The lecture didn’t end when the bell rang. Most of the students didn’t even notice it. Aurelion kept speaking, calm and unhurried, as if ti didn’t apply to him. His explanations layered over each other with precision—complex, but structured in a way that forced attention. What had started as confusion had slowly shifted into focus.
Students who had walked in casually were now leaning forward, writing faster than they could process, trying to keep up with ideas far beyond what they expected on the first day.
When he finally stopped, it wasn’t because ti ran out. It was because he decided it was enough. He placed the chalk down and looked over the room. "Review what you’ve written," he said. "If you can’t understand it after today, you won’t understand what cos next." No reassurance. No encouragent. Just a fact. Then he turned and walked out. No dismissal. No closing words. He simply left.
For a mont, the room stayed still. Then everything unraveled at once. "What just happened?" "That wasn’t normal." "Was he even the instructor?" A noble student pushed his chair back sharply, irritation clear on his face. "This makes no sense," he said. "There’s no way he’s qualified to teach here." Another student didn’t even look up from the board. "Did you understand half of what he said?" "...No." "...Exactly."
Mira leaned back, stretching slightly. "Well," she said, almost amused, "that went about as expected." Evelyn didn’t answer. Her eyes were still on the board, locked onto the diagram he’d drawn. "...He wasn’t wrong," she said after a mont. Mira glanced at her. "That’s your takeaway?" Evelyn leaned back slowly, thoughtful rather than overwheld. "It contradicts standard theory," she said. "But it explains instability better than anything we’ve been taught." Mira smirked. "So you’re impressed." "I’m curious." Mira’s smile widened just slightly. "That’s worse."
Around them, the class had already split into clusters. So frustrated. So confused. And a few—quietly thinking. The sa noble student from earlier slamd his hand lightly against his desk. "This is ridiculous," he said. "The academy is supposed to provide proper instruction, not... whatever that was." A student nearby frowned. "But he demonstrated it." "That doesn’t an anything." "It ans sothing." "It ans he can perform a trick," the noble snapped. "That doesn’t make him a professor."
A quieter voice spoke from behind him. "Then explain it." He turned, annoyed. "What?" "You said it was a trick," the student said evenly. "So explain it." The noble hesitated. Just for a second. Then looked away. "...That’s not the point." But it was.
The room didn’t settle after that. If anything, the tension sharpened. The board at the front still held the remnants of the lecture—clean lines of chalk forming a structure no one had fully grasped yet. It wasn’t ssy. It wasn’t unclear. That was the problem. It was too precise.
A few students had already stood up, moving closer to the board as if distance had been the issue. One of them reached out, hesitated for a second, then began tracing a portion of the diagram in the air with his finger. "...This part," he muttered, more to himself than anyone else. "If this is rotation, then the flow shouldn’t stabilize like that." "It doesn’t," another student replied from beside him. They both went quiet. Because it did. That was exactly what made it unsettling.
Across the room, soone flipped through their notes again, faster this ti, as if rereading would suddenly make everything click. "It doesn’t match the standard model," a girl said under her breath. "Then the standard model might be incomplete," soone else replied. "That’s not sothing you just say," she shot back. But she didn’t sound convinced.
Near the windows, two noble students were speaking in lower voices, their earlier confidence noticeably restrained. "He skipped foundational steps," one of them said. "That’s poor instruction." "Or he assud we should already understand them." "That’s the sa thing." "No... it’s not." That answer lingered between them longer than expected. Not because it was strong—but because it was possible.
At the center rows, a quiet frustration had begun to shift into sothing else. Focus. Not everyone felt it, but those who did couldn’t ignore it anymore. A boy hunched over his desk suddenly straightened, flipping back a page in his notes. His eyes narrowed slightly as he compared two sections. "...Wait," he said. No one responded.
He grabbed his pen again, quickly sketching sothing beneath the earlier diagram, adjusting one small connection. Then another. And then—he froze. "...That’s why it worked," he said quietly. The realization wasn’t loud. But it spread. Not as noise—but as attention. A few nearby students leaned over instinctively, drawn not by confidence, but by the change in his expression.
