The creaking of the doors behind the stage seed to ripple through the entirety of Beacon Hall.
What little noise had remained among the students died at once.
Every stray whisper, every rustle of movent, every unfinished murmur faded into a silence so complete that the great hall itself suddenly felt heavier— more solemn , more worthy of the occasion it had been prepared for.
Then, one by one, the academy’s authoritative figures began to enter.
At the front of them all walked Headmaster Thion.
The old man carried himself with the sa dignified steadiness he always possessed, yet today there was sothing even more pronounced about his presence. Dressed in formal academy robes far more ornate than his usual attire, he looked every bit the figure one would expect to stand at the summit of an institution as prestigious as this one. Dark embroidered patterns traced the hem of his long mantle, and the silver crest of the academy rested proudly over his chest. His expression remained composed, stern in the natural way of a man used to command, but not cold. If anything, there was a quiet gravity to him today, as though he himself understood better than anyone the weight this ceremony held.
Just a half-step behind him ca his assistant, Lucia, composed and efficient as ever, carrying a polished case that no doubt contained the ceremonial docunts and records required for the proceedings. Her face was calm, unreadable, and sharp with professional focus, moving with the quiet confidence of soone long accustod to operating at the headmaster’s side.
Following them ca the rest.
Mystica Moonstone entered with her usual effortless grace, her dark gown-like formal attire reimagined into sothing more befitting an academy ceremony while still retaining that unmistakable air of elegance and danger around her. Even in an official setting such as this, she sohow managed to look like soone attending for her own amusent while still embodying authority so naturally that few would ever dare question it. Her long dark hair frad her face perfectly, and her piercing purple eyes swept over the hall with a lazy, knowing calm that made more than a few students sit up straighter in their seats.
Sir Kaelen followed not far behind, his bearing crisp and knightly, his formal academy mantle resting over broad shoulders that seed made for armor rather than ceremony. He walked with restrained discipline, every movent asured, his face composed in that familiar stern neutrality that had intimidated countless students over the years. Beside the mystique of instructors like Mystica and Seraphina, Kaelen’s presence offered sothing harsher and more grounded.
Then ca Lady Seraphina Vale.
The atmosphere shifted almost instantly the mont she appeared.
Even in a formal academy setting, Seraphina moved like soone stepping onto a stage designed for her alone. Her dark ceremonial attire was elegant, severe, and beautiful all at once, accentuating the dangerous charm she carried so naturally. Midnight-green hair fell smoothly over her shoulders, and her bright green eyes held that sa familiar, unreadable amusent that always made people wonder whether she was pleased, bored, or quietly toying with everyone around her. The faint curve of her lips suggested she was enjoying sothing, though what exactly that was, no one could ever truly tell.
Walking a little behind and to the side of her was Professor Veylan Kaine.
As always, Kaine looked like a man who had no particular desire to be there and yet sohow made that disinterest itself feel oppressive. Tall, broad-shouldered, and dressed in dark formal wear that only amplified the cold severity of his appearance, he moved with silent precision. His long silver hair and steel-gray eyes gave him an almost inhuman sharpness, and the students who noticed him seed to shrink a little deeper into their seats without even realizing they were doing it.
There were others as well—senior instructors, administrative officials, distinguished faculty mbers whose nas were known across departnts and disciplines alike. Each took their place in the procession with solemnity fitting the day.
And among them, unmistakable as ever, was Magnus Yaer.
Even dressed formally, Magnus sohow looked only half-tad by the occasion. He carried himself with his usual easygoing air, shoulder-length dark hair resting neatly behind him, though his expression today was far more composed than his students were used to. The humor that usually hovered around him had not vanished entirely, but it had quieted itself into sothing more respectful. He still looked like Magnus, but today he also looked like a knight of real standing—soone who had once walked the very sa path the graduating students were about to leave behind.
The faculty and officials moved across the stage in an orderly line, each taking their designated seat or position with practiced ease. The mont they had all settled, the full scale of the ceremony’s formality beca impossible to ignore.
From where the students sat, the stage no longer looked like the usual platform used for academy announcents.
It looked like a tribunal of excellence.
A place from which judgnt, honor, and recognition would now be delivered.
The hall remained perfectly still.
Even Dylan, who had spent much of the earlier wait whispering and grinning like a fool at Maxwell’s expense, had gone completely silent now. Maxwell himself sat straighter than before. Charlotte observed the stage with calm interest. Asher had opened his eyes fully, his previous irritation giving way to a far colder attentiveness. Ariana’s hands rested neatly in her lap. Sheila’s gaze shifted briefly between the figures on stage before settling again. Liam, seated farther back among the first-years, simply watched.
Then Headmaster Thion rose from his seat.
The movent alone seed to command the room.
With asured steps, he approached the central pulpit at the front of the stage. The polished wood glead under the light pouring into the grand hall, the academy’s crest engraved proudly upon its front. He stopped behind it, placed both hands lightly upon either side, and for a brief mont said nothing at all.
