He was navigating toward the drinks table for a second ti when Kai’sa appeared.
He recognized her before she reached him. The seafoam green of her hair caught the golden light from three different directions at once, and the water-like quality of her robes still moved differently from anything else in the room. She flowed through the crowd rather than pushing through it, people unconsciously making space without seeming to notice they were doing it.
She stopped directly in front of him with a smile that had several layers and made no effort to conceal any of them.
"Leo." The way she said it carried that sa musical quality as her laugh. "You placed second."
"...I did."
"Against Odessa." She tilted her head, her dark seafoam hair catching the light differently. Up close, the ocean-blue of her eyes had actual depth to them, like water rather than color. Her figure in the robes was the sa distraction it had been at their first eting, the fabric moving in soft waves around full hips and a curved waist before falling to the floor. "I watched your semi-final. The weight manipulation when the mage reached for his staff. That was creative."
"Thank you," Leo said.
She laughed, that bright sound. "You seem quite cagey."
"You can’t bla , with how direct you’ve been."
"Hmm." She accepted a glass from a passing servant without looking away from him and sipped with practiced ease. "I believe you have a story to tell ."
"I do?."
"Tell about the tunnel," she said simply.
"What specifically?"
"All of it." She stepped beside him, falling naturally into his pace as he moved toward the wall, as if she had simply decided they were walking together now. "You rescued a High Elf princess from cultists. You carried wounded students through maintenance passages for hours."
"You have a detailed account already."
"I have what is officially circulating, which is deliberately vague." Her shoulder almost touched his as they reached the wall. Her scent was light and oceanic, very unique perfu. "I want your version."
"Why?"
"Because I am trying to understand who you are." She said it easily, without pretense. "You appeared at the Jubilee attached to the First House delegation with no background anyone can verify. You placed second your division. You pulled a Saintess candidate out of a collapsing arena section during a coordinated terrorist attack."
She sipped her wine. "And now you are standing in an Imperial gala like you have always been here."
"That’s a summary, not a reason for the interest."
Her smile sharpened slightly in appreciation. "Are you loyal to First House, or are you loyal to Arakami specifically?"
There it was. Beneath the practiced charm, the actual question.
The distinction she was drawing mattered. Arakami and First House were effectively the sa thing in most practical senses, but she was asking whether his allegiance ran to an institution or to a person. The answer would tell her sothing about how he could be approached politically.
"I’m loyal to the people who helped ," he said. "House Arakami and Iori Arakami are currently the sa answer."
"Currently," she noted.
"I’m at the beginning of a long life," Leo said. "Most things are currently."
She looked at him for a mont with an expression that was not quite calculating, more like she was genuinely reassessing sothing she had already decided. Then she laughed, and the social architecture dropped briefly.
"My people say the sea respects the swimr who does not pretend to be the ocean," she said. "You don’t perform larger than you are. That is rarer than it should be in this room."
"Is that a complint?"
"And a critique." She touched his arm as she angled away, the contact light but deliberate, leaving warmth behind. "One more thing. You will be at the academy, yes?."
"Starting after the Jubilee."
Sothing moved behind her eyes. Quick, almost hidden. "Interesting." Her smile returned, layered as always. "Perhaps we will run into each other there."
He opened his mouth to ask, but she was already gliding back into the crowd, her robes moving like water, leaving the comnt hanging exactly where she wanted it.
He stood there for a mont, certain she had revealed exactly as much as she intended to and not a fraction more.
He filed it carefully and moved on.
---
He found Aria on the balcony.
Not entirely alone, two other academy students stood nearby in their own conversation, but she occupied a separate pocket of space at the stone railing. She wore sothing more formal than he had seen on her before, pale silk with High Elf embroidery running along the cuffs and neckline, traditional patterns that probably carried specific aning. Her black hair was partially arranged, the rest falling loose. She looked like royalty who had dressed as royalty and was still sohow managing to appear as though she wanted to be elsewhere.
She heard his footsteps and glanced over. Sothing in her expression eased.
"You escaped too," she said.
"For a few minutes." He leaned on the railing beside her. Below, the city spread in layers of light, the Jubilee’s celebrations still running in the streets despite the hour. "How long have you been out here?"
"Long enough." A pause. "High Elf political gatherings have specific protocols. Who you address first, how long you sustain each conversation, where you position yourself relative to higher-ranking guests."
