"What happened to Senior Maya?"
Astron's sharp purple eyes locked onto Sylvie's the mont she spoke, his expression calm but his gaze piercing in a way that made her breath hitch. The silence that followed her question was heavy, weighted with the unspoken tension between them.
"What happened to her?" Astron repeated, his voice asured. He tilted his head slightly, his sharp gaze unyielding. "What do you an by that?"
Sylvie straightened in her seat, gripping her teacup tightly to steady herself. She knew Astron well enough to recognize that he was being deliberately evasive. He was hiding sothing—he always did when he felt the need to shield others from the truth. But not this ti. This ti, she wasn't going to let him deflect.
She took a deep breath, her fingers tracing the edge of her cup as she tried to gather her thoughts. "Astron," she said, her voice firm but not accusatory. "There's sothing inside her. Sothing that isn't normal. I can feel it."
Astron's gaze didn't waver, but she caught the faintest flicker of sothing in his eyes—curiosity, perhaps, or recognition. "What do you an, feel it?" he asked evenly.
Sylvie hesitated, the words catching in her throat. She had never openly discussed her [Authority] with him, but she had a feeling he already knew more than she had let on. And now, there was no point in hiding it.
Sylvie swallowed hard, her grip on the teacup tightening as she forced herself to et his gaze. "I can feel it," she said simply, her voice steady but edged with an undercurrent of tension.
Astron's sharp purple eyes bored into hers, unyielding, as if searching for sothing beneath her words. The silence stretched between them, heavy and suffocating, until he finally nodded, the faintest tilt of his head.
"With your changes…" he murmured, his tone calm but tinged with an almost imperceptible weight. "It is understandable that you can feel sothing like that."
Sylvie's chest tightened. She had expected him to question her further, to probe for more details, but his words carried a quiet certainty that caught her off guard. He knew—maybe not the full extent, but enough to understand what had happened to her.
Enough to believe her.
Astron leaned back slightly, his gaze still locked onto hers, unrelenting in its intensity. But Sylvie had no intention of backing down or changing the subject. Not now.
She set the cup down gently on the table, her fingers brushing the rim as she took a deep breath. "There's sothing inside her," she began, her voice lower now, as if the weight of her words demanded restraint. "Even though it's not sothing I've encountered before, I can understand it to so extent."
Astron remained silent, his sharp eyes narrowing slightly as he listened. He didn't interrupt, didn't push her to elaborate, but she could sense the tension in the air between them.
Sylvie's hands clenched into fists on the table as she leaned forward slightly. Her voice grew firr, more resolute, as she described what she felt. "It's… bloody. Thirsty. Hungry. And inhuman."
She paused, her breath catching as she forced herself to say the words that had been clawing at her mind since she first sensed it. "Demonic energy."
The words hung in the air like a stormcloud, heavy and foreboding. For a mont, Astron's expression didn't change, but the subtle shift in his posture—a faint straightening of his back, the way his hands relaxed slightly on the table—spoke volus.
"Demonic energy," he repeated, his voice quiet but sharp, like the edge of a blade. His gaze flickered briefly, as though piecing sothing together in his mind. "You're certain?"
Sylvie's voice didn't waver, even as her chest tightened. "Yes. And you know about it as well, don't you?" she asked, her tone sharper now, though her eyes betrayed a flicker of vulnerability.
There's no way he doesn't. Not with his perception. He sees through everything, even the things others don't want to reveal.
Astron's gaze remained steady, his sharp purple eyes unwavering as he leaned back in his chair. His expression, as always, was calm—too calm. Then, after a long mont, he nodded.
"I knew," he admitted, his voice low, carrying the weight of a truth he had no intention of hiding.
Sylvie felt her breath hitch, her hands tightening into fists on the table. The confirmation wasn't unexpected, yet it still sent a shiver down her spine. Of course, he knew. He always knows. But if he knew… why didn't he do anything?
"Then… why?" she began, her voice trembling slightly despite her efforts to steady it. "Why didn't you—"
Astron's hand lifted, a subtle but firm gesture that stopped her mid-sentence. His calm gaze softened slightly, but there was no room for argunt in his tone as he spoke. "Because," he said, "I don't make it a habit to speak about other people's lives unless it's absolutely necessary."
