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rlin went still.

Not the frozen-stiff kind of stillness, but the kind that ca when sothing inside him simply... shut a door. A reflex older than his body, sharper than his instincts, deeper than his fear. The silhouette didn’t move again, but the damage was done—one tilt of its head and the air around them had changed texture.

Morgana didn’t breathe for several seconds. Her mana rose like a curtain around the two of them, thin enough not to provoke the distortion but dense enough to shield rlin if it lunged.

"It recognized you," she murmured—voice calm, yet vibrating with the kind of focus that ca from a master mage standing inches from the unknown. "This is no longer observation. This is acknowledgnt."

rlin didn’t look away from the silhouette. "What does that an?"

"It ans," Morgana replied, "that whatever is forming around you no longer sees you as incidental."

The silhouette flickered, its edges unraveling like smoke trying to escape a glass jar. It didn’t take a shape, didn’t step closer, didn’t vanish—just existed, too aware, too awake.

rlin felt its attention like fingers tapping lightly against the back of his skull.

Morgana stepped in front of him—not aggressively, not protectively, but as a scholar positioning herself between a rare specin and a reckless student who might accidentally touch it.

"rlin," she said, keeping her gaze fixed on the distortion, "listen carefully. When it reacted earlier—when it aligned with you—that was passive resonance. This—" She gestured at the silhouette with a slow, precise motion. "—is active attunent."

"And that’s worse?" he asked.

"It’s not better."

The distortion pulsed once—softly, like a heartbeat answering so call rlin hadn’t made. Shade shrank down against his collarbone, feathers trembling, and rlin forced himself not to step back. Any movent felt like a mistake. Even breathing too deeply seed like permission.

Morgana’s mana sharpened into a fine, invisible grid around the distortion, analyzing more than containing.

"...Headmistress," he said quietly, "if you push too hard, it might—"

"I’m not provoking it," she answered, her tone clipped. "I’m reading it."

"You’re reading sothing that doesn’t have a form?"

"That’s what makes it interesting."

rlin didn’t have the energy to argue with that. Morgana leaned forward slightly, studying the shifting haze with all the rapt attention of soone who learned long ago how to stop fearing things she didn’t understand.

"It is not a creature," she murmured. "Not a spell. Not an illusion. Not even a construct."

Her voice dropped to sothing threaded with awe.

"It’s a placeholder."

rlin blinked. "...A placeholder for what?"

"For you."

She turned her head just enough that he could see the reflection of the distortion in her eyes. A faint smirk touched her mouth, but there was nothing amused in it.

"This world is preparing a role," Morgana said. "And it is waiting for you to grow into it."

The silhouette shimred again, this ti bending closer, as if drawn by the sound of rlin’s heartbeat. He felt it tugging—gently, insistently—at the edges of his mana, like a hook sunk into the fabric of his existence.

He whispered, barely audible, "I didn’t ask for any role."

"That is irrelevant," Morgana replied. "The world assigns roles regardless of consent."

The distortion pulsed again.

Stronger.

Morgana’s brows knit. "It’s responding to your denial."

"Responding how?"

"You feel it, don’t you?" she said. "It tightens. As if correcting you."

Correcting.

rlin hated the word with a deep, instinctive violence.

The distortion flickered quicker, almost like a flicker of impatience. Morgana’s fingers twitched at her side—her only sign of unease.

"rlin," she said, "what did you do when you arrived in this world?"

"I didn’t do anything," rlin snapped, too sharply, and the silhouette rippled—

—hungry.

Morgana’s palm rose instantly, a violet barrier forming with a quiet hum. The silhouette recoiled at the sudden presence of shaped power, not with hostility, but like a moth reacting to light.

She stepped back toward him. Closer than before. Close enough that her presence pressed against his shoulder like cold iron.

"Listen to ." She didn’t whisper this ti. She didn’t need to. "I don’t care where you ca from. I don’t care why you’re accelerating. I don’t care what anomaly birthed this shadow."

rlin t her gaze—steady, dangerous, impossibly calculating.

"I care that it wants you," she said. "And that the world is making room for sothing bigger than you can contain right now. If you keep growing blind, it will devour you whole."

A cold spike went through rlin’s spine.

