rlin’s room felt too small for the weight of the world’s attention.
And it was attention—he could feel that now. Not consciousness. Nothing intelligent. Just... the pressure of a stage light on soone who had never asked to stand on a stage.
He stood just as dawn began to dim the shadows, rolling the stiffness out of his shoulders. His mana wasn’t rattled, but it wasn’t calm either. It pulsed with a faint, irregular echo—like sothing had tapped the surface and left ripples that refused to settle.
Shade chirped nervously and clung tighter to his cloak.
"...She’ll be here soon," rlin said quietly.
The bird chirped again, accusing this ti.
"I know she’s intense."
More chirping.
"No, I’m not letting her read my dreams. That’s not what she ant."
Shade gave him a suspicious look but stopped complaining.
A soft knock broke the thin tension.
No magical pressure. No aura. No dramatic entrance.
Just a knock.
rlin opened the door.
Morgana stood on the other side, not wearing her usual layers of arcane presence. No veil of shadow, no coiling mana, no threat. She’d suppressed everything so thoroughly she looked almost human.
Almost.
Her eyes gave her away. They were too alert, too focused, too precise—like a predator who’d spent an entire night staring into the dark for movent.
"You didn’t sleep," she said.
"You told not to."
"That didn’t guarantee compliance."
rlin didn’t answer. She studied him once more, then nodded as if checking off sothing in her mind.
"Good. That will make the next step easier."
"What step?"
Morgana’s lips curved faintly. "We’re leaving the academy."
He blinked. "Why?"
"Because I refuse to test resonance anomalies near eight hundred children."
Fair.
She motioned for him to follow with a tilt of her head, then turned away, her cloak whispering across the stone floor.
rlin followed her through the hallway, Shade clinging to him like a small, feathered parasite. Morgana didn’t speak at first—she moved with a level of purpose that made words unnecessary—but halfway through the courtyard, she finally broke the silence.
"That entity wasn’t random," she said. "It manifested because you triggered sothing."
"I didn’t trigger anything."
"You existed," she corrected. "That was enough."
They reached the outer gates. Morgana raised her hand and the wards parted with a soft hum, like parting water.
She stepped through.
rlin hesitated. "Where exactly are we going?"
"There’s a fracture point two kiloters west. Stable. Isolated. No human traffic. Perfect for observation."
"Observation of what?"
"You," Morgana said, as if that should have been obvious.
He sighed, but followed her anyway. The trees swallowed them quickly, damp morning air cool against his skin. Birds began to stir. Mana currents ran clean and undisturbed here.
It felt normal.
Wrongly normal.
Morgana must have sensed the shift in his posture because she slowed her pace just a fraction, glancing back at him.
"Sothing else is bothering you."
"That’s a long list."
"Give one item."
He hesitated, then said, "If the world is adjusting around ... does that an it’s rewriting the people close to too?"
She looked at him for a long mont.
"No," she said at last. "Not rewriting. Accelerating. Amplifying. Highlighting traits that already existed. The world rarely invents—it only pushes."
That didn’t make rlin feel better. At all.
"What about the entity?" he asked. "You said it’s only the first ripple."
"It is." She didn’t sugarcoat it. "Whatever is reacting to you may not be a single thing. It may be a process. Or a progression."
"So this is going to keep happening."
"Yes."
He swallowed. "And you’re sure it isn’t dangerous?"
"No."
"So why aren’t we panicking?"
"Because panic is useless," Morgana answered simply. "And because if the world is rearranging itself, then you have two options: adapt or die."
rlin didn’t like that answer either.
They reached a clearing—unnaturally round, unnaturally quiet, almost glassy in how sound seed to bend around it. A fracture point. A weak spot in the world’s structure. The ground humd faintly underfoot.
Morgana stopped at the center.
"Stand there," she said, pointing to a spot opposite her.
rlin crossed his arms. "And then what?"
"Then," she said, raising her hands, "you let watch the world react to you."
Her mana unfolded—not attacking, not probing, but blooming outward in thin, translucent sheets of violet that layered over the clearing like petals of light.
"rlin," she added, soft but firm, "do not lie to about what you feel."
He stepped into position.
And the mont he did—
The ground shuddered.
The air thinned.
Morgana’s eyes snapped wide.
"...Already?" she whispered.
rlin felt it too—a pressure, faint but familiar, settling just behind his ribs like a breath that wasn’t his.
Then a voice—barely a voice at all—touched the edge of his awareness.
Anchor.
rlin’s pulse spiked.
Morgana’s mana exploded outward instantly, violet shards slicing through the air in a defensive lattice.
"Show yourself," she commanded.
Nothing moved.
But the world itself leaned toward rlin the way a needle leans toward a magnetic field.
Morgana’s expression changed—not fear, not anger.
Recognition.
And sothing like dread.
"...This is not an entity," she said. "It’s a convergence."
rlin felt the pressure intensify.
"What does that an?"
"It ans," Morgana whispered, "the world isn’t reacting to you."
