Chapter 63: Indebted Silence
Evening dragged its chalk across the academy and left the halls a softer kind of quiet. The last bells forgot to ring on time. The library lights stayed honest - rows of scholars leaning into their books like they could convince time to curve - but the corridors between buildings had that empty echo that turns footsteps into secrets.
They had just finished putting the practice toys back. Sweat was a memory, laughter a low hum in the bones. Kori was writing something fierce and tidy on a clipboard. "Good work today!" She shouted from behind them, as they were heading for the exit. Then, added: "And Esen, thanks for not blowing up the targets again!"
"Yeah, yeah, it’s called self-control" Esen replied without turning his back.
"You don’t really have a lot of that" Kori wrapped her blade while walking.
Then Lynea drifted close to Hikari with a movement so small it could have been a change in air. Hikari felt the touch before she saw it - a slip of paper ghosting the inside of her wrist. She closed her fingers without looking. Lynea’s fragments turned once near her shoulder like sleepy birds. No words. Then she walked away.
Raizen caught Hikari’s glance and the little not now there. He waited until the hallway bent around a stair and the others had peeled off toward showers, toward food, toward whatever boredom looks like when you have earned it.
Hikari opened her hand.
A narrow strip, torn clean. Three lines in tight, steady handwriting.
Midnight. Petal Hall. Don’t be late.
"Petal Hall" Raizen said, reading it once and feeling the word land like a quiet bell.
Hikari looked up. They held the paper like it might try to float. It smelled faintly of the chalk from Lynea’s case.
"Are we going?" he asked.
Hikari folded the note once and slid it into the brace’s thin pocket. "We are."
The rest of the evening tried to be ordinary. Back at Kori’s,Dinner was a tray pretending to be hot food and Arashi telling three different versions of the same story until even he laughed at himself. Apparently, he paid Esen back, slamming him into the Crown Spine. Keahi muttered at the small flame she could now levitate two centimeters as if it were late to its own party, warming the food even more, eyes flicking to the spice drawer. Hikari listened. Raizen watched the second hand of the clock pretending to be in a hurry.
The hour turned the always-cloudy sky dark. Raizen lay on his back for a while and counted the beats it took his chest to forget the day. When the count matched the number on the note, he swung his legs over the side and stood.
Hikari was waiting in the corridor already, hair tied up messy, eyes steady in a way that made the dark feel like a hallway instead of a hole. They didn’t speak. Sneaking is mostly about deciding you belong. They mostly did. Still, the floorboards had opinions. Twice they stepped over squeaks by memory.
"And where" Kori said, very softly, "are my disasters going."
Hikari tucked the reflex to lie behind her teeth and went with the more dangerous truth. "Training" she said, equally soft.
Kori’s eyes moved from Hikari to Raizen and did that counting thing where she measured not your height or your weight but your choices. She didn’t look at her watch. She did not need to. "Training" she repeated, like the word might reveal an extra syllable if she turned it around.
Raizen tried a smile that had never saved him from anything. "Kenzo said we could practice catching each other before the floor did."
"At midnight" Kori said.
"The floor is always free" Raizen said.
Kori stared at him long enough for him to feel like a broom left in the wrong closet. Then she sighed through her nose and rubbed her thumb across the edge of the clipboard like she was sanding a splinter. "If you are going to be idiots, at least be idiots who hydrate" she said, and handed them a bottle each from nowhere like a magician. She started to turn away, then paused. "Don’t be late" she said, as if she couldn’t stop herself, and the corner of her mouth did a small treacherous thing that looked like a half smile.
They slipped out.
"There’s something off tonight, but I can’t prove it" she added, to herself.
The campus at night held its breath. The lamp posts hummed. The wind did a quiet job along the hedges. The petal room’s glass dome shone in the faint moonlight, reaching through the clouds. By day it was the ideal lecture space, all clean sightlines and acoustics that loved words. At midnight it borrowed the hush of a shrine. The glass held the dark the way a bowl holds water. Petal-shaped fixtures along the aisles glowed low, not gold, not copper, something in between that made the air gentle.
They went in, only to discover that the hall was empty. Tables sat in good posture. Someone had left a scarf folded neatly over a chair as if they had only stepped away for a minute six hours ago. The clock over the entrance ticked like it had enrolled in music class and was trying to learn a new time signature. Hikari’s steps softened without her deciding to. Raizen’s breath did the same.
Lynea was a shape at the far edge of the room, half in shadow, half in the low light. She was sitting with her back straight and her hands resting, palms down, on her knees. Her fragments made a slow coin above her shoulder. When she saw them, she rose without a sound and lifted one hand - not a stop, something resembling a greeting, but come on. This is Lynea. The gesture was more of a simple "you are here". She turned and walked toward the side corridor that led deeper into the building. They followed.
Petal Hall’s back passage didn’t creak. The air cooled a fraction. They passed a row of doors that were just doors by day and now looked like choices. A storage room breathed darkness. A preparation alcove held the faint smell of ink and chalk. At the end, the corridor opened into familiar bones - the Eon training room, but at night it belonged to another dimension.
Lights along the ribs had turned the luminite down to a resting glow. The high windows were squares of night. The floor plates wore their scars like old handwriting. The copper grates along the channels held the last of the day’s warmth like coals under ash. The hum was present - the low live-wire buzz that says the room is listening - but it had set itself to library volume.
Lynea crossed the threshold and stopped in the center ring. She sat again, this time cross legged on the dark plate, as if the floor had asked her to and she had agreed. Raizen and Hikari sat opposite, not too close, not far. For a moment none of them said anything. The kind of quiet that is not empty but full stretched itself between them and made a home. Her eyes were clear. The fragments settled near her shoulder and didn’t move. When she spoke, it was with the steady edges of someone reminding herself that breath is something you can do on purpose.
"I feel like I am indebted" she said. "To tell you this."
Hikari did not interrupt with a kindness. She only tilted her head in the way she did when a shape was revealing itself.
Raizen kept his hands at his back. He tried to make his stillness gentle, not waiting like a judge, but present like a wall you leaned on to rest.
Lynea’s gaze went to the floor between them and found the exact middle. She placed her next word there like a cup. "I should have told you earlier. Or I should not tell you at all. Both felt like lies."
The room listened.
"I asked you to come because the quiet is easier at night" she said. "Because nobody will be here to make faces when they don’t understand what a sentence costs. Because Kori would stand like a door between me and the right words if I told her first, and I need the wrong words too, before I can find the right ones."
Raizen folded her hands together once and let them part. "We are here" she said.
Lynea nodded. The motion was small and it undid nothing of her composure. She turned her palm up as if she might ask the floor to hold a thing for her when she finally opened her fist.
Outside in the hall a clock somewhere tried a new bar of its song and got it almost right. Far away, a door closed because a student had remembered they needed sleep. The Eon training room hummed like a throat before a word.
Lynea breathed in. She looked from Hikari to Raizen and did not hide when she reached one of them and was seen.
"I feel like I am indebted" she said again, softer, as if repetition could carry the first load for the second. "So I am going to tell you."
She set both hands on her knees, palms down, like anchor, vector, release.
The room leaned closer without moving.