
The High Weaver's Revenge
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The silence in the Grand Hall stretched until it felt brittle enough to snap. Elara’s gaze remained locked on the obsidian amulet resting against Lyra’s collarbone. The heirloom wasn't just a piece of jewelry; it was a conduit, deeply attuned to Elara's own magical frequency. Seeing it draped around the neck of a simpering, manipulative coward felt like a physical violation.
"Take it off," Elara commanded. Her voice wasn't raised, but it carried a sharp, absolute authority that made the ambient magic in the room shiver.
Lyra gasped, shrinking back against Caelum’s chest. "Caelum, she’s scaring me."
"Elara, that is enough!" Caelum barked, tightening his grip on Lyra. "You will not speak to her in that tone. The amulet belongs to the Guild Master’s chosen partner. It is rightfully hers now."
"It is an ancestral relic of the Vance bloodline," Elara replied, her tone glacial. "It requires a Weaver's core to stabilize it. If she wears it when the Rift Storms hit, the mana feedback will boil her blood in her veins."
Lyra let out a pathetic whimper, her hands flying to her throat as if the amulet were already burning her. "Caelum, is that true? Is she trying to hurt me?"
"She’s lying," Caelum said quickly, though a flicker of doubt crossed his eyes. He glared at Elara. "You’re just trying to frighten her because you're bitter. You can't stand that I've found someone who is actually capable of warmth."
Elara didn't bother defending herself against the insult. Her mind was already moving three steps ahead, calculating the catastrophic failure rate of the manor's wards. She needed to bypass Caelum's stupidity. She needed someone else to understand the gravity of the situation.
"Jessa!" Elara called out, projecting her voice toward the upper balcony. "Jessa, come down here immediately!"
A moment later, a door slammed on the second floor. Heavy, irritated footsteps pounded down the marble staircase. Jessa, Elara and Caelum’s sixteen-year-old adopted apprentice, appeared at the landing. She was dressed in an extravagant, sequined gown far too mature for her age, her arms crossed defensively over her chest.
"What is it now?" Jessa groaned, rolling her eyes. "I'm trying to practice my posture for the Solstice Gala. Can't you guys scream at each other quietly?"
Elara looked at the girl she had raised for the past six years. Elara had found Jessa on the streets, half-starved and brimming with raw, uncontrolled magic. Elara had taken her in, spent countless hours teaching her rune-craft, and provided her with a life of luxury and safety. Surely, Jessa would listen to reason.
"Jessa, listen to me very carefully," Elara said, stepping toward the stairs. "The wards have been compromised. Caelum has transferred the primary keys to Lyra. The defense matrix is going to fail. Go to your room, pack a bag with emergency supplies, and get your travel cloak. We need to leave the manor."
Jessa blinked, looking from Elara to Caelum, and finally to Lyra. A slow, mocking smirk spread across the teenager's face.
"Leave?" Jessa laughed, a harsh, grating sound. "Are you insane? I'm not going anywhere with you."
Elara stopped. "Jessa, this isn't a game. The Rift Storms are accelerating. If you stay here, you will be in mortal danger."
"The only danger here is you losing your mind," Jessa retorted, descending the rest of the stairs to stand beside Lyra. The younger woman immediately reached out, intertwining her fingers with Jessa’s in a sickening show of solidarity.
"Lyra told me you'd do this," Jessa continued, her voice dripping with teenage spite. "She said you'd try to drag me away from my home just to punish Dad."
Elara felt a cold knot form in her stomach. "Lyra told you?"
"Yes!" Jessa snapped. "Because Lyra actually talks to me. She actually cares about what I want! All you ever do is lock me in that stupid library and force me to study dusty old runes. You never let me go to parties. You never let me wear nice things. You're just a cold, obsessed monster who cares more about rocks and shields than your own family!"
The words struck like physical blows, but Elara’s face remained an impassive mask. She had sacrificed her sleep, her health, and her own magical core to ensure Jessa had a future where she wouldn't starve in the gutters. She had enforced discipline because magic was dangerous, not because she was cruel.
"I made you study so you wouldn't blow yourself up," Elara said evenly. "I kept you safe."
"Well, I don't need your kind of safe anymore," Jessa spat. "Lyra is going to help me with my debut at the Gala. She convinced Dad to buy me this dress. She's going to be a way better mother than you ever were."
Lyra offered a watery, modest smile, squeezing Jessa’s hand. "I just want us all to be a happy family, Elara. If you would just soften your heart, maybe you could stay... in the guest wing."
