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Now reading: Chapter 134: The Carriage Through the Gate (II) from Young Master's Pov: I Am The Game's Villain, a Fantasy novel by DQVJX.

The phrase *other channels* hung in the air. The kind of phrase that signaled to any Church-trained ear that the speaker was indicating they had information beyond official records. Seraphina would understand it. So would Lucien, who was watching the exchange from his position with the smile fixed at exactly its public setting.

"Your Eminence," Seraphina said.

"I am not asking you to confirm or deny anything. I am informing you that the substantive interview, when we conduct it, will include questions that do not appear in the standard doctrinal review template. I felt it was a courtesy to ntion that now, so that you may consider your responses with the appropriate care."

Seraphina inclined her head. "I appreciate the courtesy, Your Eminence."

"I am grateful you understand."

He held the mont for another beat. Then his eyes moved past her — past Lucien — past Draven —

To .

The dark eyes settled on my face.

The smile was still in place. Small. Formal. But sothing underneath it had shifted.

"Young Master Valdrake," he said.

"Your Eminence."

"I look forward to making your acquaintance during this visit. The Cathedral has an interest in your house’s recent — recovery."

The word *recovery* was unusual. Houses didn’t recover. Houses had crises and resolved them. The phrasing suggested he was aware of sothing the Valdrake house had been doing, or had been having done to it, that he categorized as a recovery process.

Sera. The Bloodline Refinent Ritual. The rumored reasons my father had begun his quiet political withdrawal. The rumors I myself had not yet fully traced.

The Cathedral knew sothing. Either through their own records or through the Office’s research, they had information about what had happened in House Valdrake before Cedric arrived at the academy.

I kept my face composed.

"I am at the Cathedral’s disposal, Your Eminence."

"That will be very helpful."

He inclined his head — the formal close to the public greeting — and turned back to Headmaster Orvyn. The conversation shifted into administrative arrangents. Where the retinue would be quartered. The schedule for the visit. The protocols for the formal interview, scheduled for tomorrow morning.

I stood in my position. The smile had not appeared on my face because Cedric did not smile at Archbishops. The composure was holding. The mask was on.

But sowhere underneath the mask, the chapel girl’s recalibration had a partner now.

The Cathedral knew sothing about my house. About . About the family I had inherited.

Whatever Castellan had co to investigate, Seraphina was only one of the targets.

---

The retinue dispersed to their quarters. Castellan and the Sealed Texts Custodian were given the senior guest suite in the Cathedral wing — a section of the academy reserved for high-ranking Church visitors, which had not been used in three years. The chaplains and scribes were placed in adjacent quarters. The Inquisitorial guards rotated patrols on the wing’s exterior corridors.

The formal interview was scheduled for ten the next morning.

The team reconvened in the suite at eleven-fifteen. Mira had co down from the upper terraces — Castellan was in his quarters, beyond the range of any Aether signature she might broadcast. The window of safety was small but real.

Lucien spoke first. "He deviated from protocol in the public greeting."

"Yes," Seraphina said.

"He told you in advance that the substantive interview would include non-standard questions. That’s outside doctrine. Even informally."

"Yes."

"He also addressed Cedric directly. ntioned the Valdrake house’s *recovery.* That language is unusual."

"Yes."

"Which ans," Lucien said, "either he’s trying to spook us with a bluff, or he has actual information we didn’t expect him to have."

"He has actual information," I said.

The room turned to .

"How do you know?" Lucien asked.

"Nihil knows."

I unsheathed the sword. Set him point-down against the floor. The blade humd quietly in his standard signal-state, the resonance he produced when he wanted to be heard by the room rather than just by .

"The Custodian," Nihil said. The voice ca through the bond in the volu that allowed the team to hear it — a courtesy he extended occasionally, when the information he was delivering needed to be received by everyone simultaneously. "I read her on disembarkation. She is carrying a sealed docunt case at her hip. The case contains an artifact whose age I recognize. Approximately one thousand years old. The artifact is — a fragnt of the original founding coalition’s archive."

The room was silent.

"You’re certain," Valeria said.

"I am certain. The resonance pattern matches the archive I observed during the founding-era sealing. The Castellan family did not just inherit the title. They inherited at least one artifact. They have brought it here."

