Chapter 62: Floating Knives
Lynea had been quiet, watching the room the way a hawk watches an orchard. Her fragments traced a sedate orbit by her shoulder. She did not reach for anything in particular. She lifted her hand and the four gleaming bits of her weapon rose a hand span higher and stayed there, aligned, their edges catching the light in patient lines.
Kenzo stopped mid chuckle. "Go on" he said, softer now.
Lynea extended her fingers, and a knife from the rack trembled, slid forward, and came free of its rail. It didn’t wobble. It obeyed. Another knife followed, then a third. They took up positions around her fragments in a slow ring, points inward, like petals choosing to become a flower. A training spear answered next, drifting from its hook, turning point down and hovering with a steady humility that none of the students had managed. She raised her other hand and the spears at the far wall twitched as if debating whether to join. She did not call them. She had enough already.
The room exhaled as a unit.
Kori’s eyes flicked to Lynea, then back to Kenzo. Kenzo’s smile did not go away. It changed temperature. He stepped closer, not too close, curiosity straight as a plumb line.
"How do you know so much already?" he asked. No suspicion. No praise. Just the simple weight of genuine interest. "Even I struggled to keep five clean at once when I first started. You have seven floating like you are choosing which one to read."
Lynea did not look proud. She looked the opposite, like someone passing along a recipe that had been memorized so long ago it had turned into a lullaby. The fragments rotated a fraction. The knives held their quiet.
"My family practiced" she said. "It was a forced game when I was small. My grandfather said the world is lazy and will help you hold it if you ask nicely. They kept saying something about me being gifted and something about restoring control... I can’t really remember"
Kenzo waited.
Lynea’s eyes went to Raizen and away before anyone but Raizen caught it. Her voice remained calm.
"My family mastered an ancient technique" she said. "Levitating knives."
Something in Raizen’s head put a hand on a bell and hit it. The sound was entirely inside him and it was not sound at all. The Moirai. Knives that floated like thoughts with bad manners. An old story told in ambushes. A village memory he had learned to name shadow. His skin tried to feel the temperature of the room and forgot how. Takeshi...
Arashi, who lived for the social weather, opened his mouth for a joke and then closed it because some jokes are for later. Kenzo did not blink. "I see" he said. And he did. The hammer at his feet hummed once, as if agreeing with something a long way off. Kori’s gaze flickered across their faces. She found Raizen’s and let hers rest half a heartbeat too long. He did not look away.
Kenzo broke the quiet with a small clap. "Good" he said, tone practical again because practical saves lives. "We keep the room safe and we keep the story for later. Lynea, show them how to do it. Not the trick, the courtesy. Arashi, save your skull. Feris, head not handle. Esen, try not to break your head against my dear hammer. Keahi, don’t light anyone’s shoes. Ichiro, stop being be polite to the ball. Hikari, slow. Ugly is allowed if it works. Raizen, float them a moment longer and then put them down on purpose."
They moved as if someone had wound the room back up. The hoop drifted. The tiny planet inside it rolled like a marble that liked attention.
Lynea walked Esen and Arashi through the idea of touch without touch. "Not grab" she said. "Think of asking the air to be a shelf and then putting something on it. If you push, the shelf tips. If you pull, the shelf comes with the plate." She picked up a knife with a glance and set it back, flat as thought. Esen tried to mimic the softness and managed to keep Arashi knee high without smacking him into anything.
"Improvement" Arashi said from his embarrassing altitude.
"Don’t sneeze, now!" Esen said through a bead of sweat.
Hikari found a tiny path. The rod rose, wobbled, and stayed a breath longer than before. She frowned, eased her breath, adjusted nothing and everything. The rod held. She let it down slowly and did not smile because she had not decided to.
Keahi coaxed a small ember to drift like a moth. It flirted with a chalk line and did not scorch it this time. She grinned. Ichiro glared at the ball as if it had insulted his mother and then tried politeness again. The ball lifted, thought about philosophy for a second, and settled on a nice compromise three fingers off the floor. Feris anchored the mace head and laughed when it finally obeyed, because power tool obedience is joy. Arashi guided three practice rounds in a little orbit around his head like moons trying to remember choreography. One pinged his ear. He accepted the pain as tuition. Raizen opened his hands and raised his blades again. The anchor held like a handshake that did not slip. He asked nothing extravagant, just up and stay and be the weight of language, not the weight of steel. When the tremor came he chose not to fight it. He chose to end on purpose. He breathed release. The swords set themselves down as if a polite hand had returned them to the table.
Kenzo’s grin returned. "Yes" he said simply, and it was somehow higher praise than a speech.
They ran the drill another hour. The mess smoothed from slapstick to rhythm. Kenzo corrected with humor and specifics. Kori circled like a moon that could become a storm if someone did something unwise. Twice she caught herself watching the line of Kenzo’s forearm when he flicked the hammer midair to demonstrate torque. Twice Arashi noticed and filed it under fun for later with a saintly restraint that suggested he wanted to live.
By the end, even the ball had manners. Ichiro rolled it along a vector that he did not touch and admitted, grudging but real, that the world did not only listen when it wore stone.
Kenzo clapped once, final. "Enough for today. You do not need headaches to be talented. Return the toys. Hydrate. Tomorrow we will try catching each other before the floor does."
"Excellent" Arashi said. "I love not hitting the floor."
"I’d say something about that..." Hikari said, but her mouth had softened around the word.
They set things back where they belonged. Raizen slid his blades into their sheath and could still feel the ghost weight of them floating, light as a decision. He looked across the room once more at Lynea.
She was quiet again. Her fragments orbited in their ordinary picture, as if seven weapons had not hung around her like a secret a minute ago. When she met his eyes she did not look away this time. There was no challenge there. There was no apology. There was only the bare fact of a sentence that had just been said out loud after being true for a long time.
My family mastered an ancient technique, levitating knives.
The word Moirai stood up in his head like someone you thought was gone walking back into a room. His eyes widened before he could tell them not to.
Kori called time. Kenzo shouldered the hammer. The hall’s rib-like arches went from bright to ordinary as if someone had turned the day down one notch.
On the way out, Raizen stayed half a step behind, the world audible again, the shape of the revelation riding his shoulder like a small, silent bird. He did not have a word to tell it to fly away. He did not want it to. He only wanted to breathe steady enough that when it finally took off he would be ready to see where it went.