Elara closed the distance fast enough that grass bent under her montum. She didn’t grab rlin, didn’t shove Morgana away—she simply placed herself halfway between them, the spear angled downward but ready to snap upward the instant anything felt wrong. Shade brightened, its glow flickering like a frantic heartbeat, circling rlin’s shoulder in loops too tight and quick to be healthy.
"What happened?" Elara asked, voice low but edged with tension. Her eyes flicked over rlin, then to Morgana, then back to rlin again. "I felt—sothing. It wasn’t mana. It felt like soone pressed on my ribs from the inside."
"That was it," Morgana said flatly, as if answering a question Elara hadn’t fully ford.
Elara bristled. "I wasn’t speaking to you."
Morgana raised one eyebrow. "And yet, I answered."
Before Elara could snap, rlin stepped closer, just enough that his shoulder brushed Elara’s arm. It was a quiet signal—he was fine, he was here, he wasn’t choosing Morgana over her. Elara’s posture loosened by a fraction, but not nearly enough to be called relaxed.
Nathan skidded through the garden gate next, face pale. Adrian, Ethan, Liliana, and Dorian piled in behind him.
Nathan pointed at rlin. "Tell you didn’t die."
"I didn’t die."
"Great. Amazing. Now tell what that thing was that punched the side of my head from nowhere."
"No one punched you," Ethan said. "You tripped over a bush."
"I was ATTACKED."
"You were attacked by your own foot."
Adrian folded his arms. "Can we focus on the real issue? Why does this place feel like soone’s watching us through the floor?"
Dorian didn’t say anything, but his shadows clung tighter than normal—closer to his skin, more awake.
Liliana whispered, "Sothing’s wrong with the air..."
Shade chid in agreent.
Elara’s fingers tightened on rlin’s sleeve. "Explain. Now."
rlin didn’t lie. Not to her. Not when she was looking at him like that—with fear sharpened into instinct, with protectiveness wound so tightly it might snap her spine.
"It’s the thing that’s been... aware of ," he said quietly. "It reached further this ti. Farther than I expected."
Nathan’s face went still. "Define ’farther.’"
Morgana answered for him. "Half the academy."
Everyone froze.
Ethan squeaked. "Like half-half?"
"Yes," Morgana said.
"Like... half of the students?"
"Yes."
"Half the buildings?"
"Yes."
"Half the—"
Morgana’s eyes cut toward him. He went silent imdiately.
Elara straightened. "Why them? Why now? Why us?"
"It isn’t targeting you," rlin said. "It’s targeting anything connected to ."
The entire group shifted subtly closer to him. Even Dorian.
Liliana’s voice trembled. "We’re connected to you."
rlin nodded once.
Morgana stepped forward—not intruding, but close enough her presence anchored the air. "Tonight," she said. "We et. All of us."
"et for what?" Nathan asked.
"To define what hunts him," Morgana replied.
Adrian frowned. "Hunts? I thought this thing was just... watching."
"It escalated," Morgana said simply.
Elara’s jaw clenched. "And what do we do about it?"
Morgana’s lips curved—sharp, approving, dangerous. "We confront it."
Ethan wheezed. "Confront what exactly? A ghost? A god? rlin’s emotional trauma?"
"Possibly all three," Morgana said.
Ethan looked betrayed. "That was a joke."
"It was not inaccurate."
Dorian’s voice cut through the noise, calm and cold. "Headmistress. If sothing is circling rlin, what do you expect it to do next?"
Morgana looked directly at rlin—no hesitation, no doubt.
"Claim him."
Elara stepped in front of rlin before she even realized she was moving, spear rising an inch.
"Over my corpse."
Morgana didn’t blink. "Over all of yours, if you are not prepared."
Silence sliced through the garden.
rlin exhaled tightly. "Enough. All of you."
Elara didn’t move. Nathan, Adrian, and Dorian didn’t flinch. Shade pulsed faster.
"I’m not being claid by anything," rlin said firmly.
Morgana studied him, gaze cool, calculating, weighing.
"That," she said, "is the correct response."
Elara finally looked over her shoulder at rlin, searching his face. He t her eyes—steady, grounded, sure enough she believed him.
Morgana turned toward the gate. "Nightfall. Hall of Veils. Bring only the six."
"The six?" Nathan asked.
Morgana didn’t slow. "Your circle. rlin’s orbit. The ones it already touched."
Ethan brightened. "Oh! That’s us!"
Adrian slapped a hand over his mouth.
Morgana disappeared past the door.
The instant she was gone, Elara grabbed rlin by the collar—not roughly, but with deep, breathless urgency—and pulled him close.
"What aren’t you telling ?" she whispered.
rlin didn’t look away.
"...That I don’t know how to stop it yet."
Her hand tightened.
"But I will."
Elara’s breath shuddered.
"That," she said, "is the only reason I’m still breathing."
Nathan clapped rlin’s shoulder. "We’re with you. Tonight. Whatever the hell this is."
Adrian nodded. "If the world wants a fight, it can choke on one."
