The silence that followed was not the silence of a room processing information.
It was the silence of a room that had heard sothing it had not expected to hear and needed a second to confirm it had heard correctly.
Davan did not change expression.
But sothing in his eyes changed.
Two of the Inquisitors on the left flank exchanged a glance.
The level‑82 on Agustín’s right stopped writing.
They did not show it with words. Not in this room, not in front of Agustín, not with the twelve present and the administrative wing report still on the table.
Davan looked at Agustín.
"An execution."
"A public execution," said Agustín. "Docunted. Broadcast to the guilds, to the institutions, to the governnts of the seven territories that have spent years asking whether the Temple’s position on the Fragnts is politics or evidence." A pause. "This is evidence."
---
Cael spoke.
He had reached the limit of what he could process in silence and had decided that silence was no longer sustainable.
"Father Agustín—"
Agustín raised his hand.
Not abruptly.
"Inquisitor Cael." He looked at him. "You recruited Davan Osei at fifteen years old. Seven years of training under your direct supervision." A pause. "You are responsible for what Davan Osei is and for what Davan Osei now wears around his neck."
Cael did not answer.
"I will give you the opportunity for your pupil not to suffer unnecessarily." Agustín. "Davan Osei will be executed. But how that happens — the timing, the thod, the level of dignity granted — depends on who the executioner is."
A pause.
"You will be the executioner, Inquisitor Cael."
The room.
The silence in the room was now different from all the silences before.
Davan looking at Agustín.
Cael looking at Agustín.
Magnus at the opposite end of the table.
Magnus’s eyes — one blue, one gold — moving from Agustín to Cael to Davan and back.
Without saying anything.
Without changing expression.
Watching.
---
Agustín picked up the report from the table.
"The eting is over," he said. "I will give you coordination instructions this afternoon."
He stood up.
The twelve Inquisitors of his faction stood up.
Agustín walked toward the door without looking back.
The eting room door closed.
---
[eting Room — after]
The twelve Inquisitors filed out.
The level‑82 was the last to stand. He looked at Davan once, then left.
The room remained with Davan, Cael, and Magnus.
Magnus at his end of the table.
Still saying nothing.
His eyes on Davan.
On the necklace.
On Cael.
Magnus’s eyes, which had been watching exactly this kind of mont for fifty years and which today, as always, were not going to articulate aloud what they were seeing.
Magnus stood up.
He gathered his docunts.
He left the room without saying a word.
---
Davan and Cael alone.
The long gray stone table between them.
Davan looked at the door through which Agustín had left.
Then he looked at Cael.
Cael with his eyes on the table.
Not evaluating. Not calculating. Just looking at the stone surface.
"Cael."
Cael looked at him.
Davan looked back.
He did not say *don’t do it*. He did not say *you don’t have to*. He did not say any of the things the situation offered as options because Davan had known Cael long enough to know what kind of person he was and what kind of options that person could process.
"When you recruited ," said Davan, "you told that the Temple was the only place in the world where soone with my level and my background could beco sothing real."
Cael did not answer.
"I believed it." Davan. "I still believe it." A pause. "But I already know that believing in the Temple and believing in what Agustín does with it are not the sa thing."
F5’s necklace glowed slowly.
Not the combat pulse — sothing lower, more constant. Like sothing breathing.
"I don’t want you to do anything you can’t carry," said Davan. "Only that."
Cael looked at him for a mont.
The Inquisitor’s expression, which for twenty years had been controlled, direct, without the emotional weight situations should have carried — and which at this mont, in this empty room with the stone table between them, was none of those things.
He said nothing.
He stood up.
And left the room.
---
[eting Room — Davan alone — 2:47 PM]
The necklace on Davan’s neck.
F5’s light constant, low, present.
Davan in the chair.
He looked at the table.
He looked at the door.
He looked at the window — the Academy’s east corridor visible from here, students moving through the hallways again after the evacuation, the building returning to normalcy with the specific efficiency of institutions that know normalcy is the most important product they offer.
