Se connecter"You're going tonight," Petra said. It wasn't a question. She was sitting on Zara's bed when Zara returned to the dormitory, notebook closed on her knee, with the expression of someone who had already run the calculation and arrived at the answer before the variable had walked through the door.
Zara set her bag down. "How did you know?" "Because you've been clocking the East Wing since we arrived and someone just handed you a reason to move." Petra tilted her head slightly. "Was it Sera Vane?" "Why would you think that?" "Because she's the only person in this building who looks at us like we're people rather than furniture, and that kind of deliberate kindness in a place like this always has a shape to it." She said it without cynicism, more with the measured quality of someone who had learned to read rooms the hard way and no longer apologized for the skill. "I'm coming with you." Zara considered her for a moment the steadiness of her, the way she sat without any of the performative casualness people adopted when they were trying to seem less invested than they were. Petra was invested. She had been since the first morning, since the notebook and the list of names and the particular grief of a girl who had been carrying her brother's disappearance in careful, contained silence for long enough that sharing it had cost her something real. "Seven o'clock," Zara said. "Wear soft soles." --- The academy at ten minutes past seven was a different institution than the one that operated in daylight. Not quieter exactly sounds carried differently in old stone buildings, voices from the senior common rooms traveled through walls and floors in fragmented, ghostly ways but emptied of its performance. The corridors had a stripped quality, the social choreography of the day packed away with the daylight, and what remained was just the building itself, old and enormous and entirely indifferent to the two girls moving through its east corridor with their backs close to the wall and their footsteps careful. Zara had spent the time between Sera's courtyard conversation and seven o'clock doing what she always did when preparing to move into uncertain territory, she built the map in her head first. The east corridor ran the length of the academy's original structure, predating the north and west additions by at least a century if the architectural inconsistency in the stonework was accurate. The East Wing branched from it at a point roughly two thirds of the way along, behind a set of double doors that appeared on none of the current academy floor plans she'd found in the library's public collection and on all of the older ones she'd located in the archive annex two days ago while ostensibly researching the seminar reading list. The doors were there. They were also, as she'd found on her first attempt four days ago, sealed in a way that went beyond a simple lock the frames had been filled, the gap between the doors packed with something that had hardened over time into a seamless, load-bearing silence. But the corridor had other doors. Older ones, less considered in whatever renovation had decided the East Wing should cease to officially exist. She found the one she was looking for six meters before the sealed double doors, a single door, narrow, set so flush with the wall that the seam was nearly invisible unless you were looking for it in the specific quality of evening light that came through the corridor's high windows at this hour. She'd noticed it two days ago and said nothing, because noticing things and acting on them were different stages and she didn't conflate them. She pressed her fingers along the frame's left edge. Felt slightly, but present. Petra stood at the corridor's turn, watching both directions, her notebook tucked under her arm with the specific grip of someone holding something they weren't prepared to lose. Zara pressed harder. The door moved inward with the resistant, granular protest of something that hadn't been opened in a very long time, and then it was open, and the air that came through it was cold and old and carried the particular quality of a space that had been sealed long enough to develop its own atmosphere entirely separate from the building around it. She went in. --- The room beyond was not the East Wing itself but an anteroom of some kind small, stone-floored, with a second door on the far wall that was properly locked and a single high window through which the last of the evening light fell in a narrow, dusty column. There were shelves along one wall, mostly empty, a few containing boxes that had been there long enough to become part of the room's character rather than its contents. The floor was thick with undisturbed dust except for one area near the far door where the pattern was broken not recently, the disturbance had its own thin layer of dust over it, but unmistakably deliberate. Someone had stood here. Had stood here repeatedly, over time, in the same spot, facing the locked door. Zara crouched and looked at the floor without touching it. The marks were small. A woman's shoe size, or a girl's. The stance was close to the door, closer than you'd stand if you were simply trying to open it. The kind of distance you stood at when you were pressing your ear against the wood and listening to what was on the other side. She stood up slowly. On the wall beside the locked door, at roughly shoulder height, she found what she'd come for and hadn't known she was looking for until this moment two letters, carved into the mortar between stones with something small and sharp, the kind of careful, deliberate carving that took time and intention. Not graffiti. A record. *L.V.* Lena Voss. Zara pressed her fingers against the letters and the cold of the stone moved through her hand and up her arm and she stood there for a moment that had nothing efficient or calculated about it just her and her sister's initials in a wall and ten years of distance between the girl who had carved them and the girl standing with her hand against them now. She breathed. Once, twice. Then she took her phone out and photographed the wall, the floor, the marks, the shelves, everything, with the systematic thoroughness of someone converting a feeling back into evidence. She had just straightened up when she heard it. Not the hum from below that was becoming familiar enough to map. This was different. From the corridor outside the anteroom's first door came the specific sound of deliberate footsteps not hurried, not searching, but moving with the direct certainty of someone who knew exactly where they were going and had known before they started. They stopped outside the door she'd come through. Zara didn't move. Beside the shelves, flat against the wall, she made herself into the stillness of the room and waited with the focused, suspended quality of someone who had learned that panic was just wasted information. The door opened. Caius Vane stood in the doorway with the evening corridor light behind him, looking at her with an expression that contained, in precise and equal measure, the fact that he was not surprised and the fact that he had hoped, perhaps, to be. They regarded each other across the small, cold room