He rely looked out at the gathered students.
First-years.
Second-years.
Third-years.
All under the sa roof. All present for a mont that would mark an ending for so and the sharpening of ambition for others.
When he finally spoke, his voice carried with effortless clarity to every corner of Beacon Hall.
"Students of Dark Knight Academy," Headmaster Thion began, "faculty, honored staff, and distinguished guests... welco."
His tone was steady, rich, and practiced without sounding hollow. It was the voice of a man who had delivered many speeches in his life and yet understood that none of them should ever be spoken carelessly.
"Today, we gather not rely to perform ceremony, nor simply to fulfill tradition, but to recognize a passage. A threshold."
He let that settle.
"For one group among you, this day marks the end of formal instruction within these walls. For another, it marks the outco of a year’s labor and the beginning of new expectations. And for all of you, whether you stand at the beginning of your path or near the edge of it, this ceremony serves as a reminder of what this academy exists to cultivate."
He lifted his chin slightly.
"Strength, yes. Skill, certainly. Discipline, without question."
A brief pause followed.
"But those alone have never defined the worth of a knight, a mage, or a leader."
The hall remained utterly silent.
"At Dark Knight Academy, we do not concern ourselves only with what power a student can wield. We concern ourselves with what kind of person stands behind that power. We asure not only victory, but conduct. Not only talent, but endurance. Not only brilliance, but character."
His eyes swept over the rows of students.
"Over the years, this academy has produced knights who now guard the borders of kingdoms, tacticians who shape campaigns, diplomats who preserve uneasy peace, and commanders whose nas are known across all of Amthar. Their nas endure because they left these halls with more than sharpened skill. They left with resolve."
Thion’s hands remained steady on the pulpit.
"To the third-years seated before us today: you have endured the final asure of your student lives. You have trained, failed, risen, learned, and sharpened yourselves through hardship. So among you arrived here with confidence and discovered humility. Others arrived uncertain and discovered strength. All of you leave changed."
His voice deepened slightly.
"You will step beyond these walls no longer as students sheltered beneath the structure of this institution, but as graduates whose actions will carry consequence in the wider world."
He let his gaze rest over the third-year section.
"The world beyond the academy does not pause to ask whether you feel prepared. It will not slow itself for your convenience. It will test your judgnt without warning, your values without rcy, and your strength without apology."
A few students in the third-year section visibly straightened.
"What you do when that mont cos," Thion continued, "will matter far more than what rank you held within these walls."
Then, after a asured breath, he shifted his attention.
"To the second-years: today you watch your seniors depart, and soon enough you will find yourselves standing where they now sit. Take note of that. A year disappears faster than pride likes to admit. If you seek promotion, earn it. If you seek recognition, beco worthy of it. If you seek greatness, then understand that greatness is built in repetition—through discipline, through failure, and through the refusal to let either comfort or fear define your limits."
Murmurs did not dare rise, but many second-years looked more alert than before.
"And to the first-years," he said at last, his gaze shifting farther back into the hall, "you have now seen enough of academy life to understand that entry is the easiest part of belonging here."
That drew the faintest shift in posture among the younger students.
"You stand at the beginning of a road that will demand more of you than so of you yet realize. Use this day well. Look closely at what is before you. Study the seniors who leave today, not to imitate them blindly, but to understand what persistence looks like when carried through to its end."
His expression remained firm.
"No matter which year you stand in, rember this: rank is a asure. It is not identity. Recognition is an honor. It is not purpose. And talent is useful, but talent without discipline decays into waste."
He paused, letting his words settle deep into the hall.
"This academy does not promise ease. It never has. What it offers instead is refinent. Those who accept its demands leave stronger than they arrived."
Now his voice softened, though only slightly.
"And so today, as we honor those who graduate, we also honor the labor behind their achievent. The countless mornings of training. The bruises, failures, sleepless nights, humiliations, recoveries, rivalries, and small victories no audience ever saw. All of it matters. All of it brought them here."
Then he straightened.
"Let this ceremony begin in full."
At once, the hall filled with formal applause.
It was not wild or chaotic, but asured and respectful, in keeping with the weight of the occasion. Students clapped. Faculty joined. Even the atmosphere itself seed to ease for a mont after the speech had concluded so firmly and cleanly.
Headmaster Thion inclined his head slightly, accepting the response before raising a hand and bringing the hall back to quiet.
Then he continued.
"As tradition permits, one among the graduating class has been chosen to deliver the final student address."
That imdiately stirred expectation through the hall.
Though no one spoke aloud, the assumption was nearly universal.
Percy Granger.
The number one ranked third-year. The academy’s finest senior. The prince whose na carried admiration across the student body.
But Headmaster Thion’s next words cut directly through that expectation.
"I call forth," he said, voice carrying with ceremonial clarity, "the second-ranked student of the graduating class... De’Ain Looken."
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