Carter had said he needed ti.
Ti to learn to control the Fragnts without losing himself. To understand the power without the power consuming him.
Davan looked at the necklace.
F5 on his neck had been there less than a day and had already changed things that could not be undone. It had already created a situation with no clean exit. It had already taken Davan’s faith in the Temple and amplified it into certainty — and that certainty had led Davan to attack Cael, the last thing he would have chosen to do if the Fragnt hadn’t found a way to make it feel right.
Carter had said it in the corridor, hours ago that felt like days:
*The Fragnt doesn’t erase what the person is. It amplifies it until the person can no longer distinguish where they end and the Fragnt begins.*
Davan had believed he was right.
F5 had given him reason to believe it.
The difference between the two was what he needed to learn to see.
Agustín had described it as an example.
A public execution. Broadcast to the seven territories. Evidence that the Fragnts were what the Temple said they were.
Davan looked at the necklace one last ti.
And decided that if he was going to be an example, he would be one on his own terms.
Not yet.
But eventually.
---
[Celestial Academy — Agustín’s Private Office — 3:02 PM]
Agustín alone.
The administrative wing report on his desk. Photographs of the destroyed detection systems. The inventory of structural damage. The dical report on the two students with energy trauma.
All docunted.
All saved.
Agustín did not need the report to know what it said — he had processed it since arriving at the corridor and had been building it in his mind long before it happened.
Thirty years.
Fourteen docunted bearers.
Fourteen outcos.
And now the world had direct evidence of what Fragnt 1 did at one hundred percent corruption — not in a classified report, not in an internal Temple docunt, but in a building to which journalists, guilds, students, and students’ families had access.
The world was going to ask.
Agustín was going to answer.
The answer was going to be Davan Osei.
A Temple Inquisitor in training — not an outsider, not a criminal, but one of their own — consud by a Fragnt in less than a day. Turned into a threat. Executed by his own ntor.
It was the cleanest argunt thirty years of work had produced.
Agustín opened the draft of the communication to the seven territories.
He began to write.
---
[East Route — moving away from Imperial City — sa mont]
Alex walked.
Grim in his arms — HP 3,600 now, the crimson flas more stable, recovery progressing at the speed of sothing that had its own resources to heal when active combat was not consuming them.
F1 and F4 were still.
Ninety‑five percent.
The number was still there.
Alex knew it without looking because it was the kind of number you don’t forget.
The team around him — Kira ahead, Raven on the flank, Emily and Maya behind. The sound of the east route under their feet, the air of Imperial City giving way to the open air of the territory between the city and whatever ca next.
None of them spoke for a while.
It was Grim who broke the silence.
**"Master."**
"What."
**"Davan."** His flas on Alex. **"Do you. Know. What will. Happen."**
Alex looked at the route ahead.
He didn’t answer imdiately.
Because yes, he did know. Soul Sight did not require being in the sa corridor to read what Agustín would do with what he had — thirty years of doctrine, fourteen docunted cases, and now a bearer within his own ranks with F5’s necklace visible on his neck and the willingness to accept whatever ca.
Agustín was not going to waste it.
"Yes," said Alex.
**"And?"**
Alex looked at Grim.
The crimson flas waited.
"And that’s why I need to learn to control this before Agustín finishes building what he’s building."
A pause.
**"How long."**
"I don’t know."
**"I don’t. Either."** Grim. **"But. Ti. Exists. If you use it."**
Alex looked at him.
**"Carter."** His flas. **"The problem. With the bearers. Who ca before. Wasn’t the power. It was that they waited. For the power. To tell them. Who they were."**
A long pause.
**"You already know. Who you are."**
**"That is. Enough. To start."**
Alex looked at the east route.
The city behind.
What lay ahead — the ti, the work, the necessary distance from the Fragnts to learn to live with them instead of against them.
"Yes," he said.
The east route continued.
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