The rhythmic thud of the wheels had become a steady drumbeat matching the pulse in Amanda’s temples. She pressed herself against the rough barrel, holding her breath. Her hearing, sharpened by whatever strange gift these new ears carried, snatched fragments of conversation from the night around the campfire.
“…luminescent crystal with a violet tint: defective, full stop! Those dwarves from the Deep Shafts are strangling us with their monopoly!”
“The third attempt with the retort sediment failed again! All the formulas are worthless! The Imperial Academy demands 99 % purity, and we’re barely hitting ninety!”
“Quiet, idiots! Word is an imperial envoy arrived in Ironhaven itself. Not for tariffs. They’re looking for someone. Or… something.”
(Alchemical reagents… contracts with noble houses… imperial intrigue…)
Amanda’s mind, trained for years to assemble evidence into airtight cases, instantly stitched the scraps together. This wasn’t just a merchant caravan. It was a throbbing nerve centre of problems. And problems smelled like money and danger.
Night fell like black velvet. The campfire in the centre of the camp became the only island of fierce, uneasy light.
Finn, the young alchemist, his face twisted with helpless rage, hurled a large violet crystal into the flames. It hissed, releasing acrid smoke.
“Defective! Again defective! Without pure luminescent I can’t produce the phosphorescent base for House Hawkclaw’s crest! The contract collapses, and we all end up paying our debts in the mines!”
Lorenz stood apart, his face in the half-dark resembling an ancient wooden mask: impenetrable, carved with deep fissures of wrinkles. Yet Amanda caught the tiniest detail: his fingers tapped lightly on his dagger hilt. A sign of profound irritation.
(He’s not just displeased. He’s counting losses. And the numbers aren’t pretty.)
Into that oppressive silence, broken only by the crackle of flames, her voice cut: quiet, yet surprisingly clear, free of its earlier rasp.
“It can be purified.”
Every head turned as if pulled by strings. Dozens of eyes, a mixture of exhaustion, anger, and now sharp, sudden curiosity.
Finn snorted, raking her from head to toe with venomous contempt. “Oh, the miracle savage speaks! What’s next? Will you sing it a cleansing song? Or can those demon eyes of yours bleach stone just by staring?”
“Finn!” Lorenz’s voice cracked like a whip. Yet his own gaze, now fixed on Amanda, was heavy and probing. “Time is coin we’re spending here. If this is a joke, it will be your last.”
Amanda didn’t flinch. Inside, everything knotted into ice, but months spent in courtrooms in her previous life had taught her one truth: certainty is half the battle. She rose, ignoring Finn’s sneer, and addressed Lorenz directly, as one addresses the only person who matters in the room.
“You need strong grape vinegar aged in oak, no less than seven years. Crush the crystal into pea-sized grains, no finer. Boil it in a copper cauldron: copper only: until the solution loses its emerald tint and turns clear as a tear. Then rinse with distilled water and calcinate in a clay crucible over coals made from white ash. The oxide film that gives the violet sheen will evaporate.”
Silence fell so complete you could hear a pine cone drop somewhere far away. Even the fire seemed to hush.
“Oxide… film?” whispered one of the apprentices, a bearded giant staring at Amanda like she was a ghost.
Lorenz stepped closer, slowly. His shadow swallowed her. He was no longer looking at a curiosity. He was examining a phenomenon.
“That term,” he said with icy precision, “is used...
in the closed circles of the Arcanian University’s alchemists. Half the masters in our own Guild don’t know it. How did it find its way into the head of a borderland girl from a village tax collectors wipe off the map?”
(Damn it! Overplayed my hand! That was dissertation-level for a village simpleton!)
Her heart hammered so hard she feared it would burst from her chest. Backing down now was death. She let her gaze go unfocused, vacant, slipping into the “lost-memory” mask she had already tested.
“I… don’t remember. The word just… surfaced. As if I read it once. In a book with a blue cover.” She deliberately added a hazy, half-remembered detail. A lie seasoned with a crumb of false specificity sounded truer.
The story has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the violation.
Lorenz froze. His grey eyes, cold as lake ice, scanned her face for the tiniest crack. The silence lasted an eternity.
“…Very. Very curious,” he finally breathed, and for the first time there was no fear or suspicion in his voice: only the thrill of a collector who has stumbled upon a strange artefact. He turned to Finn. “Do exactly as she said. Your pride or our purse: choose.”
“Master Lorenz! You can’t be serious!” Finn went pale. “Entrust a Guild process to the words of this… this river-found whelp?”
“I’m trusting the chance to avoid ruin,” Lorenz replied coldly. “Or are you admitting your skill is inferior to a ‘river-found whelp’?”
Clenching his fists until the knuckles cracked, Finn set to work, muttering curses. The hours dragged. People drifted away, shaking their heads. But Lorenz stayed. He sat across the fire from Amanda, never taking his eyes off her. His stare was a physical weight: analytical, stripping away layers. He didn’t see a girl. He saw a walking enigma, and his mind was already calculating her market value.
