copying by hand could exist without her. The press didn’t need a scribe’s skill. It needed a scribe’s understanding — the selection of what to print, the arrangent of type, the quality of the ink. But it didn’t need the hand. And a world where the hand wasn’t necessary was a world where the institutions that had trained the hand needed to find a new reason to exist.

The Crucible would adapt. Vessen’s constraints would hold for five years, maybe ten. Then soone smarter than Vessen or more ambitious than Thornwick would push, and the constraints would stretch, and the word would escape the last formal boundary between the institution and the populace. Harven could see it coming the way a man standing on a levee could see the river rising — not with panic, but with the asured understanding that the levee was never the solution. The levee was the delay.

He picked up the last copy of the petition. Walked it himself to the records clerk’s desk on the lower floor — a small gesture, unnecessary, a procedural courtesy that junior administrators noticed and senior ones forgot. The clerk accepted it without comnt, stamped the receiving log, and placed it in the outgoing tray for the Hall of Records.

Sowhere across the administrative quarter, Elaya Thornwick was sitting at her bench, waiting for the answer that would determine whether the thing she’d built would be permitted to exist.

The answer was already in the tray.

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