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Now reading: Chapter 86: The Empty Audience Seat from The Lamp That No Longer Shines: A LitRPG Action Comedy, a Action novel by BrokenBulb.

[Ti]: Day 67, Wednesday, 05:30 PM

[Location]: Royal Rosas Club · VIP Lounge

Hathaway pushed open the heavy mahogany doors of the Royal Rosas private lounge.

POP.

A cork detonated off the ceiling.

A cascading torrent of black and crimson confetti—cut into shapes that were unambiguously miniature skulls and jagged thorns—rained down across her hair, her shoulders, her face.

"And THERE she is!"

Rhode von Ludwig stood dead center in the lounge wearing her usual oversized T-shirt, rubber flip-flops, and a pair of cheap sunglasses.

Flanking her in immaculate, razor-sharp charcoal suits, arranged in a tactical formation normally reserved for siege operations, were six elite Witch lawyers clutching glowing briefcases. They radiated the cold, professional lethality of a firing squad that billed by the minute.

The visual contrast between the beach-bum vanguard and her litigation strike team was a masterpiece of localized absurdism.

Behind them, Bella's interior design contributions spoke for themselves.

A massive banner stretched across the back wall. The font was aggressively dark-gothic, but because this was a Ludwig production, the pitch-black letters were heavily backlit by a retina-searing, 10,000-lun crimson neon halo.

[THE ECLIPSE SEIZES THE AUTHORITY OF THE MORTAL COIL.] Bella herself stood beneath it in full thorny-vine hunting attire and eyepatch, her dark vines now interwoven with aggressively pulsing red mana-threads. She looked profoundly satisfied with her creative decisions.

Hathaway squinted against the blinding glare.

Wait.

She didn't just spend forty-seven days coming up with the 'Eclipse' nickna, Hathaway realized, staring at the perfectly balanced contrast of absolute dark and blinding light.

She actually overhauled her entire Chuunibyou aesthetic. From 'Pure Light Pollution' to 'Flashbang Gothic'—just so my non-glowing eyes would look like a deliberate, stylish centerpiece.

It was an act of profound familial love, executed with the subtlety of a flashbang.

On the plush leather sofas in the corner sat the involuntary atmosphere group.

Nino had her arms crossed and was radiating the contained fury of a woman physically extracted mid-experint.

Alucard held a cup of black tea in both hands with the hollow, thousand-yard stare of soone who had survived three consecutive municipal budget hearings.

Tasia sat upright and pristine, slowly working through a slice of strawberry shortcake with a small silver fork, radiating the tranquil, absolute detachnt of soone for whom other people's corporate crises were rely ambient background music.

Rhode and Bella definitely used highly questionable thods to get those three here, Hathaway noted internally. The how is a mystery best left unsolved.

"Here!" Rhode thrust a crystal flute into Hathaway's hand before she even finished closing the door.

"The second Nino posted your grade, I moved. Behind you have the finest intellectual property litigators in the White City. You say the word, hand over the schematic, and by morning they will have every underground workshop that breathes the sa air as your patent locked in a legal chokehold."

Hathaway looked at the glass.

The gratitude was genuine. Her family had mobilized a corporate army on pure hearsay in under an hour. That was either deeply touching or mildly alarming. The correct answer was probably both.

She raised the flute to her lips and drank.

The champagne was exquisite.

Crisp, cold, pale-gold—it rolled across her tongue and then ca the bloom: a warm, spreading numbness rising from the back of her throat, the effortless paralysis of sothing very expensive doing exactly what it was designed to do.

And in the microsecond that warmth registered, the lounge ceased to exist.

Not gone. Just—absent.

It wasn't a thought. Her brain didn't form the na. It was purely her body, which had stored the information sowhere below the verbal layer: the color of the liquid, the quality of the warmth, the specific texture of being rendered completely still without any force being applied.

She was still standing in that corridor. The crushing weight of an amber-gold coat. Eyes that turned looking into being seen.

One second.

The room snapped back. Hathaway lowered the flute. Her expression hadn't moved.

"The patent," she said, voice cutting cleanly through the soft jazz. "Is already handled. I don't need the lawyers."

The silence that followed was total.

Rhode's smile froze in place.

Her cheap sunglasses slipped exactly halfway down the bridge of her nose, and for one unguarded second the full, blazing 150-lun crimson of her pureblood Ludwig eyes was exposed to open air—pupils contracted to absolute pinpoints.

"Handled," Rhode repeated.

The word sounded like a word she had never encountered before. She looked at the six lawyers standing at attention. Then back at Hathaway.

"Handled by who? I moved the second the grade posted. I have people inside the administration. The network was already—"

"Irene," Hathaway said.

The na didn't land so much as depressurize the room.

All six corporate lawyers simultaneously stopped breathing. One of them, very quietly, took a half-step backward.

Rhode didn't gasp. She didn't flinch.

Instead, the absolute, bulletproof arrogance that usually powered her every movent simply flatlined.