"What?" soone asked. He didn’t answer imdiately. He was still staring at what he’d written, like he didn’t fully trust it yet. "If you remove the stabilizing loop..." he began slowly, "...and let the flow collapse inward first—just for a mont—then rebuild it..." He stopped. Because now it made sense. Not completely. But enough. "...It becos stronger," he finished.
Silence followed. Not the earlier confusion. Sothing quieter. Heavier. Across the room, Evelyn’s pen paused for just a fraction of a second. Then continued. At the back of the room, Rowan pushed himself off the wall, a faint grin on his face. He’d seen enough. "Interesting bunch," he muttered, heading for the door.
As he passed Mira and Evelyn, he slowed slightly. "You two keeping up?" he asked. Mira smirked. "Barely." Evelyn didn’t look at him. "I will." Rowan chuckled under his breath and left. Outside, the corridor buzzed with movent. Students passed through in both directions, so discussing their own lectures, others still figuring out where they were supposed to be.
But sothing had already shifted. Word was spreading. "Did you hear about the Mana Theory lecture?" "Yeah." "They’re saying the instructor’s... off." "Off how?" "I don’t know. Just... different." The rumors weren’t clear yet. But they were growing.
Aurelion walked through it all without slowing. To anyone passing by, he was just another instructor moving between classes. No one stopped him. No one looked twice. For now. Elsewhere, in one of the faculty rooms, a group of instructors had already begun talking. "I heard soone took over Advanced Mana Theory." "Yes." "On the first day?" "That’s unusual."
One of the older professors frowned. "Who approved that?" A brief pause followed. "...Administration." Another instructor leaned back. "I haven’t seen him before." "Neither have I." "That’s not reassuring." A third voice spoke more calmly. "I heard he designed the revised curriculum." That made the room go quiet. "That’s not possible." "Why not?" "Because no one that young should be capable of it."
No one argued. But no one agreed either. The tension just settled into the room. Back in the courtyard, the atmosphere felt different now. Students gathered in larger groups between lectures, conversations overlapping as opinions ford quickly. "He’s definitely not normal." "That’s obvious." "But is he actually qualified?" "I don’t know."
Evelyn stood slightly apart, focused on the small notebook in her hand. She was already rewriting parts of the lecture, restructuring it so it made sense. Mira leaned over her shoulder. "You’re reviewing already?" "Yes." "You’re serious." "Yes." Mira smiled faintly. "You’re going to like this place." Evelyn didn’t answer. But she didn’t disagree.
Later, in the Dean’s Chamber, Seraphine stood by the window, a docunt in her hand. She wasn’t reading it. Her attention was on the academy below. The movent. The shift. The beginning of sothing. A knock sounded. "Enter." A senior instructor stepped inside. "Vice Dean." Seraphine turned slightly. "Yes?"
"There have been... discussions." "Of course there have." He hesitated. "So faculty are questioning the new assignnt." "On what grounds?" "...Experience." Her expression didn’t change. "They’re free to question." "And if it becos a problem?" "It won’t." The certainty in her voice left no room for argunt. The instructor nodded and left.
Seraphine turned back to the window. "They’ve started reacting," she said quietly. From behind her, Aurelion replied, "They were always going to." She didn’t turn. "The students too." "I know." "And you’re still not revealing yourself." "No." She glanced back at him. "You enjoy this." Aurelion stood near the door, calm as ever. "It’s efficient." "It’s disruptive." "Yes." A brief pause. Then—"Good."
Outside, the academy kept moving. But not the sa way as before. Students were more aware now. Watching more closely. Thinking more carefully. The first lecture hadn’t just taught sothing. It had shifted sothing. It had broken expectation. And once that breaks—everything else starts to move.
By sunset, the rumors had spread across most of the academy. About the lecture. About the instructor. About how different it all felt. But one question remained. Unanswered. Who was he? And sowhere within the academy—soone had already decided to find out.
[To be Continued]
User Comments
0 comments from readers