Chapter 99: Standing Still
The days stopped being hours and started being angles.
By morning the Elite Room would be a nest of boards and projectors showing lanes that changed as you blinked. By afternoon the Petal Hall shifted into a maze of corridors and doors with springs that smacked your mistakes back at you. By evening, chalk ghosts of formations still clung to their sleeves like they had been hugged by geometry. Kori called it progress. Esen called it bullying with rulers and compasses.
They learned that a line was not a line - it was a promise about who moved when. If a path winked left by a meter, Raizen had to feel it before Hikari did. If Arashi planted himself on a tile, the tile was now a statement about pressure and everyone owed it respect. Angles weren’t drawings. Angles were the way fear failed to get a foothold.
Kori tossed them into pairs and then into groups of four, then back to pairs when she decided someone had learned the wrong lesson. "Vanguards don’t travel alone unless they want to be studied posthumously" she said. "Pairs for everything under Abyssal. Four for the things that name themselves."
Speed with Core. Power with ranged. It sounded tidy on a board. It shook out in the room like weather.
Raizen learned to take a step without taking it - a half promise that let Hikari decide whether to spend it. Her hands measured distances that weren’t there yet. Timing slid between them until her voice could say less and do more. She would call "left" and he would already be a shadow toward it, just a tilt that said, I heard you. The first time he stopped short because she had not yet finished seeing, Kori tapped his shoulder and said "Trust timing, not impulse" It landed without bruising and left a mark anyway.
Across the hall, Keahi found the weight in the floor and then doubled it. Arashi ghosted beside and behind, sighting through the space she cleared, his palms dipping to paint trajectories in the air like he was drawing math he liked. When Keahi’s swing woke the sensors into false fire alarms, Arashi swore softly and corrected for smoke and heat the way some people added salt. "You burn messy" he told her. "I calculate around it." Keahi grinned. "You calculate pretty. I burn around that."
Feris treated the formation like a contract. She moved without asking permission from her own doubt. Lynea kept distance with a surgeon’s cruelty, flicks marking lines others had to pretend they could see. Their banter, when it happened, was a glance and a micro-tilt of chin. Esen, partnered to Ichiro, tried to make the concept of lane discipline into a punchline and failed. Ichiro made arcs and terrain that for Esen was basically a playground. "Faster" he said. "Cleaner" Ichiro shot back, but he listened.
Angles turned into habits. Habits turned into comfort in the half steps between orders.
On the sixth morning, Kori walked in with the clipboard held like a verdict.
They were already sweat-slick, mid-drill, Petal Hall walls breathing open and closed to simulate panic. Hikari called fall back and Raizen let the command pass through his ribs into his heel without needing to think about it. Keahi slammed a hinge shut with her shoulder and Arashi said thank you like a man to a door. Feris cut a corner so precisely it looked like she had folded the room. Lynea’s line snapped and sang. Esen whooped when he didn’t stumble; Ichiro gave him a flat look that meant he’d noticed.
"Line up" Kori said. No question in it. The hall exhaled and they moved to the stripe.
Kori looked like she was measuring them for uniforms and graves. "Ceremony teams are finalized" she said. "Field attachments will mirror. You will look like you meant it."
No one spoke. The Petal Hall lights hummed in a way that made you feel watched by architecture.
"Division Three" Kori read. "Raizen - Speed. Keahi - Power. Arashi - Ranged. Hikari - Core." She didn’t look up. She didn’t need to. The air changed shape anyway. "Pairs as trained. Keahi with Arashi. Raizen with Hikari."
Arashi rocked on his heels and tried not to smile. "We’ll set the horizon on fire" he said, failing not to smile.
"Aim high" Kori replied, without sticking her eyes up from her slate. "No one forgives low."
Hikari didn’t move. Her eyes flicked once toward Raizen, quick and certain, then back to Kori. He felt the look the way you feel a hand offered in the dark.
"Division Four" Kori continued. "Feris - Power. Esen - Speed. Lynea - Ranged. Ichiro - Core." She lifted the page a little, as if considering whether to read out a surprise that she had not written. "Pairs as trained. Lynea with Feris. Esen with Ichiro."
Esen breathed out through his teeth like a man who’d been holding his breath just to see if he could. "I will be the fastest well-behaved menace you’ve ever seen" he promised no one in particular.
"You will be the least injured speed person if you listen" Ichiro said mildly.
Kori tucked the sheet under the clipboard and let them all sit in the moment they had been pretending not to anticipate. "Say whatever clever thing you were going to say" she offered. "Get it out before the ceremony microphones amplify your poor decisions."
