"The most dangerous people in any story are the ones the author forgot about."
***
Professor Delacroix’s classroom was less a room and more a living theorem.
Desks floated. Glowing formulae drifted through the air like schools of luminous fish. She moved through it all like a conductor, her tallic silver hair drifting as if underwater.
"Mana resonance," she began. Her voice was lodic, carried easily through the space. "This is not rely the interaction between magical fields. It’s a dialogue between fundantal forces of reality. Equations that govern how disparate sources of magical energy communicate across the taphysical plane."
She turned, violet eyes sweeping the class.
"Can anyone hypothesize what variables determine the frequency of this exchange? What mathematical constants must be considered when calculating why certain magics harmonize while others create catastrophic interference?"
Silence.
The uncomfortable kind. Students shifted in their seats. Nobody made eye contact with the professor. These were doctoral-level concepts. Advanced grimoire material we wouldn’t see until year four. If ever.
Most students stared at the floating diagrams with glazed expressions. The mathematical symbols might as well have been ancient hieroglyphics.
I knew the answer.
Every variable. Every constant. Every exception. All of it outlined in excruciating detail in Chapter 847, deep in what fans called "The Slog." That fifty-Chapter stretch of technical exposition most readers admitted skipping in forum discussions.
Leo had learned it during his third training montage. So white-bearded hermit in a mountain cave spent seventeen pages explaining mana resonance theory. The golden boy "intuitively grasped" it in seconds because protagonist halo is a hell of a drug.
I’d trudged through every tedious paragraph. Analyzed the chanics most readers dismissed as background noise.
My hand twitched.
Muscle mory urging to raise it. To show off. To have those violet eyes focus on with sothing other than polite dismissal. To prove I wasn’t the drooling idiot I pretended to be.
I forced my eyes down. Hunched into my practiced slouch of confusion. The formula burned in my mind while I doodled a confused stick figure in my notebook.
Patience, Kaelen. You’re not here to be clever. You’re here to be invisible.
"The resonance frequency..." A soft voice broke the silence from the middle of the classroom. "It would depend on the mana density of the surrounding environnt, wouldn’t it? Like how a tuning fork produces different tones in water versus air?"
I looked up.
Seraphina Valois.
In a room full of peacocks, she was aggressively unremarkable. Natural silver hair pulled back in a practical braid. Done for speed, not aesthetics. A few strands frad her fine-boned, pale face. The complexion of soone who preferred books to garden parties.
Her sharp grey eyes fixed on the professor with sothing close to hunger. Crooked reading glasses sat on her nose. Her robes were clean but sohow rumpled. Sleeves rolled up to reveal forearms stained with ink and herb residue. Her fingers tapped her notebook in a complex rhythm I couldn’t decode.
Professor Delacroix’s expression shifted. The barest widening of eyes. A fractional head tilt. For her, this was a standing ovation.
"An intriguing hypothesis, Miss Valois. Your analogy shows understanding of fundantals. Continue."
Every head in the classroom swiveled toward Seraphina.
I watched her physically recoil. Shoulders curled inward. Spine bowed like she was trying to disappear into her seat.
Color blood across her pale cheeks. A mortified red that crept up to her ears.
"I... that is..." Her voice faltered under thirty pairs of eyes. She swallowed. "I was considering that if mana possesses mass, then it should follow fundantal wave chanics. Like acoustic vibrations traveling differently through varying diums, mana waves would propagate uniquely depending on the ambient magical field density..."
She trailed off as the stares intensified.
I watched her confidence shatter in real ti. Eyes dropped. Fingers went still. Body contracted to occupy as little space as possible.
The silence that followed was loaded with judgnt.
Vance Thorne’s contemptuous sneer. An Onyx nobody daring to speak up.
Argent students exchanging smirks. How presumptuous.
Even fellow Onyx housemates looked embarrassed by association.
Professor Delacroix, completely oblivious to the social massacre happening in her classroom, simply nodded. A single, deliberate chin dip.
"Correct in principle, Miss Valois. Though the relationship transcends simple wave models. Ambient mana creates interference patterns when interacting with the caster’s resonance signature, generating a dynamic frequency matrix. Observe..."
Her floating equations rearranged into a dizzying 3D model. Most students ntally checked out within seconds.
But I watched Seraphina.
She stayed engaged. Her eyes tracked every movent, every diagram shift. The embarrassnt faded, replaced by pure intellectual focus. Her fingers resud their complex tapping. Not fidgeting. Taking shorthand notes only she could read.
There it is.
Beneath the anxiety is a mind that’s hungry. She doesn’t just want to pass. She wants to understand.
I pulled up what I knew of her from the novel. Seraphina Valois. Overlooked support character. Appears briefly in three Chapters on dical teams. Saves Leo’s life twice through clever alchemy. Receives a pat on the head. Then fades into narrative wallpaper.
Smart enough to be valuable. Invisible enough not to be missed.
Potential asset. High intelligence. Low confidence. Could be a breakthrough analyst if soone gave her direction.
Or dangerous, if that sharp mind ever focused on .
The lecture continued. Advanced theory I already knew cover to cover. I perford careful confusion. Took thorough-looking but useless notes. The academic equivalent of theater.
I solved seventh-order harmonic equations in my head while looking appropriately overwheld on the outside.
Middle of the pack. Not struggling enough for redial attention. Not excelling enough to be rembered.
Just another diocre Leone. Nothing to see here.
When Delacroix finally released us, students poured out like a broken dam. I packed slowly. Created space to observe without being noticed.
The room emptied in predictable patterns.
Vance held court near the door. His laugh was too loud, too practiced. His circle mocked Seraphina’s "pathetic attempt to show off" in voices just quiet enough to maintain plausible deniability.
Rhys Blackwood walked alone. Direct. Unyielding. His isolation was a fortress he’d built stone by stone.
Seraphina stayed behind. ticulously organizing her materials with reverent care. When she finally left, she took the long route around Vance’s group. Head down. Steps quiet.
Three people.
Three variations on the sa the.
People the story decided don’t matter.
Rhys, the noble savage marked for sacrifice. Seraphina, the brilliant mind relegated to furniture. And , the pathetic villain destined to be a tutorial boss for the protagonist.
All playing parts in a script we didn’t know existed.
Not for much longer.
I shouldered my bag and headed for the door. Let my expression settle into that vacant, slightly confused look that had beco my most valuable disguise.
The pieces were on the board. Rhys. Seraphina. Vance. The professors. The original plot rolling forward like a boulder down a hill.
All I had to do was figure out where to push.
Ti to get to work.
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