with the silence of two people who had just found each other somewhere neither of them was supposed to be, which was a different kind of silence than any they'd shared before less guarded, more honest, stripped of the social architecture that the academy's daylight hours imposed on every interaction. "The floor plans in the public archive don't show this room," he said finally. "I used the ones in the annex," she said. Something shifted in his expression, not surprise exactly, more like the particular acknowledgment of someone recalibrating the distance between where they thought a person was and where that person had actually gotten to. He looked at the wall behind her. At the carved initials. Back at her face. "How long have you known about those," he said. It came out quieter than his usual register. "Since thirty seconds ago." She held his gaze. "How long have you?" The question landed in the room and stayed there, and Caius looked at her with those grey eyes that were doing the thing she'd noticed giving more away than his expressions intended and what they gave away this time was not calculation or assessment but something that looked, with uncomfortable clarity, like guilt. He didn't answer. Which was, she understood with complete certainty, an answer."He wants to see all five of you," Sera said, appearing at Zara's dormitory door at half past four with the particular energy of someone delivering information they'd been sitting on long enough that it had become uncomfortable to hold. "Aldric. Formal welcome, he's calling it. Tea in his office at five."Zara looked up from her notebook. "Today.""In thirty minutes." Sera leaned against the door frame with her arms folded, and the folding had nothing relaxed about it. "He does this every intake, first formal week, personal welcome, the whole performance. I've watched it from the outside enough times to know the shape of it." She paused. "Just watch what you say. Not because you'll say the wrong thing. Because he listens to everything and he's very good at making you feel like the listening is warmth rather than collection."Zara closed the notebook. "What does he collect?""Motivations," Sera said simply. "He wants to know why each of you is here. What you want from the academy, what
"You photographed the initials," Caius said. It wasn't an accusation. It was the opening move of someone who had spent the night deciding how much ground to give and had arrived at the morning with a position that was still being adjusted in real time.They were in one of the small study alcoves off the main library early enough that the building was mostly empty, late enough that the cleaning staff had finished and moved on. Zara had chosen the location deliberately, the same way she chose most things for its sightlines, its exits, and the specific acoustic quality of a recessed space that made it difficult to overhear from the corridor without being visible to the people inside it."I photograph everything useful," she said."Those photographs can't leave the academy.""That's going to depend entirely on what you tell me in the next twenty minutes." She set her coffee on the table between them she'd brought two, a small calculated gesture that she was aware could be read as either c
"You need to leave this room," Caius said. "Both of you." Zara hadn't moved from her position beside the shelves. She watched him stand in the doorway with the particular attention she gave things that were in the process of revealing themselves the set of his shoulders, the way his jaw had tightened fractionally when he'd looked at the initials on the wall, the careful, controlled quality of someone managing their own reaction in real time and doing it well enough that most people wouldn't notice. She noticed. "Petra," she said, without raising her voice. A beat, and then Petra appeared in the doorway behind Caius having clearly been there for some portion of the conversation, her notebook pressed flat against her chest and her expression carrying the specific quality of someone who had heard enough to have opinions and was currently keeping them contained. Caius turned at her appearance, took her in with a single assessing look, and then turned back to Zara with the resigned qu
"You're going tonight," Petra said. It wasn't a question. She was sitting on Zara's bed when Zara returned to the dormitory, notebook closed on her knee, with the expression of someone who had already run the calculation and arrived at the answer before the variable had walked through the door.Zara set her bag down. "How did you know?""Because you've been clocking the East Wing since we arrived and someone just handed you a reason to move." Petra tilted her head slightly. "Was it Sera Vane?""Why would you think that?""Because she's the only person in this building who looks at us like we're people rather than furniture, and that kind of deliberate kindness in a place like this always has a shape to it." She said it without cynicism, more with the measured quality of someone who had learned to read rooms the hard way and no longer apologized for the skill. "I'm coming with you."Zara considered her for a moment the steadiness of her, the way she sat without any of the performative
"They have a name for us," Dami said, falling into step beside Zara between morning classes with the easy stride of someone who had decided the academy's corridors belonged to him as much as anyone. "I heard it twice before breakfast. Third time just now in the senior corridor." He paused for effect, which was very much his way. "Fillers."Zara kept walking. "As in we fill the five seats.""As in we fill the five seats and the implication is that filling is the entirety of our function." He said it without particular bitterness, more with the tone of someone cataloguing data that offended his intelligence rather than his feelings. "The boy who said it the third time looked genuinely surprised that I heard him. As though human ears are decorative.""Let them think that."Dami glanced at her sideways. "Already are."The corridor opened into the main atrium, a vast, stone-floored space where the academy's internal arteries converged, students moving through it in the shifting, self-organ
"That sound last night," Petra said, wrapping both hands around her coffee mug the next morning like it was the only warm thing in the building, which it possibly was. "Tell me someone else heard it."Dami looked up from his plate. "The hum?""So it wasn't just me.""Wasn't just you," he confirmed, then returned to his breakfast with the equanimity of someone who had filed the information away and decided it wasn't worth ruining his appetite over. Zara watched him do it and found herself genuinely uncertain whether that was emotional resilience or a very practiced kind of avoidance. With Dami she suspected the line between the two was deliberately blurred.Ines said nothing, which meant she'd heard it too.The five of them were eating in the small dining annex attached to their dormitory building rather than the Grand Hall apparently the main breakfast was optional, attendance compulsory only for dinner, a distinction that felt less like generosity and more like the academy understand







