07. Chapter 6: Tea, Tension, and Titles


Chapter 6:
Tea, Tension, and Titles

The Official Daily Schedule of Lady Grace of AshfordMaintained by Governess Elyne Marren, per Duchess Liliana’s instruction



6:30 AM
Wake Up & Dressing
Lady Grace is to be gently woken at half-past six. Hair is to be brushed, and her ribbon tied as per Duchess’s instructions. Morning bath to follow.


7:00 AM
Morning Routine

Dressed in appropriate attire for the day’s instruction. Light breakfast with warm milk and toast. Grace is encouraged to speak kindly to all staff.



8:00 AM
Breakfast

Supervised breakfast with fruit, soft cheese, and herbal tea. Must be seated properly at all times. Gratitude must be expressed.



9:00 AM
Private Instruction

Lady Grace receives foundational lessons in noble etiquette, reading, and arithmetic. If progress is made, a gold star is granted.



11:00 AM
Arcane Education (Beginner Tier)

Madame Liliana permits Grace to observe basic glyphs and listen to low-grade magical principles, under strict supervision.



12:00 PM
Midday Tea with Governess
Tea served with honey, biscuits, and cucumber slices. Time for calm reflection and small conversation.


1:00 PM
Nap Time

Grace is to lie down in quiet darkness. A lullaby may be hummed. Room checked every 15 minutes.



3:00 PM
Outdoor Time
A short walk through the inner garden. Lady Grace may pick one (1) flower per day. All insects are to be treated gently.


4:00 PM
Creative Hour
Practice of violin or watercolor. Music must remain within C major. Drawing of mythical beasts discouraged.


5:30 PM
Dinner with the Duchess
Formal etiquette observed. Speak only when spoken to. One (1) question about her day may be asked by Her Grace.


7:00 PM
Evening Story & Wind Down

Chosen tale read aloud. Grace may select from approved books. No stories with monsters, rebellions, or demons.



8:00 PM
Lights Out

Governess Elyne tucks Lady Grace in. Night warding spell activated by house staff





