Chapter 26: The Seven in One Room
The room was smaller than Ren expected.
Not cramped. But it was clearly designed for a handful of people, not a class. Seven desks arranged in a loose curve facing a single instructor’s platform. Clean walls. One wide window with the curtains half-drawn. A small screen mounted beside the platform, currently dark. No decorations. No posters. No school banners. Nothing personal at all.
It looked like someone had built a room to hold something important and then deliberately forgotten to make it look friendly.
Six people were already inside.
— • —
The first person Ren noticed was a girl sitting near the window.
Soft brown hair pulled loosely behind her ears, and she was looking at him. Not suspiciously. Not coldly. Just — looking, the way someone looks at a new person when they’re hoping that person will be normal and not a problem. Something warm in her expression. A little nervous, too. Her hands rested on her desk, fingers laced together, sitting straight but not stiff — the posture of someone trying hard to seem calm when they weren’t entirely.
She wore a plain uniform. No family crest. No expensive accessories. Nothing that announced money or status.
’Orien local,’ Ren guessed. ’I think I’ve seen her face before. Maybe from the year group. Never spoken to her.’
She gave him a small, almost reflexive smile as he walked past.
He nodded back, once, and kept moving.
The next impression hit differently.
A girl in the second row sat like she owned the room.
Dark hair, sharp features, posture so clean it could have been cut from glass. Her uniform was the same as everyone else’s, but somehow on her it looked like it had been tailored yesterday. A thin silver pin on her collar caught the light — a family crest. Ren didn’t recognize the design, but he recognized what it meant. Noble house. High one, too, based on the quality.
She wasn’t looking at him. She was reading something on a small device in her hand. But the moment Ren stepped past her row, her eyes flicked up.
Just once. Quick and precise, like a camera shutter.
Then she looked down again.
’She just read me in half a second,’ Ren thought. ’And she already decided I wasn’t interesting enough to look at twice.’
He wasn’t sure whether that was a good thing or a bad thing. ƒreewebηoveℓ.com
A boy near the back leaned sideways in his chair with one leg stretched out into the aisle, chewing something wrapped in paper. Messy dark hair, a scratch across one cheekbone that looked recent, and the kind of relaxed slouch that came from never worrying about posture in front of important people.
He glanced at Ren as he walked past and gave a short nod. Casual. No judgment. No sizing-up. Just acknowledgment — the way people nod at each other in a bus station or a market line.
’Frontier kid,’ Ren thought immediately. ’Or at least someone who grew up closer to the ground than the nobles.’
He almost liked him already. Which, for Ren, was unusual.
Two desks away from the slouching boy sat a girl who felt like a drawn sword.
Upright. Alert. Not nervous — ready. Her eyes moved across the room in slow sweeps, pausing on each person for exactly long enough to take a measurement before moving on. Short dark hair. Strong build for her age. A faint scar along one forearm that she made no effort to hide.
When her gaze reached Ren, it stopped.
She looked at him the way a fighter looks at another fighter. Not with hostility. With evaluation. Then she seemed to decide something, gave a small nod — not friendly, not unfriendly, just acknowledged — and went back to scanning the room.
’Soldier. Or trained like one.’
Beside her, sitting perfectly still, was a girl who looked like she was carved from pale jade.
Elegant. Composed. Long dark hair falling straight past her shoulders. A face so calm it was almost unreadable — like a pond in the early morning before anything has touched the surface. She did not look at Ren when he entered. She did not look at anyone. She sat with her hands folded, eyes slightly lowered, and an expression that suggested she was either meditating deeply or simply choosing not to participate in the room until it earned her attention.
’That’s not shyness,’ Ren thought. ’That’s control. Whoever she is, she’s been trained to sit in rooms full of important people since she could walk.’
— • —
And then there was the last one.
He sat alone, one row away from everyone else, as if the distance had been chosen deliberately.
Light hair. Sharp, clean features. Pale eyes that looked like they had been designed to judge things and find them lacking. His posture was straight but not stiff — controlled the way a blade resting in its sheath is controlled. His uniform was identical to everyone else’s, but there was something about the way he wore it that made it look colder.
He wasn’t doing anything. Not reading. Not fidgeting. Not scanning the room. He was simply sitting, perfectly composed, like someone who had already decided he was the most important person here and didn’t need to confirm it.
When Ren walked past, the boy’s eyes moved.
Slowly. Deliberately. With the kind of calm that made even a simple glance feel heavier than it should.
Their eyes met for about one second.
One second was enough.
Something in that gaze was cold. Not angry. Not hostile. Just — cold. The way deep water is cold. The kind of cold that had been there long before Ren had walked into this room, and would still be there long after he left.
’He doesn’t like me,’ Ren thought. ’No — that’s wrong. He doesn’t know me well enough to not like me. But something about me already bothers him. And he doesn’t know why either or know something i don’t know.’
The warmth in Ren’s chest shifted. Just slightly. A faint pulse, quieter than a heartbeat, as if the ember inside him had noticed something in this room it didn’t quite understand.
Ren looked away first.
Not because he was intimidated. Because staring at a person like that was exactly the kind of thing a quiet, unremarkable student would not do.
— • —
Ren found a desk near the side — not the back, not the front, not next to anyone in particular. A middle spot. Forgettable.
He set his bag down and sat.
Seven desks. Seven Bloodline Plant Lords. All in one sealed room, behind Alliance walls, in a school that had never produced more than three in its entire history. ƒгeeweɓn૦vel.com
None of them were talking to each other.
That was the strangest part. In a normal classroom, seven teenagers meeting for the first time would fill the silence within thirty seconds. Someone would crack a joke. Someone would ask a question. Someone would complain about the chairs.
Here, the silence held.
Not because they were unfriendly. Because every single person in this room understood, on some level, that they were not here by accident. That this room had been built for them. That whatever was about to happen next was not a normal class.
The nervous girl by the window was still looking around, trying to catch someone’s eye. The noble girl was reading. The slouching boy had finished his snack and was now staring at the ceiling with a vaguely amused expression. The fighter was watching the door. The jade-still girl hadn’t moved. The cold one hadn’t either.
And Ren sat in his forgettable middle seat, wearing his quiet, slightly awkward expression, and watched all of them.
"So," the slouching boy said suddenly, his voice carrying through the silence with the subtlety of a rock thrown into a pond, "anyone else get dragged here by a one-line message that explained absolutely nothing? Or is that just me?"
A few heads turned.
The girl by the window almost laughed. She caught it, turned it into a cough, and then gave up and smiled anyway.
The noble girl did not look up from her device. But one corner of her mouth moved. Just barely.
The cold boy’s expression did not change at all.
"Just you," the fighter said flatly. "The rest of us received poetry and flowers."
The slouching boy grinned.
And just like that — not all of it, but some of it — the silence cracked.
Ren almost smiled.
Almost.
’Six people,’ he thought, ’who have nothing in common except a talent most of the world will never see. One sealed room. One instructor they haven’t met yet. And whatever it is the people above this school have already decided about all of us.’
He leaned back in his chair and looked toward the front of the room, where the instructor’s platform still sat empty.
’This is going to be interesting.’
He paused.
’...Probably the dangerous kind of interesting.’
Outside the window, the morning light fell across the courtyard of the East Annex, and somewhere in the building, a door opened and closed.
Footsteps. Getting closer.
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(Thank you for reading Bloodline Plant Lord.
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See you in the next Chapter — Ren’s journey is just beginning.)