"Why bring an archive fragnt to the academy?" Draven asked.

"Two possibilities," Nihil said. "One — they intend to compare the fragnt against the academy’s leyline architecture to verify a hypothesis the Office has been working on for so ti. Two — they intend to use the fragnt as leverage. To demonstrate to a specific person that they possess it. To open a conversation that could not be opened without the artifact’s presence."

"Which is more likely?"

"I cannot be certain. The Office’s behavior has been quiet and patient for twenty years. Patient organizations bring artifacts only when they are ready to act on them. Whatever they have co for, they have decided the ti is correct."

The room held the information.

Lucien spoke first. "We adjust the interview strategy."

"How?" Seraphina asked.

"You assu he knows everything about your activities at the academy. The Mindwalk. The cure protocol. Possibly Mira herself. You don’t admit to anything, but you stop performing the role of soone hiding orthodoxy violations. You perform the role of soone who has been doing thoughtful, theological work outside doctrine, and who is willing to defend her reasoning in formal interview."

"He’ll see through that."

"Probably. But it shifts the ground. If he already knows, the orthodoxy denial doesn’t help. If he doesn’t know, the theological framing protects you. Either way, the role of a Saintess defending her own conscience is stronger than the role of a Saintess defending her record."

She thought about it. The Saintess composure was still on, but the chapel girl was running calculations underneath.

"That’s the better strategy," she said. "Yes. We do that."

"And Cedric," Lucien said. "He addressed you directly. He’ll want a private conversation at so point during the visit. Probably tomorrow afternoon, after his interview with Seraphina. Possibly tomorrow evening."

"What’s my framing?"

"Cooperative ignorance. You’re a Ducal heir who has not been read into your family’s deeper affairs. You’re aware of the Bloodline Refinent Ritual in vague terms because the title obligates you to be aware. You don’t have specifics. You don’t have the Cathedral’s information. You are willing to listen to whatever he chooses to share with you."

"Bait the trap."

"Bait the trap. Whatever he has on the Valdrake family, we want to learn it from him before he learns from us how much we already know. He’ll lead with his strongest material to establish leverage. Let him."

I nodded. The strategy was sound. The Cathedral had information. Whatever it was, Castellan would deploy it tomorrow. Our job was to receive it carefully and not give him any information in exchange.

"There’s sothing else," Mira said.

The room turned. Mira had been quiet through the entire debrief. She’d taken a seat near the window, slightly outside the main conversation circle. The cataloguing rhythm I’d co to associate with her was running. She had been processing sothing.

"What is it, Mira?" I asked.

"The Custodian," she said. "When she disembarked. I felt her."

"From the upper terrace?"

"Yes. The distance was large but the signature she carries is — distinctive. The artifact in her case has a resonance that touches Abyssal. Not the corrupted form. The original form. The form Abyssal Aether had before it was — twisted. Before the Cult learned to use it on children."

"That’s significant," Valeria said.

"It’s more than significant. It ans the founding coalition’s archive contains records of Abyssal energy in its un-corrupted state. Which ans the Office has access to information about Abyssal that no one else in the Empire currently has. Including the Cult. Including the Church’s official Inquisitorial records."

The room was quiet.

"Mira," I said. "How do you know what un-corrupted Abyssal feels like?"

"Because the Cult kept fragnts of older texts. They studied the original form to understand how to corrupt it. I overheard the priests discussing it once. They described the resonance. The artifact in the Custodian’s case carries that resonance."

The implications were stacking.

The Restoration Office had information about Abyssal energy older than the Cult.

The Office had brought a fragnt of that information to the academy.

Either they were here to give the team sothing — or they were here to take sothing the team had.

Either way, the interview tomorrow was no longer just about Seraphina’s deviations from Church doctrine.

It was about whatever the Office had decided needed to happen now.

"Two days ago," Lucien said, "we thought he was coming for Seraphina. Yesterday we adjusted to thinking he might be coming for the cure protocol. Today we adjust to thinking he might be coming for sothing larger than either of those."

"Do we still want him here?" Draven asked.

"We don’t have a choice. The Cathedral’s authority ans we cannot refuse a plenary visit. Refusal is a doctrinal violation that triggers automatic Inquisitorial escalation. The visit happens. The question is what we do during it."