Grace was furious. First, after her mother ordered stricter supervision, her boring, dull days finally seemed like they might change. Her mother had said that at five years old, it was now appropriate for Grace to begin formal education – after Grace had directly asked about it. But the result? Her new daily schedule turned from boring and dull to… an idiotic routine. It was like she had been sentenced to kindergarten hell.
She hadn’t escaped Earth to sip tea and nap under embroidered quilts. She had come to conquer. To build her legend. And instead? She had to draw flowers and hum lullabies. She didn’t want a gold star. She wanted a kingdom. She wasn’t a side character in her own story, she was the main character. The villainess who escaped time and space, changed worlds and builds her shadow empire to conquer space itself.
Wait. Did I really want this? Was this my goal…?
Grace stopped for a moment at a window. She was currently walking to her 11:00 a.m. Arcane Education.
Did I change again? she thought. Did my childish body let me make childish dreams?
The thought clawed at her mind more than she liked to admit. Had the softness of her cheeks, the lull of bedtime stories, the warmth of a mother's touch… dulled her edge?
She blinked, slowly. Her reflection blinked back, smiling faintly now.
No… I’m still me.
Just… waiting.
She turned from the window, walking to her Arcane Education lesson.
--::--
When Grace reached the classroom, she paused, genuinely surprised for the first time in weeks.
Not only was her instructor already waiting – a thin, severe-looking man with graying hair – but two other girls stood beside him. Roughly her age. Dressed neatly. Eyes wide.
Grace blinked.
These were the first children she had seen in this world. Until now, her life had been surrounded by adults; governesses, tutors, guards, servants… but never other children
Oh mother… that’s what you think, isn’t it?
I need peers. I need playmates.
How… pathetic.
Something stirred inside her. Not quite curiosity. Not quite annoyance. More like… disgust.
She stepped forward with a polite smile on her lips, every movement composed, every glance measured. I’ll play along, she thought. For now.
The instructor gave a small nod toward the girls. “Lady Grace of Ashborn, allow me to introduce your classmates. Both are daughters of loyal retainer houses, sworn to your father’s duchy.”
The first girl stepped forward, clutching the hem of her dress in both hands as she curtsied awkwardly. Her hair was dark and tied back with a pale ribbon.
“My name is Clara of House Bellgrave,” she said, her voice small but practiced. “My father serves as Master of the Hunt for the Duke.”
She looked up with wide, nervous eyes, waiting for approval. The second girl followed, slightly taller, with auburn curls and a bolder tone in her voice.
“I’m Elen of House Trivelle. My mother is a knight in the Duchess’s personal guard.”
She didn’t curtsy so much as nod, stiffly, but with a strange sort of pride.
Grace tilted her head slightly.
Bellgrave and Trivelle. Retainer houses. Loyal, landholding families of minor importance. Perhaps one was a baron, the other untitled. Either way, they were several steps beneath her.
There was a structure to nobility in this world, clear and absolute.
At the top stood the Dukes and Duchesses, rulers of vast territories like Ashborn, second only to royalty. Beneath them, Marquesses governed the borderlands, followed by Counts and Viscounts, who ruled counties and large towns. Then came the Barons, holders of small estates and local power. Below them, Baronets, nobles in name, barely in influence. And finally, Knights, respected, but not truly noble, their status earned through service, not blood.
Grace was the daughter of a Duke. These girls? They were nobodies. Children of servants dressed in silk.
Peers, she thought again, her smile not shifting an inch. What a joke.
“Pleased to meet you,” Grace said smoothly, her voice like honey wrapped around glass. “I hope we’ll all get along… just fine.”
The instructor gave a satisfied nod.
“Good. Now that introductions are done, let us begin.”
He moved to the front of the room, gesturing to a long, slate-colored panel etched with faint runes. A servant stepped forward to place a leather-bound book and a carafe of water beside him, then retreated in silence.
“Before any of you learn to cast a single spark or scribe a single glyph, you must understand what it is you’re touching.”Support the creativity of authors by visiting the original site for this novel and more.
His voice was sharp and ragged as he clasped his hands behind his back. He began placing, each step deliberately.
“Magic is not a toy. It is not a parlor trick. It is the legacy of gods.”
He stopped before a tall blackboard etched faintly with divine symbols. At its center, a great circle surrounded six smaller ones. With a simple touch, each glowed faintly in turn.
“Iras gave us Light Magic—to heal, to protect, to purify.Thyron gave us Earth Magic—to shape stone, enhance the body, and anchor ourselves.Elyra gave us Space Magic—to understand what lies beyond, and travel without walking.Velarion gave us Water Magic—to control rivers, rain, and the sea.Lirien gave us Nature Magic—to nurture, to rot, to grow.And Kaelir gave us Shadow Magic—to adapt, to vanish, to change.”
He paused. The air in the room shifted slightly as his voice lowered.