Elara looked at the three of them. Her soon-to-be ex-husband, puffing his chest out in false bravado. His mistress, wearing Elara's stolen heritage and weaponizing fake tears. And her adopted daughter, a spoiled, ungrateful child who had chosen sequined dresses over the woman who saved her life.
The cold knot in Elara's stomach dissolved, replaced by a profound, liberating clarity.
She owed them nothing.
"I see," Elara said. Her voice was no longer angry. It was terrifyingly calm. "You have made your choice."
Caelum, sensing a victory, reached into his velvet robes and pulled out a thick parchment scroll. He tossed it onto the dark wood of the nearby parlor table.
"Since we're finally being honest," Caelum said, adopting a businesslike tone, "I had the Guild lawyers draft this up yesterday. It’s a formal separation agreement and a deed transfer. You will relinquish all claims to the Vance Guild Manor, your position as Head Weaver, and the contents of the vault."
Elara walked over to the table and picked up the scroll. She unrolled it, her brilliant eyes scanning the dense legal jargon in seconds. It was a complete eviction. They were stripping her of her home, her wealth, and her titles, leaving her with absolutely nothing but the clothes on her back.
"You're throwing me out into the slums," Elara stated, looking up at Caelum. "With the Rift Storms approaching."
"You brought this on yourself, Elara," Caelum said, crossing his arms defensively. "If you had just been a supportive wife, none of this would be happening. Sign the papers. You have five minutes to leave the premises before I have the guards physically remove you."
"Dad, make sure she doesn't take the silver candlestick from her room," Jessa chimed in maliciously. "She always liked that one."
Elara didn't scream. She didn't cry. She didn't throw herself at their feet and beg for mercy. Her pragmatic mind had already accepted the reality of the situation. They were dead weight. If she stayed, she would die trying to protect people who actively despised her.
Without a word, Elara picked up the heavy quill resting on the table, dipped it in the inkwell, and signed her name with swift, elegant strokes at the bottom of the parchment.
Caelum looked genuinely shocked. He had clearly expected a fight, a tearful breakdown, or at least a negotiation. "You... you signed it?"
"I did," Elara said, dropping the quill. She turned on her heel and walked toward the grand staircase. "I will collect my coat and leave."
"Wait!" Caelum called out, a sudden paranoid edge to his voice. "Don't touch anything in your study! The magical artifacts belong to the Guild now!"
Elara ignored him, ascending the stairs with perfect, unhurried posture. She walked down the corridor to her private study. The room was lined with ancient grimoires and glowing crystals, all of which she had procured herself. She didn't pack a bag. She didn't take a change of clothes or a single coin.
Instead, she walked over to the false panel behind her desk. Pressing her thumb against the wood, she injected a tiny spark of her blood-magic. The panel clicked open, revealing a small, velvet-lined box. Inside rested three smooth, black stones engraved with glowing silver runes: her hidden master-runes. The true, foundational anchors of her magic, completely untraceable by the Guild's rudimentary systems.
She slipped the heavy stones into the deep pockets of her practical woolen coat, pulled the garment over her shoulders, and left the room without a backward glance.
When Elara descended the stairs, Caelum, Lyra, and Jessa were waiting in the foyer. Two burly Guild enforcers stood by the massive front doors, their hands resting on the hilts of their swords.
"Make sure she doesn't have anything stolen," Caelum ordered the guards.
"Let her go, Caelum," Lyra whispered, burying her face in his shoulder. "I just want her out. Her aura is giving me a headache."
Elara walked straight past them. She didn't flinch when the enforcers opened the heavy mahogany doors, letting in a blast of freezing, unnaturally sharp wind. The sky outside was no longer its usual twilight blue; it was a bruised, roiling purple, thick with the scent of ozone and impending destruction. The sirens in the lower city slums hadn't started wailing yet, but Elara could feel the static charge of the Rift Storm building in her teeth.
She stepped over the threshold, her boots crunching against the gravel of the driveway.
"Elara!" Caelum called out one last time, standing safely behind the threshold of the manor. "Don't come crawling back when you realize you're nothing without the Vance name!"
Elara paused. She turned slowly, looking back at the magnificent, glowing dome of the manor's wards, and the three foolish people standing beneath it. Her lips curved into a sharp, chilling smile.
"I won't," Elara said softly, her voice carrying over the rising wind. "Enjoy the sanctuary I built for you, Caelum. I hope it lasts the night."
She turned her back on the Guild Manor and walked into the darkening slums, taking the true strength of the city's defenses with her.
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