The carriages arrived just after sunrise.
Twelve of them. Each more polished than the last. Gold-trimmed wheels. House crests gleaming in the morning sun. Guards in formal armor lined the Academy courtyard, forming a narrow path between the gates and the main hall.
From the dormitory balcony, Alaric watched it all without speaking.
A student beside him whispered, "That's House Fenreth. And the blue one… I think that's from the north. Lord Balthis?"
Alaric didn't respond.
His eyes locked on the red and gold crest that appeared on the final carriage.
The symbol of House Veyron.
He recognized the woman who stepped out.
Lady Vestra Veyron.
His aunt.
Her smile was soft. Her gloves perfect. Her footsteps light on the stone as if she floated.
But Alaric remembered the last time she smiled at someone.
That boy had vanished the next week.
---
Inside the main hall, Professor Gaelin met him with a raised brow and a steaming mug in his hand.
"Big day," Gaelin said. "Looks like the noble circus is in town."
"They're not here to talk," Alaric muttered. "They're here to probe. Threaten. Bribe."
Gaelin sipped his drink. "And smile while doing it."
"Of course."
"Did you sleep?"
"No."
Gaelin sighed. "That's what I thought."
He handed Alaric a second mug. Alaric didn't take it.
"You'll need it," Gaelin added. "They're going to parade through the Academy acting like they're here to support the investigation, but it's all smoke."
"I know."
"And one of them will mention your sister."
Alaric turned his head.
"Why?"
"Because they know you won't ignore it."
---
By midmorning, the Academy hall had been transformed. Tables cleared. Faculty seated in a semi-circle. The center was left open for what the invitation had called a "formal diplomatic discussion."
Alaric stood at the back.
No robes. No crest.
Just him.
And his name.
He didn't need anything else.
Royal Envoy Ravel Solvan stood at the front, dressed like someone who'd never seen a wrinkle in his life. His smile was charming, bored, and dangerous all at once.
"Today," Ravel began, "we welcome representatives of the High Houses—including honored guests from House Veyron—to discuss stability, safety, and future cooperation with the Royal Academy."
Lady Vestra stepped forward.
Her voice was smooth and slow, like someone pouring expensive wine.
"House Veyron is pleased to be included in these matters. We are, of course, deeply concerned about the chaos caused by recent events… and saddened by the damage done to one of our own."
Alaric's jaw tightened.
Vestra turned her eyes toward him. Her voice lowered, just enough to make the entire hall lean in.
"But we do not hold grudges. We only wish to see our young Alaric returned home where he belongs."
Dozens of eyes turned to him.
He said nothing.
Didn't move.
But his gaze stayed locked on hers.
Calm.
Cold.
Unshaken.
---
When the meeting ended, Alaric didn't wait for permission.
He walked right past the nobles, right past the guards, right up to Ravel Solvan, and said clearly:
"She's planning something."
Ravel didn't look surprised.
"I assumed as much," the envoy replied. "You didn't say anything in there."
"Didn't need to."
"You're going to act, aren't you?"
Alaric looked over his shoulder.
Lady Vestra was still smiling.
"Yes," he said.
> "But not on their schedule."
---
The Academy library was quiet, but not peaceful.
It was the kind of quiet that buzzed behind your ears—the kind that warned something was moving beneath the surface.
Alaric sat alone at the corner table on the second floor. No books in front of him. Just an open notebook, one coin spinning slowly under his finger.
He wasn't studying.
He was waiting.
Across the room, Instructor Halem Norn scribbled lecture notes onto a small tablet while three students listened. Every motion was practiced. Clean. Friendly.
Too clean.
Alaric lowered his gaze and pressed two fingers against the table's edge.
Echo Sensory
— Read the space around Halem's path. Sensed neutrality on the surface.
But underneath…
> Hidden tension. Masked intention. A trained mental rhythm.
Not magical.
Not noble.
But practiced.
Alaric tapped the coin.
It stopped spinning.