Her gaze locked onto his with terrible clarity.
"It’s waiting for you."
The air tightened around them—no wind, no sound, no movent. Just pressure. Low, constant, patient pressure, like a hand resting on rlin’s sternum, waiting for him to inhale wrong.
Shade dug into his shoulder with tiny claws, trembling hard enough rlin almost reached up to steady him. But he didn’t break eye contact with Morgana. She had stopped moving entirely. Frozen—not in fear, but in calculation.
She wasn’t looking at him.
She was looking through him.
"It’s waiting?" rlin said, forcing the words through a throat that felt a little too tight. "Waiting for what?"
"Don’t speak like you don’t know," Morgana murmured, stepping closer. Her mana folded around her like a second cloak—dense but not defensive. Analytical. "You feel it. You’ve felt it since you arrived in this world."
rlin held her gaze and said nothing.
Because she wasn’t wrong.
The world had always felt... slanted. Like he was walking along the seam of a book soone had opened too wide. Every major event ca with that faint, quiet pressure—the expectation of a choice he didn’t want to make.
Morgana lifted two fingers and brushed the air near his chest—not touching him, but interacting with the thing that wasn’t him.
The pressure tightened.
For a split second, the air shimred—like heat over desert sand. A thin ripple of distortion bent around rlin’s torso, still faint but no longer pretending to be subtle.
Morgana’s voice dropped. "There. Do you feel it? It reacts when I approach."
rlin nodded once. "It’s been doing that since the cliffs."
"Earlier." Her eyes sharpened. "It was observing then. Now it’s... aligning."
He didn’t like that word at all. "Aligning to what?"
"To you," Morgana said simply. "To your trajectory. To your choices. To your mana signature. It’s attuning."
The ground beneath rlin’s feet gave a single, gentle pulse—like a heartbeat that didn’t belong to him.
Shade let out a distressed chirp that sounded dangerously close to a swear.
Morgana’s eyes flicked briefly to the bird. "Your familiar is more sensitive than you are."
"He’s dramatic."
Shade pecked his ear in protest.
"Regardless," she continued, "this convergence is not passive. It’s... anticipatory."
rlin exhaled slowly. "aning?"
Morgana took one step toward him.
The pressure intensified again—subtle, but definite. Like the world itself leaned in a fraction.
She stopped.
The pressure eased.
She raised a brow.
"It is calibrating itself around your proximity, rlin. This is behavior consistent with frawork magic."
His pulse jumped—just once, but Morgana caught it.
She always caught everything.
"Frawork," she repeated softly. "World-shaping. Boundary-setting. Ancient and forbidden for a reason. It dictates rules, destinies, narratives—"
He flinched before he could stop himself.
Just a twitch.
But enough.
Morgana’s expression sharpened like a blade being drawn an inch from its sheath.
"...You know that word," she whispered. It wasn’t a question. "Explain."
He didn’t speak.
Because there wasn’t an explanation he could give. Not one she’d tolerate. Not one that wouldn’t unravel a truth he absolutely could not afford to say aloud.
Morgana stepped closer again, softer this ti, almost careful.
"rlin," she said, "if you don’t tell , I will discover it myself."
"That’s exactly why I’m not telling you."
He expected anger. Frustration. Coldness.
Instead, she smiled. A small, genuine, terrible smile.
"You think I’ll break if I learn the truth. You think I’ll interfere with whatever path you’re on. But you’re wrong."
She lifted her hand and—not touching—let her palm hover an inch from his cheek.
"I don’t want to control you," she said. "I want to prepare you."
He stared at her, thrown off balance. "For what?"
"For whatever the world expects of its anchor."
Her fingers dropped.
The ground pulsed again, stronger this ti, and the distortion shivered—elongating like a second shadow, one that didn’t match rlin’s shape at all.
Morgana inhaled sharply.
"There," she whispered. "There. Look."
rlin turned his head.
Slowly, reluctantly, the distortion ca into focus—barely-there outlines, flickering like mist trying to rember how to be solid. No face. No limbs. No form.
Just a silhouette.
Tall.
Wrong.
Waiting.
Morgana’s voice lowered to a near breath. "Do you recognize it?"
"...No."
"Do you feel like you should?"
rlin didn’t answer.
Because he did.
The silhouette tilted—like a curious animal leaning toward sothing warm.
The pressure spiked.
Shade screeched and wrapped himself around rlin’s neck like a scarf.
Morgana raised her hand again, her mana tightening into a blade-thin arc around her fingers.
"rlin," she said quietly. "Tell sothing true."
He looked at her.
At the silhouette.
At the fracture point humming beneath his feet.
"What do you want to know?"
Morgana didn’t hesitate.
"What is this thing waiting for you to beco?"
rlin opened his mouth—and the world shuddered violently, cutting him off.
The silhouette turned its head.
And rlin felt a shock of recognition, cold and electric, tear through his spine.
Not because he knew the shape.
But because—
For the first ti—
It looked like it knew him.
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