“There is one more, but it is not a gift. It is a curse. Void Magic – the unmaking of all things. It is forbidden, corrupt, and treasonous to study. I should not have to say more.”
Grace felt her fingertips twitch.
Don’t smirk. Not yet.
He returned to the central circle. “All magic flows through these paths. But only those with a Mana Core – a second heart – can channel it without aid. Without staves, glyphs, or ritual. Such individuals are rare. One in ten thousand.”
Clara blinked rapidly. Elen straightened. Grace tilted her head.
Oh, this should be amusing.
“Can we get one?” Clara asked softly.
“No,” the instructor said without looking at her. “You are born with the potential – or you are not. A Mana Core, sometimes called a ‘second heart,’ is not something that can be made through will alone.”
He paused, then added, “If it forms, it usually does so within the first ten years of life, as a child absorbs ambient mana. Once the core begins to take shape, the dominant type of mana, whichever fills it past the halfway point, determines the child’s affinity.”
His tone remained flat, dispassionate.
“If you are one of the rare few… you will know soon enough.”
Grace’s quill moved slowly across her parchment, but her mind was already elsewhere.
Too late, she thought. I already know.
He turned back to the board.
“But all magic, even ritual, begins with one thing.”
He picked up a piece of chalk and began to draw slowly across the slate surface.
“The foundation of magical script – the Old Tongue. You’ll need to memorize the first eight glyphs by week's end. They are the basis for both arcane theory and practical invocation.”
Clara was already reaching for her ink and parchment. Elen's fingers moved more steadily, her back rigid with focus.
Grace didn’t move.
She already knew these glyphs. Had studied them when she was three. She could draw them blindfolded and backward. She had carved them into the underside of her wardrobe for practice.
But she said nothing.
Instead, she dipped her quill slowly, deliberately, and began to write along with the others. Stroke by careful stroke.
Let them think I’m learning, she thought. Let them watch. The real game hasn’t started yet.
The instructor began to speak again, voice droning in that precise, dry rhythm only old scholars seemed to master.
Grace’s eyes flicked toward the two girls beside her.
Clara’s grip on her quill was too tight. Elen’s lines were too sharp, too fast.
Interesting, Grace thought. One will break. The other might fight.
She smiled faintly and returned to her page.
The lesson ended with the sound of chalk snapping and chairs scraping gently against the stone floor. The instructor gave them a stern nod and swept from the room without ceremony.
Grace was already standing, brush-cleaning her inkwell with measured grace when the two girls approached.
Clara stepped forward first, wringing her hands slightly. “Um… Lady Grace, it was an honor to study beside you. I hope we can… be friends?”
Elen folded her arms, eyes flicking between the two of them. “You’re not what I expected,” she said bluntly. “But you’re not weak.”
Grace tilted her head. She could have said something cutting. She could have smiled with venom. But before she could open her mouth, another voice interrupted.
“Ah, there you are, Gracie.”
Elyne entered the chamber, her voice light and pleasant as always. “Since you’ve all been introduced,” she continued, looking between the girls, “why not join us for midday tea in the west garden? The Duchess believes it’s important you get to know one another. Properly.”
Clara’s eyes lit up. Elen just gave a cautious nod. Grace looked between them, then to Elyne.
What a perfect little trap you've arranged, she thought with disgust and shakes her head inwardly. But outwardly, she offered a sweet smile.
“I’d be delighted.”
--::--
The west garden had been trimmed to perfection.
Hedges sculpted into swirls and tiers framed a white-marble table, already laid with delicate porcelain, sugar cubes in silver bowls, and plates of tiny, perfumed biscuits that looked more decorative than edible. Rose petals floated lazily in a crystal pitcher of water. It was the kind of setting meant to impress noble guests, not entertain children.
Which, Grace thought, made it all the more amusing.
She sat at the head of the table, legs folded neatly beneath her, her posture impeccable. Clara and Elen sat opposite her, still uncertain about whether they were being honored… or tested.
Elyne poured the tea herself, smiling warmly as she added a drop of honey to Grace’s cup before offering the others theirs.
“There we go,” Elyne said, settling beside Grace. “Now we can all get to know one another. Isn't this lovely?”
Clara nodded too fast. “It’s beautiful. Thank you for the invitation.”
Elen looked like she was still trying to decide if this was part of the lesson.
Grace took a small sip, letting the taste of jasmine and sugar roll over her tongue.
“This is my favorite tea,” she said softly, cradling the cup with both hands. “My mother says it’s calming.”
Not that I need calming, she thought. But it's useful to look like I do.
There was a short silence, then Clara leaned forward, clearly trying.
“Lady Grace… um, have you always lived in the estate?”
Grace smiled over her teacup. “Of course. I was born here. After all my father is the Duke of Ashborn.”
“I’ve never met a real duchess,” Clara whispered, eyes wide.
“She’s not a duchess,” Elen said flatly. “She’s the duke’s daughter.”