---
An hour later, Halem left the library.
Alaric followed at a distance. Not too close. Just enough to keep line of sight.
They passed the alchemy wing. Down a hall students rarely used. Two stairwells later, Halem entered his office.
Click.
Door shut.
Lock engaged.
Alaric stopped three doors away.
Slipped a tiny thread of thought into the air.
Suggestion Thread
— Embedded a whisper in the room's atmosphere:
> "You've already checked. No traps. Nothing to worry about."
Then he turned and walked away.
---
That evening, Halem sat at his desk and reached beneath the drawer.
He tapped a rune carved into the bottom.
The back wall shifted open.
Inside the hidden compartment: a sealed scroll and a familiar coin.
He lifted it gently, examined the spiral crest, and whispered:
> "Almost ready."
---
At the same time, Alaric sat on the roof above the office.
Eyes closed.
Not asleep.
Just focused.
Watching.
Feeling.
Mind Trace
— Connected to the office below, tracking Halem's thoughts. Not reading them fully—just following the rhythm.
Sudden spike.
Intent focus.
A memory flash.
Alaric's lips moved barely:
> "That's not lesson planning."
He opened his eyes.
Moonlight glinted off the tile.
"Got you."
---
It started with a simple request.
The next morning, Alaric knocked on Halem Norn's door during office hours, wearing a perfectly neutral expression.
"Instructor," he said, "I had a few questions about yesterday's lesson."
Halem smiled from behind his desk.
"Of course. Come in, Alaric."
---
The room was small. Clean. Too clean.
Books arranged in color-coded rows. Not a single sheet of parchment out of place. The rug beneath the desk hid faint pressure in the floor—Alaric could feel it vibrating softly beneath his boots.
He didn't sit.
Just stood near the bookshelf, flipping through an empty notebook.
"I was confused about your example of layered rune interaction," Alaric said slowly. "You drew a binding pattern over a recursive loop. That's illegal magic, isn't it?"
Halem chuckled, easy and practiced. "Only in practice. Not in theory. The design was historical."
"I see."
Alaric didn't blink.
Suggestion Thread
— Left another faint nudge in the air as he flipped the page:
> "Today is the right day."
"No one's watching. No need to wait."
Then he smiled and closed the notebook.
"Thanks, Instructor. That's all."
Halem nodded. "Any time, Mister Veyron."
Alaric stepped out.
And didn't look back.
---
Three floors up, Ravel Solvan sipped tea beside Professor Gaelin in the observatory lounge.
The two men watched students scatter across the training fields like ants.
"Veyron's quiet lately," Ravel said. "Surprising."
"He's not quiet," Gaelin muttered. "He's patient."
"He hasn't reported anything since the duel."
"That just means he's working."
Ravel raised an eyebrow. "Should I be worried?"
Gaelin stared out the window.
"I think someone else should be."
---
That afternoon, Halem Norn returned to his office alone.
Closed the door.
Lowered the blinds.
Reached under the desk and slid aside the rug.
There it was.
The coin.
Spinning gently on its own.
The activation rune beneath it hummed.
Halem knelt and whispered:
> "Now."
The glyph lit red.
---
Alaric, seated across campus in the empty lecture hall, felt it.
His eyes opened instantly.
He didn't smile.
Didn't blink.
He just stood.
And walked toward the trap.
---
Alaric arrived at Halem's office in under thirty seconds.
He didn't knock.
He walked straight in.
The door wasn't locked.
It was left slightly open.
Waiting.
Inside, Halem knelt beside the glowing circle etched beneath his rug. The coin floated just above the center, humming softly.
He looked up—startled, but only for a moment.
"I figured it would be you," Halem said calmly.
Alaric stepped inside, closing the door behind him.
"You activated a summoning anchor inside an imperial school."
Halem stood. "It's not a summoning. It's a signal."
"A signal for what?"
Halem didn't answer.
The coin spun faster.
Alaric raised one hand.
