The Temple of Light was busy during midday hours, supplicants coming and going while priests moved through halls with purposeful efficiency. Raze and Mariabel navigated to the cultivation wing where Elizabeth typically worked, found her organizing medical supplies in a preparation room with her usual gentle efficiency.
"Lord Dragonheart, Lady Valtee," she greeted them with pleasant surprise, her golden eyes warm and welcoming. "I wasn't expecting you today, did you need to schedule another session?"
"Actually we need to speak with you about something else," Raze said carefully, keeping his voice low and glancing around to ensure privacy. "Something private and potentially sensitive regarding your charity work."
Elizabeth's expression shifted immediately, the pleasant warmth becoming more guarded and professional. "I'm not sure what you mean, perhaps you should speak with a senior priest if you have concerns about Temple operations or outreach programs."
"It's not about the Temple specifically," Mariabel interjected gently, reading the situation with noble-trained social awareness. "It's about your work outside these walls, the people you help in ways the Temple might not officially acknowledge."
"I help many people," Elizabeth said, her tone carefully neutral and giving nothing away. "You'll need to be more specific about what you're asking."
"Someone connected to a powerful family," Raze pressed, watching her body language for any sign of recognition. "A child who's been sick for years with something the Healing Halls can't cure, suffering from mana corruption in the blood pathways causing gradual crystallization of the circulation system."
Elizabeth's expression didn't change but her hands stilled on the medical supplies for just a moment, that tiny pause was enough confirmation that she knew exactly who they meant and was now calculating how much danger this conversation represented.
"I don't know what you're talking about," she said, but her voice lacked the conviction of genuine ignorance. "There are many sick children in the capital with various conditions, I couldn't possibly identify one from such vague description."
"We have a cure," Mariabel said directly, cutting through the diplomatic deflection with aristocratic bluntness. "If administered correctly over three days it will completely reverse mana corruption, flush the crystallization from the system and restore healthy circulation, the child would be completely healthy within a week."
That got visible reaction, Elizabeth's eyes widened fractionally and her breath caught before she caught herself and forced composure. "Even if such a child existed," she said slowly, choosing words with obvious care, "why would you want to help them? What's your interest in this situation? Nothing this valuable comes without strings attached."
"Does the reason matter if the cure is genuine?" Raze countered, letting sincerity show in his expression. "We have the means to save a life, connecting us with the right person is all we're asking, you facilitate the meeting and we handle everything else, no one needs to know you were involved."
Elizabeth studied them both for long moment, internal debate visible in her expression as she weighed the risks of involvement against the possibility of helping someone she clearly cared about. Her golden eyes searched their faces for deception or ulterior motives, trying to determine if this was genuine offer or elaborate trap.
Finally she sighed quietly, her shoulders dropping slightly as decision was made. "Not here," she said in barely more than whisper, glancing toward the doorway nervously. "We can't discuss this in the Temple, there are too many ears and eyes, if anyone overheard this conversation..." She trailed off meaningfully, the implications clear.
"Where then?" Mariabel asked, matching her quiet tone.
"There's an orphanage in the eastern district, the Temple oversees its operations and I visit regularly for medical checks and treatment." Elizabeth's voice remained barely audible, clearly terrified of being overheard. "Come tonight after dark, use the service entrance in the back alley, I'll meet you there and we can talk properly without risk of being observed or reported."
"What time specifically?" Raze pressed, needing concrete details.
"Two hours after sunset, that's when the children are asleep and staff is minimal, fewer people to see you arrive or ask questions." Elizabeth's golden eyes were serious, almost pleading. "Come alone, just the two of you, if you bring others or if this is some kind of trap..." She didn't finish the threat but the warning was clear.
"We understand completely," Raze assured her, keeping his voice calm and trustworthy. "Just us, tonight, two hours after sunset at the orphanage service entrance, we'll be there and we'll come alone."
Elizabeth nodded once, sharp and decisive, then returned to organizing supplies with hands that trembled slightly. The conversation was over, the meeting arranged, and now they just had to wait for nightfall.
Raze and Mariabel left the Temple quickly, navigating back through crowds toward the Copper Rest with growing anticipation. The pieces were moving, the plan progressing exactly as calculated, and tonight they'd take the crucial step of securing Lady Anastasia's cooperation through Elizabeth's facilitation.
Everything depended on Elizabeth trusting them enough to make the introduction, and on Lady Anastasia being desperate enough to accept help from strangers who appeared mysteriously offering miracle cures. Both were calculated gambles but necessary ones with acceptable risk profiles.
They returned to find Kael still obsessing over the cure, checking and rechecking its stability while running additional tests to ensure no degradation. "We made contact," Raze announced as they entered. "Elizabeth knows exactly who we're talking about, she's arranging a meeting tonight at an orphanage the Temple oversees, two hours after sunset."
"She agreed just like that?" Kael asked skeptically, his analytical mind identifying the ease with suspicion.
"Not exactly, we had to push through initial deflection and she tried playing ignorant at first," Mariabel explained, settling into her chair. "But mentioning the cure got immediate reaction, she knows this child and cares about them enough that the possibility of genuine help overcame her caution about involvement."
"She's scared though," Raze added. "Whatever connection she has to this situation makes her extremely cautious about exposure, which is actually good for us since fear means she understands the stakes and won't take unnecessary risks that could compromise operational security."
The afternoon dragged while they prepared for the evening meeting, going over contingencies and backup plans if things went wrong. The cure was secured carefully in protective case lined with cushioning material, too valuable to risk damage during transport through crowded streets.
Finally sunset arrived and then the waiting period after, two hours feeling like eternities as anticipation built toward breaking point. When the appointed time finally came Raze and Mariabel left together, navigating darkened streets toward the eastern district while staying alert for the criminal elements that emerged after dark.
