Seraphina Vance sat in her private office, a space seven floors above the President’s public workspace—a sanctuary where the real machinery of power operated, far removed from prying eyes, recording devices, and the sanitized theater of governnt. The room was austere, almost monastic in its design. White walls. Dark wood furniture. A single window overlooking the sprawling circuit board of New Vein City below. Everything was deliberate. Everything was controlled.
The holographic display before her desk shimred with three separate feeds, each one a window into a different facet of the puzzle that had consud her thoughts for the better part of the afternoon.
Left: Satori Nakano’s official Academy file, a sterile collection of data points and sanitized facts.
Center: Surveillance footage from the Crucible duel, looping endlessly—his movents, his power, his victory.
Right: A live feed of Celeste’s current location. Her sister sat in her room in Onyx House, bathed in the soft afternoon light streaming through the window. She was reading, or at least pretending to read. A book lay open in her lap, but her attention was focused elsewhere—on the two-tailed black cat curled contentedly against her stomach, its eyes half-closed in feline bliss as Celeste’s slender fingers stroked its fur with an almost reverent gentleness.
Seraphina had been studying these feeds for three hours now.
Her assistant, a nervous young woman nad Yuki, had brought tea twice during that ti. Both cups sat cold and forgotten on the edge of the desk, the delicate porcelain growing room temperature as steam condensed into mory. Seraphina hadn’t touched them. Hadn’t even acknowledged their presence.
Commander Graves stood at parade rest near the door, silent and patient as a statue. The woman was in her late fifties, her graying hair pulled into a severe bun, her dark suit perfectly pressed. She had the bearing of a soldier and the eyes of an executioner—pale gray, like cigarette ash. She could wait for days if necessary, unmoving and unwavering. It was one of her more useful qualities, one of the many reasons Seraphina kept her so close.
"Tell what you see," Seraphina said without looking away from the screens, her voice calm and asured, the tone of a surgeon preparing to make the first incision.
"Which feed, Madam President?"
"All of them."
Graves moved closer, her polished shoes silent on the hardwood floor as she stepped up beside Seraphina’s chair. She examined the displays with those ash-gray eyes, her expression unreadable, her mind already cataloging, cross-referencing, analyzing.
"Subject Nakano. Age eighteen. Late manifestation at seventeen, which is statistically improbable but not entirely impossible given the current models of Aspect theory. Official Aspect designation is Thermal Incision, classified as C-Rank with projected A-Rank potential based on initial evaluation trics."
"Continue."
"Combat performance during observed encounters exceeds his official registration paraters by a significant margin. Movent speed during the Hydra engagent suggests base physical stats—specifically Agility and Dexterity—that are at minimum a full tier higher than his official listings would indicate. Yesterday’s duel with Cabana demonstrated abilities not included in his registered file—specifically, what appears to be so form of electromagnetic absorption or redirection, temporary physical enhancent beyond natural limits, and what our analysts tentatively classify as spatial manipulation."
Graves paused, her eyes narrowing slightly as she watched the looping footage of Satori’s final strike against Reyna. "The boy moved faster in the final ten seconds of that fight than he did in the first ten minutes. His body temperature spiked by three degrees Celsius in the span of two seconds, suggesting an active tabolic enhancent ability. And the final blow—the one that shattered Cabana’s lightning construct—generated a kinetic impact reading that should not have been physically possible given his recorded Strength attribute."
"Your assessnt?"
"Either the initial VHC evaluation conducted at his registration was catastrophically incompetent—an error of such magnitude that multiple redundant safety protocols would have had to fail simultaneously—or Subject Nakano is actively concealing his true capabilities through unknown ans."
"Which do you believe?"
"The latter, Madam President. Without question."
Seraphina finally turned away from the screens to face her, one elegant eyebrow arching ever so slightly. "Why?"
"Because incompetence of that magnitude would have been flagged by multiple departnts within the first twenty-four hours of his registration. Because the VHC’s evaluation protocols are designed specifically to prevent such catastrophic errors, with triple-redundancy verification at every stage. And because—" Graves paused, choosing her next words with the care of a demolitions expert handling unstable explosives. "Because I’ve been doing this job for twenty-three years, Madam President. I’ve seen thousands of Hunters co through our system. I’ve evaluated everyone from E-Rank washouts to S-Rank prodigies. And I know what it looks like when soone’s playing gas with our systems. I know what deception slls like."
"Gas." Seraphina tasted the word, rolling it across her tongue like a sample of poisoned wine. "Interesting choice of phrasing."
She tapped the center screen with one pale finger, the holographic interface responding instantly to her touch. The footage enlarged, filling the display with a frozen mont in ti—Satori standing over Celeste in the Necropolis, his hand extended downward, her hand reaching up to grasp it. The image was crystal clear, captured by one of the Academy’s ubiquitous surveillance drones. Celeste’s face in that mont was a study in contrasts—hope mixed with relief, yes, but also sothing else. Sothing warr, softer. Sothing that made Seraphina’s chest tighten with a cold, creeping dread she refused to na.
Dangerous.
"He’s saved Celeste’s life twice now," Seraphina said, her voice still perfectly calm, perfectly controlled, even as her mind raced through scenarios and contingencies. "First in the Necropolis, when she was separated from her team and cornered by a pack of Hollow Wraiths. Then at Sector 7, when the Black Gate sealed them inside together for forty-eight hours."
"Yes, Madam President."
"And now my sister has transferred to his guild. Sleeps under his roof. Trains with his team." She zood in further on Celeste’s face in the current feed, studying every micro-expression, every subtle shift in her sister’s usually impeccable mask. "Smiles when his familiar purrs in her lap."
The hologram flickered slightly, adjusting its resolution to accommodate her movents.
"Celeste has spent her entire life being prepared for a specific role," Seraphina continued, her words precise and clinical, as if she were discussing a piece of complicated machinery rather than her only sibling. "Grood for leadership within the VHC. Every relationship, every friendship, every mont of her existence has been carefully managed, carefully curated to ensure she develops into the leader Valoria needs. The leader I’ve spent sixteen years crafting."
Her fingers tightened almost imperceptibly on the edge of the desk, the only outward sign of the tension coiling like a spring in her chest. "And now she’s chosen to spend her ti with a boy who manifested late, who carries secrets in his eyes, and who seems to attract danger the way blood attracts sharks."
"Your orders, Madam President?"
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