Grace lowered her cup, gaze sharpening for just a heartbeat.
Then she laughed – light, airy, practiced.
“It’s all right. I don’t mind. I’m sure it’s confusing for some.”
Clara flushed. Elen frowned.
Elyne stepped in gently. “Titles are important, girls. But kindness is more so.”
Grace resisted the urge to roll her eyes.
Of course, you’d say that, dear Elyne. Ever the perfect little court flower.
Instead, she leaned forward slightly, resting her chin on her palm and staring at both girls with a faint tilt to her smile.
“So… which of you thinks they’ll get a Mana Core first?”
Both girls froze.
Clara blinked. “I… I don’t know. That’s really rare, isn’t it?”
Elen met her gaze evenly. “Why? Do you think you already have one?”
Grace grinned.
“I suppose we’ll all just have to wait and see.”
There was a pause after Grace’s remark, long enough for Clara to look suddenly unsure whether she was still breathing, and for Elen’s jaw to tense just slightly.
Elyne, ever the gracious buffer, leaned forward and smiled.
“Well,” she said, her voice smooth as silk, “since you’re all so curious, maybe I can tell you how it happened for me.”
Both girls turned toward her immediately, eager. Even Grace, despite herself, tilted her head slightly.
“I was ten,” Elyne said. “It started when I began to hear... humming. Not from outside, but from the space around me. Like the world had turned into threads, and I could feel the tension in them.”
Clara blinked. “That sounds… weird.”
“It was,” Elyne admitted with a soft laugh. “But beautiful, too. Everything began to shimmer. I remember the day my core solidified – it felt like a second heartbeat echoing in my chest. And then I knew.”
Her fingers brushed the teacup absentmindedly.
“I was aligned with Space Magic. I saw lines where no one else could. And when I stepped forward… I stepped twice. Once into the world, and once through it.”
Elen’s eyes lit up. “Did it hurt?”
Elyne smiled. “Not at all. But it was overwhelming. For a moment, it felt like I wasn’t part of the world anymore… like the world had to make room for me.”
Grace kept her expression still. Her tea cooled between her hands.
So dramatic, she thought. You’d think she birthed the stars herself.
Still, a flicker of memory tugged at her.
The silence in her chest. Then the sudden thrum. Like a string had been pulled tight across her ribs. And then – awareness. A depth to everything. A pull, and a pulse, and a thread through the spine of the universe.
Mine was faster, she thought.
But she didn’t say it.
Instead, she smiled sweetly and said, “That’s amazing, Elyne. Truly.”
Elyne beamed at her, utterly unaware of the shadow in Grace’s eyes.
Elyne gave a small, content sigh, then set her teacup down with a soft clink.
“But enough about me,” she said with a warm smile. “This isn’t my tea table—it’s Grace’s. And it’s important that we all get to know each other, don’t you think?”
Clara nodded eagerly. Elen leaned back a little, more guarded. Elyne turned to Grace with a gentle, coaxing tilt of her head. “Lady Grace, why don’t you tell the girls something about yourself? Maybe… your favorite book? Or what you like to do in the afternoons?”
Grace blinked slowly, just once.
Of course. Bind them with common ground. Like puppies meeting in a garden.
She smiled.
“I read a lot,” she said sweetly. “My father’s library has the most fascinating books, some are even older than the estate. I like history. Myths. Especially the old ones, about gods and heroes.”
“Oh!” Clara’s eyes lit up. “I love stories about the gods, too! My favorite is the one where Velarion calms the sea by singing into a shell.”
Grace gave a soft hum, as if thinking. Cute.
Elyne smiled at the connection, then looked at Elen. “And you? What do you enjoy when you’re not training with your mother?”
Elen hesitated. Then shrugged. “Sword forms. And I like watching thunderstorms.”
Clara giggled nervously. “You don’t read much, do you?”
“No,” Elen said plainly. “Books are too slow. I’d rather do something.”
Grace tilted her head just slightly. Her voice was soft. “There’s strength in books, too. But I suppose different people see power in different places.”
It was an innocent comment on the surface. But Elen frowned.
Elyne, ever the mediator, chimed in cheerfully. “That’s why it’s so wonderful that you three are here together! Different strengths, different interests… but still noble daughters, still learners. And who knows? You might become the best of friends.”
Unlikely, Grace thought, still smiling.
But she said, “I’d like that.”
The tea cooled slowly in their cups.
Clara chatted nervously about her favorite flowers. Elen watched the clouds, speaking only when spoken to. And Grace… Grace listened.
She didn’t interrupt. She didn’t correct. She simply filed everything away.
Names. Preferences. Weaknesses.
Elyne sat beside her, oblivious, thinking the afternoon a success. Thinking bonds were forming.
They are, Grace thought. Just not the ones you imagine.
When the tea was finished and the sun had shifted just enough to lengthen the garden shadows, Elyne gently rose.
“Come now,” she said softly. “Time to rest before the next lesson.”
Clara stood, beaming. Elen gave a small nod. Grace rose with practiced grace, her black ribbon fluttering behind her like a banner.
She turned her head, just slightly, and looked over her shoulder at the tea table.
Three cups. Three paths.
Let’s see where they lead.
She smiled.

