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Beat Twelve.

Syevira slowly opened her eyes.

She looked at our interlocked hands. There was no crystallization. She looked at my face. There was no blood, no agonizing spasm, no screaming.

I was just sitting there, holding her hand, looking at her with the profoundly tired, unbothered expression of a chanic running diagnostics on a faulty engine.

"You are resisting," I said. My voice did not carry the dramatic weight of a savior sacrificing his life; it carried the flat, unfeeling certainty of a technician frustrated by a jamd valve.

Syevira froze. Her brain, expecting a traumatic death scene, completely flatlined. "…What?"

"Your fourth node," I clarified, adjusting my conceptual scalpel inside her chest.

"You are subconsciously clenching your valves because you expect the pressure to build up. Drop the resistance. You are making the extraction inefficient."

For a girl who had spent ten years believing she was an untouchable curse, having a boy hold her hand and casually critique her internal posture was the psychological equivalent of a flashbang.

Her lips parted. She stared at , completely devoid of words. The world around us—the rushing students, the fountain, the morning bells—faded into absolute irrelevance. There was only the stone table, our interlocked hands, and the impossible reality that she was not hurting .

"Drop it," I repeated patiently.

Slowly, numbly, she let the tension in her chest go.

Beat Fifteen.

Beat Seventeen.

I hit the root. I couldn't extract the parasite itself—that would kill her—but I used [The Terminal rcy] to completely drain the toxic reservoir it had built up over the last twenty-four hours. My biological vacuum cleaner had done its job.

I began to slowly unlace my fingers from hers to withdraw my hand.

But I couldn't.

Before I could pull away, her fingers snapped shut. It wasn't a calculated, aristocratic movent. It was a violent, involuntary reflex. Her pale fingers interlocked tightly with mine, gripping my palm with white-knuckled desperation.

My tacarpals ground together. The pressure was intense. Syevira Sinclair was not a physical brawler, but the sheer, involuntary force of a girl holding onto the first living thing that hadn't decayed from her touch was actively threatening to dislocate my fingers.

She stared at our connected hands, her amber eyes wide, the impenetrable wall of her composure fracturing completely into sothing startlingly fragile. For ten years, her parasite had forced everyone around her to instinctively pull away before their brains even registered the danger. She had spent her entire life watching rooms empty themselves around her. This was the first physical contact she had ever experienced that hadn't resulted in soone choking on her poisoned air.

"It didn't crystallize," she whispered. Her voice was barely a breath, trembling and completely unguarded. She looked up at my face, her eyes searching mine as if terrified the illusion would break. "You... you are still here."

"I am highly motivated to keep my internal organs intact," I replied, my face remaining a perfectly blank, exhausted canvas. "And the first treatnt is finished, Syevira. My fingers are currently losing circulation. Let go."

She blinked, the psychological flashbang finally receding enough for her aristocratic training to catch up. She let out a short, shuddering breath, and her fingers released mine as if she had been burned.

I withdrew my hand. The absolute zero faded. Local physics aggressively snapped back into place.

[ EXTRACTION COMPLETE ]

Above her head, the Native System flickered.

─────────────────────────────────────────────────────

[ ANNOTATION UPDATE — Syevira Sinclair ]

◈ [GREEN] [MASK] ➔ [YELLOW] [MASK]

◈ [YELLOW] [GRAVE] ➔ [GREY] [GRAVE]

─────────────────────────────────────────────────────

Syevira let out a sudden, involuntary gasp. Her pale hands flew to her chest. She inhaled, deeply, and for the first ti in a decade, the air didn't feel like breathing through crushed glass. The heavy, suffocating weight that had constantly crushed her lungs was just... gone.

Before she could speak, a second-year student—late and entirely distracted by a glowing ODICIOS map—briskly walked right past our stone table. He stepped directly through what used to be her three-ter isolation boundary.

He didn't choke. His body didn't instinctively flinch. He simply muttered a distracted apology for walking too close and kept going.

Syevira watched his retreating back. Then, she looked at her own hands, completely paralyzed by the utter destruction of her worldview.

I didn't give her the chance to recover.

Stolen from , this story should be reported if encountered on Amazon.

I casually wiped my hand with a napkin, grabbed my iced mocha, and checked my ODICIOS interface.

08:53 AM.

"Treatnt stage one is complete," I said, standing up and adjusting my collar. "The relief is temporary, but it should hold for the day."

I looked down at her. She was still staring at the empty space where the second-year student had safely passed, completely stripped of her aristocratic ice.

"Stand up."

No exclamation point. I delivered the instruction with the exact, unhurried cadence of a conductor announcing a train departure. "We have exactly seven minutes to reach the second floor for Circuit Anatomy with Instructor Cicero. I don't know the syllabus, but based on the na of the class, it is highly probable he will ask us to demonstrate the state of our internal engines."

Syevira finally raised her amber eyes. The quiet awe of the extraction was still lingering there, but it was currently colliding with the abrupt, jarring pivot to academic bureaucracy. She blinked, the impenetrable wall of her isolation stalling for a fraction of a second as she tried to process the shift.

"My circuit just swallowed the biological nightmare rooted inside your chest, and your valves were just surgically bypassed by a ghost," I pointed out, my expression completely hollow of any dramatic weight. "We need to construct a flawless dical lie while we walk to the second floor. If I am late for my first class, the Headmaster is going to personally unwrite my existence."

I didn't wait for her to agree. I turned and started walking toward the eastern archway at a pace that bordered on a clinical sprint.

For a second, the space behind was quiet.

Syevira Sinclair did not rush. Rushing implied a reaction to the world, and her entire survival strategy for the past ten years revolved around moving so deliberately that the world was forced to empty itself around her. She did not chase.