"Do we wave" Esen asked, because someone had to ruin the mood with a joke so it didn’t burst on its own.
"You will stand still" Kori said. "Standing still is difficult for you. Consider this growth."
She paced them once, slow, like gravity in a room with a job. "A team is not who you fight with" she said, pausing by Raizen and Hikari long enough for his shoulder to notice. "A team is who you don’t have to look at to know what they’re doing."
They returned to motion with new edges. Not better - sharper at the places that mattered.
Keahi and Arashi ran a pattern that made the Petal Hall’s sensors plead for cooler air. Keahi’s step drove, Arashi’s hands wrote arcs through her wake. He called "two high" and she altered her swing a finger’s width, enough to change ten meters of math. They touched forearms after without looking like they meant to, then separated as if to deny it happened.
Feris and Lynea ghosted through a mock bottleneck with such economy that the corridor seemed ashamed of wasting space on them. Lynea’s string hummed once, twice, and three harmless targets learned dignity by being sliced into lessons. Feris checked corners with a glance you could have set a watch by.
Esen, guided by Ichiro’s palm at his shoulder blade, discovered that fast was not the same as early. He almost said something smug and swallowed it in time. "Faster" Ichiro repeated. "Cleaner" Esen said, and made it so.
"Oh! I almost forgot! A representative from each division. You choose. You’ll need to hold up a small speech to convince the people that you aren’t disasters. You can lie about not being disasters." Kori said, because that was where truth lived.
They didn’t even look surprised. When Kori begins with "Oh! I almost forgot!" You know you’re about to find out something painfully obvious or something disastrous.
By afternoon, the banter rose because adrenaline needed somewhere to go. Arashi declared himself artillery and Keahi declared herself the reason artillery had a job. Esen and Ichiro argued about whose name should go first on a report that had not been written yet. Lynea ended an entire conversation with a look so delicate it shouldn’t have been fatal and was. Feris drank water like it offended her and went back to the line. Raizen caught his own reflection in the Petal Hall’s glass - eight figures moving in a pattern that only made sense from above. He did not like seeing himself in windows.
Kori finally called time. "Uniform checks tomorrow" she said. "Ceremony walk-through. Then nothing. Eat? Sleep? I don’t really care as long as you’re better than Raizen after 3 hours of sleep."
"What about the seventh day?" Esen asked, still hopeful even when reality had taught him about hope. "Is it free?"
"It is free of bad decisions, yeah" Kori said. "Which is as close as you get."
The Elite Room took them back for debrief. The boards rolled up to make space for minds to sit down. The eight became people again instead of lines and numbers. Saffi slipped in late and stood at the back with her arms crossed and her mouth trying not to be proud.
"You could have put me anywhere" Arashi told Kori, not modest because modesty wasn’t part of his kit.
"Well that’s exactly what I did" Kori said.
Keahi bumped his shoulder in passing. "Don’t miss."
"Don’t blink" he said, which was as close as he came to a vow.
"Alright, alright. We’re done talking!" Kori interrupted every thought or dispute.
"Finally" Feris said, and stood up before anyone else had decided whether the meeting was over.
Esen slumped back and made a dying sound for comedic effect. Ichiro passed him a bottle without looking. "Drink" he said.
"It’s water" Esen said, disappointed.
"Not so sure if you’ll even get to live long enough to complain" Ichiro said.
Hikari gathered notes that were really reminders to breathe. She looked at Raizen once, question and answer both in it. He nodded once, because talking would have made the air heavy. Kori stacked her papers into an order... Only she understood. "Ceremony at the Spire front. Public. Officials from the field cities. Your rivals smiling like they’re made of grace. None of it is for you" she said. "What’s for you is standing like a team without asking for permission to be one."
The room emptied in layers, energy leaking out into the hall like heat off a forge. Raizen lingered by the board that held their names in four neat lines. The symmetry felt right, which made it feel suspicious.
Roles made sense on paper. Courage didn’t.
He thought of Saffi’s hand brushing his when she slid a bracket across a table and told him to choose. He thought of Hikari’s fingers curling in sleep around a truth that did not belong to him and mattered anyway. He thought of Keahi’s step, Arashi’s breath, Feris’s silence, Lynea’s thread, Esen’s noise, Ichiro’s gravity. He thought of Kori saying stand still like it was a skill...
Four pairs. Eight names. A public stage waiting to measure them.
He put his palm flat against the board - the same hand that still remembered a taser’s language - and let the angles settle where breath sits when it is ready to be used.
Tomorrow they would rehearse standing still.
After that, they would have to move.