"I'll only say this once," he said. "Turn it off."
"You won't kill me," Halem said, voice sharp. "You need me to trace it."
Alaric blinked.
"No," he said. "I already did."
Then he flicked two fingers forward.
Vector Grip
— Yanked the coin out of the air and crushed it mid-flight.
Shatter Pulse
— Fired instantly into the exposed glyph lines before the coin's rupture could trigger the anchor.
The floor cracked.
The light died.
And the walls shook—faintly—but nothing erupted.
The trap had been stopped.
Clean.
Fast.
Halem backed away. "You don't understand—"
"I do," Alaric cut in.
He stepped forward. Slowly. Calmly.
"The Veyron crest was burned into the root of the formation. Your carving tools left residue in the lines. And your fear spiked the second I mentioned your 'historical example.'"
"You're bluffing."
"You were sloppy."
Halem moved suddenly—spell forming on his lips.
Alaric didn't flinch.
Perception Crush
— Collapsed his visual and auditory senses in one instant.
Halem staggered, tripped, collapsed backward into the desk.
Alaric reached down, grabbed the collar of his robe, and whispered:
"I'll tell them you cooperated."
"Why?"
"Because if I don't, they'll think you were worth killing."
---
Five minutes later, Gaelin arrived with two guards.
Halem was bound.
The trap was disabled.
But the air in the room still smelled burnt.
Ravel stood just outside, watching with unreadable eyes.
"You acted fast," he said quietly.
Alaric dusted his sleeves.
"He acted first."
---
The knock came just before nightfall.
Alaric opened the door to find Professor Gaelin standing there, arms folded, face tight.
"She's gone."
---
They walked together in silence through the eastern wing of the Academy—a quieter part of the building reserved for special guests and visiting nobles. Seraphine had been living there for the past few weeks.
She didn't have a student schedule. She wasn't enrolled.
After the duel, after Marcus was dragged off in chains, the Academy placed her in temporary housing. Protection, they called it.
Safer than sending her home.
Safer than letting House Veyron get close.
Or so they thought.
---
Her room was tidy.
Too tidy.
The bed was untouched. A teacup sat cold on the table, half full. Her brush was still beside the mirror. A hair tie lay on the floor, right where she'd always dropped it.
Alaric stood in the doorway for a full ten seconds.
Then stepped in without a word.
"She wouldn't leave on her own," he said softly.
"I know," Gaelin replied.
"She wouldn't run."
"I know."
---
Alaric moved carefully. One hand on the wall. Fingers trailing along the furniture. Not looking for evidence. Looking for intent.
Then he stopped.
By the window.
Near the curtain's edge, the paint was slightly chipped. Not fresh.
Not normal.
He pressed his hand to the windowsill.
Echo Sensory
— The air still carried her presence. Calm. Focused.
Then, underneath that—something colder. Sharper. Not her.
Fear. Not hers. Someone else's.
He crouched beside the bed, touched the floor just beneath it.
Felt something.
Not magic.
Not mana.
Psychic. Faint but real.
Veil Pierce
— Peeled back the thin layer of thought masking the message beneath the wood.
And there it was.
Not a voice. Not a sentence.
A memory.
Seraphine, kneeling. Hands bound. Eyes open and focused—locked on a single command.
Behind her: the crest of House Veyron.
And etched in a perfect psychic burn across the room's mental layer:
> Come home.
Alone.
---
Gaelin knelt beside him.
"Do we tell the Royal Court?"
"No," Alaric said. "Not yet."
"Why not?"
"Because they'll try to stop me."
"You're thinking of going alone."
"I'm not thinking," Alaric said.
"I've already decided."
---
That night, Alaric met Ravel Solvan at the front gate.
"I'm leaving," he said.
Ravel didn't argue. Just sighed.
"You know this is what they want, right? You walk into their territory alone—"
"They think I'll be weak without the Academy."
Ravel squinted. "Aren't you?"
Alaric didn't smile.
"Let's find out."