By midday, the yards were dismissed. Students scattered toward the halls, buzzing with rumor again now that the morning's spectacle had ti to fernt. Coren washed at the basin, changed shirts, and ignored the looks thrown his way.
Soone bumped his shoulder deliberately as he passed the armory.
"Watch it," the boy muttered—House colors he didn't bother noting.
Coren didn't slow. Didn't turn.
Behind him, the boy went quiet.
Mira caught up near the refectory, walking backward so she could talk at his face. "You realize half the Academy thinks you're either going to be claid, killed, or crowned by the end of the week, right?"
"Efficient," Coren said. "Covers the options."
She snorted. "You're impossible."
They ate quickly. Too quickly. The room felt like it was leaning in again, listening. Coren kept his posture relaxed, his movents ordinary. He let himself look like just another capable student with unfortunate attention.
Inside, Valenna remained coiled and watchful.
After the al, Atrius intercepted him with a tilt of the head toward the western annex.
"Private instruction," he said. "You don't miss this."
"I won't."
The annex was quieter, older stone, fewer windows. Atrius closed the door behind them and warded it with a casual flick that made the air thrum.
He studied Coren for a long mont. "You're holding too much back."
Coren didn't argue. "I'm holding what matters."
Atrius's gaze sharpened. "Careful. There's a difference between restraint and hesitation."
"I know."
"Do you?" Atrius stepped closer. "Because Feldren will press until you either bare your throat or bite back. And if you bite—"
"I'll choose where," Coren finished.
Atrius paused, then nodded once. "Good answer."
Valenna murmured, almost fond.
He sees the blade. He just doesn't know how deep it goes.
Atrius turned away. "You'll spar tomorrow. Not students. Instructors."
Coren lifted an eyebrow. "Plural?"
"Yes."
Mira, listening from the doorway, groaned. "I'm starting to think the Academy hates you."
Atrius glanced at her. "No. It's worse than that."
He looked back at Coren.
"It's interested."
The word settled like a weight.
That evening, as the bells rang and shadows stretched long across the towers, Coren stood at his window and watched the lights co on across the Academy. Sowhere out there, Houses plotted. Heirs asured. Instructors debated.
None of them knew who he truly was.
And they never would.
Valenna rested against his pulse, cold and steady.
Let them play their gas, she whispered. You know your na. You know your edge.
Coren closed the shutters.
Tomorrow would co soon enough.
Dusk crept in slow and deliberate, like it knew it was being waited on.
Coren left the dormitory alone.
No escort. No audience. No visible weapon beyond the sword at his hip, plain as ever. Students lingered in doorways and along balconies as he crossed the inner courtyards, pretending not to watch while morizing every step he took. Word traveled faster than bells now. Feldren had summoned him. Feldren had noticed him.
The northern terrace sat higher than the rest of the Academy, overlooking the old stone gardens and the drop beyond them. By the ti Coren reached the stairs, the light had turned copper and violet, the sky bruised with evening.
Two figures waited at the top.
One was the Feldren instructor who had fetched him earlier, hands folded behind his back, posture immaculate.
The other stood closer to the edge.
Aren Feldren did not turn when Coren approached.
He was taller than most, broad without being bulky, his uniform tailored so precisely it might have been grown onto him. His hair was bound back in the Feldren style—practical, severe. He rested one gloved hand on the stone railing, looking out over the Academy as if it already belonged to him.
Coren stopped three paces back.
Did not bow.
Did not speak.
Silence stretched.
Valenna murmured, pleased.
Good. Make him choose when this begins.
Aren finally turned.
His eyes were grey. Flat. The kind that asured weight and balance without emotion.
"So," Aren said, voice even, unhurried. "You ca."
"You summoned ," Coren replied.
A faint smile touched Aren's mouth. Not warmth. Appraisal.
"Most hurry," Aren said. "So beg. A few bring friends." His gaze flicked briefly toward the stairs, empty. "You did none of that."
"I was told to co alone."
"And you obeyed." Aren tilted his head slightly. "Interesting."
Coren said nothing.
Aren studied him the way one studied a blade laid out for inspection—not admiring, not dismissive, simply thorough. His gaze lingered at Coren's stance, his breathing, the way his hand rested near his sword without tension.
"You embarrassed Estrix," Aren said at last.
"I fought a duel."
"You humiliated an heir in front of witnesses," Aren corrected. "There is a difference."
Coren t his gaze. "He challenged ."
Aren nodded once, conceding the point. "And won nothing for it."
The Feldren instructor shifted subtly behind them, presence heavy but silent.
