Five in the morning, and the rain had co back overnight.
I stood on the western balcony and watched it fall. Thin and gray, the sa not-quite-rain that had arrived with Castellan’s carriages a day ago, returned at the wrong hour and on no schedule the leyline grid recognized. Sowhere in the academy’s weather instrunts a calibration was being maintained that didn’t match the world below.
Lucien joined at five-twenty. He hadn’t slept. I could tell from the coat — sa line of buttoning as last night, the cravat changed to suggest a fresh start the rest of him hadn’t earned.
"The interview chamber is set," he said. "Aether-tuned glass on the observation wall. Ren cleared the readings an hour ago. We’ll see the room. Castellan won’t see us."
"He’ll know the wall is there."
"Of course. He’ll behave as if he doesn’t. That’s the protocol on his side."
"And ours?"
"Ours is the sa. The protocol is mutual fiction. The Cathedral has used it for two centuries. Both parties pretend the wall is a wall. Information flows both ways anyway."
Below us the cloud sea moved at its returned pace — slow, indifferent. A mountain swift crossed beneath the lower terraces and disappeared into the mist. The bird had no business at this hour. Probably lost.
"Lucien."
"Yes."
"What are we expecting."
"Nothing I’d commit to in writing." He didn’t smile. The smile was off this morning, which ant the practice-hall version of him was the one standing beside . "Mother’s overnight dispatch arrived at three. The Restoration Office’s last public action on record was forty-one years ago. They delivered a sealed docunt to the Cathedral’s executive council. The council’s response was to dissolve a senior bishopric and reassign the bishop to a hospice in the southern marshes. He died there fourteen months later. We don’t know what was in the docunt. We know what ca after it."
"That’s not reassuring."
"It’s not ant to be. The Office moves rarely. When it moves, it moves decisively. They don’t co for small things. Whatever they ca for here, they will deliver it inside this visit. We will not get a second one."
He went back down. I stayed another minute. The rain didn’t increase. Sowhere in the east wing of the academy, in the senior guest suite, an Archbishop and his cousin were making the preparations the morning required.
---
The observation chamber was older than I’d realized.
Ren had told the architecture once — built into the academy in its second century, when the institution had still been negotiating its relationship with the Church and had wanted the option of watching formal interviews without becoming party to them. The wall was a slab of leyline-quartz cut from the eastern Spires and tuned to a frequency that allowed sight to pass one direction and not the other. The technology had not been replicated since. The academy preserved it the way so institutions preserved old laws — kept on the books, rarely invoked, available when needed.
Today it was needed.
Ren sat at a small table at the chamber’s rear with two notebooks open. Lucien stood at the glass with his arms folded. Liora stood behind him, Crimson Oath sheathed at her hip, present in the role she’d assigned herself the night before — second observer, in case Lucien missed sothing. Liora rarely missed things Lucien did. Her training had taught her to watch fighters’ hands. Lucien watched their words. Between them the coverage was cleaner than either alone.
I stood beside Lucien. Nihil rested point-down against the floor, listening through the glass at frequencies the rest of us couldn’t access.
The interview chamber on the other side was bare. Two chairs at a low table. A single Aether-lamp on the side wall. A small brass vessel placed on the table between the chairs — Cathedral attar, the sacred oil burned only during plenary auspices, already lit and producing a thin dark thread of smoke. The sll would not reach us. The wall absorbed scent the way it absorbed the room’s intent to be private.
"Nine fifty-eight," Ren said, without looking up.
"They’ll co in at exactly ten," Lucien said. "Castellan won’t be a minute early. The Cathedral teaches arrival as a doctrinal act."
He was right. The chamber’s far door opened at ten precisely. The Inquisitorial guards entered first — two of them this ti, posted at the door rather than escorting. Then the Sealed Texts Custodian. Then Castellan. Then, last, Seraphina.
She wore the white-and-gold from the gate. Her braid had been redone — tighter than yesterday, the formal Veylinor pattern at full ordination weight. The chapel girl was sowhere underneath, but the surface had been smoothed to a finish I’d never seen on her before. The Saintess training at full operation, no leakage permitted at the seams.
The Custodian sat at the right-hand chair. The artifact case rested on her lap. Castellan sat at the left. Seraphina took the small kneeling cushion between them — the candidate’s position, lower than both interviewers, the Cathedral’s structural reminder that the interviewed party stood beneath the interviewing one.
Castellan opened with the First Affirmation again. The repetition was protocol — every formal session began with the sa recitation that had ended the public greeting. Seraphina returned it. The Second. The Third. The verifications were brief. The interview began.
---
The first ten minutes were doctrine.
Castellan asked the standard questions in the standard order. The duties of a Saintess in residence at a non-Church institution. The boundaries of permitted ministry. The specific obligations regarding cooperation with civil authorities versus Church authorities. The reporting cadence Seraphina was ant to maintain with Veylinor. She answered each one cleanly. Her voice didn’t waver. She used the doctrinal phrases the Cathedral expected, in the cadences the Cathedral graded for fluency. The Custodian wrote in a small ledger as she answered. The scribes’ work was being done by Iren Castellan personally, which was its own information — the records of this interview would never reach the Cathedral’s general archive.
Lucien noted it under his breath. "She’s keeping the transcript private."
"For the Office’s files," Ren said.
"Or for no files at all. The Office has been known to destroy interview records when the interview’s content makes its way into a private decision. We’re watching a session that may not exist by tomorrow."
