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From the upper balcony of the eastern faculty wing, the world below looked smaller.

Students walked the cobbled paths in scattered clusters, their laughter carried by the evening air. The academy’s banners swayed in rhythm with the slow wind, shadows stretching across the courtyard. The atmosphere was calm — too calm, Chase thought.

He leaned against the iron railing, eyes fixed on the lone figure moving through the courtyard. Arios.

Even from this distance, Chase could recognize him by the way he walked — deliberate, silent, unhurried. The kind of walk that made people think he had nowhere to be when, in truth, he was always exactly where he needed to be. That composure irritated Chase more than anything else.

The light from the west tower cast a faint glow on Arios’s white shirt, dulling the faint sheen of sweat that ca from training earlier. He wasn’t talking to anyone. Just moving, always deep in that detached rhythm of his thoughts.

Chase narrowed his eyes.

"This isn’t over," he muttered under his breath, his voice low, deliberate.

The words ca out calm, not angry. It wasn’t rage driving him anymore. It was precision — the kind that ca from watching soone long enough to understand their patterns, their weaknesses, their inevitable cracks.

Arios thought the situation was done. He thought the matter with Garron was closed, the case resolved, the storm passed. Everyone did.

But Chase knew better.

He had spent too many years studying people who thought they’d won. The mont they relaxed was when they beca predictable.

Behind Chase, the balcony doors creaked as soone moved inside the empty council chamber. The sound echoed faintly, but he didn’t turn. He didn’t need to. The chamber was dark now, its long table stripped of docunts and the usual argunts. Only a few faint traces of mana lingered — leftovers from etings that had ended weeks ago.

He preferred it that way.

Silence suited him better than debate.

From up here, he could see the entire courtyard — students from Class A walking toward the dining hall, a few instructors crossing paths near the southern gardens, the faint flicker of evening wards activating. The academy was alive again, and with that life ca new cover, new opportunities.

And Arios — the man who had disrupted the balance — was right at the center of it all.

Chase tapped his fingers once against the railing. His gaze stayed locked on Arios.

He rembered the first ti he saw him. Quiet, composed, distant. Not arrogant — just unreadable. It wasn’t the expression of soone trying to stand out, but soone who already knew standing out was inevitable.

People like that were dangerous. They didn’t seek control, they simply exerted it by existing.

Arios had that effect on people.

Lucy followed him. Liza hovered around him. Alia softened because of him. Even Regulus — broken, humiliated, suspended — still asured himself against Arios like a shadow chasing its owner.

Chase understood that kind of influence. He’d cultivated it himself for years, in a different form — subtle manipulation, pressure, reputation.

But Arios’s influence wasn’t built on fear or ambition. It ca from steadiness.

That’s what made him harder to eliminate.

Down below, Arios stopped at the garden edge and glanced toward the sky.

The movent was small, ordinary — but it made Chase tense slightly.

He wasn’t sure if Arios had noticed him. The balcony was high and shadowed, too distant for normal sight. But he’d seen that look before — the faint narrowing of eyes, the subtle pause that said *I feel watched.*

Arios had instincts that couldn’t be fooled easily.

Chase waited, unmoving.

After a few seconds, Arios turned away again, continuing toward the dormitory path.

The tension eased from Chase’s shoulders, though not completely. He straightened, exhaled slowly, and turned his gaze toward the far edges of the academy where the walls t the forest line.

From here, the landscape looked endless. Beyond those trees lay the neutral plains, and beyond that, territories that still whispered of wars long gone. It was easy to forget how small the academy really was compared to the world outside — a confined stage where power was tested before being unleashed.

That was how Chase saw it. Not as a school, but as an experint.

And right now, one of its variables had gone off course.

The door behind him opened again.

This ti, a voice followed.

"Still watching him?"

Chase didn’t answer imdiately. He didn’t need to turn to know who it was. The footsteps were careful, respectful, not daring to close the distance without permission.

"I don’t stop watching what interests ," Chase said finally, eyes still on the courtyard.

The other voice hesitated. "You think he’s still a threat?"

Chase smirked faintly, the kind of smirk that didn’t reach his eyes. "He’s not a threat yet. But he’s becoming one."

The figure behind him stayed silent for a mont, unsure how to respond. Then, quietly, "He doesn’t look like he’s doing anything. Just... living normally."

"That’s what makes him dangerous," Chase replied.

He finally turned, the light from the corridor outlining his sharp features. His expression was calm, but his eyes carried that faint gleam that made people uneasy — not rage, not hate, but calculation.

"People like him don’t act without reason," Chase continued. "If he’s quiet, it’s because he’s thinking. And if he’s thinking, it ans he hasn’t decided what to do with what he’s learned."

The other man nodded slowly, absorbing the words. Chase stepped closer, stopping beside the open balcony door. The wind shifted, carrying the faint scent of evening wards — a sterile, ozone-like sll that clung to mana-heavy areas.

"Regulus failed," Chase said, almost to himself. "Garron failed. Both of them underestimated him. I won’t."

He looked outside again. Arios was gone now, his silhouette swallowed by the shadows of the dorm path. But Chase’s mind held his image clearly — every step, every pause, every unspoken question that lingered behind those calm eyes.