Aren turned back toward the view. "Feldren values order. Predictability. Strength that does not draw chaos in its wake."
Coren waited.
"You," Aren continued, "are disruptive."
"Yes," Coren said simply.
That earned him a sharper look.
Most denied it.
Aren's eyes narrowed just a fraction. "Do you know why I asked you here?"
"To threaten ," Coren said. "Or recruit ."
Aren's smile returned, thin as a blade. "Good. You understand the options."
He stepped closer, close enough that Coren could feel the pressure of him—not aura, not magic, but presence honed by authority and certainty.
"Feldren does not waste resources," Aren said quietly. "You have value. That makes you dangerous if left uncontrolled."
"I'm not uncontrolled."
Aren's gaze flicked, just once, to Coren's wrist.
Valenna went still.
Aren looked back up. "Perhaps not. Yet."
The word hung there.
"You will be watched," Aren said. "Closely. Every fight. Every alliance. Every deviation from expectation."
"And if I refuse?" Coren asked.
Aren shrugged, casual as a man discussing weather. "Then the warnings stop. The corrections begin."
Coren considered him for a heartbeat.
Then he said, "You don't want to correct ."
The Feldren instructor stiffened.
Aren's eyes sharpened—not angry, not insulted.
Amused.
"Confidence," Aren said. "Or ignorance."
Coren didn't move. "You already asured . If you thought correction was simple, you wouldn't be standing here."
A long pause.
The wind stirred Aren's cloak.
Then—soft laughter. Genuine, brief.
"Very good," Aren said. "You see the board."
He stepped back, restoring distance. "Here is what will happen, Coren Vale. Feldren will not claim you. Not yet."
Mira would have hated that phrasing.
"You will remain unaligned," Aren continued. "You will continue to fight. To train. To attract attention."
Coren's jaw tightened. "As bait."
"As proof," Aren corrected. "If you break, you were never worth the effort. If you endure…" He shrugged again. "Options expand."
Valenna whispered, sharp and delighted.
He wants to see what bleeds you. How much.
Aren turned away, signaling the end without ceremony. "You are dismissed."
Coren didn't leave imdiately.
"What happens if I surpass your expectations?" he asked.
Aren paused at the stairs.
Then, without turning back, he said, "Then the Academy will beco very loud."
He descended, the instructor following a step behind.
Coren remained at the terrace edge, the sky darkening overhead.
He did not feel shaken.
He felt focused.
Valenna coiled around his pulse, cold and approving.
They will not own you, she whispered. They will chase you.
Coren turned back toward the stairs.
Let them.
Coren didn't rush back.
He descended the stairs at a asured pace, boots striking stone with the sa rhythm he'd walked in with. Anyone watching from the gardens below would see exactly what Feldren was ant to see: a student who had gone when summoned and left unchanged.
Inside, the Academy breathed differently.
Windows glowed. Lamps flared to life. Conversations stopped when he passed, then restarted softer, sharper. News of the eting had already spread—who called it, who attended, who left first. No one knew what had been said, and that ignorance gnawed at them.
Good.
Valenna stirred, low and controlled.
They will fill the silence with fear. Let them.
Coren cut through the inner corridors toward the eastern wing. No escort appeared. No instructor intercepted him. That alone was a ssage—Feldren had not raised an alarm, which ant the Houses were waiting to see what he would do next.
Mira was waiting by the practice hall doors, arms crossed so tightly it looked painful.
"There you are," she said. "You took long enough that I was deciding which House to stab first."
"You'd lose," Coren said mildly.
She snorted, then searched his face. "You alive?"
"Yes."
"All limbs attached?"
He lifted one shoulder. "As far as I can tell."
She exhaled, sharp and relieved despite herself. "Gods. Okay. Good. What did they want?"
Coren walked past her into the hall. "To see ."
"That's not an answer."
"It's the only one they get."
Atrius stood near the center mat, hands clasped behind his back. He didn't turn when Coren entered.
"Well?" Atrius said.
"They didn't kill ," Mira offered. "So I'm calling it a win."
Atrius ignored her. "Did Feldren issue terms?"
"No."
"Threats?"
"Yes."
Atrius nodded once, as if that confird sothing he already suspected. "Then they're interested."
Mira groaned. "Why is that worse?"
"Because uninterested Houses leave you alone," Atrius said. "Interested ones start maneuvering."
Coren set his sword down against the wall and rolled his shoulders. The eting had left a residue in him—not fear, not anger. Pressure. Like a weight added to a bar he was already lifting.
Valenna whispered, precise.
You held. He saw it.
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