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"Don’t," she said, narrowing her eyes. "Don’t do the shrug. Don’t do the deflecting. Don’t give that ’I’m fine’ nonsense."

She stepped closer.

"You’re pale. And you’re shaking."

He wasn’t. Not visibly. But she wasn’t wrong.

"Sothing was out there," she said, voice lower now. "Sothing strong."

He inhaled. "You felt it?"

"Everyone felt it," Elara answered. "Nathan sprinted halfway here thinking it was a Cabal strike. Dorian’s still sweeping the periter. Even Professor Rowan left his classroom."

rlin blinked. "Rowan?"

"He felt it too." Elara’s gaze sharpened. "rlin—what did you run into?"

Shade gave a miserable croak, burrowing deeper into rlin’s cloak like a terrified child.

Elara’s expression softened only for him—just a fraction—before she looked at rlin again.

"You need to tell ."

And the problem was: he wanted to.

Gods, he wanted to.

But how did he tell her that the world was folding around him? That Morgana had seen sothing growing beside him? That a formless thing had watched him like a reflection learning how to move?

How did he tell her she was part of a tiline she was never supposed to advance this quickly in?

How did he tell her she was already being pulled into his gravity?

He exhaled slowly. "It wasn’t the Cabal."

"Then what was it?"

"...I don’t know."

Elara stared at him for several seconds.

Her jaw tightened. "You do know. You just don’t want involved."

Of all the responses he expected, that one hit like a stone to the ribs.

"Elara—"

"No." She stepped even closer, eyes sharp enough to cut. "Don’t you dare make this another thing you try to carry alone."

"I’m not—"

"You are. You always do. You think you’re protecting us, but you’re not. You’re isolating yourself and hoping the world doesn’t notice." Her voice dropped, almost trembling. "But it already has, hasn’t it?"

He didn’t answer.

That was enough of an answer.

Elara let out a slow, frustrated breath, then reached up and brushed her thumb across his cheekbone—an unexpectedly gentle touch that forced him to et her eyes.

"You’re not walking into this alone," she said quietly. "I don’t care what Morgana told you."

He stiffened. Just slightly.

Elara saw it.

"Morgana did say sothing, didn’t she?"

"...Yes."

"About you?"

"...Yes."

"About keeping others away from you?"

"...Not directly."

"But enough."

He didn’t deny it. Couldn’t.

Elara’s grip on his collar tightened, pulling him down just enough that their foreheads nearly touched.

"rlin," she whispered, "I’m not leaving you. Not for a threat. Not for a prophecy. Not for the world itself."

Every word hit harder than anything Morgana could ever summon.

rlin swallowed, the truth clawing at his throat.

"Elara... sothing’s following ."

She didn’t flinch. Didn’t step back. Her voice didn’t even shake.

"Then I’ll follow you too."

He exhaled, a sound caught sowhere between relief and dread.

Because the world might’ve been making room for him.

But he wasn’t the only one stepping into the space.

And that made everything so much more dangerous.

Elara didn’t release him right away.

She held there, forehead almost touching his, close enough that rlin could feel the steady rhythm of her breathing. It was controlled, disciplined, but not calm. She was anchoring herself the sa way she anchored him—by proximity, by presence, by refusal to let the mont fracture into sothing worse.

rlin finally lifted a hand and rested it against her wrist, a quiet acknowledgnt rather than a plea to pull away. "You shouldn’t have followed," he said softly.

"I didn’t," Elara replied. "I waited. There’s a difference."

He huffed a faint breath that might’ve been a laugh if it didn’t carry so much weight. "You always do that. Turn my argunts sideways."

"Soone has to," she said. Then her gaze sharpened again. "Now walk. You look like you’re about to collapse, and I’d rather not explain that to Nathan."

That was enough to get him moving.

They crossed the courtyard together, not rushed, not slow—just deliberate. The academy around them felt too normal after the forest. Students passed by, laughing, complaining, arguing about assignnts and sparring schedules, blissfully unaware that sothing had pressed its attention against the world not ten minutes ago.

rlin felt disconnected from it, like he was watching through glass.

Elara didn’t let that distance widen. She stayed close without hovering, her presence constant at his side. When they reached the outer steps of the main building, she finally spoke again, voice quieter now that the open air had narrowed into stone corridors.

"You don’t have to explain everything," she said. "But you can’t explain nothing."

rlin leaned against the railing, closing his eyes for a brief mont as the academy’s wards brushed against his senses. Familiar. Safe. At least on the surface.

