Arthur hadn’t moved from the chair.
The evening ca and went. The morning arrived. He was still in the sa position. Sa chair. Sa window. The light that had been warm and orange last night was now thin and early and coming from a different angle and he had watched the whole transition without really seeing any of it.
’Brat.’
He didn’t answer.
Roz was on the armrest. He had been there for a while. His red eyes were fixed on Arthur’s face and his ears were slightly forward in the specific way they went when he was paying attention to sothing he hadn’t decided what to do with yet.
’You’re sweating,’ Roz said.
Arthur looked down at his hands.
He was.
Okay so here is the actual situation, he thought. Here is what is genuinely happening right now.
He was going to die today.
What the hell.
WHAT THE HELL!
Not even taphorically. Not as a plot point he was reading about at two in the morning with cold coffee. Today. Physically. A gloved hand and a blade and an alley and that was it, that was the whole end of it, no more Arthur, no more anything.
He had never seen anyone get killed before. He had watched action movies. He had read ten thousand Chapters of webnovels where characters died in battle and it was fine, it was just narrative, it ant sothing or it didn’t and either way you turned the page. He had never once in his life been in a situation where violence was aid specifically at him.
And now he was sitting in a chair in a world that wasn’t his, in a body that wasn’t his, sweating through an expensive shirt at six in the morning because in a few hours soone was going to put a blade to his throat in an alley near the academy gate.
He pressed both hands over his face.
I cannot believe this is how I go out.
I refuse to accept this.
I already died once for curse sake.
His hands were shaking slightly.
He noticed that and did not feel good about noticing it.
Vexis drifted down from sowhere near the ceiling.
’Hey.’ His voice was at normal register. Not the caps energy. Just conversational, which from Vexis at six in the morning ant sothing was off and he had noticed. ’What’s wrong with you. You look like sothing died.’
Arthur lowered his hands.
Nothing. Go back up.
’You’ve been sitting there all night. You’re sweating. You’re doing that thing with your face where—’
I’m fine. Bad dream. Drop it.
Vexis looked at him for a second with those gold eyes that matched the ones in the mirror.
’You didn’t sleep.’
Arthur said nothing.
Vexis floated there for another mont. Then he crossed his arms and drifted back up toward the ceiling, still watching, and didn’t push further.
Roz said nothing either. His ears had gone back to neutral. He was looking at the door.
Arthur looked at his hands again.
Okay. Think. Actually think.
The vision had said January 23rd. Today. But the original death date was supposed to be two weeks from January 20th which put it sowhere in early February. The gap was almost two weeks shorter than it should have been.
Sothing he had done had moved it.
He went through everything. The cafeteria fight was already in motion when he arrived. The bathroom. Class A. The mouth thing with Xavier. The Patriarch.
The Patriarch.
He got moved to Class F. And according to everything packed into Vexis’s mory, Vexis in the original story had never gone to Class F. He had stayed in Class A the whole ti. Sa room as Xavier. Sa visibility. Sa orbit around the main plot.
When Arthur dropped out of that orbit sothing downstream had shifted. A mont soone had counted on that no longer existed. A eting that didn’t happen. A window the killer had been using that Arthur had accidentally closed.
So whoever was coming had moved the date up.
Because of him.
He had accelerated his own murder by existing in the wrong classroom.
He pressed his palms flat against his knees.
Okay. Options.
Don’t go to the academy. Stay in the estate. If the vision placed the death near the lower gate then don’t be near the lower gate.
He reached into Vexis’s mory automatically, the way he did when he needed sothing specific.
It ca back imdiately and it was not helpful.
Vexis had a near-perfect attendance record. Not because he enjoyed the academy but because the Patriarch tracked it. The man received reports. If Vexis missed a day without docunted illness or a formal approved absence the Patriarch found out by midday. Arthur had already seen what happened when the Patriarch found out about sothing. The marble floor. The blood. The pressure that had felt like being held underwater.
A second offense would not be a lighter version of the first one.
So staying ho ant a different kind of danger arriving by afternoon.
He thought about that.
He thought about the flag being on today specifically. Not on the academy. On the date. Which ant the flag didn’t care where he was. It cared when. Staying in the estate didn’t remove the danger. It just changed which room it found him in.
Both doors had a wall behind them.
He sat in the chair for another ten minutes and listened to the estate being quiet around him and did not feel any better.
Then he stood up.
Roz looked at him.
’You’re going,’ Roz said.
Arthur picked up the academy bag.