She stood there, sunglasses still perched at the halfway point, and for a mont the only thing moving in her face was the thought cycling behind those frozen crimson irises.

Rhode had the Ludwig network, the club connections, the official institutional channels. She had moved the instant Nino's ssage ca through—and Irene, who held no seat in any of them, had already been waiting in the hallway when Hathaway stepped out of the office.

"Prove it," Rhode said, very quietly.

Hathaway reached into her pocket and set the heavy black coin on the glass coffee table.

Rhode had it in her hands before it finished settling.

She turned it over and over in her hands, thumb pressing into the mana engravings, tracing the geotry of the tal, hunting for a flaw.

Thirty seconds passed. Forty.

Finally, Rhode set it down with the expression of soone forced to concede a point they found personally offensive.

"Authentic," she muttered. "She was literally waiting at the finish line."

Across the room, Bella had not moved.

She was not looking at the coin.

Her single uncovered eye had been fixed on Hathaway's face since the champagne touched her lips.

Her Chuunibyou operating system was visibly processing an ergency patch—so kind of mythic-tier reinterpretation of a convergence the grimoires had never pre-rendered. The expansion pack was downloading in real ti.

"The trajectory of the Eclipse crossed the Radiant Sun prematurely," Bella intoned, with the grave weight of soone announcing a prophecy mid-revision.

Then her voice dropped. The theatricality receded by about fifteen percent.

"The contract is signed, cousin," Bella said quietly, stepping closer. "But the heat remains on your skin. You walked into the light, and your eyes have not yet adjusted to the dark."

A pause. "You are physically here. Your shadow is still in that corridor."

Hathaway felt the sharp prickle of being seen sowhere she hadn't invited anyone.

"It was a standard comrcial agreent," she said.

"A walking financial black hole," Nino cut in from the sofa.

Hathaway filed the reading away.

[Apex Predator Entity confird. Threat level: Incalculable. Do not engage.]

Nino stood up and crossed the room, grey eyes already running the math.

"What were the terms? Tell you didn't do a full buyout."

"Five-year exclusive licensing," Hathaway answered. "Sky-islands and mortal territories. Upfront disbursent, unit royalties, and procurent access through the private network."

Nino stopped. The grey eyes processed the variables in silence.

"...Not entirely hopeless," Nino said finally.

From Nino Lucent, this was the acoustic equivalent of a standing ovation.

Then Nino's grey eyes narrowed into a cold, surgical slit as she delivered the addendum.

"Irene never trades at market value. Rember that."

Nothing more. The implication stood on its own.

"The Right of First Refusal."

Alucard set her teacup down.

The exhaustion in her eyes sharpened into sothing cold and precise—the Archon of the White City, running a system diagnostic.

"Did the contract include a renewal clause?" she asked.

"Yes. In five years, she has first refusal."

Alucard nodded slowly, once, with the expression of soone confirming a diagnosis they'd already suspected.

"That is her signature," Alucard said. "Irene never signs a contract without installing a door to the next one. The premium price, the early appearance, the procurent access—none of it is generosity. It ans she didn't plan on seeing you only once."

A pause. "You signed a patent agreent, Miss Ludwig. You also signed a tether."

Hathaway's hand closed around the black coin.

She turned to look at the sofa.

Tasia had set down her fork. Her clear grey eyes rested on Hathaway with the quiet, unhurried patience of soone who already knew what she was going to say.

"Tasia," Hathaway said. "Thank you for the Wondrous Object. Without it I wouldn't have had anything worth bringing to that table."

Tasia looked at her.

"Not everyone gets to simply find themselves in her way," Tasia said.

That was all.

No warning. No elaboration. Nothing after.

The six elite corporate lawyers, who had maintained their professional composure through the entire exchange, collectively adjusted their briefcases and attempted with great dignity to blend into the upholstery.

Rhode was still staring at the coin.

Nino had gone quiet, running numbers behind her eyes.

Alucard had picked up her tea.

Bella was watching Hathaway with that quiet, asuring focus, the expansion pack presumably still compiling.

Hathaway sat down on the edge of the leather armchair.

She looked at the champagne.

Golden. Still faintly effervescent. Still warm going down.

She had walked in here forty minutes ago carrying the phrase it's handled like a completed-quest notification. Task cleared. Reward collected. Return to hub.

Instead she was sitting in what felt suspiciously like a loading screen for a questline she hadn't accepted, from a faction she hadn't researched, with a currency system she hadn't learned yet. The tether was already installed. The five-year cooldown tir was already running.

The coin sat on the table, catching the light.

The champagne, she noted distantly, no longer tasted like a victory drink.

It tasted like a preamble.

[Ti]: Day 67, Wednesday, 11:15 PM

[Location]: Dormitory [Golden Bough]

The family's griffin-carriage deposited her at the dormitory entrance just past eleven.

The night air was cold. It found the gap at her collar and went straight for the spine—one sharp, involuntary breath, and for a mont the champagne receded.