The orphanage was easy to find, a three story building that looked worn but maintained with obvious care despite limited resources. They found the service entrance in the back alley exactly as Elizabeth described, a simple wooden door with no marking that opened at their quiet knock.
Elizabeth stood in the doorway, still wearing her Temple robes but looking more tired than during their earlier conversation, stress evident in the lines around her eyes. "You came, good, follow me quickly and keep quiet, the children are sleeping and I'd rather not disturb them or alert staff to visitors."
She led them through dark hallways lit only by occasional lanterns, past rooms where small forms slept in rows of simple beds. The orphanage was larger than expected from the exterior, clearly housing dozens of children with nowhere else to go and no families to care for them.
Finally they reached a small office at the building's rear, Elizabeth closed the door carefully and gestured for them to sit in the worn chairs facing a simple desk.
"Alright," she said, her voice steady but quiet with tension underneath. "You want to talk about Lady Anastasia Venn and her son Thomas, you claim to have a cure for his condition that no one else has been able to provide, I need to understand your real motivations before I facilitate anything that could put them in danger."
The moment of truth had arrived, the balance between revealing enough to gain trust while maintaining enough operational security that failure wouldn't compromise everything.
Raze met Elizabeth's golden eyes directly, let calculated sincerity show in his expression. "We have reasons to want Lord Venn held accountable for crimes he's committed, reasons that don't involve harming anyone innocent but do involve making him answer for systematic abuse of power." He paused, letting that sink in. "Helping his son is both moral imperative because the child deserves treatment regardless of his father's sins, and strategic necessity because Lady Anastasia's cooperation may be crucial to achieving justice."
Elizabeth studied them both for long moment, searching for deception or ulterior motives with the careful evaluation of someone who'd learned to be suspicious of generosity. Finally she nodded slowly, decision visible in her expression.
"Lady Anastasia visits an estate outside the city three times weekly, keeps her son there away from the manor and away from his father's influence," Elizabeth's voice was heavy with implications about why that separation was necessary. "I make house calls to treat Thomas, manage his symptoms and provide what comfort I can since actual cure has been impossible until now." She paused, hope and doubt warring in her expression. "If you truly have something that can help him, something that will actually cure the corruption rather than just managing symptoms..."
"We do," Mariabel confirmed, pulling out the vial carefully and holding it up to the lamplight where the deep red liquid pulsed with visible power.
Elizabeth's breath caught as she examined the vial with professional medical eye, recognition and wonder mixing in her expression. "Is this real? This formulation could it actually work? Thomas would be healthy for the first time in five years." She looked up sharply. "But why would you do this? What do you want in return? Nothing this valuable comes without price, so what's yours?"
"We want Lady Anastasia to meet with us," Raze said simply and directly. "To hear what we have to say about her husband's activities, to consider providing testimony if the situation warrants formal accusations, that's all we're asking initially, if she refuses to help after hearing us out then we still provide the cure regardless, the child's health isn't conditional on his mother's cooperation."
That clearly surprised Elizabeth, her eyes widening slightly as she processed the offer. "You'd cure Thomas even if Anastasia refuses to testify against Venn? You'd give this away for nothing?"
"The child didn't choose his father or his father's crimes," Raze said firmly, conviction clear in every word. "He deserves treatment regardless of political considerations, we're not monsters who hold sick children hostage for cooperation, we're people trying to do something right in a corrupt situation."
Elizabeth's expression softened considerably, some fundamental test passed that Raze hadn't fully realized he was taking. "Alright, I'll arrange the meeting, I believe you're sincere even if I don't understand all your motivations." She pulled out paper and began writing. "Tomorrow afternoon at the estate, I'll tell Anastasia you represent researchers who've achieved medical breakthrough requiring urgent discussion, she'll agree to that meeting, she'd agree to anything if it means hope for Thomas."
Relief flooded through Raze so intensely it was almost physical, the first real step was complete, connection established and meeting arranged through trusted intermediary. Everything else would flow from this crucial moment.
"Thank you," he said with genuine gratitude. "You're saving more than one life with this introduction."
"I hope so," Elizabeth replied quietly, fear evident beneath the professional composure. "Because if this goes wrong, if Venn discovers I connected you with his wife and son..." She didn't finish the sentence but everyone in the room understood the stakes perfectly.
They finalized details for tomorrow's meeting, establishing exact time and location and what cover story Elizabeth would provide to justify the introduction. When everything was arranged to mutual satisfaction they left through the same back entrance, melting into night streets with mission accomplished.
Back at the Copper Rest they shared the news with Kael and Aslan, energy in the room shifting from nervous anticipation to focused determination as pieces fell into place.
"Tomorrow we meet Lady Anastasia," Raze said, feeling the plan crystallize into concrete action. "We offer the cure, explain what we need in careful terms, and hope she's desperate enough and angry enough to accept our proposal, if she agrees then we have our witness and our testimony, the cornerstone that makes everything else possible."
"And if she refuses?" Aslan asked quietly, always considering failure scenarios.
"Then we cure her son anyway and find another path forward," Raze said firmly, meaning every word. "But I don't think she'll refuse, not once she understands what's really at stake, not once she realizes we're offering her the chance to stop the monster her husband became and protect her son from that influence permanently."
They settled into preparation for tomorrow, checking supplies and reviewing approach strategies, but beneath the practical planning was genuine hope that they were finally moving against Venn in meaningful way.
The night deepened around them while the capital slept, unaware that in a small inn room four young cultivators were plotting the downfall of one of its most powerful and corrupt lords.
Tomorrow everything would change. They'd take the second crucial step and Lady Anastasia would choose between protecting her husband and saving her son.
Raze was betting everything she'd choose correctly.
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