Her grip on the duffel loosened by about ten percent. She stepped fully through the doorway, and the afternoon light from the south windows caught her from behind, turning the white hair into a halo and silhouetting the horns against the warm glow from outside. The tail was still tucked close, but it had stopped trembling.
"Are you. Also a resident? Of this building?"
"Room 205. Second floor, east side."
"Oh." A pause. Her eyes darted to the side, processing. "I’m. Room 302. Third floor. West Tower." She said this like she was reading it from a card she’d morized, which she probably was. "I’m Rina. Rina Soleil. I apologize for introducing myself so. Abruptly. I should have waited until you were. You looked busy with your phone and I shouldn’t have interrupted, I’m really sorry—"
"Lukas Belmont." I pocketed the phone. Sloane’s incoming ssages could wait thirty seconds. "And you weren’t interrupting anything. I was just arguing with my girlfriend about whether I said goodbye this morning."
"Oh no, did you not say goodbye? That’s. That sounds like an important thing to. I’m sorry, it’s none of my business, I shouldn’t have asked, I—"
"You didn’t ask. I volunteered. It’s fine, Rina."
She blinked at hearing her own na. Like she hadn’t expected to rember it from twelve seconds ago, or like hearing it from a stranger’s mouth recalibrated sothing in her internal model of how this interaction was supposed to proceed. Her cheeks colored, a soft pink that climbed from her jawline to her cheekbones and made the contrast between her white hair and her skin even more striking.
"You can sit down if you want." I gestured at the opposite end of the couch. Plenty of distance. No pressure. "The cushions are decent."
Rina Soleil looked at the couch. Looked at . Looked at the duffel bag in her hands. Looked at the elevator bank. Looked at the couch again. Her internal debate played out across her face with the transparency of soone who had never learned to hide what she was feeling because she’d spent too much energy learning to apologize for feeling it.
She sat.
Not on the opposite end of the couch where I’d pointed. Not close enough to suggest familiarity. Exactly in the middle, which was its own kind of statent, a compromise position between fleeing and committing. She placed her duffel on the floor between her feet and folded her hands in her lap with the careful composure of soone attending a job interview rather than sitting in her own building’s common room.
Her tail poked out from behind her on the cushion, fluffy and white and now visible from my angle. It twitched once, then settled.
"I ca early," she said, as though this required explanation. "I know move-in isn’t mandatory until Wednesday but I thought. If I ca early I could. Get familiar with the space before everyone else arrived. Without the. Crowds." Her voice dropped on the last word in a way that communicated her opinion of crowds without requiring elaboration.
"Sa logic I had."
"Really?" Her purple eyes widened in a way that completely bypassed the apology-register she’d been operating in for the past five minutes. The surprise was genuine and imdiate, like the concept of another person sharing her preference for early arrival and crowd avoidance hadn’t occurred to her as a possibility worth entertaining.
"I thought most people would wait until the last day. To maximize their ti at ho before the sester started. I know my parents thought I was being. Unnecessarily cautious. But I just. I wanted to see where things were. Where the fire exits were located. Whether the showers had doors or curtains because curtains make . Um. Uncomfortable. If that makes sense."
She was rambling. The realization hit her mid-sentence and she cut herself off with an apologetic wince, like she’d just committed a social infraction that required imdiate correction. "Sorry. I’m. Sorry. That was probably more information than you needed."
"Most people probably will wait," I said, not acknowledging the apology because acknowledging it would only make her apologize for apologizing. "But I was bored."
Sothing shifted in her face. Not a smile, not exactly, but a loosening of the tension that had been holding her jaw and her brow in that careful configuration designed to minimize her presence and reduce the probability of taking up space soone else might need.
The apology-posture didn’t disappear. It just. Softened. Like soone had told her it was okay to exist in the room without requiring permission first, and she was tentatively testing whether that might be true.
Her eyes t mine for longer than they had since she walked in. Underneath the anxiety and the reflexive apology I could see her actually looking at for the first ti, not scanning for threat or calculating whether I required sothing from her she hadn’t provided yet.
Just looking, the way soone looks at another person who has just said sothing that resonated with a frequency she recognized from her own thinking and had not expected to encounter in soone else.
"That’s. A very practical reason," she said quietly. The statent landed like a complint she hadn’t intended to give but ant anyway. "I thought I was being. Overly cautious. My parents said it was fine to arrive on ti with everyone else but I just. I couldn’t. I needed to see the space first. Without the noise."
"Practical is what I do," I said. "Cautious is just practical with better threat assessnt. You’re fine."
Her tail twitched again. Just once, the fluffy white puff flipping sideways against the couch cushion and then settling back into its resting position. The movent was small, quick, the kind of unconscious physical tell that most people wouldn’t catch if they weren’t already watching, but I was watching and the motion landed sowhere in my chest with a weight I wasn’t expecting and couldn’t imdiately categorize.
Cute.
The Oracle Feed pulsed in my peripheral vision.
〘 New Heroine Detected: Rina Soleil.
Temptation Gauge initialized at 0%.
Classification: Channeler. Aspect: Wool (Epic, Active).
Secondary Trait: Wool Sense (Uncommon, Passive).
Emotional State: Anxious. Receptive. Cautiously engaged.
Note: Subject responds positively to calm environnts, low-volu communication, and individuals who do not require her to perform confidence she does not possess.〙
Zero percent. Blank slate. A girl who had walked through the door expecting to be invisible and had instead been seen by the one person in the building who needed to see her.
I really was a scumbag.
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