She exhaled. "Imperial galas are more fluid. I keep waiting for the rule I am violating."
"You’re doing fine."
"I’m on a balcony hiding."
"Strategically positioned," Leo said.
A soft laugh escaped her. It transford her face briefly, the careful princess composure giving way to sothing younger and less guarded.
"How are you actually doing?" he asked.
She was quiet long enough that he thought she might redirect the question.
"Thinking a lot," she said finally. "About whether I should have tried harder to warn people. Whether trying harder would have changed anything."
She traced the pattern on the railing without looking at it. "The healers said the students we pulled out all recovered fully. That helps."
"It should."
"I know." She looked at him. "You didn’t have to co back for ."
"I know."
"Everyone keeps saying it was foolish."
"It probably was," Leo said. "I would do it again."
She studied him with those hazel eyes that shifted color in different light. In the gala’s warmth, they read more amber than green.
"The academy starts soon," she said after a mont, deliberately lightening the weight. "Are you ready?"
"No. But I don’t think readiness is the point."
"What is?"
"Showing up and not failing imdiately." He glanced at her. "Besides, you will be there."
"Second year," she confird. "Different courses mostly, but we will overlap." A pause. "I ant what I said about the academic side. Theory is the one thing I am genuinely good at right now."
"And I’m clueless," Leo said. "So that is useful."
She smiled again, less perford this ti.
They stood in comfortable silence. The city glittered below. Music drifted through the balcony doors, warm and distant.
"She’s remarkable," Aria said quietly.
Leo did not have to ask who.
"Yes."
"I watched her speaking with the Dwarven trade minister earlier." Her voice had that careful quality, trying to keep sothing from showing. "She was negotiating a favorable agreent and delivering what sounded like a very civil warning about non-compliance at the sa ti, while making the man feel like he had arrived at the terms himself."
"That’s her in her elent," Leo said.
"It’s impressive." A pause. "She must think highly of you."
Leo said nothing.
The balcony doors opened. A servant leaned out to indicate the gala’s closing reception was beginning inside.
Aria straightened, her princess composure reasserting itself like armor settling back into place. "Duty calls."
"I’ll be right behind you."
Then she was inside.
He stood on the balcony for another mont, looking at the city.
The ceremony tomorrow. The answer tomorrow night. The academy after that.
He finished the last of his drink, set the glass on the railing, and followed her in.
---
He saw Iori once, across the full length of the room.
She stood in conversation with an elven dignitary and two Imperial officials, positioned in the kind of cluster that had clearly ford around her rather than one she had joined. The formal Arakami robes were deep crimson with black detailing along the shoulders and hem, with silver thread catching the movent. Her white hair was half arranged with small ornants that glinted when she turned.
Even at this distance, she commanded the space around her without appearing to try. Not loudly. Just completely.
As if reading the attention, she turned slightly, and her eyes found his across the room.
The distance made reading her expression difficult, but the brief quality of it, two seconds that held sothing small and warm before public composure returned, was enough.
He gave a small nod. She returned it and held his gaze for one more second.
Tomorrow.
After the ceremony.
He nodded again, and she turned back to her conversation.
---
The gala wound down in stages. The dwarven contingent departed first, practical about hours. The High Elves withdrew with ceremonial formality. The human nobles lingered the longest.
Leo moved through the final hour without anchoring himself anywhere, drifting between brief conversations, learning nas and faces he would need to rember, watching how the room’s political geography shifted as groups departed.
He was learning this too. The social battlefield. Its rhythms and currents.
He was a beginner at it, but he was in the room.
The delegation gathered at the entrance when the music finally shifted to sothing slower. Akane talked about the food on the walk to the carriages. Yuki made quiet observations about the political clusters she had tracked through the evening. Takeshi said almost nothing, which felt less hostile than it had a week ago without being noticeably warr.
The carriages moved through the capital’s night streets, the Jubilee’s celebration still running at a lower volu in the outer districts. Leo watched it through the window.
When they reached the estate, he stood for a mont in the courtyard after the others went inside.
The fear was present. He had stopped pretending otherwise. Tomorrow night, he would say the words out loud, and they would beco real in a different way from how they existed in his own head.
But underneath the fear, steadier than he expected, was sothing else.
He was choosing this, fully and without the comfortable fiction that circumstances had made the choice for him.
He looked up. Stars overhead, the capital’s light not quite swallowing them.
Tomorrow.
He turned and walked inside.
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