"He’s not finished," Chase murmured. "And neither am I."

The other man shifted, uneasy. "What are you planning?"

Chase’s lips curved slightly, but there was no warmth in the gesture. "Planning? Nothing yet. Observation first. Reaction later."

He closed the balcony doors softly, the faint click echoing in the empty chamber. The reflection in the glass caught his expression briefly — calm, confident, but with sothing colder beneath.

"You don’t win by striking first," he said as he walked past the long council table. "You win by letting them believe the war is over."

He moved through the darkened hallway, steps echoing lightly. The student council offices were empty now, their papers cleared after the recent case. The silence felt heavier here, thick with the residue of old debates and decisions.

Chase liked walking these halls after hours. It reminded him that authority wasn’t about volu or presence — it was about consistency. People feared what stayed unmoved.

That was his strength. He never rushed. Never let emotion dictate motion. Even when Garron’s na was erased, even when Regulus fell, even when Arios’s quiet investigation undermined months of careful manipulation — Chase didn’t break rhythm.

He adapted.

That’s what made him different.

He didn’t need loyalty. He only needed predictability. People would always seek soone who seed to have control, and as long as he looked like he did, he’d always find new allies.

He stopped near the end of the hall, glancing at the glass wall that overlooked the courtyard.

Arios had disappeared from sight completely.

Chase stayed there a mont longer, thinking.

He replayed every recent event in order — the council etings, the suspension notices, the student whispers. The public believed the academy had restored order. Garron’s expulsion had been frad as justice. Alia’s na cleared as fairness.

It was a perfect narrative.

But perfection was fragile.

All it would take was one new scandal, one twist, one hidden truth resurfacing — and everything would fracture again.

And Chase was patient enough to wait for that.

He walked back toward his office, the sound of his shoes the only noise in the empty wing.

When he entered, the faint blue light of mana stones greeted him. He placed his hands on the desk, fingers brushing the edges of a sealed folder.

Inside were nas. Reports. Evaluations. Details of students and instructors alike. So accurate, so fabricated, all useful.

He flipped it open and found Arios’s file — mostly empty, classified, restricted by multiple administrative seals.

Chase had tried to access it once. The system blocked him.

That alone told him enough.

Soone above had taken precautions.

He traced the na with one finger.

"Arios," he said softly. "What are you really hiding?"

He closed the file.

The answer didn’t matter yet. He’d find it eventually.

For now, the illusion of peace worked in his favor. The academy would relax, the council would look inward, and Arios would keep moving, unaware that every calm day only tightened the noose around him.

Because Chase had no intention of confronting him directly. Not yet.

Direct confrontation was noisy. Predictable.

No — he preferred precision. Small pushes. Subtle pressure. Let the system do the work for him while he stayed clean.

Let Arios fight shadows while Chase built them.

The sound of faint thunder rumbled in the distance.

He looked toward the window again. The horizon was dim, clouds gathering at the edge of the forest. The wind outside picked up, rustling the curtains slightly.

Storm coming.

Fitting, he thought.

Because storms were useful. They erased tracks, confused direction, made everyone look the wrong way.

When chaos returned — and it always did — he’d make sure Arios was the one standing in the wrong place when it broke.

He smiled faintly, not the smile of satisfaction, but of inevitability.

Everything that rose eventually fell.

And those who stood too firmly drew the most lightning.

Hours later, the academy grew silent again. Most lights were out. Only a few mana lamps still flickered in distant corridors. Chase remained seated, still working.

He went over the week’s schedule: disciplinary hearings, council audits, budget reviews. Normal routines. Normal cover.

He thrived under normality.

That was his camouflage.

Everyone thought the storm was gone. They didn’t realize the eye had simply passed.

He leaned back in his chair, eyes closing briefly. His thoughts stayed sharp even in stillness.

Arios was intelligent — but intelligence could be baited. Empathy could be used. Loyalty could be broken. Chase had learned those truths early, and he never forgot them.

It wasn’t enough to destroy an enemy’s reputation. You had to dismantle their stability, piece by piece, until they questioned their own ground.

And that was sothing he excelled at.

Midnight ca again. The wind outside howled faintly against the glass.

He opened his eyes and glanced once more toward the courtyard below.

Empty now. No more movent. Just the faint shimr of mana wards guarding the periter.

He exhaled slowly.

"Enjoy the quiet while it lasts," he murmured, voice almost a whisper. "You’ve earned your calm, Arios. But calm doesn’t last forever."

He stood, walked to the window, and rested one hand against the glass.

"This isn’t over," he said again, quietly, almost like a promise.

He stayed there for a while longer, watching the empty grounds below.

He wasn’t in a hurry. He never was.

In ti, the academy would shift again.

In ti, new alliances would form, new conflicts would rise.

And when that happened, he’d already be positioned where he needed to be — in the shadows, unseen, ready to move first when the next piece fell.

Arios might have won a battle. But Chase had always been planning for the war.

The night swallowed the courtyard completely.

And Chase, standing before the window, didn’t look away until even the stars disappeared behind the clouds.

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