Then, the sharp rustle of heavy uniform fabric cut through the morning air.

She caught up to in three seconds. She hadn't broken into a run, but her usually asured stride had accelerated into an aggressive, fluid glide that perfectly matched my desperate pace. A faint flush touched her pale cheeks—partially from the sudden influx of clean oxygen to her newly cleared nodes, and partially from the sheer absurdity of speed-walking next to a boy.

"What is the lie?" she asked, her breathing slightly elevated but her enunciation remaining razor-sharp as we hit the first staircase.

"Acute Nodal Cramp," I said, taking the stone steps two at a ti. "A severe fuel line clog. You experienced a sudden bottleneck in your primary chest node because of the cold morning air. I happened to be walking past, panicked, and applied a brute-force manual flush. I hit your engine with a kinetic hamr to force the pipes open."

Syevira seamlessly bypassed a group of bewildered third-years on the landing. They instinctively scrambled backward, pressing themselves against the stone walls, their eyes wide at the sight of the untouchable deadzone-girl moving at terminal velocity.

"Striking a congested circuit with a raw kinetic flush is classified as dical assault," she noted, not slowing down as we banked hard into the left corridor.

"It is also the only lie sloppy and brutally intrusive enough to explain why both of our internal engines are currently smoking and vibrating like uncalibrated boilers," I countered, keeping my eyes fixed on the hallway ahead. "If Instructor Cicero asks, I used brute force because I am an unranked provincial who didn't know any better."

"You want to tell a faculty mber," she said, her voice dropping ten degrees, "that I allowed an unranked student to violently punch my primary valves."

"I want you to tell him that, or I want you to explain how the terminal parasite in your chest was just bypassed by a boy using a ghost as a surgical vacuum cleaner."

We hit the second-floor landing.

Syevira didn't answer imdiately. Her jaw tightened so hard a faint line appeared along her profile. She stared dead ahead. The sheer, chanical logic of the lie was impenetrable, but the thought of publicly admitting she required my 'sloppy first aid' forced her pale fingers to grip the strap of her bag until her knuckles turned white.

She let out a sharp, perfectly controlled exhale through her nose.

"Acute Nodal Cramp," she murmured, accepting the script as if it coated her tongue in ash. "I despise you."

"Fine. Despise . I'm too tired to negotiate better terms." I replied, not breaking my stare from the classroom door at the end of the hall.

Room 04.

We arrived at the heavy oak doors of the Circuit Anatomy lecture hall. The ODICIOS clock in my peripheral vision flickered from 09:00 to 09:01 exactly as my hand hit the brass handle.

I pushed the door open.

The lecture hall was a massive, amphitheater-style surgical theater. Rows of steep, curved wooden desks looked down upon a central staging area. The room was packed with first-year students from all four houses.

I imdiately spotted them. Scattered across the tiered seating were the original characters from the novel.

The mont we stepped through the doors, the ambient chatter in the hall didn't die.

It violently mutated.

Because an amphitheater is architecturally designed to carry sound directly to the center, the disorganized noise instantly sharpened into dozens of highly focused, aggressive whispers. The entire first-year cohort was running a real-ti threat assessnt on the two people who had just walked through the door.

"That's him. The Liar from the platform."

"Is that the lunatic from the northwest corridor? The one who made a Haldia second-year drop to his knees on Day One?"

"Wait, isn't he the destitute idiot who had a screaming ntal breakdown in the atrium lounge yesterday because he lost his stipend?"

"Look who he's walking with. Is that her?"

"The deadzone girl? Why is she walking so close to him?"

"Are they insane? He's completely inside her isolation radius! How is he not coughing blood?"

I maintained a completely vacant, unbothered deadpan.

Yes. I am the Liar. Yes, I am the corridor lunatic. Yes, I am the pathetic commoner who wept over my lunch money, and I am currently acting as the personal escort for a walking biological weapon. Please update your social databases accordingly.

Beside , Syevira's face was an absolute, impenetrable wall of aristocratic ice. The flawless, freezing composure she had spent ten years perfecting was back in full effect, shielding her from the stares of a hundred students who had spent their entire lives treating her like a terminal disease.

But I noticed one crucial detail. Despite the whispers, despite the stares, she did not take a step away from . She maintained our proximity with the exact, rigid posture of soone declaring that her presence beside was entirely intentional.

Down in the central staging area stood Instructor Cicero Lawless Ardennes. He was a tall, unnervingly thin man wearing a perfectly tailored white vest over his faculty uniform. Behind him glowed the large, transparent Odic Projector—in simple terms, a magical X-Ray machine designed to strip away your privacy and project a live, 3D blueprint of your internal engine into the open air.

Instructor Cicero listened to the whispers cascading through his lecture hall. He turned slowly. His eyes, sharp and predatory behind thin wire-rimd glasses, locked onto us. He took in Syevira's rigid posture, and then his gaze slid to —noting my perfectly pressed, clean uniform, which completely contradicted the chaotic rumors surrounding my na.

A slow, terrifyingly clinical smile spread across his face.

"Ah. Miss Syevira," Cicero said, his voice cutting through the whispers and echoing clearly across the hall. He locked eyes with . "And the infamous Lunatic Liar of House Abyssion. Perfect timing. We were just about to need volunteers for our first live, transparent diagnosis."

The silence in the amphitheater was not the respectful quiet of students waiting for a lecture to begin. It was the absolute, breathless stillness of an execution crowd waiting for the guillotine to drop.

My exhausted, anomaly-soaked F-Rank engine pulsed painfully in my chest. Beside , Syevira went absolutely, rigidly still.

"Step up to the platform, you two," Cicero commanded smoothly, adjusting his glasses. "Let's strip away the flesh and see exactly what kind of secrets you are hiding this morning."

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