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The thing about supporting characters is that they have their own stories running underneath the one you put them in.

Lucus knew this intellectually; he had always known it, in the abstract way of a writer who understood that every character existed before the scene they appeared in and continued to exist after it. But understanding it as a writer and as a person who was currently sitting across from Seraphina Von Solaris in the academy’s east courtyard were, he was discovering, fundantally different experiences.

She had found him. He’d like to note that clearly for the internal record: he had not sought out a single mber of the main cast, not once since the day he’d accepted Ethan’s library offer.

He was careful about this. Deliberate. One interaction with Ethan was already more main-cast entanglent than he had planned; he had no intention of accumulating more.

Seraphina Von Solaris had approached him in the east courtyard on the sixty-third day with the particular unhurried directness of soone who had made a decision and intended to execute it efficiently.

She was, in person, exactly the visual archetype he’d written: Solaris family coloring — the distinctive pale gold hair worn in an elaborate coil, the light-brown skin that ca from the Solaris line’s Eldonian ancestry, the eyes that were a warm amber with a faint luminescence that betrayed her light-mana affinity. The kind of beauty that is specifically designed, on an architectural level, to command attention.

He’d written her to have that quality deliberately, as a character note: Seraphina is soone who has been treated as ornantal her entire life, and has used the assumption against everyone who made it.

She sat across from him at the courtyard bench with the composed ease of soone who had done the social version of the combat stance — fully settled, weight balanced, projecting confidence that had nothing to prove.

"Lucas Martin," she said.

"Seraphina Von Solaris," he said.

A slight pause — the kind that acknowledged he knew who she was without making a thing of it, which he suspected she appreciated. " You have been avoiding the Class A students," she said. "Since the library."

"I’ve been studying," he said.

"You’ve been avoiding it." Her tone was not accusatory, but more like soone stating a fact they find mildly puzzling.

"Ethan filed a joint access request for you and ntioned you to Selena in passing, who ntioned you to . You have been using the restricted section twice a week for three weeks. You do not appear in any Class A social spaces. You’re not attending the optional evening seminars that Class B students can join if a Class A mber sponsors them."

She gazed at him steadily. "You accepted one door and closed all the others."

"I didn’t know there were other doors," Lucus said, which was technically true.

"Every door Ethan opens is also a door to everything Ethan is connected to." She paused. " That is not a warning. It’s just how it works."

Lucus looked at her. Seraphina Von Solaris in his planning notes had been characterized by: exceptional political intelligence, a performing exterior that concealed a considerably more calculating interior, and — the note he’d written and underlined — She has her own agenda, and it isn’t the one she’s presenting. He intended to develop this in Arc Two, where she beca a more active figure. He had never worked out what the agenda was.

He was sitting across from it, and it was looking at him with warm amber eyes.

"Why are you here?" he asked.

Sothing shifted in her composed surface — fractionally, the way well-constructed things shift when a real question lands in an unexpected place. "I want information," she said.

"About what?"

"About what you’re actually doing at this academy."

The sentence fell into the quiet of the courtyard with more precision than did the suggested conversational sentence structure. Lucus carefully looked at her. "I’m a student."

" You are a student who spends unusual amounts of ti with a Valhalla artificer in the eastern quarter. Who placed Class B from a C-level entrance assessnt? Who reads Eldonian academic texts with the focus of a doctoral researcher? Who avoids other Nobles after being introduced to them." She allowed the list to settle. "The pattern is unusual of your , which keep my interest in you."

"You’ve been watching ."

"I watch a great many things." Not an apology. Not a deflection. Just true. "I’m telling you I’ve been watching you because I’ve decided the more useful option is to have this conversation directly."

Lucus pondered this. Seraphina Von Solaris, Solaris family heir, Class A — she had resources, social access, and political connections that were significantly beyond what a Class B minor-noble student should be able to access.

She approached him with transparency about her surveillance, which was either genuine openness or a very sophisticated gambit.

In his character notes, he wrote: She has her own agenda.

What was it? He thought about what he knew of the Solaris family — a major noble house with significant historical ties to the academy’s founding institutions. Old money in the most literal sense: the Solaris family had been one of NEXUS Academy’s original institutional supporters, three centuries ago.

Then, with the specific sensation of a writer connecting the dots he had laid down and forgotten: the Solaris family vault. He ntioned it once in a world-building note about the academy’s founding.

The Solaris family had donated items to the academy as part of the founding agreent — artifacts from before the world changed, from the period when mana had first appeared. Items that the Solaris family had never officially disclosed.

Items that may include records. Possibly including records of the kind of historical events the Eldonian academic texts had docunted in their Chapters about individuals with unusual cognitive architecture.

"You’re looking for sothing," Lucus said slowly.

Seraphina’s composure held perfectly, which told him he was right. The perfect composure of soone carefully managing a response rather than naturally having no response. "And what makes you say that?"

"Because a Solaris does not leave the Class A social ecosystem to approach a Class B minor-noble student unless the minor-noble student is incidentally relevant to sothing the Solaris is already doing. You are not interested in . You’re interested in sothing I’m adjacent to."

Now, the composure has changed — a small, genuine shift, a recalibration. "You’re more direct than your profile suggested."

"What did my profile suggest?"

"Cautious. thodical. Soone who prefers to understand a situation fully before participating in it."

"That’s accurate. I’m making an exception because the indirect version of this conversation would take significantly longer and we’d reach the sa point."

A beat. Then, Seraphina Von Solaris did sothing he had not expected: she smiled. Not the social smile she had been wearing since she sat down — a different one, smaller, with more actual amusent in it. "All right," she replied. "Yes. I’m looking for sothing."

"What?"

"Evidence that there is a Cult of the Abyss operative network embedded in this academy’s institutional structure."

The courtyard, which had been carrying the ambient sounds of autumn birds and distant student activity, seed to get slightly quieter.

Lucas took a careful breath. "That’s a specific thing to be looking for."

"My family has reason to believe that the network exists. We have been tracking secondary indicators for the past year. The difficulty is that the institutional structure makes direct investigation dangerous — any overt inquiry tips off the network, which has, based on our evidence, at least one mber in a faculty position."

"Instructor Delos Vane," Lucus said.

This ti, the composure cracked. Visibly. For approximately two seconds, Seraphina Von Solaris looked at him with an expression that was entirely genuine: shock rapidly shifting to calculation, then to sothing that might have been respect.

"You’ve confird the faculty link," she said,

"And the student operative and the void-mana grid infusion and the dungeon gate modification plan," Lucus said.

"We have three months before the operation reaches its endpoint, which is the dungeon trial. We have the faculty contact’s identity and the student operative movent pattern. We have secondary environntal data on the infusion sites."

He paused.

"We don’t have chain-of-evidence that would hold up to an institutional inquiry without triggering a premature abort."

Seraphina sat very still for several seconds. Then: "Who is ’we’?"

To be Continued..

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