I watched Seraphina. The composure held. She’d told , once, in the chapel, that the Saintess training had a na for this state — *rendering.* The Church used the word warmly. The candidates used it less warmly. To be rendered was to be read down to your essential components and weighed, the way leather was rendered, or fat. Seraphina had said the word with the small dryness she reserved for institutional vocabulary she didn’t quite trust.
She was being rendered now. She was holding.
Then Castellan paused.
It was a small pause. Two breaths longer than the rhythm of his previous questions. The Custodian’s pen lifted from the ledger.
"Saintess Seraphel," he said. "I would like to set aside the standard template for a mont. May I ask you a personal question."
"Your Eminence may ask whatever the Cathedral requires."
"This question is not the Cathedral’s. It is mine."
Seraphina did not move. The kneeling posture did not adjust. But beside , Lucien’s arms tightened across his chest. The phrasing was a deviation. An Archbishop conducting a plenary inspection did not separate his questions from the Cathedral’s. He was the Cathedral’s instrunt for the duration of the auspice. Castellan had just declared a question outside that instrunt.
"Then ask it, Your Eminence."
Castellan leaned forward slightly. The dark eyes settled on her face.
"When you channel Celestial energy into sothing the Church would call corrupted," he said, "what do you believe you are doing?"
The chamber went still.
I saw the mont her composure caught. Not broke — caught. A small fraction of breath behind her usual rhythm. The chapel girl rising under the Saintess surface, registering the question for what it was.
It was the question he had not been authorized to ask.
The orthodox answer was *purifying.* The Cathedral had a doctrinal phrase for it. Three words, in the old liturgical tongue, learned by every Saintess candidate by the third year of training. Purification through Celestial intercession. The phrase would have ended the question. Castellan would have written down the doctrinal answer. The Custodian would have noted the verification. The interview would have moved on.
She didn’t say it.
"Healing," Seraphina said.
The single word landed in the chamber and stayed there.
Castellan did not move. The Custodian’s pen returned to the ledger and wrote one short line. The Inquisitorial guards at the door did not shift, but their stillness took on a different quality — the stillness of trained n who had registered a heretical answer and were waiting for the senior cleric’s instruction.
"Healing," Castellan repeated.
"Yes, Your Eminence."
"Would you elaborate."
"I would. With the Cathedral’s permission."
"You have it."
She breathed out. The chapel girl was fully forward now. The Saintess was the costu, the thing she was wearing for the formality, but the voice that spoke next was the voice from the Old Chapel. The voice that had attended.
"Corrupted Aether is not a separate substance from clean Aether. It is the sa substance shaped wrongly. The wrongness was done to it. Whatever did the wronging — Cult ritual, founding-era trauma, the slow accretion of a sealed wound across a thousand years — left a pattern that the energy now repeats because it has lost the mory of any other pattern. Purification, as the Cathedral teaches it, removes the corrupted material. Healing reaches inside the pattern and reminds it of what it was before the wronging. Both produce clean energy as outco. Only one produces it without erasing what ca before."
She paused. Castellan had not interrupted.
"I have co to believe that the Church’s tradition of purification was developed for a category of corruption that does not include all corruption. There are wounds for which purification is the right tool. There are wounds for which it is the wrong one — and the wrong tool, applied confidently, deepens the wound it claims to address. I have spent fourteen months at this academy practicing what I now call healing. The technique is not in the Cathedral’s permitted curriculum. I will not claim it is orthodox. I will claim it is correct."
The Custodian wrote three short lines.
Castellan was quiet for a long mont.
"Saintess Seraphel."
"Your Eminence."
"Thank you for your honesty. I will tell you that I expected the doctrinal answer. I would not have penalized it. It is the answer your training was designed to produce, and producing it would have satisfied the Cathedral’s record. You chose not to give it. I would like to ask you why."
"Because Your Eminence asked the question outside the Cathedral’s instrunt. The doctrinal answer is the answer for the Cathedral. You asked for mine."
He almost smiled. The first real expression I had seen cross his face since he’d descended from the carriage at the gate. A small, surprised motion at the corner of his mouth. The smile of a man who had set a test for soone and watched the test answered better than expected.
"Quite so," he said.
He turned to the Custodian.
"Sister Iren. The fragnt, if you would."
---
The case opened on the table.
The Custodian’s hands moved with the slow precision of soone who had handled the contents of that case for three decades and had not beco careless. The lid lifted. Inside, on a bed of pale velvet, sat a single piece of parchnt in a leyline-stabilized fra.
Even through the observation glass, even at the frequencies the wall permitted, I could feel the resonance. Nihil humd against my hip — a long, low note I had not heard from him before.
"Founding era," he said through the bond, voice dropped to its lowest register. "The script is pre-Reformation Veylinor liturgical. The artifact is genuine. The ink on this parchnt was laid down within twenty years of my own forging. Whatever is written there was written by soone I may have t."
The Custodian lifted the parchnt, fra and all, and set it before Seraphina on the small table.
"Saintess Seraphel," Castellan said. "I would ask you to read this aloud. The script is one your training prepared you to read. The Cathedral assigns this script to candidates of the Celestial line specifically, because the script’s grammar relies on inflections that Celestial bloodline carriers can hear in ways untrained ears cannot. You may take the ti you require. There is no haste."
Seraphina did not touch the fra. She bent her head slightly to read.
The chamber held silent. The brass vessel’s smoke continued its thin upward thread. Castellan watched her face. The Custodian watched her hands. The Inquisitorial guards watched the door.
I watched the mont her face changed.
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