The tribunal chamber slled like old wood and newer ambition.
Duncan had been in enough rooms to know when a space had been designed to diminish the people standing in it. Low ceilings despite the building’s height. Chairs arranged so the five-person panel looked down at the accused from a raised platform. Lighting that pooled around the judges and left the defendant standing half in shadow. Whoever had built this room had understood sothing fundantal: the architecture of judgnt mattered as much as the judgnt itself.
He stood with his hands at his sides, watching Caldwell sort through papers with the particular unhurried deliberateness of a man who had already decided.
The other administrators flanked Caldwell on either side — three on the panel tonight instead of five, the empty seats explained away as "scheduling conflicts given the current security situation." The House Selaris representative sat at the far right, expression professionally neutral, giving away nothing. Duncan had already catalogued him the mont he’d entered: mid-thirties, slightly elevated rank insignia, the particular stillness of soone accustod to watching verdicts get delivered.
The guards stood behind Duncan. Two of them. He’d tested their positioning when they’d marched him in — not obviously, just the subtle calibration of soone who’d spent years learning where exits were. Mid-Initiate at minimum. Possibly higher. Neither of them careless.
How did the instructors not notice this? The thought had been circling since they’d knocked on his door. An ergency tribunal convened at this hour, while half the senior staff was apparently occupied with the border situation, while the academy buzzed with the death of that Ashmar student, while every person with genuine authority was pointed sowhere else.
Not by accident.
Duncan understood that now with a clarity that had settled over him sowhere between the dormitory and this room, cold and unsurprising, like recognizing a familiar face in an unfamiliar crowd.
He’d known since the gloves.
"Duncan Varn." Caldwell didn’t look up from his papers. "First-year candidate, outpost origin, currently under investigation for theft of property belonging to House Selaris. The panel has reviewed all submitted evidence and testimony."
Reviewed. Duncan said nothing.
Caldwell turned a page. Turned another. The sound was very loud in the small room.
"It is the panel’s determination that the evidence supports a finding of guilt on all charges."
There it was.
Duncan had expected it — had felt the shape of it from the mont the guards had stood in his doorway — but hearing it stated in Caldwell’s flat administrative voice landed differently than anticipated. Not like a blow. More like watching sothing tip past the point of recovery and knowing there was nothing left to grab.
"Sentencing, as pursuant to Academy Code and Republic law regarding theft from noble houses in excess of the established threshold value—" Caldwell finally looked up. Not at Duncan. At his papers, just slightly above the edge. "Expulsion from Sparkshire Academy, effective imdiately upon conclusion of this proceeding. Additionally, as the theft was committed against a recognized noble house and exceeds the threshold for standard disciplinary response, the panel recomnds application of the traditional punitive standard."
Duncan felt sothing go very still in him.
He’d heard the words before. Had even turned them over when Bright had first outlined what was possible. But there was a distance between possible and a recomndation by a man sitting ten feet away who will not look you in the eye.
"The hand used to commit the act of theft."
The Selaris representative’s expression didn’t change. Caldwell’s didn’t either. One of the flanking administrators — a woman Duncan didn’t recognize — had her eyes fixed sowhere on the middle distance, jaw slightly tight.
She doesn’t like this either, Duncan noted distantly. Not that it matters.
"Bailiffs will restrain the defendant for imdiate processing."
The guards behind him moved.
Duncan didn’t run. The calculation was imdiate and honest: two guards at close range, one exit, no weapon, Caldwell’s panel between him and the door. Whatever he might manage in open ground, this was not open ground. This was a box, and boxes were built to contain things.
He let them take his arms.
The grip was professional. The kind of hold that communicated clearly that resistance had been anticipated and accounted for. Duncan catalogued the pressure, the angles, the slight over-rotation that suggested the left guard had a habit of controlling with his shoulder — and then set all of it aside, because it didn’t matter right now.
"Proceed," Caldwell said.
-----
Bright heard the verdict through the door.
The words were muffled but intelligible — the old wood didn’t absorb sound as well as the architect had probably intended. He heard guilty. He heard expulsion. He heard the third thing, and felt Mara go very still beside him, and heard Celestine’s breath catch in a small, controlled way that was worse than if she’d made a sound.
"We go in," Mara said quietly.
"Not yet." Bright’s hand ca up — not a command, just a pause. Because sothing was wrong.
Not the tribunal. The tribunal was what it had always been going to be; he’d known that since the adjournnt, and so part of him had been building toward this mont since the gloves. That wrongness was visible, traceable, a shape he could point to.
This was the other kind.
His danger sense had been loud for days now. The persistent buzz he’d described to himself as background noise, the itch without a source. He’d mapped it onto Duncan — onto the fraup, the institutional threat, the pattern of escalating pressure. A natural enough association. The most imdiate visible danger.
But it hadn’t co from there. It had only pointed there because that was where he was looking.
He understood now, standing in the corridor outside the tribunal chamber with his spatial awareness extended as far as it would reach, that he’d made a fundantal error in interpretation.
His spatial sense was picking up sothing that shouldn’t be possible.
It was subtle. The kind of thing that wouldn’t have registered a month ago, before Hendricks had started pushing him to think about the texture of space rather than just its geotry. A vibration at the edge of what he could detect. A quality to the air in the direction of the eastern wall.
"Bright." Adam was watching him. "What’s—"
"Quiet."
He mapped it. Let his spatial awareness spread slowly, feeling for the shape of what he was detecting. The academy’s grounds. The walls. The barriers — because Central’s buildings were embedded with dinsional reinforcent, subtle but present, the kind of infrastructure that had been laid down over decades and taken for granted so thoroughly that people stopped noticing it. He’d never had reason to think about it before.
He was thinking about it now.