07. Chapter 6: Tea, Tension, and Titles


Chapter 6:
Tea, Tension, and Titles

The Official Daily Schedule of Lady Grace of AshfordMaintained by Governess Elyne Marren, per Duchess Liliana’s instruction



6:30 AM
Wake Up & Dressing
Lady Grace is to be gently woken at half-past six. Hair is to be brushed, and her ribbon tied as per Duchess’s instructions. Morning bath to follow.


7:00 AM
Morning Routine

Dressed in appropriate attire for the day’s instruction. Light breakfast with warm milk and toast. Grace is encouraged to speak kindly to all staff.



8:00 AM
Breakfast

Supervised breakfast with fruit, soft cheese, and herbal tea. Must be seated properly at all times. Gratitude must be expressed.



9:00 AM
Private Instruction

Lady Grace receives foundational lessons in noble etiquette, reading, and arithmetic. If progress is made, a gold star is granted.



11:00 AM
Arcane Education (Beginner Tier)

Madame Liliana permits Grace to observe basic glyphs and listen to low-grade magical principles, under strict supervision.



12:00 PM
Midday Tea with Governess
Tea served with honey, biscuits, and cucumber slices. Time for calm reflection and small conversation.


1:00 PM
Nap Time

Grace is to lie down in quiet darkness. A lullaby may be hummed. Room checked every 15 minutes.



3:00 PM
Outdoor Time
A short walk through the inner garden. Lady Grace may pick one (1) flower per day. All insects are to be treated gently.


4:00 PM
Creative Hour
Practice of violin or watercolor. Music must remain within C major. Drawing of mythical beasts discouraged.


5:30 PM
Dinner with the Duchess
Formal etiquette observed. Speak only when spoken to. One (1) question about her day may be asked by Her Grace.


7:00 PM
Evening Story & Wind Down

Chosen tale read aloud. Grace may select from approved books. No stories with monsters, rebellions, or demons.



8:00 PM
Lights Out

Governess Elyne tucks Lady Grace in. Night warding spell activated by house staff





