Chapter 764: Entrance (2)

The hall had not yet resumed its full rhythm.

Not completely.

Not after that.

The entrance of the Lorian envoy had left the air faintly charged—polished, smiling, cordial on the surface, yet beneath it, something simmered. A low thrum of unspoken satisfaction that hummed beneath every clipped toast and artful exchange.

Valeria stood near one of the central terrace alcoves, the faint glow of ambient mana catching the silver runes on her gown. She was flanked by two nobles from allied houses—Ser Damanth of House Terevas and Lady Irelenne of Vorthellas—both mid-tier families with enough prestige to matter, and enough tact to know whom to align with.

“And there it is,” Damanth murmured into the rim of his glass, eyes flicking toward the Lorian table. “House Lorian, seated after the probationary initiates. I don’t think I’ve seen that level of subtle insult executed with such… refinement.”

Lady Irelenne sipped her wine, eyes half-lidded. “Refinement is exactly what makes it burn longer. Let them smile through their teeth while they digest it.”

Valeria’s gaze remained forward, calm as ever, but the faintest curve touched the edge of her mouth.

“They dressed it in ceremony,” she said, voice low but unmistakably composed, “but it was a verdict.”

Damanth let out a quiet breath, somewhere between a scoff and a laugh. “A lovely one at that. Rank is dictated by precedence. And today, they were placed beneath our commonborn initiates. On record. On stage.”

“It’s not just placement,” Irelenne added, tilting her head. “It’s optics. Perception. Those envoys will carry this moment back to Loria like a shadow stitched into their legacy. That stain will outlive their silk.”

Valeria’s fingers traced the stem of her glass, but she did not drink. Her eyes moved—not to Adrian, nor to Isolde—but to the nobles now gathered around them. She recognized most. The ambitious. The observant. The ones who knew how to read the shifting winds.

None of them were fawning.

They were watching.

Calculating.

And pleased.

“Arcanis,” she said softly, not quite to them, not quite to herself, “does not forget the war. But it also does not shout its victories. We record them. Publicly. Permanently. Elegantly.”

“That’s why this is beautiful,” Damanth agreed, swirling his glass. “It’s not a sword. It’s a ledger. A matter of fact.”

Irelenne’s smile was the thinnest line of satisfaction. “A ledger they’ll be forced to sign every time they sit at that table.”

Valeria said nothing more, but she felt the quiet heat beneath her skin—the particular kind of pride that did not rise from arrogance, but from precision. From knowing that her Empire did not need to roar to dominate. It simply moved the pieces.

And now, those pieces had shifted.

Subtly. Indelibly.

She turned slightly, her eyes catching the faint outline of a woman across the hall.

Not close—no. Near the third columned tier, just removed enough from the nobility’s clustered orbit to go unnoticed by most.

Valeria had felt the eyes first.

A gaze. Brief. Inconspicuous. The kind that slid over the skin without weight, but left the senses taut, like a blade brushing silk.

Now, she saw her.

A young woman, seated with composed posture and measured stillness. Chestnut hair, arranged simply. Not ostentatious. Her dress was dignified but unremarkable—no family crest, no daring cut, no hunger for attention in its tailoring.

But her eyes—

Rich hazel. Still. Watching.

Not darting, not wide with ambition or awe like the lower initiates so often were.

Quiet.

The gaze of someone measuring a battlefield, not admiring the decor.

Valeria studied her for a moment longer.

There was something about her presence that didn’t quite fit. Not foreign—but not deferential either. The way she held herself spoke of discipline. Control. Familiar with war, or something close to it.

For a heartbeat, something in Valeria’s magic-honed instinct pulsed. A faint ripple in the weave. Not threat, exactly. Not yet.

Just… awareness.

Like being watched by something intelligent cloaked in unassuming cloth.

She narrowed her eyes—barely.

’I’ve overlooked something.’

But the moment passed. The girl—whoever she was—had already turned her gaze away, as if the earlier connection had been an accident. A coincidence.

Valeria’s posture didn’t shift, but she let her attention slide back toward her companions.

Damanth chuckled low in his throat, swirling the last of his drink as his gaze lingered on the Lorian table.

“I wonder how long their little envoy will keep their posture once the initiates outscore them. Assuming they last the season. I give the younger ones until winter before they start cracking under our system.”

“They weren’t bred for rigor,” Irelenne added, her tone velvet over ice. “Their court worships elegance. But here, elegance is currency, not immunity. They’ll learn that soon enough.”

Another noble—Lady Marcella of Ardent Crest, lean and lacquered in obsidian silk—joined their gathering with a lazy arch to her brow.

“I overheard one of the Lorian girls whispering about the ranking seals. She didn’t even know the primary colors for the Five-Tier Combat Trials. Can you imagine?”

More laughter. Light, sharp. Not cruel in pitch, but in rhythm—like birdsong with teeth.

Valeria listened.

And said nothing.

Her face was the same. Unmoved. Serene. But a shift had settled behind her gaze—subtle as pressure beneath silk.

There it was again.

The smugness.

The joy not in victory, but in degradation.

She understood pride. She understood sovereignty. Arcanis had earned this moment—through blood, through brilliance, through sacrifice that most of these nobles had only read about.

But pride did not require mockery.

Not for her.

Valeria’s spine remained straight, her chin just slightly angled upward, as if held by something more than bone—something older. Older than banners. Older than thrones.

A code.

She did not speak against them.

She never did. Not publicly. Not in a gathering like this, where tact was currency and silence the highest denomination of disagreement.

But she did not add to their amusement, either.

Let them laugh.

Let them play their small games around the shadow of a war they didn’t bleed in.

She was not here for their approval.

Her eyes drifted once more—past the nobles, past the polished opulence of the hall, toward the far entrance. The eastern wing.

Still sealed.

Still waiting.

She allowed herself a breath.

There were still a few moments left in this act.

Damanth raised his glass again. “To the memory of Loria’s supremacy. May it rest comfortably beneath our boots.”

Irelenne chuckled. “If they polish the sole, we might even spare their pride.”

Valeria didn’t turn. Didn’t flinch. Her lips didn’t move.

But the inside of her glove creaked faintly as her fingers curled tighter around the stem of her glass.

And then—

A soft chime.

High. Measured.

The room quieted.

A voice rang out, clear and composed from the central dais.

Special Admission Students are entering.

The hall stilled.

Some with disdain.

But most with attention.

Just that.

Special Admission.

Valeria’s fingers relaxed slightly around her glass.

The term was precise. Deliberate. Not probationary. Not unranked. And certainly not lesser.

But it meant one thing clearly enough:

The commoners.

Not elevated by lineage. Not carved from bloodlines honed by war or diplomacy or age-old alliances. These were entrants chosen for merit, raw and unvarnished.

And among them—she knew—would be him.

Lucavion.

She lifted her gaze to the far end of the banquet hall, where the great mirrored doors began to open.

And the silence shifted.

This wasn’t the awed hush that had greeted the Lorian envoy. Nor the rustling curiosity that had followed the nobles’ procession.

This was something cooler.

Still.

Evaluative.

The sound of a hall bracing for something it could not yet define.

The doors widened.

And they entered.

Five figures.

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