Just a mont.

She stood on the steps with her hand on the railing and waited to feel like herself again.

The thing about drinking too much wasn't the loss of control. It was this: the spaces between thoughts got longer, and the things you'd been successfully not-thinking-about crept in through the gaps.

Sowhere between the fourth glass and the carriage ride ho, she'd stopped thinking about Irene.

She'd started thinking about blue.

Victoria's eyes. The cold, particular blue of them—not warm, not inviting, the color of winter sky before snow—and the way they didn't quite move like eyes that saw the way other people saw.

She'd grown accustod to them. They were the first thing she'd oriented to, in this new life, after the panic and the chaos and the terror of discovering what she was. Victoria's eyes, looking at her like a problem worth solving.

She hadn't realized, until this mont on the steps, how much she'd wanted to co ho and tell her everything.

Every stupid detail. Irene's hands opening on the coin. The way the corridor slled of old stone and stained glass. The terrifying weight of those golden eyes—the specific sensation of having her defenses effortlessly bypassed, of being stripped bare by a stranger and feeling dangerously, warmly loved for it.

It was a suffocating kind of gravity. The golden heat was still clinging to her thoughts, quietly bending her own will out of shape.

She'd wanted to sit down across from Victoria and say this happened to today. She desperately needed Victoria's cold, rciless precision to cut through that intoxicating fog. She needed that sharp, unyielding ice to scrub the gold from her mind and remind her who she was, because sohow, Victoria's absolute harshness always left Hathaway feeling less lost, not more.

The want was so specific and so sudden that her eyes stung.

She pushed open the dormitory door. And then, instead of turning toward the stairs, she turned the other way.

The first floor was quiet. She knocked once and pushed open the door.

Victoria was packing.

The bag was open on the bed. thodical—folded rather than stuffed, the way Victoria did everything, like disorder was a personal insult. The room was very quiet except for the small sounds of cloth moving, buckles settling.

Hathaway's hand stayed on the doorfra.

She didn't know what was happening in Holheim. Victoria had never said. Hathaway had never found the right angle to ask—or maybe she'd been afraid of the answer, the way you're afraid to look directly at sothing you can already feel is wrong.

All she knew was that it kept pulling Victoria away. And Victoria kept going. Quietly, efficiently, without explanation.

She couldn't stop her. She couldn't help her. She didn't even know what she'd need help with.

The thought sat in the middle of her chest like a stone.

Victoria went still. She'd registered Hathaway's presence the mont she appeared in the doorway—the familiar weight of her mana, and beneath it, the unmistakable scent of expensive champagne.

"I'm leaving tonight," Victoria said, without turning.

The words were practical. A statent of facts.

She crossed to the side table, filled a glass of water, and held it out without looking. Hathaway took it.

Victoria returned to the bed and closed the last clasp on her bag, as if she'd done nothing unusual, because in her accounting of care, she hadn't.

Hathaway drank the water. Felt marginally more present.

Victoria's back was to her. The clasps clicked into place with the quiet finality of things decided.

Outside, a night bird called once and stopped.

Victoria lifted the bag. Moved toward the door.

"Victoria," Hathaway said.

It ca out quieter than she'd intended. A little rough around the edges.

"The qualifier." She stopped. Started again. "Will you be able to co and watch?"

The question ca out like she was eight years old asking for sothing she already suspected she wouldn't get. She hadn't spoken in that register in years. Decades, if you counted the other life.

She'd learned early, in that life, that asking for things that couldn't be given was just a specific kind of hurting yourself on purpose. She'd stopped doing it sowhere around the age of ten.

Victoria had gone still with her hand on the door.

She didn't turn around.

"I can't," she said.

Her voice was very quiet. Softer than the night breeze outside. Quieter than Hathaway had ever heard it.

A pause.

"I'm sorry."

She opened the door and walked through it.

Her mana grazed Hathaway's shoulder as she passed—cold, precise, brief, like a draft of winter air through a gap in stone. Then she was in the corridor. Then she was gone.

The door drifted shut behind her.

Hathaway stood in the center of Victoria's room for a long mont. Then she walked out into the first-floor corridor and up the stairs, all the way to her room.

She pushed open her own door. Leaned her back against it. The wood was solid and cold through her coat.

She stayed there.

After a while, she cried—not dramatically, not with any of the gestures the situation might have warranted.

Just quietly, tiredly, the way children cry when they're too exhausted to do it properly. Her face felt hot. The rest of her felt very far away.

Eventually she pushed off the door and turned around.

There was sothing on her desk.

A small stack of handwritten notes, left squarely in the center. She recognized the handwriting instantly.

Spell theory. Organized by subject, the notation precise and marginless. Not lecture notes. Sothing prepared for her specifically.

She didn't know when Victoria had co up to leave them here—only that she had, at so point during the day, before any of this.

She didn't pick them up. She just looked at them for a while.

Then she went to bed.

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