INICIAR SESIÓNThe room key had teeth.
Amelia noticed that before she noticed anything else about it.
It lay in the center of the folder the admissions clerk had given her, nestled between a map that had already changed twice and a placement slate, whose ink was still drying. The key itself was small, dark, and old-fashioned, with a round bow and a narrow stem cut with jagged notches that looked less designed for a lock than for biting into one.
A paper tag hung from a thin black string.
Room 317.
No residence name. No floor designation. No directions.
Liora looked at the key, then at Amelia’s face, and smiled like she could hear the question Amelia had not asked.
“Third level,” she said.
“Of which building?”
“The one your room is in.”
Amelia blinked.
Liora had the nerve to look pleased with herself.
“That was almost impressively unhelpful.”
“Thank you.” Liora adjusted the stack of folders against her chest and started down the corridor. “Most new students cry before lunch. You’re doing better than average.”
“I’m not sure that’s the standard I want to aim for.”
“It’s the one you have.”
Amelia followed because that seemed to be the only survival strategy Waycross Academy had offered so far: follow whoever seemed to know where they were going and hope the building agreed.
The corridor outside the intake should have returned them to the admissions hall. Amelia was almost sure of that. Instead, it curved beneath a row of arched windows showing a courtyard she had not seen from outside. Rain silvered the stone paths. Plants with long, translucent leaves glowed faintly blue along the edges, their light pulsing in no rhythm that Amelia could track.
Students moved around them in clusters.
Some stared.
Some pretended not to stare, which was worse because they were bad at it.
A girl with dark braids and a line of delicate scales along her jaw paused mid-step when Amelia passed. A boy with golden eyes inhaled, frowned, and leaned toward his friend to whisper. Three students near a stairwell stopped talking altogether and watched her with the same unsettled focus people used when glass cracked overhead.
Amelia kept her eyes forward.
Her skin felt too thin.
“Is everyone going to do that?” she asked.
“Do what?”
“Look at me like I’m either contagious or on fire.”
Liora glanced over her shoulder. “Probably.”
“That was not the answer I was hoping for.”
“You asked the wrong person if you wanted comfort.”
“At least you’re honest.”
“Only when it’s inconvenient.”
They turned left, though Amelia could have sworn there had not been a left turn before Liora reached it. The hallway narrowed. The stone walls were replaced with dark wood paneling. The scent changed too, from cinnamon and rain to lavender, old paper, and something musky beneath it that made Amelia think of fur warmed by sunlight.
A staircase waited at the end.
It spiraled upward in a tight curve, the steps black and glossy, as though carved from the inside of a shell. No railing, no center support. Just a few steps climbing into the shadow.
Amelia stopped at the bottom.
Liora looked back. “Problem?”
“Is this the stairwell that needs consent?”
“No. That one sulks more.”
Amelia stared at her.
Liora laughed under her breath and started up.
The stairs did not creak, but they seemed aware of weight. Every time Amelia placed her foot on the next step, a faint pressure moved through the sole of her boot, like something beneath the stone was deciding whether to hold.
She did not look down.
On the third level, the staircase opened into a long residence hall lit by narrow windows and wall sconces filled with low violet flame. Doors lined both sides, each marked by a number and a small metal plate engraved with symbols Amelia could not read.
The hallway was not quiet.
Music drifted from one room, soft and discordant; Somewhere farther down, someone laughed too loudly, followed by a sharp thud and a voice snapping, “Shift back before you break the wardrobe." The air smelled of perfume, wet wool, smoke, and animal warmth.
Several students stood near the far end of the hall.
They turned when Amelia and Liora arrived.
The tallest of them was a girl with pale blond hair pulled into a sleek ponytail and eyes the flat silver-gray of storm clouds. She wore the Waycross uniform like armor: charcoal blazer, burgundy tie, polished boots, every line perfect. Her posture was relaxed, but not casual. Nothing about her felt casual.
The two girls beside her looked less composed. One had pointed ears and glossy black lips. The other had curls the color of copper wire and a smile too sharp to be friendly.
The blond girl’s gaze moved over Amelia, slow and assessing.
Then her nostrils flared.
Amelia felt her stomach sink.
“Human,” the girl said.
It was not a question.