Yeah.
’You are a very strange person, brat.’
I know.
He walked out.
-----
He spent the entire walk to the academy with his eyes on every shadow in every doorway. His aetheric field was pressed out around him as far as he could hold it without making his arm go numb. Feeling for anything that moved wrong. Any presence in the dark that sat differently from the light source casting it.
The lower gate ca into view.
He slowed without aning to.
The alley to the left. Narrow. Stone walls. Long shadow from the building on the right.
He looked at it for a second.
Then he walked through the gate and out the other side and kept moving.
He was still alive.
Okay. Still alive. Good. That’s the goal. That’s the whole goal right now.
-----
The classroom was half full when he arrived.
He stopped in the doorway and his eyes went across the room automatically and landed on Havier before he had consciously started looking.
Havier was at his desk. Sa seat. Sa folded posture. Head angled slightly down.
Except.
Arthur had been watching this person. He knew the tired resignation. He knew the way Havier held his shoulders when he was just waiting for the day to be done. He knew the particular quality of soone who had learned how to be invisible in a room.
This was not that.
The posture was the sa but sothing underneath it was running. The shoulders were too controlled. The stillness was too deliberate. The pen between his fingers was not moving and Havier always moved his pen when he was just waiting.
He was performing being fine.
Arthur sat down at his own desk.
His pulse was sowhere it shouldn’t be.
He thought about the tip to the Allright council. Anonymous. Soone who knew the operation’s structure. Soone with proximity. Soone with motive.
He thought about Havier’s file sitting in his head. Fallen noble. Moon faction ties. Years of Vexis’s particular brand of targeted cruelty. That specific kind of quiet fury that doesn’t announce itself and doesn’t go away.
He thought about the date on the vision.
He had no evidence. He had a theory built out of timing and a changed posture and two weeks of watching a person be miserable. He had a shadow he could rge and a field he could extend and maybe forty seconds before his arm started going numb.
He had nothing.
Roz was on his shoulder. ’You’re doing the face again,’ he said quietly.
Arthur breathed in.
He found the density behind his sternum and dropped it low and compressed it inward. The shadow under his desk darkened at the edges. A small blob lifted off the floor. Dark in that specific way, the color of water over sothing with no bottom.
’What is that,’ Vexis said from above.
Arthur guided it across the floor. It moved silent and flat and crossed to Havier’s row and touched the edge of his shadow and the boundary dissolved.
He felt the rge settle.
Warmth in the dark. His field sitting inside Havier’s shadow.
The pen between Havier’s fingers. The controlled stillness of his shoulders. A tension in the jaw that was doing its best not to be visible.
Arthur stood up.
He had no evidence.
He had today.
He crossed the room. Up the steps. The class was still settling, still moving, nobody watching yet.
He stopped at Havier’s desk.
Havier’s eyes dropped imdiately.
I’m sorry, Arthur thought. I genuinely am. But I have been awake since yesterday and I am going to die today and I have nothing else.
His mouth opened.
"What is that sll." Arthur turned his head towards Havier. "Did sothing die on you?"
His gold eyes looked down. Havier didn’t move.
"You sll like spoiled at."
The room went quiet. Heads turned.
Havier said nothing at first. Then quietly.
"I did shower. Sir."
The sir ca out wrong. Like sothing he’d had to practice not saying differently.
Arthur leaned forward. Left hand over his nose. Right hand reaching to Havier’s shoulder, pressing lightly against his back. His aetheric field spreading through the rged shadow below. Listening.
"Then why is my nose telling otherwise."
Havier’s pen still didn’t move. He had been through enough versions of this that the surface of him had learned how to stay flat.
Arthur leaned down.
He had no evidence.
He had a reaction he needed to see and one day to see it and nothing else in his hands.
Close. Near Havier’s ear. Voice dropping to sothing that didn’t carry past two feet.
"I know it was you."
A pause that lasted exactly one second.
"You’re the one who tipped them off."
The air between them changed.
Havier’s head turned.
Slowly. Like sothing pulling against its own resistance. Until their eyes t at about six inches and whatever Havier had been keeping behind that flat careful face for two weeks was right there on the surface of it.
Shock. Real and unperford and specific.
And underneath it, older and denser and patient in the way that only ca from compression over a very long ti.
Spite.
Not anger. Not fear. Spite.
Arthur held the gaze and felt his pulse in his ears and read everything on that face.
Arthur’s eyebrows raised involuntarily.
Checkmate.
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