แชร์

CHAPTER 3 Rules for Survival

ผู้เขียน: Clare
last update วันที่เผยแพร่: 2026-05-12 01:02:43

The rules, revised, looked like this: One: Do not interact with Crown Prince Aldric Solenne. Two: Understand, before anything else, what Lady Morwen Ashvale actually wants from you. Three: Do not witness anything you are not supposed to witness. Four: If in doubt, leave the room. Five: Do not let Seren Vael get killed.

Clara folded the scrap of paper, considered it, and did not burn it. She tucked it into the inner pocket of her jacket instead. In her previous life she had kept lists the way other people kept journals — not as a record of feeling, but as a record of decisions. There was a comfort in writing things down, in making the provisional concrete, in knowing that even if you forgot, there was evidence that you had once known. She did not, however, feel particularly comforted by what she'd written.

The morning after the ceremony arrived grey and purposeful, the kind of weather that made demands on you. Clara rose before her roommates, washed in cold water, and sat at the small desk by the window to eat the bread she'd brought from the lower city, looking out at the Academy's courtyard while she thought.

She knew this story. That had been her advantage, her singular edge in a world that would otherwise be completely incomprehensible to her. She knew the main plot beats. She knew which characters were important and which were window dressing. She knew, in broad terms, how the next year and a half would unfold if nothing intervened: the heroine Lysa would arrive, discover her extraordinary power, catch the crown prince's attention, become the target of Morwen's jealousy, and navigate a series of escalating magical and political crises until the climax in which Morwen's obsession was either broken or redirected, depending on which ending her book club's edition had printed. Clara had read the longer version, which was not more satisfying.

What she had not known — what no one reading that novel could have known — was that the story had apparently run before. Multiple times. That the character readers understood as the obsessive, threatening villainess had actually been accumulating something across those repetitions: knowledge, intention, and apparently a very specific plan involving Clara Quinn. None of this was in the book. Which meant Clara was now operating in a version of this world that had already deviated from the text, and was going to keep deviating, and her careful foreknowledge of plot beats was less reliable than she'd assumed.

What she needed was information. Not from the novel, which was already proving itself an incomplete document. From the world itself.

She pulled out a fresh sheet of paper and began writing. What she knew: Morwen had lived this story before, at least once, possibly more. She had recognized Clara at the ceremony with the ease of long familiarity — this was not someone acting on a description or a suspicion. She had said do not wander off this time, which suggested she had watched Clara wander off before and it had ended badly. She had touched Clara's collar, which was not the action of an acquaintance but of someone who had long since moved past the awkwardness of physical contact and landed somewhere more complicated.

What she didn't know: how many times. Why Morwen had been the one to accumulate memory while everyone else, apparently, started fresh. What had happened to the original background character in iterations where Clara hadn't been transplanted into her. Whether the timeline she was currently inhabiting was running toward the same ending as all the others, or whether Morwen's changed behavior had already started pulling it in a different direction.

She also didn't know what she was to Morwen. Beyond the obvious, which she still wasn't looking at directly.

She folded this paper too and pocketed it.

The Academy's orientation schedule was printed on a card that had been slipped under the dormitory door overnight. It was dense with obligations: a tour of the facilities at the seventh hour, a meeting with the year's assigned academic counselor at the ninth, first class placements at the eleventh. There was also a notation at the bottom, marked with an asterisk and a small seal Clara didn't recognize: All first-year students are required to attend a magic aptitude assessment in the lower testing hall at the thirteenth hour. Results determine track placement and remain in your permanent record.

Clara had forgotten about the magic aptitude assessment. This was, she realized, a problem.

In the novel, the aptitude assessment existed to establish Lysa's extraordinary power and set in motion the sequence of events that would make her the crown prince's interest. The background character — Clara's predecessor in this body — had presumably also attended the assessment, produced unremarkable results, and been placed in the general stream without fanfare. The novel didn't say this explicitly because the novel had not found the background character interesting enough to follow, but it was the logical implication.

The question was what Clara's assessment would show. She was not, in her original life, a magical person. She had been a project coordinator for a logistics company, which required a different but arguably comparable skill set. She had no reason to expect she would produce results different from the original occupant of this body.

The no reason to expect was doing a lot of work in that sentence, and she knew it.

She had noticed, in the four days before the ceremony, small things. The way the candle in her rented room had flared when she'd focused on it while thinking, a surge of warmth that she'd attributed to a draft and then filed in the part of her mind labeled probably nothing. The way the coin in her pocket had felt warm to the touch in a way that metal shouldn't, as though it was drawing heat from somewhere. The way the edges of things sometimes looked slightly more defined than they should, the air around solid objects just barely too crisp, too present, as though she was seeing not just the surface of things but their capacity to remain.