Liora’s expression did not change. “Sable.”
So this was Sable.
Amelia had heard the name in intake whispers, caught at the edges of conversations, weighted enough to matter. Seeing her now, Amelia understood why. Sable did not need to raise her voice. The hallway seemed to make room for her opinion before she gave it.
Sable stepped away from the wall.
“Admissions actually let you stay?”
Amelia shifted her bag higher on her shoulder. “Apparently.”
“Apparently,” Sable repeated, with faint disgust. “Do you know what this place is?”
“No,” Amelia said. “But no one else seems interested in explaining it either.”
The copper-haired girl snorted.
Sable did not smile.
“This is not a sanctuary for fragile little girls who got bored being ordinary.”
Something in Amelia tightened.
She had been called ordinary before. Quiet. Careful. Nice. All the soft little words people used when they meant forgettable. Hearing it here, in this hallway that smelled like fur and smoke and judgment, made the word feel sharper than usual.
“I didn’t apply,” Amelia said.
Sable’s eyes narrowed. “Then why are you here?”
It was the question Amelia had been trying not to ask too loudly.
Before she could answer, Liora stepped between them with the mild impatience of someone interrupting a weather pattern.
“Because her room accepted her.”
Sable’s gaze flicked to Liora.
Something passed between them that Amelia did not understand.
Then Sable looked back at her.
“Rooms have bad judgment sometimes.”
Liora smiled pleasantly. “So do wolves.”
The hallway went still.
Sable’s expression did not change, but the air around her seemed to sharpen.
Amelia caught the smallest shift beneath Sable’s skin, a ripple along the line of her jaw, there and gone so quickly she might have imagined it. The copper-haired girl lowered her eyes. The one with pointed ears took half a step back.
Liora remained exactly where she was.
After a long moment, Sable turned aside.
“Enjoy pretending you belong.”
Amelia walked past her because stopping would have made the fear obvious.
Her room waited halfway down the hall.
The number was engraved into the door in dark metal. Beneath it, the small plate held a symbol that, at first glance, looked like a simple crossroad: four lines meeting at a central point. But when Amelia blinked, the lines seemed to bend, becoming roots, then veins, then paths seen from very far above.
The key warmed in her hand.
She slid it into the lock.
The door opened before she turned it.
Inside, the room was waiting.
Not empty.
Waiting.
That was the only word for it.
A narrow bed stood against one wall beneath a tall window overlooking the rain-bright courtyard. A desk sat opposite it, already stocked with ink, notebooks, and a brass lamp with a green glass shade. A wardrobe waited in the corner, carved with vines that seemed almost too detailed. The air smelled faintly of clean linen, old wood, and lavender.
Her uniform hung from the wardrobe door.
Amelia stared.
Charcoal blazer. White shirt. Burgundy tie. Dark skirt. Boots beneath. All arranged neatly, exactly her size from the look of it.
On the desk lay a second placemat slate.
Unlike the one in her folder, this version included locations.
Some of them moved while she watched.
“That’s normal,” Liora said from the doorway.
“I’m starting to hate that sentence.”
“You’ll hate it less by winter.”
“Comforting.”
“I told you I don’t do that.”
Amelia stepped inside.
The floorboards did not creak. The room did not shift. Nothing reached for her. Nothing whispered.
That should have helped.
It didn’t.
The room fit her too well.
The bed was the right height. The chair at the desk was angled the way she preferred, not tucked in but turned slightly outward. The window latch was loose in the same way the one in her bedroom at home had always been loose. On the top shelf of the wardrobe sat a space exactly large enough for the journal in her bag.
Her throat tightened.
The room was not welcoming her.
It was measuring her.
Liora watched her for a moment, and for the first time, her expression softened.
Then she ruined it by speaking.
“Don’t unpack anything you’d chase if it ran away.”
Amelia turned slowly. “What?”
“General advice.” Liora stepped back into the hallway. “Meal bell is unpredictable. If you hear it, follow everyone else. If you hear it twice, don’t.”
“That feels like something you should explain.”
“It does, doesn’t it?”
Liora left.
The door closed with a soft click.
Amelia stood alone in the room that knew too much about her.
For several minutes, she did not move.
