The Heart-Ledger
Rain still dripped from Calven’s robes when he stepped inside. “Company headquarters,” they’d sneered when he asked what this place was. It bore no resemblance to the crumbling spires and torchlit halls of his training. Instead, the stone floors gleamed under hanging lamps, and thin brass pipes snaked overhead like hidden veins. The air smelled of fresh ink, oiled metal, and aged paper—so alien that Calven paused in the doorway, his wet boots squeaking on the polished surface. The others strode forward as if they owned every inch: Master Yorrik, his cloak stitched with ravens that seemed to move in the lamp glow; Veyla, her silver talon-tipped fingers clicking against her thigh; Hesh, broad-shouldered and scowling with contempt. Their presence slashed through the hush like a blade. The reception desk perched in the center of the marble expanse, attended by a woman in an immaculate grey suit whose hair was so precise and motionless it looked lacquered in place. Her hands typed, stopped,...