She had told herself this was stress. New world, new body, heightened senses. Perfectly reasonable.

She ate the last of her bread and watched the courtyard fill with students as the bells marked the seventh hour and tried to decide how, exactly, you went about making yourself seem less than you were when you didn't yet know what you were.

The tour was conducted by a sixth-year student named Corvan who had the demeanor of someone who had done this many times and found it neither rewarding nor particularly burdensome. He walked them through the library — vast, many-floored, with sections Clara noted carefully — the practical magic training halls, the infirmary, and the refectory. He did not take them to the restricted wing. He gestured toward a door at the far end of the main library floor and said, simply, "That section requires special permission and is not available to first-year students without faculty escort," and moved on before anyone could ask questions.

Clara looked at the door and noted where it was and said nothing.

Seren appeared at her shoulder as if she had been there all along. "You're memorizing the layout," she said.

"I'm paying attention."

"It's the same thing." She fell into step beside Clara as Corvan led them toward the training halls. "The restricted section has a different librarian. I asked someone this morning. She's been there for as long as anyone can remember. Some of the sixth-years say she's been there longer than the Academy itself, which is probably not literally true but is interesting as a thing people feel compelled to say."

Clara looked at her sideways.

"I told you," Seren said, without particular emphasis. "Information."

"How long have you been here?"

"I arrived two days before the ceremony. I've been at this since the morning of the first day."

Clara thought about Seren's eventual disappearance in the novel, her unexplained absence from the later chapters, the way Lysa's grief over her had been handled in three sentences before the plot moved on. She thought about the word later and decided to put it somewhere she could find it again.

"What do you know about Lady Ashvale?" she asked.

Seren glanced at her with the attention of someone recalibrating. "More than I told you last night, or about the same?"

"More."

"She came to the Academy three years ago. She was already trained — she'd had private instruction before that, from her family's household images and from a tutor whose name I haven't been able to find in any record that should contain it. She tested into the advanced track on her first day with results that apparently made two of the examiners request a recess." Seren's voice was even, informational. "She doesn't attend social events. She doesn't participate in inter-house competitions. She goes to class, she goes to the library, she goes to the restricted section, and she trains alone in the early hours of the morning in the north courtyard. That last part I observed myself, this morning, before the tour."

Clara stopped walking. "You were watching her train this morning."

"I was watching the north courtyard," Seren said, as though this were a meaningful distinction. "She happened to be there. She trains with a precision that is somewhat alarming to observe. Everything is economical and exact and very obviously the product of an extraordinary amount of practice."

"And this morning? Did she seem different from what you'd heard?"

Seren looked at her with that recalibrating attention again, then: "Yes, actually. She seemed less contained. Like something had been loosened, slightly. A spring that's still wounded but has given a fraction."

Clara started walking again. Something loosened. A spring that had given a fraction. She had found what she was looking for, Clara thought. After many iterations of this same story, Morwen had finally found her. And something in her had released just enough to be perceptible to a first-year student watching from across a courtyard.

Clara put her hand in her pocket and felt the folded paper with its revised list. She added one more item, in her mind only: Find out, carefully and without being found out, how many times this has happened before.

Ahead, Seren was already asking Corvan a question, her voice bright and interested, her posture perfectly calibrated to read as harmless curiosity. Clara watched her and thought: I am not going to let you disappear from this story. I don't know how yet, and I don't know what it costs, but that is not how your chapter ends.

It was a somewhat alarming thing to have decided, given that she had known Seren Vael for less than a day. She had always cared too quickly. In her previous life, this had caused her numerous problems. She was beginning to understand that in this one, it might cause considerably more — and that she was going to do it anyway.

อ่านหนังสือเล่มนี้ต่อได้ฟรี
สแกนรหัสเพื่อดาวน์โหลดแอป

บทล่าสุด

  • THE VILLAINESS REMEMBERED ME:In Every Timeline, She Chose De   CHAPTER 8 You Belong to Me

    She told Seren about the shadow. Not everything — not the conversation in the rain, not the number Morwen had given her, not the forty-third iteration or the way a background character had stayed in a corridor when she should have kept walking. Those were things Clara was still holding carefully, still turning over in the private space of her own mind where she could examine them without anyone watching her do it. But the shadow she told Seren, because Seren was the kind of person who noticed things whether you told her or not, and it was better to be the one who provided context than to have her draw her own conclusions from incomplete data."Three days from now," Clara said. They were in the library, ostensibly studying elemental theory, actually doing that but also talking under the cover of it. "There's going to be something in the east corridor, near the third-floor junction. I don't know exactly what it looks like — I've been told shadow, creature, dark. I don't have more specif

  • THE VILLAINESS REMEMBERED ME:In Every Timeline, She Chose De   CHAPTER 7 Crimson Eyes