Then, carefully, she set her bag on the bed and opened it. Clothes went into the drawers. Toiletries went on the washstand. Her journal was on the desk, though the space on the wardrobe shelf seemed to disapprove.
Last, she pulled out the photograph of her grandmother.
For a moment, she simply held it.
Then she tucked it beneath the edge of the brass lamp where she could see it from the bed.
The lamp flickered once.
Amelia froze.
Nothing else happened.
She let out the breath she had been holding and reached for her placement slate.
As her fingers brushed the paper, the back of it warmed.
She turned it over.
Her family name was there.
Vale.
Written in the same dark, shifting ink as the letter.
Amelia stared at it.
Then the ink moved.
Not forming words this time.
A symbol appeared beneath her name: four crossing paths meeting at a single dark center.
The same symbol was carved into her door.
Outside the room, someone laughed.
Inside, the walls seemed to listen.
Amelia touched the mark.
It pulsed once beneath her fingertip.
Like a heartbeat.
The room key had teeth.Amelia noticed that before she noticed anything else about it.It lay in the center of the folder the admissions clerk had given her, nestled between a map that had already changed twice and a placement slate, whose ink was still drying. The key itself was small, dark, and old-fashioned, with a round bow and a narrow stem cut with jagged notches that looked less designed for a lock than for biting into one.A paper tag hung from a thin black string.Room 317.No residence name. No floor designation. No directions.Liora looked at the key, then at Amelia’s face, and smiled like she could hear the question Amelia had not asked.“Third level,” she said.“Of which building?”“The one your room is in.”Amelia blinked.Liora had the nerve to look pleased with herself.“That was almost impressively unhelpful.”“Thank you.” Liora adjusted the stack of folders against her chest and started down the corridor. “Most new students cry before lunch. You’re doing better than
The creature behind the admissions desk stared at Amelia as though she had arrived misspelled.That was the only way she could think to describe it.Its polished black eyes moved from her face to the open file, then back again. The fingers resting on the edge of the paper were too long by at least one joint, tipped in nails that looked less like nails and more like pieces of dark glass. Its skin had the faint pearly sheen of something that lived underground and rarely saw the sun, though the room around them was warm with golden light.For one suspended second, neither of them spoke.Rain tapped against the tall windows behind her. Somewhere deeper in the building, laughter echoed, then bent strangely, as if it had turned a corner without its owner.Amelia shifted the strap of her bag higher on her shoulder.“You said I’m listed as human.”The creature’s mouth closed.It had been slightly open. Not in surprise exactly. More in the manner of someone who had discovered a crack in a wall
By morning, the letter had stopped pretending to be paper.It still looked like paper, which somehow made it worse. It sat on Amelia’s desk in the thin gray light before dawn, pale and smooth and silent, as if it had not rewritten itself in front of her the night before. As if it had not blacked out her phone, stretched the hallway behind her reflection, and left her standing in the kitchen with rain tapping against the windows like something asking to come in.She had not slept much.Every time she closed her eyes, the words returned.Pack only what you can carry.Do not bring anything you are unwilling to lose.Arrival is expected by dusk tomorrow.Except tomorrow had become today.Amelia sat cross-legged on the floor beside her half-packed bag and looked at the things spread around her. Clothes. Toiletries. A worn gray sweater that still smelled faintly of cedar from the drawer. Her old leather journal. Two pens. Her phone charger, though she had no idea if phones worked wherever W
The envelope was waiting on the porch when Amelia came home.That was the first strange thing.Not because the mail never arrived. The mail arrived all the time. Mostly bills, advertisements, and glossy flyers promising discounts on things Amelia had never wanted. But those came folded into the dented mailbox at the edge of the driveway, crammed between paper coupons and thin envelopes with little plastic windows.This envelope sat by itself on the welcome mat.Centered.Untouched by the damp.As if whoever had left it there had measured the porch, the mat, and the precise angle of the door before deciding where it belonged.Amelia stopped with one foot on the bottom step and stared at it.The afternoon had been gray in the way early autumn afternoons often were, with low clouds pressing close enough to make the whole neighborhood feel smaller. Rain had fallen sometime before she arrived home, leaving the concrete dark and slick and the air smelling of wet leaves, old wood, and the fa