Lucien looked at the team. The smile was at its tactical setting. The Drakeveil discipline was running clean.

"We learn what he’s actually here for. We protect Seraphina, Mira, and the cure protocol from any actions the Office might take. We don’t volunteer information. We listen carefully. And tomorrow, when he opens his hand, we see what’s in it before we decide what to put in ours."

The team nodded.

The eting ended at twelve-forty.

Castellan was in his quarters. The Sealed Texts Custodian had taken the artifact case with her into the senior guest suite. The retinue had dispersed to their assigned positions. The academy’s normal rhythm continued in the background — students moving between afternoon lectures, the administrative substructure running its standard cycles, the cure protocol paused but the entity below still breathing at its slow heartbeat rhythm.

I went to the western balcony again.

The rain had stopped.

The cloud sea had resud its slow movent between the islands.

Below , on the academy’s main approach road, the unmarked carriages had been moved to the visitor stables. Eight matched whites grazing in the Aether-infused paddock the academy reserved for visiting Church teams. They looked tired. The Cathedral did not stable horses casually; the matched whites had been ridden hard from Veylinor.

Whatever the Office had decided to do, they had decided it mattered enough to ride their best team to exhaustion getting here.

Tomorrow at ten, the formal interview began.

Tomorrow afternoon, my private conversation with Castellan.

Whatever he had brought with him from Veylinor — the fragnt of the founding archive, the information about my house, the Office’s twenty-year patient agenda — was about to enter the building.

I stood on the balcony for a long ti. The cloud sea moved. The leyline grid pulsed at its standard dayti rhythm. Sowhere below the academy, the entity slept. Sowhere in the senior guest suite, an Archbishop and a Restoration Office officer were either resting from their journey or beginning whatever preparations the visit required.

The team had a plan. The plan was sound.

The plan would survive contact with Castellan for approximately as long as plans usually survived contact with soone smarter and better-resourced than expected.

We’d see how long that was tomorrow.

Nihil humd quietly from my hip.

"You’re calm."

"No. I’m prepared. They aren’t the sa thing."

"They’re functionally similar in your case. You’ve gotten better at the distinction over the last month."

"Thanks."

"It wasn’t a complint. It was an observation. The team is tighter. Your composure under pressure has improved. The improvents are noted. Whether they’re sufficient against the Office, we will know tomorrow."

"That’s the most you’ve said in a week."

"Yes. The situation warranted comntary. I will return to my standard volu tomorrow."

I went back inside the suite. Ren was at his desk. The pen was moving. The notebook was open.

He didn’t look up when I entered.

"Did Mira see sothing we should know about?"

"How did you know."

"Because she stayed quiet for the entire debrief and then spoke once. Mira speaks in proportion to certainty. One sentence at the end ans she was certain. I want to docunt what she said."

I told him. About the Custodian’s signature. About the un-corrupted Abyssal resonance. About the founding coalition’s archive carrying information older than the Cult.

Ren wrote.

When I finished, he set the pen down and looked up. The brown eyes behind the glasses were steady.

"This visit is bigger than we initially understood."

"Yes."

"The Restoration Office has been waiting for sothing. They believe whatever they’ve been waiting for is now occurring at this academy."

"Yes."

"That’s — significant."

"Yes."

"What do you need from ?"

"Tomorrow, while Seraphina’s interview is happening, I want you in the academy library. Specifically the upper restricted section. The Headmaster has authorized our access for the Restoration Office’s visit. I want you cross-referencing every founding-era docunt the academy holds against what Mira described — the un-corrupted Abyssal resonance pattern. If the academy has anything that touches on the original archive, I want to know before tomorrow afternoon."

"That’s six hours of reading."

"Yes."

"I’ll need tea."

"Already arranged."

He nodded. Picked up the pen. Went back to writing.

I sat at my own desk. The rain had ended. The afternoon light through the window was thin and silver. Sowhere in the academy, an Archbishop was resting from his journey. Sowhere in the upper terraces, a sealed girl from Brindlemoor was holding her quiet position. Sowhere far to the south, the Cathedral of Veylinor was waiting for the dispatches Castellan would send back about what the Office had found.

Tomorrow began the part of this visit that no one had planned for.

I’d be ready when it did.

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