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Five years earlier

The first concert after the rebellion was a hit.

Adam knew it before anyone told him, before the reviews appeared on the internet, and before the palace-approved entertainnt channels cut his best notes into thirty-second loops and pumped them through the city’s communication towers like a heartbeat.

Two years.

Two years of the new regi under Damian Lyon, two years of officials in black and gold trying to stabilize a country that had been cracked open and stitched back together with ether lines and blood and paperwork.

Two years of rationing, of curfews, of tightened wards around governnt buildings, of the quiet hum of reconstruction running under everything like a second heartbeat.

And now, finally, music.

Not propaganda hymns or victory anthems forced into public squares, but a real concert: a crowded hall, lights warm enough to feel like sunlight, security scans at the doors, and warded glass panels shimring faintly where sound and ether t and didn’t quite agree on who owned the air.

Adam had walked onto that stage and felt the weight of it hit him like a wave.

The standing pit, raised platforms, barricades reinforced with tal and ether-thread, and security lines were all triple-layered because the Empire was still learning to trust crowds. The ceiling was lost in darkness, rigged with light bars and suspended speaker arrays, the whole grid humming faintly as the ether-powered acoustics synced to the sound system.

People were already yelling before he sang a single word.

Nas shouted raw, voices cracking, laughter and sobs mixed together because the last ti this many bodies had gathered in one place, it had been for funerals, protests, ration queues, and speeches that left everyone exhausted and empty.

Tonight they ca to be loud for sothing that did not demand sacrifice.

The first bass drop hit like impact.

The floor vibrated through Adam’s boots, through his calves, and up into his ribs, and for half a second the only thing he could feel was rhythm and electricity and a thousand hearts syncing to the sa beat. The LED panels behind him flared into color, creating sharp neon lines that traced geotric patterns before collapsing into a storm of light that moved as if it were alive.

Etherlight ran through it all, subtle but noticeable: a shimr along the stage edge where the safety wards were anchored, a faint glint in the air when the light beams cut through the haze and caught the ward dust, and tiny sparks like stars in smoke.

Adam lifted the microphone.

The crowd surged forward against the barricade, hands up, faces lit by phones and wrist screens, eyes bright, mouths open, screaming his na like it was a spell.

"ADAM—ADAM—ADAM—"

He felt it hit him.

That wall of attention. That hunger.

He rolled his shoulders once, letting his body settle into the familiar shape of performance. The in-ear monitors clicked as the backing track lined up. The drumr counted him in with a sharp tap that sliced through the roar.

Adam smiled.

When he sang the first line, the sound system grabbed him and propelled him forward cleanly, amply, and flawlessly. His voice was layered with the track in a way that made the entire hall tighten, the kind of pop hook engineered to lodge under skin, except it wasn’t only engineering. It was him.

He could feel the crowd reacting in real ti.

The first wave of screaming hit at the end of the first phrase. People jumped, hands flying higher, bodies bouncing in place like the music had given them permission to move again. Soone in the front row was crying openly, mascara streaking down her face as she scread the chorus back at him, and Adam felt his throat tighten for half a beat.

The rebellion had taken their public joy and turned it into caution. The war had taught them to keep their heads down, to avoid crowds, and to treat every gathering like a potential tragedy.

Tonight the Empire let them gather.

Tonight the Empire let them be loud.

Adam paced the stage, mic in hand, moving with the smoothness of soone who knew exactly how to hold attention without looking like he was trying. The lights tracked him, white beams snapping to follow his silhouette before exploding into color with each beat drop. The haze machines emitted a low fog that caught the laser lines and made them appear solid, as if he could walk between them.

The crowd sang with him.

They shouted the lyrics back, off-key and perfect, a thousand voices crushing into one. When he held the mic out for the hook, the roar that ca back was so loud it distorted the edge of the sound wards for a second, the ether grid flashing a soft corrective shimr along the stage periter as it absorbed the pressure.

Adam laughed mid-song, breathless and delighted, and the crowd went insane for it.

He jumped down onto the front riser, close enough that the first rows could see the sweat starting at his temples, could see the way his chest rose with every breath, and could see that he was real and not an ether-projection like the governnt broadcasts everyone had learned to distrust.

Hands reached for him.

Security tensed.

Adam lifted one palm, and the crowd stilled, not fully, but enough.

That was the other power he had always carried.

He didn’t need a crown to make people listen.

He leaned into the mic and said, voice rough with adrenaline, "I missed you."

The scream that followed was almost feral.

Soone threw a glow band. Soone else threw a flower crown, because hope always found stupid forms first. Adam caught it one-handed on instinct and put it on without thinking.

The hall detonated.

Song after song, each one tighter, louder, and designed to make bodies move. Bright pop lodies over heavy bass. The lyrics were mostly about flirtation, light heartbreak, and the kind of shallow joy that beca sacred after real grief.

By the ti he reached his most famous track, the one the entire city seed to know even if they claid they didn’t listen to pop, the crowd was a living thing.

Phones held up like stars.

People on shoulders.

Security sweating.

The ether-powered speakers were humming at the edge of their limit.

Adam’s shirt clung to his back. His hair - long, blond, and usually so controlled - had started to co loose, damp strands sticking to his neck and cheeks. His lungs burned. His legs ached.

He had never felt better.

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