The Granum Tower was always the first thing Leon looked for. From his seat in the glass-walled academy, it rose like a silver needle piercing the clouds, a monunt to everything his family wasn’t.
Every day at 2:17 PM, the sun would hit a specific scaffold halfway up. That was his father’s section. Leon had tid it.
For sixty stolen seconds, he would watch that distant figure—a man adding color to a world that saw him only as grease and labor.
It was a minute of quiet pride, wedged between the equations on his screen and the sweet, venomous chatter at his back. It was the only ti the secret felt like a legacy instead of a curse.
’I’ll make you proud,’ he thought, the daily vow tasting bitter on his tongue—solvent and old tal, his father’s scent, his own inherited sha. ’And I’ll hide what we are. Just like I promised.’
Seriously? Hahaha!
Deafening laughter crashed at the back of his neck, right on schedule, shattering the ritual.
He stared at the smudged text in his book, as if the words could shield him—especially from her.
"I an, honestly," Vera’s voice cut through the chatter in a sweet, venomous tone. "Does he think staring at that building will make his father’s work any less pathetic? Or earn respect?"
Leon’s knuckles tightened. The words weren’t just insults; they were probes, scraping close to the live wire of his secret. Today, under her scorn, the minute of pride soured. It was nothing but pennies and dust—the flavor of his own fear.
Ding...! ding...! ting...!
A chorus of harmonized chis erupted around the room. Smart devices lit up on every wrist and desk. A low murmur of interest stirred.
Whoosh! Whoosh! Fwoosh!
Leon didn’t need to look as a gasp cut the air. He could picture Vera tossing her hair, soaking in the attention.
"Oh, my gods, guys, have you seen the news? A plane crash! Guess where this one landed?" Vera’s eyes glittered with ugly joy.
Leon kept staring at the Granum Tower, at the sun-glinted speck. 2:18 PM. The ritual was broken.
Uh... ahem...
Vera cleared her throat.
Leon’s gaze flicked past her just long enough to catch Zoe’s steady eyes. They looked as if she was holding sothing back - or holding herself back.
Then Vera’s voice sliced through. "It says it hit a building under maintenance near an outbreak site." Her joy was ugly, restrained with wet gasps. "Guess painters got more than paint on them—probably monster blood too."
"...monster blood? Hahaha!"
The words weren’t a key; they were a detonation. Outbreak zone. Granum Tower.
The classroom didn’t vanish—it crystallized. Leon saw every pore on Vera’s smiling face, every dust mote frozen in the sunbeam.
The world muted into a deafening, tallic scream. Dad. Scaffold. The secret. His own breath scraped raggedly in his throat. Ti didn’t resu until his biology textbook slipped from numb fingers and hit the floor with a sound like a bone breaking.
Snap!
"NO...!"
He moved, fumbling in his patched bag for the ancient, cracked communicator—a family relic, the only line to the one person who knew what he truly was.
His hands trembled as he raised it. He hit the single speed-dial button. Ho. It rang and rang.
Each tone was a hamr on the lid of a coffin he’d felt building around him all his life. He tried again. The final, empty tone carried the taste of solvent, choking and sharp.
The whispers around him sharpened from distinct murmurs into a nuclear blast against his ears.
He caught Jade’s uncaring glance, Vera’s venomous gaze, Tiger’s predatory grin.
Seeing Tiger, he rembered the day he had dodged that kick—a move too fast, too fluid, a flicker of a hidden skill that had made Tiger stare.
His eyes flicked to Zoe. No mockery. No pity. Just a steady look that saw too much.
"So people are just born unlucky," Vera sliced in, her laugh like broken glass. "Guess that’s what you get when your dad’s nothing but a painter."
A shadow fell on his desk. Mr. Lee stood at the door, his face pale, his eyes etched with a profound grief.
"Leon," Mr. Lee said, his voice strangled. "A word. Now."
Leon stood, legs shaking. The room tilted. "Don’t worry," Vera murmured as he passed. "We’ll be here for you." Her smirk was soft and sharp, like a scalpel.
Every step through the gleaming hall was a battle. Mr. Lee didn’t speak. And when they entered the office, he just placed a heavy hand on Leon’s shoulder, exhaling a breath that slled of cheap coffee and defeat.
"I saw the news. I know your father was at the Granum Tower today. I am... so sorry."
The last trace of hope didn’t just die—it was incinerated. Leon stared at the floor.
His soul wasn’t trapped under his feet; it drifted violently, unmoored. mories reeled, not in snippets, but in a sensory flood:
His father’s hands, stained with pignt and permanent gri, gripping his shoulders. The sll of turpentine and fear.
"Son, promise to hide what you know of our family. What you are."
"Dad... why?"
"The world isn’t ready. You aren’t ready. Promise . Not until you can control it. Not until you can protect them..."
"Let take you ho," Mr. Lee offered, shattering the pull of mories.
Leon nodded, a ghost following a mourner. Eyes from every window drew to them like hooks.
Among them, one pair stayed still, unblinking - Zoe’s. Watching with the sa gaze families had when responding to the news about the destroyer of worlds a decade ago.
’Until I see his body, I won’t believe it,’ Leon thought, but it ca in hollow.
The truth was colder: the guardian of the secret was gone. The secret was now his alone, an inheritance of a terrifying, lonely power.
The sun stabbed his eyes as they exited. Mr. Lee steadied him, pushing him forward as his knees buckled. Leon barely felt himself slide into the sleek silver car.
Vroom... Vroom... Vroom...
Only the engine’s hum brought a thread of thought. The city moved past the window. They passed a military tanker streaked with fresh, black ichor.
Leon jolted—not with fear, but with terrible, secret sympathy. Another outbreak. Another thing the clean world would try to scrub away.
They climbed the high-arching bridge. The city unfurled below, a brutal diorama.
To the left, towers glead. Floating gardens drifted on anti-gravity platforms. To the right, cramd into the river basin like a raw, weeping scar, was Dusthollow.
His birthplace. A sprawl of cracked concrete and rust-stained beams. It didn’t look like ho. It looked like the truth—ugly, resilient, and hidden in plain sight.
The first place to experience the monster outbreak. The place whose elders whispered and ran from questions.
As the car began its descent toward the scar, Leon’s tears dried. The taste in his mouth shifted. No longer just solvent and dust.
Now, it was the sharp, electric tang of ozone—the taste before a storm, the taste of sothing awakening.
The promise had changed. It was no longer ’I’ll make you proud.’
It was now, ’What did you leave inside , Dad? And what do I have to beco to control it?’
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