The Academic District at the fifty-third minute of the attack.
Rowan had been here since before the alarm finished sounding.
Not because he’d run toward the danger. He hadn’t been running anywhere. He’d been in the administrative corridor between the practical evaluation offices and the main academic wing when the ambient mana field changed in the specific way it changed when sothing very large and very wrong was entering the island’s frequency range.
He’d been a Vanguard officer for thirty years and he’d felt field changes before and he knew the difference between a weather event and a breach.
This was a breach.
He’d moved before the alarm activated.
The first thing he did was not fight. He went to the shelter point access corridor and found twelve first-year students already there. Early. The ones who’d read the mana shift and moved on instinct and arrived at the shelter point ahead of the protocol.
He looked at the shelter point’s lower access door. Looked at the mana reading on the corridor’s monitoring crystal, which was giving back a frequency that the crystal had no category for and was expressing as a flat red error.
His jaw tightened.
He turned the first-year students around.
"Not here," he said. "Up. The hill. Do not stop."
They went. They were first-years. Adept rank. They went imdiately, which was the correct response to a Vanguard Master’s voice using that specific register in a crisis corridor.
He moved to the next shelter point access.
For forty minutes Rowan moved through the Academic District and redirected people.
Not everyone. He couldn’t reach everyone. The district was large and the evacuation stream had distributed students across multiple access routes simultaneously and he was one person. He went to the points he could reach and redirected what he could reach.
And he filed what he couldn’t reach under what it was. The specific weight a Vanguard officer carried when the mathematics of a crisis didn’t allow for every variable to be addressed.
He fought when he had to.
The small beasts entered the district’s lower section during the first thirty minutes, moving through the walls of the maintenance corridors the way they moved through everything. That no-pause continuous movent that was wrong in the specific way that things were wrong when they hadn’t evolved in a space with walls.
They were drawn by the mana signatures of the students still in the district. And the students still in the district were the students who hadn’t yet been redirected.
Rowan was Master rank. The small beasts were a problem at Expert rank and below. At Master rank they were a cost. Each engagent drawing on a mana reserve that wasn’t unlimited, that was being depleted by the sustained output of forty minutes of crisis managent in a large space.
He killed them when they were between him and the people he was redirecting. He redirected the people. He kept moving.
The Wardens were gone by the thirty-minute mark.
He found out from a junior administrator he encountered at the main corridor junction. A woman in her forties who’d been trying to reach the Warden post and had found the access corridor already sealed. The ergency protocol having automatically locked the Hollows entrance when the breach threshold was crossed.
Which was the correct protocol response.
Which ant the Wardens who’d responded to the initial breach were inside the locked periter.
Rowan didn’t elaborate on what that ant. He directed the administrator toward the hill and kept moving.
The junior students were the hardest part.
Not because they were difficult to redirect. First-years moved when a Master rank Vanguard instructor told them to move. They moved correctly and quickly and that wasn’t the hard part.
The hard part was that they were first-years. Adept rank. They were sixteen and seventeen years old and so of them had been in the Academy for three months. They’d arrived at Zenith with letters of recomndation from provincial councils and proud families.
And they were running through the Academic District corridors with the specific expression of people who hadn’t known before tonight that the world contained things that didn’t acknowledge the laws of how the world was supposed to operate.
He redirected them. He kept moving.
At the thirty-eight minute mark he encountered the mid-sized beast.
It was in the main Academic District corridor, the wide central passage that connected the administrative wing to the lecture halls. He felt it before he saw it. The specific pressure differential of sothing with a mana mass significantly exceeding a small beast. The ambient field around it doing sothing that the small beasts’ fields didn’t do. A disruption that was deeper and more total.
Rowan stopped at the corridor junction and read it from thirty ters.
His breathing slowed. Deliberate. The thirty-year habit of controlling the body’s response before engaging.
The mid-sized beast was oriented on the lecture hall wing. There were students in the lecture hall wing. He could read the mana signatures from here, clustered in the upper rooms where the windows were high and the doors were heavy. Students who’d found the defensible rooms and locked themselves in.
The mid-sized beast had found the sa information in the mana field and was moving toward it.
He looked at the corridor geotry.
The corridor was wide enough for the beast to move freely and long enough that an engagent in its center would leave both approaches exposed. The lecture hall wing’s students were at the corridor’s far end behind heavy doors that wouldn’t hold indefinitely against sothing that didn’t acknowledge walls.
Rowan stepped into the corridor.
The mid-sized beast registered him.
The reorientation was imdiate. His mana signature was the strongest available signal in the corridor’s imdiate range. Master rank against whatever clustered signature the students in the lecture halls were producing. The arithtic straightforward.
It turned from the lecture hall wing and ca toward him.
He ran the Argent Horizon.