Grace was furious. First, after her mother ordered stricter supervision, her boring, dull days finally seemed like they might change. Her mother had said that at five years old, it was now appropriate for Grace to begin formal education – after Grace had directly asked about it. But the result? Her new daily schedule turned from boring and dull to… an idiotic routine. It was like she had been sentenced to kindergarten hell.
She hadn’t escaped Earth to sip tea and nap under embroidered quilts. She had come to conquer. To build her legend. And instead? She had to draw flowers and hum lullabies. She didn’t want a gold star. She wanted a kingdom. She wasn’t a side character in her own story, she was the main character. The villainess who escaped time and space, changed worlds and builds her shadow empire to conquer space itself.
Wait. Did I really want this? Was this my goal…?
Grace stopped for a moment at a window. She was currently walking to her 11:00 a.m. Arcane Education.
Did I change again? she thought. Did my childish body let me make childish dreams?
The thought clawed at her mind more than she liked to admit. Had the softness of her cheeks, the lull of bedtime stories, the warmth of a mother's touch… dulled her edge?
She blinked, slowly. Her reflection blinked back, smiling faintly now.
No… I’m still me.
Just… waiting.
She turned from the window, walking to her Arcane Education lesson.
--::--
When Grace reached the classroom, she paused, genuinely surprised for the first time in weeks.
Not only was her instructor already waiting – a thin, severe-looking man with graying hair – but two other girls stood beside him. Roughly her age. Dressed neatly. Eyes wide.
Grace blinked.
These were the first children she had seen in this world. Until now, her life had been surrounded by adults; governesses, tutors, guards, servants… but never other children
Oh mother… that’s what you think, isn’t it?
I need peers. I need playmates.
How… pathetic.
Something stirred inside her. Not quite curiosity. Not quite annoyance. More like… disgust.
She stepped forward with a polite smile on her lips, every movement composed, every glance measured. I’ll play along, she thought. For now.
The instructor gave a small nod toward the girls. “Lady Grace of Ashborn, allow me to introduce your classmates. Both are daughters of loyal retainer houses, sworn to your father’s duchy.”
The first girl stepped forward, clutching the hem of her dress in both hands as she curtsied awkwardly. Her hair was dark and tied back with a pale ribbon.
“My name is Clara of House Bellgrave,” she said, her voice small but practiced. “My father serves as Master of the Hunt for the Duke.”
She looked up with wide, nervous eyes, waiting for approval. The second girl followed, slightly taller, with auburn curls and a bolder tone in her voice.
“I’m Elen of House Trivelle. My mother is a knight in the Duchess’s personal guard.”
She didn’t curtsy so much as nod, stiffly, but with a strange sort of pride.
Grace tilted her head slightly.
Bellgrave and Trivelle. Retainer houses. Loyal, landholding families of minor importance. Perhaps one was a baron, the other untitled. Either way, they were several steps beneath her.
There was a structure to nobility in this world, clear and absolute.
At the top stood the Dukes and Duchesses, rulers of vast territories like Ashborn, second only to royalty. Beneath them, Marquesses governed the borderlands, followed by Counts and Viscounts, who ruled counties and large towns. Then came the Barons, holders of small estates and local power. Below them, Baronets, nobles in name, barely in influence. And finally, Knights, respected, but not truly noble, their status earned through service, not blood.
Grace was the daughter of a Duke. These girls? They were nobodies. Children of servants dressed in silk.
Peers, she thought again, her smile not shifting an inch. What a joke.
“Pleased to meet you,” Grace said smoothly, her voice like honey wrapped around glass. “I hope we’ll all get along… just fine.”
The instructor gave a satisfied nod.
“Good. Now that introductions are done, let us begin.”
He moved to the front of the room, gesturing to a long, slate-colored panel etched with faint runes. A servant stepped forward to place a leather-bound book and a carafe of water beside him, then retreated in silence.
“Before any of you learn to cast a single spark or scribe a single glyph, you must understand what it is you’re touching.”Support the creativity of authors by visiting the original site for this novel and more.
His voice was sharp and ragged as he clasped his hands behind his back. He began placing, each step deliberately.
“Magic is not a toy. It is not a parlor trick. It is the legacy of gods.”
He stopped before a tall blackboard etched faintly with divine symbols. At its center, a great circle surrounded six smaller ones. With a simple touch, each glowed faintly in turn.
“Iras gave us Light Magic—to heal, to protect, to purify.Thyron gave us Earth Magic—to shape stone, enhance the body, and anchor ourselves.Elyra gave us Space Magic—to understand what lies beyond, and travel without walking.Velarion gave us Water Magic—to control rivers, rain, and the sea.Lirien gave us Nature Magic—to nurture, to rot, to grow.And Kaelir gave us Shadow Magic—to adapt, to vanish, to change.”
He paused. The air in the room shifted slightly as his voice lowered.
