It was as if Noah had seen directly into his thoughts.
"No," he said, his voice cutting cleanly through the silence before Taz had managed to finish constructing the question. "It’s the sa Noah you’re thinking I’m talking about."
He paused for a single beat.
"The one all of you ignored and branded a loser."
The words landed without decoration, stated the way facts were stated — not with the performance of accusation but with the flat, grounded certainty of soone who already knew the answer to every question he hadn’t bothered asking.
Taz gulped.
The shaking that had been moving through him since the mana pressure, which had settled into sothing lower and more manageable over the last few minutes, ca back with renewed intent.
It moved through his shoulders first and then spread outward, finding his hands and his jaw and the muscles around his eyes, making him look older than he had when Noah had first walked through the door.
He opened his mouth.
What ca out was not what he intended, but it was what the fear produced when it got to his tongue before his judgnt did.
"B-branded a l-loser?" His voice was unsteady, the consonants catching on themselves, the sentence breaking apart even as he pushed it forward. "He... will always be considered a part of the a-academy... talent or no talent."
The words existed in the air for a mont.
Noah looked at him.
"Just stop," he said quietly. "Stop with the pretentious lies."
The air in the room changed.
It was subtle — not the dramatic, crushing shift that had preceded the mana pressure earlier — but present enough to be felt on the skin, a drop in temperature that had no natural cause.
Taz felt it move down his spine like a finger drawn slowly along the vertebrae.
"I already know everything," Noah said.
He let that sit for precisely as long as it needed to.
"He told ."
Another pause. When he continued, his voice had the sa even quality it always carried, but underneath it was sothing that hadn’t been there at the start of the conversation — not anger exactly, but the thing that lived next to anger in a person who had learned to keep anger at arm’s length. Sothing with weight and edges.
"How he was bullied," Noah said. "How the academy ignored his complaints." His eyes stayed on Taz, steady and unblinking behind the mask. "How you did absolutely nothing to help."
Taz felt sothing happen in his body that was adjacent to what he would have described, in calr circumstances, as his legs forgetting their purpose.
He was already on the floor, which was perhaps the one rcy the situation offered him — there was nowhere further down to go.
His voice made an attempt.
It produced a sound that was sowhere between a word and a breath, the opening shape of sothing that hadn’t decided yet what it was going to be. Then it stopped.
Because there was nothing.
He searched — reflexively, with the practiced efficiency of a man who had navigated difficult conversations for a long ti and had developed a set of tools for doing so — and found the cabinet empty.
The explanations that usually lived there, the framings and the contextual qualifications and the references to institutional complexity that could be deployed to create breathing room in exactly this kind of situation — none of them were accessible right now.
Not because he had forgotten them, but because the masked man standing across from him had already established, clearly and without apparent effort, that he knew the difference between an explanation and an excuse.
And what Taz had was exclusively the second kind.
Because Noah wasn’t wrong.
That was the simple, undecorated truth of it, sitting at the center of everything his voice had failed to get around. Not wrong in a way that could be argued with, not wrong in a way that contained enough ambiguity to work with — just wrong the way a fact was wrong when it wasn’t a fact at all.
Noah Whiteheart had been bullied within these walls. That had happened.
The complaints had been filed, or raised, or communicated through whatever channels a student without backing and without leverage had available to him, which were narrow channels that didn’t move quickly or produce results for people in his position.
And the academy — Taz, specifically, as the person at the top of the structure through which those complaints would have had to travel to an anything — had done nothing with them.
Not because he hadn’t known.
Because the knowing had been weighed against other considerations, and the other considerations had won.
He stayed on the floor and said nothing, which was the most honest thing he had done since Noah had walked through the door.
Noah’s fists tightened at his sides.
Not from anger this ti — or not entirely. The emotion moving through him in this mont was quieter than anger, more layered, carrying things that anger alone wasn’t complex enough to contain.
’I never would have thought,’ he said to himself, his internal voice turning the image over slowly, ’that the great principal would prostrate before like this.’
The great principal. The man who had run this institution with the comfortable authority of soone who had never seriously had to question whether that authority would hold.
The figure at the top of the academy’s hierarchy, whose decisions — and whose deliberate non-decisions — had shaped the experience of every student within these walls, including the ones he had quietly chosen not to protect.
On the floor.
Shaking.
Bleeding from the residual pressure of a mana leak that hadn’t even been directed at him.
’Power really is everything in this world,’ Noah thought, and the thought didn’t carry triumph exactly, but it carried sothing — a recognition, clear-eyed and unsentintal, of how completely the calculus of a situation changed when the balance of power shifted.
Every interaction Taz had navigated with ease, every complaint he had set aside, every decision to prioritize the Count’s comfort over a student’s safety — all of it had been built on an assumption about where the power sat.
That assumption was no longer accurate.
And Noah, standing here looking down at the result of that correction, found that he couldn’t honestly deny what he was feeling.
He was enjoying this.
Not in a way he was proud of, not in a way he intended to dwell in for longer than the mont warranted — but it was there, real and present, and he wasn’t going to waste energy pretending otherwise.
When he thought back to what had been endured within these walls — the years of it, the accumulated weight of being dismissed and ignored and left to absorb whatever ca his way without recourse — this small reversal felt like sothing.
Not justice, exactly. Justice would have required more and cost more and looked different from this.
But sothing.
A little bit of revenge, quiet and undeclared, delivered simply by existing in this room at this level and watching the man who had done nothing beco very suddenly aware of what that nothing had been attached to.
It was, at minimum, deserved.
Noah exhaled slowly, and when he spoke, the cold edge that had been in his voice retreated into sothing more neutral. Not warm — he wasn’t performing warmth for Taz Lance’s benefit — but no longer pressing.
"You have no need to fear," he said.
He let that land for a mont before continuing.
"I only need you to do sothing for ."
Taz moved.
The response was imdiate — his head ca up from its lowered position with the careful, incrental energy of soone testing whether the ground was safe before committing their full weight to it. His eyes found the mask as he rose, making contact with that blank white surface for a fraction of a second —
And then went back down.
His head lowered again, not all the way to the full prostration but enough — chin angled toward the floor, gaze directed sowhere at the level of Noah’s feet, the compromise position of a man who wanted to be able to hear and respond but had found that direct eye contact with the mask was more than his nervous system was prepared to sustain.
"What’s..." he started, his voice finding just enough steadiness to carry the question. "What is that?"
Noah looked at him for a mont.
"I want my disciple enrolled for the upcoming world academy tournant," he said.
The room was quiet after it.
Taz processed the request with the visible intensity of soone who had been braced for sothing considerably worse and was now recalibrating in real ti.
His head ca up slightly again — a few degrees more than before, enough that his expression was partially readable — and what was on it was sothing that looked, cautiously and with considerable residual fear still present underneath, like relief.
He nodded.
Then he kept nodding, the movent repeating itself with an eagerness that had none of the asured quality of his earlier attempts at composure.
"That’s... all?" The words ca out with a breathless quality, lighter than anything he had managed since Noah had walked through the door. "Consider it done."
The affirmation was imdiate and absolute — no qualifications, no reference to process or procedure or the usual machinery of institutional enrollnt.
Just yes, complete and unconditional, delivered by a man who would have agreed to considerably more complicated requests in this particular mont without aningful hesitation.
Noah filed the response and moved on internally.
The world academy tournant was not a small event.
It was the kind of competition that the continent’s magical institutions oriented significant portions of their year around — a gathering that pulled in academies from every corner of the known world, each one sending its most capable students to compete across a range of magical disciplines.
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