Not the student version. Not the compound version that Vane had been building for two years with the eastern foundation underneath it. The Vanguard version. The one beaten into his body during thirty years of field operations, built for sustained engagent rather than peak output. Built for corridors and unclear terrain and fighting at the end of a long day when everything had already been spent.
He’d been running at cost for forty minutes and his mana reserve was below two-thirds and the Argent Horizon at this output level wasn’t what it had been when he was thirty years old.
It was still Master rank.
The first exchange established the mid-sized beast’s chanics. It didn’t fight the way Blessed World cultivators fought. Not the reading of intent, not the conceptual layer of mana-refined technique. It fought the way sothing fought when it had been in the deep long enough that every physical problem had the sa answer.
Which was to continue.
It ca forward. It continued coming forward regardless of what was in its way. The only thing that stopped its forward movent was output sufficient to disrupt the mana structure that made the forward movent possible.
Rowan had the output. It was costing him to use it.
The second exchange was harder than the first. Not because the beast had learned anything. It hadn’t learned anything. It was continuing.
But because the first exchange had required more than he’d planned for. And the revised calculation was less comfortable than the original one.
His arms were starting to feel the sustained output. Not exhaustion yet. The specific accumulation of cost that ca before exhaustion.
He filed this and kept fighting.
At the forty-third minute three students ca through the main corridor entrance behind him.
He heard them before he saw them. Footsteps, light, moving fast. The specific cadence of students running. He didn’t turn. He was in the middle of an exchange with the mid-sized beast and turning was wrong.
"Go back," he said. He said it at the volu that carried over the engagent without disrupting his output. "Other way. Up the hill."
He heard them stop. Heard them hesitate. Heard one of them say sothing that wasn’t words, just sound. The sound of soone who’d co around a corner and found sothing they hadn’t been prepared to find.
"Other way," he said again. Sa volu. "Now."
He heard them go.
He continued the engagent.
The corridor was four minutes from clear when the floor changed.
Rowan didn’t feel it as an impact. He felt it as the specific physical sensation of a structural system that had been load-bearing for a very long ti encountering a load it wasn’t built to bear. The stone under his boots communicating a frequency that stone communicated when it was at the limit of what stone did.
He stopped the engagent.
He read the corridor.
The lower Academic District’s foundation was below him. The structural sound was coming from below. Not the beast he’d been fighting. Sothing else. Sothing larger by an order of magnitude that was moving through the foundation’s level the way the small beasts moved through walls.
Not attacking the structure. Moving through the space where the structure was because the space happened to be in its direction.
He read the corridor geotry in two seconds.
The collapse radius. The students who were still in the lecture hall wing at the corridor’s far end, behind heavy doors, who’d been locked in since the first thirty minutes. He read the distance between the lecture hall wing’s exit and the corridor’s collapse radius and the ti available.
The exit was in the collapse radius.
Rowan moved toward the lecture hall wing.
He hit the door with the flat of his hand and it opened. Unlocked from the inside. The students had left the door unlocked on the assumption that unlocked was safer than locked if they needed to leave fast.
Correct tactical thinking.
Four students in the room. First-years, Adept rank. Their eyes went wide when they saw him in the doorway.
He read the collapse geotry again from the room’s position.
"The window," he said. He looked at the room’s high window. It wasn’t a large window. They were first-years. They were Adept rank. "Now. Out the window and up the hill. Go."
They went.
He watched them go through the window one at a ti. The four of them moving with that specific focused urgency of people who’d been given a clear instruction by soone whose voice contained the information that the instruction wasn’t negotiable.
The last one cleared the window.
The floor of the lower Academic District ceased to be the floor.
Vane was on the third tier of the spiral hill when he heard the collapse.
He was between engagents. A group of small beasts cleared from the northern approach, the Usurper running its passive sweep across the next group’s direction. The collapse sound ca from the Academic District’s bearing, below and northeast. The specific resonance of a large stone structure encountering a catastrophic load at the foundation level.
It lasted four seconds. Then it stopped.
Vane’s chest tightened.
He looked at the Academic District below.
The lower section had changed shape. Sothing had been removed from the skyline that had been there before. A specific configuration of stone and window that wasn’t there now. The absence clean in the way that sudden absences were clean.
He read the direction of the collapse.
He filed it.
He turned back to the approaching signatures and ran the Quicksilver Thrust and kept moving because there was nothing he could do about what he’d just heard and there was sothing he could do about what was in front of him.
The Oakhaven principle that had kept him alive for sixteen years was that you did the thing you could do and you filed the thing you could not.
He didn’t know yet.
He would find out.
The collapse sound settled into the island’s ambient noise and the attack continued around it and the Academic District’s lower section was a different shape against the sky and Rowan Draeven’s na was not yet on any list because the lists had not been written yet and the night was not finished.
The night was not close to finished.
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