“There is one more, but it is not a gift. It is a curse. Void Magic – the unmaking of all things. It is forbidden, corrupt, and treasonous to study. I should not have to say more.”
Grace felt her fingertips twitch.
Don’t smirk. Not yet.
He returned to the central circle. “All magic flows through these paths. But only those with a Mana Core – a second heart – can channel it without aid. Without staves, glyphs, or ritual. Such individuals are rare. One in ten thousand.”
Clara blinked rapidly. Elen straightened. Grace tilted her head.
Oh, this should be amusing.
“Can we get one?” Clara asked softly.
“No,” the instructor said without looking at her. “You are born with the potential – or you are not. A Mana Core, sometimes called a ‘second heart,’ is not something that can be made through will alone.”
He paused, then added, “If it forms, it usually does so within the first ten years of life, as a child absorbs ambient mana. Once the core begins to take shape, the dominant type of mana, whichever fills it past the halfway point, determines the child’s affinity.”
His tone remained flat, dispassionate.
“If you are one of the rare few… you will know soon enough.”
Grace’s quill moved slowly across her parchment, but her mind was already elsewhere.
Too late, she thought. I already know.
He turned back to the board.
“But all magic, even ritual, begins with one thing.”
He picked up a piece of chalk and began to draw slowly across the slate surface.
“The foundation of magical script – the Old Tongue. You’ll need to memorize the first eight glyphs by week's end. They are the basis for both arcane theory and practical invocation.”
Clara was already reaching for her ink and parchment. Elen's fingers moved more steadily, her back rigid with focus.
Grace didn’t move.
She already knew these glyphs. Had studied them when she was three. She could draw them blindfolded and backward. She had carved them into the underside of her wardrobe for practice.
But she said nothing.
Instead, she dipped her quill slowly, deliberately, and began to write along with the others. Stroke by careful stroke.
Let them think I’m learning, she thought. Let them watch. The real game hasn’t started yet.
The instructor began to speak again, voice droning in that precise, dry rhythm only old scholars seemed to master.
Grace’s eyes flicked toward the two girls beside her.
Clara’s grip on her quill was too tight. Elen’s lines were too sharp, too fast.
Interesting, Grace thought. One will break. The other might fight.
She smiled faintly and returned to her page.
The lesson ended with the sound of chalk snapping and chairs scraping gently against the stone floor. The instructor gave them a stern nod and swept from the room without ceremony.
Grace was already standing, brush-cleaning her inkwell with measured grace when the two girls approached.
Clara stepped forward first, wringing her hands slightly. “Um… Lady Grace, it was an honor to study beside you. I hope we can… be friends?”
Elen folded her arms, eyes flicking between the two of them. “You’re not what I expected,” she said bluntly. “But you’re not weak.”
Grace tilted her head. She could have said something cutting. She could have smiled with venom. But before she could open her mouth, another voice interrupted.
“Ah, there you are, Gracie.”
Elyne entered the chamber, her voice light and pleasant as always. “Since you’ve all been introduced,” she continued, looking between the girls, “why not join us for midday tea in the west garden? The Duchess believes it’s important you get to know one another. Properly.”
Clara’s eyes lit up. Elen just gave a cautious nod. Grace looked between them, then to Elyne.
What a perfect little trap you've arranged, she thought with disgust and shakes her head inwardly. But outwardly, she offered a sweet smile.
“I’d be delighted.”
--::--
The west garden had been trimmed to perfection.
Hedges sculpted into swirls and tiers framed a white-marble table, already laid with delicate porcelain, sugar cubes in silver bowls, and plates of tiny, perfumed biscuits that looked more decorative than edible. Rose petals floated lazily in a crystal pitcher of water. It was the kind of setting meant to impress noble guests, not entertain children.
Which, Grace thought, made it all the more amusing.
She sat at the head of the table, legs folded neatly beneath her, her posture impeccable. Clara and Elen sat opposite her, still uncertain about whether they were being honored… or tested.
Elyne poured the tea herself, smiling warmly as she added a drop of honey to Grace’s cup before offering the others theirs.
“There we go,” Elyne said, settling beside Grace. “Now we can all get to know one another. Isn't this lovely?”
Clara nodded too fast. “It’s beautiful. Thank you for the invitation.”
Elen looked like she was still trying to decide if this was part of the lesson.
Grace took a small sip, letting the taste of jasmine and sugar roll over her tongue.
“This is my favorite tea,” she said softly, cradling the cup with both hands. “My mother says it’s calming.”
Not that I need calming, she thought. But it's useful to look like I do.
There was a short silence, then Clara leaned forward, clearly trying.
“Lady Grace… um, have you always lived in the estate?”
Grace smiled over her teacup. “Of course. I was born here. After all my father is the Duke of Ashborn.”
“I’ve never met a real duchess,” Clara whispered, eyes wide.
“She’s not a duchess,” Elen said flatly. “She’s the duke’s daughter.”