Because sothing was pressing against it.
Not at the academy walls. Further. Sowhere in the city. One point first — a single location where the texture of space felt wrong, felt thin, felt like the difference between glass and the mory of glass. And then, as he held his awareness there, another point. And then—
The first explosion was distant enough that it registered as vibration before sound. A deep, resonant shuddering that moved through the floor of the corridor, up through Duncan’s boots, up through Bright’s, rattling the lamp brackets in their housings.
For a mont, nobody moved.
Then the second explosion, closer.
And then the alarms.
-----
The sound of the academy’s ergency alarm was not a sound Bright had heard before. He’d heard the testing cadence — two short bursts, once a month that were purely procedural. This was not that. This was a sustained, full-throated wail that seed to co from the walls themselves, as though the building was screaming.
The ergency broadcast followed imdiately, crackling through every corridor speaker simultaneously:
"Shroud breach detected within Central city limits. All students to designated shelters. Combat-capable personnel report for deploynt. This is not a drill. Shroud breach detected within Central city limits—"
The ssage repeated. Would keep repeating.
The tribunal chamber doors burst open.
Caldwell ca through first, and whatever composed professional authority he’d projected inside the room had simply ceased to exist. His face had gone a particular bloodless color that Bright associated with people encountering for the first ti the gap between what they’d believed was safely theoretical and what was happening right now. The Selaris representative was a step behind him, one hand already reaching for a weapon that, based on his rank, he’d probably never needed to draw in his career.
The guards followed, and between them — still held, arms restrained behind him — was Duncan.
They all stopped when they saw the group in the corridor.
Bright looked at Duncan. Duncan looked at Bright. A mont of communication that required no words.
The second shuddering moved through the building — this one close enough to rattle the door in its fra. Through the high corridor window, the night sky in the direction of the eastern district had acquired an edge of light that had nothing to do with dawn.
"Release him," Bright said.
Caldwell’s mouth moved. The ergency broadcast cycled again. One of the guards — the left one with a shoulder-heavy grip, the one Duncan had catalogued — was already looking at the window. Looking at the light.
"The tribunal—" Caldwell started.
"There is no tribunal." Celestine’s voice had the particular quality of a house that had spent generations learning how to make statents sound like geology. "Ergency protocol supersedes any active proceedings. All detainees with combat capability are subject to deploynt consideration under Article Fourteen of Academy Ergency Code. Or would you like to cite the specific clause that authorizes continuing to restrain a Tier-capable student while Central is being breached?"
The Selaris representative said, very quietly, "Release him."
The guards let go.
Duncan rolled his shoulders once, rotating out the tension, and moved to stand beside Bright without a word. He was empty-handed — they hadn’t given him his spear. Soone would address that in a mont.
Bright’s danger sense was not quieting down.
He’d half expected it to — half expected the alarm, the broadcast, the breach to explain it, the way identifying a sound source made the sound bearable. But the sense wasn’t reading the breach as the threat. It was reading the breach as the beginning of the threat. The thing underneath the thing.
His spatial awareness was tracking three distinct points of instability now. The first had been in the eastern district. The second was closer. The third—
He turned to face the exterior wall and felt his awareness catch on sothing that made his stomach drop.
Not outside the academy’s walls.
Inside.
"We need to move," he said.
"Move where?" Adam asked. The question was genuine, not resistant — Adam’s voice had the focused quality of soone who had already accepted the situation and needed coordinates.
"Not the shelters." Bright was still facing the wall. Still tracking. "Everyone else will go to the shelters. That’s where the concentration will be."
"That’s the point of shelters," Bessia said carefully.
"The shelters are where the students are. The students are what the Covenant wants to—" He stopped. Recalibrated. He didn’t know enough yet. He knew the shape of sothing but not its specifics. Making tactical declarations based on partial information was how people died.
The ergency broadcast had not stopped.
"—Shroud breach detected within Central city limits—"
Down the corridor, students were pouring out of their dormitory wings, so in sleepwear, so half-armored, all moving with the particular organized panic of people who had drilled for this and hoped to never use the drilling. Instructors appeared at junctions, directing traffic, faces controlled. The expressions of people doing what they were trained to do while understanding, sowhere underneath the training, that the training had been built on an assumption that was no longer true.
Central. Breached.
The thing that couldn’t happen had happened, and the space where that certainty had lived was now empty, and the emptiness was spreading.
Duncan was watching Bright. Had been watching him since the guards let go.
"You knew," Duncan said.
"Not specifically." Bright turned away from the wall. "I knew sothing was coming. I thought it was about you for a second."
"It wasn’t."
"No." He looked at each of them in turn — Duncan, weaponless but present. Mara, hand resting near her daggers, Clear Mind already pulling her focus inward. Adam, processing, calculating, rebuilding strategies in real ti. Bessia, jaw set, already reaching for her purse filled with seeds by habit. Celestine, who had no reason to be here, who had intervened twice now on principle and apparently intended to continue.
The third point of instability pulsed.
Closer.
His danger sense translated it the way it always did — not in words, not in images, but in the body’s oldest language. The hair along his arms. The drop in temperature that wasn’t actually temperature. The specific quality of silence that preceded sothing that didn’t intend to be silent much longer.
This is what I was warning about, the sense said, in the wordless way it always spoke. This is what I’ve been saying for days. You understand now.
He understood now.
The impossible had happened.
Central — the safest city in the Republic, protected by Champions and dinsional barriers and decades of accumulated certainty — had been breached.
And in the corridor outside a sham tribunal chamber, with the alarms still screaming and the eastern sky still burning and his danger sense pointing at sothing inside these walls that wasn’t supposed to be here—
Duncan’s trial suddenly seed very, very irrelevant.
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