"I ran into Morgana," he said at last.

Elara stiffened slightly but didn’t interrupt.

"She wasn’t angry," rlin continued. "She wasn’t even suspicious. Just... attentive. Like she’d already accepted that I’m an anomaly and moved straight to figuring out what kind."

"That sounds worse," Elara said flatly.

"It is," he agreed. "She thinks sothing is reacting to . Not inside . Around . Like the world is correcting for my existence."

Elara absorbed that in silence, eyes fixed on the far wall as if mapping possibilities. When she spoke again, her voice was steady, but there was a blade underneath it.

"And she told you to isolate."

"She didn’t say it like that," rlin replied. "She said I wouldn’t walk alone anymore."

Elara turned to him then, disbelief flashing across her face. "That’s the sa thing, rlin. It just sounds prettier."

He didn’t argue. He couldn’t.

"She thinks attachnts make you vulnerable," Elara continued. "Which is rich, coming from soone whose entire academy runs on loyalty and bonds."

"She thinks I’m an anchor," rlin said quietly.

That stopped her.

Elara stared at him, really stared this ti, as if recalibrating her understanding of the situation from the ground up. "An anchor for what?"

"I don’t know," he admitted. "Sothing unfinished. Sothing adapting."

Her jaw tightened. "Then she’s wrong about one thing."

He looked at her.

"You’re not an anchor," Elara said. "You’re a fulcrum. Things move because of you, not because you’re weighing them down."

The distinction hit harder than he expected.

Before he could respond, hurried footsteps echoed down the corridor. Nathan appeared around the corner, eyes sharp, posture tense, dark-blue mana flickering faintly along his hands before he visibly forced it down.

"There you are," he said, relief bleeding into irritation. "Do you have any idea how close Adrian ca to starting a riot?"

rlin grimaced. "I can imagine."

Nathan’s gaze flicked over him, cataloging every detail. "You look like hell."

"Comforting."

"Accurate," Nathan shot back. Then his tone lowered. "What happened?"

rlin hesitated, just long enough for Nathan to notice.

Elara answered for him. "Later. Sowhere private."

Nathan exhaled through his nose, then nodded once. "Fine. But if sothing followed you back, I want to know."

rlin t his eyes. "Nothing crossed the wards."

"That’s not what I asked."

rlin didn’t answer.

Nathan swore under his breath. "I knew it."

They regrouped with the others shortly after—Adrian loud and visibly relieved, Liliana fussing over rlin with soft concern, Ethan pretending not to care while absolutely caring, and Dorian watching the hallways like he expected the walls to start listening.

The group didn’t press. Not imdiately. That, more than anything, told rlin how serious they all were taking this.

Classes resud. Ti moved forward because it always did. But beneath the routine, sothing had shifted.

rlin felt it in the way the academy’s wards brushed him differently, like they were testing his edges. He felt it in the way professors watched him with a fraction more attention than before. He felt it most in the way his mana refused to fully settle, coiled and alert even during monts that should have been calm.

And sowhere—just beyond perception, just outside definition—sothing watched back.

Not with hunger.

Not with malice.

But with recognition.

And that, rlin knew, was the most dangerous kind of attention of all.

The hidden assignnt arrived that evening without ceremony.

No announcent. No sealed envelope slipped under a door. No dramatic summons. rlin only noticed it because the academy’s ward lattice twitched when he crossed the threshold into his room, a subtle harmonic shift that didn’t belong to the usual security patterns. If he hadn’t been attuned to irregularities—if he hadn’t spent so long watching for the world to misstep—he would have missed it entirely.

The air near his desk folded inward, light bending just enough to betray the presence of layered concealnt. Not illusion. Not stealth. Sothing closer to deliberate omission, as if reality itself had been instructed to pretend nothing was there.

rlin closed the door behind him and didn’t bother locking it. Whatever this was, locks wouldn’t matter.

He reached out slowly, letting a thread of neutral mana brush the distortion without forcing it. The concealnt responded imdiately, peeling back like a courteous curtain.

A thin slate of black crystal hovered above the desk, etched with sigils so old they predated the academy’s founding scripts. Morgana’s work. No one else here would have had the authority—or the recklessness—to use those runes on a student.

The slate pulsed once and a line of text surfaced, precise and unadorned.

Independent Field Directive

Recipient: rlin Everhart

Authorization: Headmistress Morgana

rlin exhaled through his nose.

’Of course.’

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