Grace lowered her cup, gaze sharpening for just a heartbeat.
Then she laughed – light, airy, practiced.
“It’s all right. I don’t mind. I’m sure it’s confusing for some.”
Clara flushed. Elen frowned.
Elyne stepped in gently. “Titles are important, girls. But kindness is more so.”
Grace resisted the urge to roll her eyes.
Of course, you’d say that, dear Elyne. Ever the perfect little court flower.
Instead, she leaned forward slightly, resting her chin on her palm and staring at both girls with a faint tilt to her smile.
“So… which of you thinks they’ll get a Mana Core first?”
Both girls froze.
Clara blinked. “I… I don’t know. That’s really rare, isn’t it?”
Elen met her gaze evenly. “Why? Do you think you already have one?”
Grace grinned.
“I suppose we’ll all just have to wait and see.”
There was a pause after Grace’s remark, long enough for Clara to look suddenly unsure whether she was still breathing, and for Elen’s jaw to tense just slightly.
Elyne, ever the gracious buffer, leaned forward and smiled.
“Well,” she said, her voice smooth as silk, “since you’re all so curious, maybe I can tell you how it happened for me.”
Both girls turned toward her immediately, eager. Even Grace, despite herself, tilted her head slightly.
“I was ten,” Elyne said. “It started when I began to hear... humming. Not from outside, but from the space around me. Like the world had turned into threads, and I could feel the tension in them.”
Clara blinked. “That sounds… weird.”
“It was,” Elyne admitted with a soft laugh. “But beautiful, too. Everything began to shimmer. I remember the day my core solidified – it felt like a second heartbeat echoing in my chest. And then I knew.”
Her fingers brushed the teacup absentmindedly.
“I was aligned with Space Magic. I saw lines where no one else could. And when I stepped forward… I stepped twice. Once into the world, and once through it.”
Elen’s eyes lit up. “Did it hurt?”
Elyne smiled. “Not at all. But it was overwhelming. For a moment, it felt like I wasn’t part of the world anymore… like the world had to make room for me.”
Grace kept her expression still. Her tea cooled between her hands.
So dramatic, she thought. You’d think she birthed the stars herself.
Still, a flicker of memory tugged at her.
The silence in her chest. Then the sudden thrum. Like a string had been pulled tight across her ribs. And then – awareness. A depth to everything. A pull, and a pulse, and a thread through the spine of the universe.
Mine was faster, she thought.
But she didn’t say it.
Instead, she smiled sweetly and said, “That’s amazing, Elyne. Truly.”
Elyne beamed at her, utterly unaware of the shadow in Grace’s eyes.
Elyne gave a small, content sigh, then set her teacup down with a soft clink.
“But enough about me,” she said with a warm smile. “This isn’t my tea table—it’s Grace’s. And it’s important that we all get to know each other, don’t you think?”
Clara nodded eagerly. Elen leaned back a little, more guarded. Elyne turned to Grace with a gentle, coaxing tilt of her head. “Lady Grace, why don’t you tell the girls something about yourself? Maybe… your favorite book? Or what you like to do in the afternoons?”
Grace blinked slowly, just once.
Of course. Bind them with common ground. Like puppies meeting in a garden.
She smiled.
“I read a lot,” she said sweetly. “My father’s library has the most fascinating books, some are even older than the estate. I like history. Myths. Especially the old ones, about gods and heroes.”
“Oh!” Clara’s eyes lit up. “I love stories about the gods, too! My favorite is the one where Velarion calms the sea by singing into a shell.”
Grace gave a soft hum, as if thinking. Cute.
Elyne smiled at the connection, then looked at Elen. “And you? What do you enjoy when you’re not training with your mother?”
Elen hesitated. Then shrugged. “Sword forms. And I like watching thunderstorms.”
Clara giggled nervously. “You don’t read much, do you?”
“No,” Elen said plainly. “Books are too slow. I’d rather do something.”
Grace tilted her head just slightly. Her voice was soft. “There’s strength in books, too. But I suppose different people see power in different places.”
It was an innocent comment on the surface. But Elen frowned.
Elyne, ever the mediator, chimed in cheerfully. “That’s why it’s so wonderful that you three are here together! Different strengths, different interests… but still noble daughters, still learners. And who knows? You might become the best of friends.”
Unlikely, Grace thought, still smiling.
But she said, “I’d like that.”
The tea cooled slowly in their cups.
Clara chatted nervously about her favorite flowers. Elen watched the clouds, speaking only when spoken to. And Grace… Grace listened.
She didn’t interrupt. She didn’t correct. She simply filed everything away.
Names. Preferences. Weaknesses.
Elyne sat beside her, oblivious, thinking the afternoon a success. Thinking bonds were forming.
They are, Grace thought. Just not the ones you imagine.
When the tea was finished and the sun had shifted just enough to lengthen the garden shadows, Elyne gently rose.
“Come now,” she said softly. “Time to rest before the next lesson.”
Clara stood, beaming. Elen gave a small nod. Grace rose with practiced grace, her black ribbon fluttering behind her like a banner.
She turned her head, just slightly, and looked over her shoulder at the tea table.
Three cups. Three paths.
Let’s see where they lead.
She smiled.
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