    She found her opportunity three days later, and it was not an opportunity she engineered. It arrived the way most significant things arrived, she was beginning to notice — sideways, at an inconvenient hour, dressed as something else entirely. It was raining. The Academy's courtyards were empty at the sixth hour of the morning, the stone dark with water, the carved fish in the dry fountain collecting small puddles in their open mouths. Clara had woken before the bells and found herself unable to return to sleep, a condition she'd experienced regularly in her previous life and recognized as her mind refusing to stop processing. She'd dressed in the grey dawn and gone out, telling herself she was getting air and knowing she was really going over the same ground she'd been going over for days. What did Morwen want from her? Not what she wanted abstractly — that was becoming, if not clear, at least legible. The quality of attention, the tracking, the white-knuckled hands. That was not a my

  • THE VILLAINESS REMEMBERED ME:In Every Timeline, She Chose De   CHAPTER 6 The Ceremony

    The entrance ceremony was on a Tuesday. By Friday of the same week, the Academy had assumed the shape of its ordinary self — classes running, students finding their orbits, the social landscape settling into the configurations it would hold, with minor adjustments, for the rest of the year. Clara attended every scheduled session and said nothing that wasn't required.Elemental Theory met in a long room on the third floor with windows that looked out over the north courtyard. The instructor was a small woman named Professor Adwen who had the permanent air of someone whose thoughts were moving faster than the room could follow. She lectured with precision and managed questions with the efficient authority of someone who had long since stopped being surprised by which students had understood the material and which ones had been convinced they had.Clara sat in the third row and took careful notes and did not, under any circumstances, allow her fingertips to do anything interesting. This

  • THE VILLAINESS REMEMBERED ME:In Every Timeline, She Chose De   CHAPTER 5 A City of Spires

    The results of the aptitude assessment were posted the following morning on the board outside the administrative office: a long list of names, beside each a track designation and, in some cases, a notation that meant additional review was required. Clara found her name in the C-section as expected. General stream. No notation. She stood there for a moment, looking at it, and felt something that was not quite relief and not quite disappointment settle in her chest. General stream was what she'd wanted. Unremarkable results, quiet placement, no reason for anyone with authority to look at her twice. The examiners' pen that had kept writing, though. The compass that had swung. She would not think about that.She turned away from the board and walked directly into Seren, who had apparently been standing two feet behind her reading over her shoulder."General stream," Seren said. She did not sound surprised. She sounded like someone filing information. "Same as me. I tested for trace-sensit

  • THE VILLAINESS REMEMBERED ME:In Every Timeline, She Chose De   CHAPTER 4 The Road to Asterveil

    The road to Asterveil had taken Clara through three villages, a river crossing, and a market town that smelled of cured meat and wood resin, none of which she'd had the presence of mind to appreciate properly because she'd been busy processing the fact of her own death and reincarnation into a fantasy novel. She was trying to correct this now. The aptitude assessment was not until the thirteenth hour, which left the morning for the academic counselor meeting and, after that, a stretch of unscheduled time that Clara intended to use for observation. The Academy was a world unto itself — it had its own rhythms, its own hierarchies, its own rules about which spaces belonged to whom — and she needed to understand it before it could be used against her. She had learned this in her previous life: the fastest way to become vulnerable in a new environment was to act before you'd mapped it. The academic counselor was a narrow woman named Instructor Fael who had the permanently preoccupied e

  • THE VILLAINESS REMEMBERED ME:In Every Timeline, She Chose De   CHAPTER 3 Rules for Survival

    The rules, revised, looked like this: One: Do not interact with Crown Prince Aldric Solenne. Two: Understand, before anything else, what Lady Morwen Ashvale actually wants from you. Three: Do not witness anything you are not supposed to witness. Four: If in doubt, leave the room. Five: Do not let Seren Vael get killed.Clara folded the scrap of paper, considered it, and did not burn it. She tucked it into the inner pocket of her jacket instead. In her previous life she had kept lists the way other people kept journals — not as a record of feeling, but as a record of decisions. There was a comfort in writing things down, in making the provisional concrete, in knowing that even if you forgot, there was evidence that you had once known. She did not, however, feel particularly comforted by what she'd written.The morning after the ceremony arrived grey and purposeful, the kind of weather that made demands on you. Clara rose before her roommates, washed in cold water, and sat at the small

บทอื่นๆ
สำรวจและอ่านนวนิยายดีๆ ได้ฟรี
เข้าถึงนวนิยายดีๆ จำนวนมากได้ฟรีบนแอป GoodNovel ดาวน์โหลดหนังสือที่คุณชอบและอ่านได้ทุกที่ทุกเวลา
อ่านหนังสือฟรีบนแอป
สแกนรหัสเพื่ออ่านบนแอป
DMCA.com Protection Status