(He’s weighing me. Not as a person. As an investment.)
The thought was unpleasant, yet it carried a strange sense of safety. As long as she was useful, she was alive.
Toward dawn Finn returned. His face was black with soot, eyes sunken, but in his grimy hand he cradled a piece of white suede like a holy relic. On it lay the crystal.
It wasn’t merely white. It glowed with an inner, milky, velvety light: absolutely pure, without a trace of colour.
“Great caverns…” Finn whispered, his voice not awed but almost terrified. “She… was right. Purity… ninety-nine percent. Maybe higher.”
Lorenz took the crystal. He didn’t just hold it to the light; he seemed to listen to it, feeling its structure with his fingertips. And on his stone-carved face something incredible happened: the silver-touched brows lifted a fraction, and faint crow’s feet appeared at the corners of his eyes: the ghost of deep, chilling interest.
“This isn’t purification,” he said, surprisingly softly. “This is enhancement. The method doesn’t merely remove impurities. It alters the lattice into a more stable configuration.”
His gaze turned to Amanda, slow and smooth as a well-oiled mechanism. She fought to keep her breathing even, to hide the wave of relief crashing over her.
(It worked. First round: mine.)
“Amanda,” Lorenz said. The name left his lips without a trace of former mockery. It was cold, businesslike acknowledgement of fact. “You have saved the Guild a considerable sum and preserved its reputation. The Phoenix does not forget debts. And it values… unexpected assets.”
Those words worked like an incantation. The atmosphere around her shifted. Eyes that yesterday had held only fear and distrust now studied her with curiosity laced with hope and calculation. She was no longer “it,” a monster. She had become “she”: mysterious, but potentially valuable.
The road to Ironhaven continued. Amanda cautiously wove scraps of knowledge from the life before her death and rebirth into the caravan’s daily routine: how to pitch a tent so the mountain gusts wouldn’t rip it away; which roots eased fever and mended wounds; which wood burned hot and clean, and which only smoked.
At last, after the final, steepest pass, the forest suddenly parted.
“Ironhaven! Dead ahead!”
Before them stretched a vast lake, cold and blue as a sapphire set in mountains. On its far shore, perfectly mirrored in the still water, rose the City.
Citadel.
Wonder.
These were not walls in any ordinary sense. It was a single, monolithic cliff thrusting hundreds of metres into the sky. Its surface had been polished to a mirror sheen, reflecting clouds and sunlight until it merged with the heavens; impossible to tell where stone ended and sky began. It looked like the colossal, polished bone of some ancient titan. And crowning that diamond escarpment, like a tiara of crystal and steel, glittered impossible towers, spires, and bridges: airy, gravity-defying marvels.
“The Diamond Tablet,” Lorenz’s voice sounded beside her, quiet and laced with the open pride of an owner. “Ironhaven. Its walls were sung from the mountain’s heart by the First Archmage himself. No battering ram, no spell, no passage of centuries has ever left a scratch. Here the rule of kings ends, and the rule of Knowledge begins.”
The caravan, suddenly looking small and pathetic, began the long serpentine descent toward the colossal gates at the cliff’s base. Gates the size of a village barn, embossed with a phoenix rising from flames.
Just before entry, Lorenz wheeled his horse and spoke to Amanda one last time. His face was grave as a surgeon’s before a perilous operation.
“Remember,” he said, each word falling like a minted coin. “Inside those walls, you are no one. You have no lineage, no past: only what you can prove. Your knowledge is your only sword and shield. It will draw attention. And attention comes in many forms: patronage, envy, greed.”
He handed her a small wooden token branded with the phoenix and a number. “This grants you entry to the Guild’s reception hall. After that, your path is your own. Do not disappoint my calculations.”
Amanda closed her fingers around the token. The wood was still warm from his hand. She squeezed until the edges bit into her palm, leaving a sharp, familiar sting of pain.
(I’m here. I made it.)
She lifted her gaze to the approaching wall: overwhelming, magnificent. That titanic polished stone was more than protection. It was a declaration. Of order built across centuries. Of unassailable power.
And of challenge.
In that moment the last remnants of fear flaked away from her soul like dead bark. In their place settled something cold, sharp, and resolute: the same feeling she once carried into a courtroom, ready to fight not for life, but for truth.
(This is not sanctuary. This is an arena.)
The gigantic gates parted without a sound, obeying some unseen will, revealing a narrow slit into the eternity of stone. A dark, cool tunnel swallowed the caravan, the wagons, the people.
And her.
Amanda: once Light, now bearer of a prosecutor’s soul in a dead girl’s body, memories of another world in her mind, and a pair of ruby eyes in which a fire now burned bright enough to challenge even the diamond inviolability of Ironhaven.
Her first case in this new world: “The Matter of Her Own Future,” had just moved to trial.