"And you intend to stop that?" he asked.

"I intend to shape you before it does," Morgana answered. "I intend to get to you first."

The silhouette twitched—once, sharply.

Morgana reacted faster.

Her hand sliced through the air, not attacking, but severing the space between rlin and the distortion. The world buckled faintly, and the silhouette snapped backward—stretched thin—then collapsed inward like a wave sucked beneath the tide.

Gone.

Not dispersed.

Withdrawn.

Retreating.

Morgana lowered her hand, the last of her mana dissipating like smoke in the wind.

rlin exhaled shakily. "Was that... dangerous?"

"Yes," Morgana replied. "But not for ."

rlin didn’t ask who it had been dangerous for. He already knew the answer.

She turned to him fully, the forest settling around them as if relieved the presence had left.

"rlin Everhart," she said, stepping close enough that he could see every faint rune etched into her irises, "from this mont on, nothing about your growth is optional."

"And I don’t get a choice in that?"

"No." Her tone was gentle, but absolute. "You never did."

rlin felt the weight of her words settle deep, cold, and final.

Morgana looked back toward the trees, where the silhouette had vanished. "Classes resu tomorrow. You will attend your morning sparring session. After that, you’ll report to ."

"For what?"

"For training," she answered. "Real training. You don’t get to be ordinary anymore."

She turned to leave, her cloak dragging shadows with it.

"Headmistress," he called quietly.

She paused.

"...Why help ? Why involve yourself?"

Morgana didn’t look back when she answered.

"I don’t help you, rlin." Her voice carried through the trees like the last note of a spell. "I invest in you."

Then she stepped into the shadows and vanished.

Leaving rlin alone in the clearing.

Except he wasn’t alone.

The ground pulsed once more—too faint for anyone but him to feel.

Shade let out a soft, terrified croak.

rlin inhaled slowly, steadying himself against a truth that was finally too large to ignore.

Sothing wanted him.

And the world was making room.

And that was the most terrifying part of all.

The trees held their breath long after Morgana vanished.

rlin didn’t move at first. Not out of fear—fear would’ve been simple. This was sothing deeper, heavier, threaded through the marrow of his bones. Shade dug trembling claws into his shoulder, feathers puffed and eyes wide, but even the familiar weight of the bird didn’t break the cold stillness that had settled over him.

Eventually—slowly—rlin forced himself to breathe. The air tasted wrong. Thin. Like magic had been siphoned out of it.

Whatever that silhouette was, it hadn’t simply departed.

It had retreated because Morgana told it to.

And that terrified him more than the thing itself.

He started walking, not trusting his mana, not trusting the forest, not trusting himself. The path back to the academy felt longer, the shadows thicker, his senses stretched thin. Every shift of grass sounded too close. Every flicker of mana felt like a finger brushing the base of his spine.

Whatever the distortion was, it hadn’t fully disappeared. It lingered the way a thought lingered behind consciousness—quiet until acknowledged, patient until attention slipped.

Shade pecked his ear once. A warning. rlin didn’t need translation.

"I know," he murmured. "I feel it too."

He walked faster.

By the ti the academy walls rose through the trees, rlin’s heartbeat had stopped trying to catch up—it had just accepted the new rhythm: sharp, quick, ready.

He reached the courtyard.

And froze.

Elara was already there.

Arms crossed. Spear slung across her back. Hair tied up ssily, a clear sign she’d left training early.

Her eyes snapped to him the second he stepped out of the woods.

"rlin."

His na wasn’t a greeting. It was an exhale of relief and accusation all in one.

rlin’s first thought was: She shouldn’t be here. Not because he didn’t want her there, but because Morgana’s words still clung to him like frost.

You don’t walk alone anymore.

And now the one person Morgana explicitly said was strengthening too quickly stood waiting in his path like a beacon for attention he couldn’t control.

He opened his mouth.

But Elara reached him first.

Her hands gripped his shoulders—not harsh, but firm, grounding, her fingers digging in like she expected him to dissolve if she didn’t.

"What happened?"

He tried to form sothing like a lie. Sothing safe, sothing light, sothing that wouldn’t drag her into the sa gravity he’d been sucked into.

But Elara knew him far too well.

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