Sylvie's lips parted, her rebuttal on the tip of her tongue, but she hesitated. His words carried a weight she couldn't ignore, a quiet finality that stilled the storm brewing in her mind.
"But now," Astron continued, his gaze sharpening, "since you've co to learn about this, it's better to give so context."
Sylvie's chest tightened further, her heart pounding as she braced herself for what was to co. She had wanted answers—needed them—but now that they were within reach, a part of her couldn't ignore the dread creeping in.
He's going to tell , indeed….He knew.
Astron's voice pulled her from her thoughts, steady and asured as he began. "Maya wasn't always like this," he said, his words deliberate. "You've seen her control, her composure. That was how she was usually before….But now, that's no longer sothing natural—it's sothing she has to fight for."
Astron's voice was calm but deliberate as he continued, his sharp gaze unwavering. "Rember the ti when we went on that trip with our club? To the Western Uxbridge?"
Sylvie blinked, her chest tightening as his words stirred mories she'd tried to bury. The Western Uxbridge trip—she could still feel the chill of that place, the way the air seed to weigh heavier there, as if the land itself carried the echoes of sothing sinister.
Her hands trembled slightly, her nails pressing into her palms as the mories resurfaced, vivid and unrelenting.
The chains had been cold against her wrists, the dim light of the cave casting eerie shadows across the stone walls. She rembered the voices of the demonic contractors, their tones cruel and mocking as they discussed what to do with her. And she rembered Astron, bloody and battered, fighting tooth and nail to get to her despite the overwhelming odds.
He almost died that day. He didn't hesitate, didn't think twice about the risk. He just… ca for .
But the mories didn't stop there. Sylvie's breathing grew shallower as her mind replayed what ca next—what she had seen when they escaped.
The murder.
It wasn't just the act itself—it was the raw, unbridled hatred in the killer's eyes, the way their emotions had burned so intensely they nearly overwheld her [Authority]. Hatred, insanity, desperation—all mixed together in a storm that made her feel like she was suffocating. She could still hear the sickening crunch, the wet thud of flesh and bone, as the life was snuffed out before her eyes.
And then, Maya's absence.
Sylvie's eyes widened, her breath hitching as the pieces clicked together. "Senior Maya… she went missing," she whispered, the realization dawning on her like a sudden, chilling gust of wind.
Astron's sharp gaze softened slightly, his expression unreadable but not unkind. "You rember that, don't you?"
"I do….At that ti, you ca to look for my [Enchantnt]. At that ti, even
Sylvie's chest tightened as the mories continued to resurface, jagged and raw. She pressed her trembling hands against the table, grounding herself as her voice grew steadier.
'I rember… back then, my [Authority] was still new to ,' she thought, her mind tinged with a mix of reflection and regret. 'I didn't even know how far it could go or what I could really do with it. It felt like… like I was holding sothing fragile but dangerous, and I didn't know if I could control it.'
Her gaze flickered to Astron, his sharp purple eyes watching her intently, though he said nothing. His silence was grounding in its own way, a steady anchor amid her swirling thoughts.
"At that ti," Sylvie continued, "you ca to find . You said you needed my enchantnt—for sothing important."
She paused, her fingers brushing absently against the rim of her teacup as she rembered the weight of that mont. "When you asked for my blessing, it was the first ti I felt… useful. Like I wasn't just a liability. But at the sa ti, I couldn't shake the fear." Her voice softened, almost a whisper now.
'I was afraid you were pushing yourself too far. That you wouldn't co back.'
Astron's expression didn't change, but there was a faint flicker of recognition in his gaze, as though he, too, rembered the events she was describing.
"But now…" Sylvie's voice trailed off, her thoughts racing as the pieces began to fall into place. The mories, the emotions, the lingering unease—it all started to make sense. Her eyes widened as realization struck, her breath catching in her throat.
"Sothing captured Senior Maya at that ti, didn't it? And you went to save her."
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