Liliana swallowed. "We’ll figure it out. Together."
Ethan raised a trembling hand. "I don’t want to die but I’ll be brave about it."
Shade glowed.
Dorian’s gaze was steady. "Then let’s prepare."
rlin looked at all of them—his circle, his orbit, his complications, his anchors—and felt sothing loosen painfully in his chest.
He wasn’t alone.
Not anymore.
Tonight, though—
He would find out if that was enough.
The group dispersed only because Elara forced them to. She herded everyone back toward the dorms with a command presence no one wanted to test, and rlin felt her eyes flick toward him every few steps, checking he was still there, still breathing, still himself.
Nathan eventually slung an arm over rlin’s shoulder on the walk back. "So, uh... anchor, huh?"
rlin gave him a flat look.
Nathan nodded. "Right, sensitive topic, shutting up now."
Adrian walked behind them like a bodyguard with anger issues. Ethan kept nervously kicking pebbles and then apologizing to the pebbles. Liliana kept fidgeting with a prayer charm she definitely hadn’t needed before rlin entered her life. Dorian watched the shadows, which felt wrong, as if blinking in the wrong rhythm.
They stuck close until they reached the academy commons. Students everywhere. Noise, life, chatter — normalcy trying to pretend it wasn’t cracking around the edges. Elara stopped short and turned to the group.
"Two hours," she said. "Eat. Rest. Gear up. No one goes alone."
Nathan raised a hand. "Bathroom?"
"Hold it."
"What if I can’t?"
"I’ll escort you."
Nathan lowered his hand. "...Okay."
Elara’s gaze slid to rlin. "You. With ."
It wasn’t a question.
Nathan mouthed good luck as Elara grabbed rlin’s wrist and pulled him toward the east wing. They walked in decisive silence until they reached the quiet stretch between their dorms, where the traffic thinned and the shade from the tall stone archways muted everything.
Elara finally stopped beneath an archway and turned, eyes steady and sharp.
"Tell what she didn’t say."
rlin exhaled slowly. "Elara—"
"No deflecting," she cut in. "You were calm. Too calm. And Morgana doesn’t lose composure unless sothing’s worse than she expected."
rlin hesitated.
She stepped closer imdiately. "There. That look. You’re trying to protect from sothing you think I can’t handle."
"I’m trying to protect you from sothing I can’t handle," he said quietly.
Elara froze for half a breath — not in fear, but in recognition. Understanding. Because she’d watched him fight things well above his level. She’d seen him handle crises that would have broken average mages. She knew exactly what it ant for him to say this one might be too much.
"Is it a person?" she asked.
"No."
"A curse?"
"No."
"A creature?"
"No."
"An entity?"
"...Closer."
Her grip tightened on his wrist. "rlin."
He looked at her then — really looked — and Elara’s expression softened gradually, the hard edges giving way to sothing quieter. Not vulnerability. Not fear.
Conviction.
"You’re not facing it alone," she said.
"That’s the problem," rlin murmured. "It’s reacting to anything connected to . The more you stand beside , the more it sees you."
Elara stepped closer until their foreheads almost touched. Her voice dropped to a whisper. "Let it look. I’m not stepping back."
He closed his eyes for half a second. Because he wanted that. Because every instinct in him scread to keep that. Because whatever this thing was — Morgana was right — it recognized his connections.
And it was circling them.
"Just stay close tonight," he said finally. "Don’t wander. Don’t break formation. Don’t—"
"—leave your side," she finished for him. "Yeah. That part was obvious."
Shade chid overhead like it agreed.
Elara pulled back slightly. "One more thing."
"What?"
"If Morgana’s wrong—"
"She’s not."
"If she is," Elara insisted, "and this thing isn’t attracted to you..."
rlin frowned. "Then what?"
She lifted her spear and touched the cold tal to his chest — not threatening, just grounding.
"Then it’s attracted to what’s changing around you. What you’re doing. The choices you’ve made since the year began. And if that’s the case..." Her gaze hardened. "I’ll help you finish what you started, no matter what it drags out."
rlin swallowed, because the weight of her words sank deeper than anything Morgana had said today.
"Elara," he whispered, "you don’t even know what I’ve started."
"Then tell soday," she said, turning away and tugging him with her. "Preferably after we survive tonight."
They walked back toward the dorms together, not speaking, but not needing to — their steps in sync, their shadows overlapping under the archway light.
At their split in the hallway, she paused.
"Two hours," she reminded him, backing toward her room. "If I don’t see you, I’m breaking down your door."
rlin managed the faintest smile. "I’ll be there."
"Good."
She slipped inside her dorm without another word.
rlin stood there for a long mont — listening, thinking, steadying — until the hallway fell quiet.
And then, faintly, from the far end of the corridor...
A sound like sothing exhaling through stone.
The walls dimd.
The air wavered.
rlin felt it before he saw anything:
A presence brushing the edge of reality, like a fingertip sliding across a veil.
Not Morgana.
Not a student.
Not anything that belonged here.
His door unlocked by itself.
And swung open.
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