Chapter 50: Steps into Ruins
Kori didn’t knock.
She slid into the attic on quiet soles and leaned over his bed until the world was her grin and the cool of her breath. The window cut a blade of city glow across her cheek; everything else was hush and heartbeat.
"Rise and shine, darling!" she murmured, the back of her hand tracing a lazy line along his cheek like she was checking the room’s temperature. "Midnight walk."
Raizen’s eyes flicked open. She was so close, that their noses almost touched. Kori didn’t lean back - of course she didn’t. She tilted a fraction closer, a laugh ghosting in her throat like a secret.
"Careful," she whispered. "Forehead kisses cost extra"
His mouth tried to apologize. Her finger tapped it, soft and rude at once. "Shh. We’re sneaking past a very judgmental sleepy audience."
She slipped a hand under his pillow and came up with his twin blades pinched between two fingers like a magic trick. "Weapons in bed? Bold." Dark steel caught the dim like a wink. She set them in his hands, palms brushing his. "Shoes. Jacket. Dignity? Optional."
"I thought I get to choose the time," he managed, trying not to look at her mouth.
"I chose now." she breathed against his ear - too close on purpose, then stepped away a half-step that still felt like none.
Across the room, Hikari turned in her sleep and settled again.
"At the door," Kori mouthed. The bolt turned twice like a heartbeat. The night let them out.
Neoshima didn’t sleep - it performed.
Rain had finished its monologue five minutes ago, and every sign wore a second life in the puddles. Towering building faces unrolled holograms that flowed in tastes and temperatures - clean blue that bit like mint, magenta that sinned and got away with it, brass gold that clung to glass. AR fishes drifted across a crosswalk, parting politely around pedestrians and rejoining like gossip. Above, the line stitched white thread into the dark while a tram whispered past on magnetic mercy.
Drones flew along designated air corridors, LEDs blinking like patient constellations. A grim little quadcopter nudged a hobby quad back into its lane with the world’s most polite bump. A laundro-bridge a block up blinked with clothespin LEDs, turning someone’s shirts into a patient parade between buildings. Rooftop shrines ran with tea lights and paper wishes, the papers pinned down by coins and stubbornness. The bridges between buildings had lightbulbs hanging like the stars once shone.
Kori moved like the city belonged to her - because it didn’t argue. No commentary. No wasted steps. A cook at a late-night grill caught her eye and lifted his chin in the smallest salute a person can give without losing face. She returned two fingers off her brow and kept going.
They crossed a walkway sprayed with graffiti that only seemed to appear if you blinked wrong - a fox leaping over a fence, a crown flipped upside down into a bowl, a compass with its north rubbed out. A street violinist wrapped in a coat pulled sound from old iron instrument, the melody folding in and out of tune. Vending shutters sighed down as cleaning bots swarmed, bristling with brushes like hedgehogs that had opinions.
An ad tried to engage Raizen:
HELLO, SCHOLAR-
And his badge reflexively pinged back that it was none of its business. He tucked the pin beneath his lapel on principle. Out here, the lotus never showed its face. Neoshima didn’t stamp crowns on everything. It didn’t need to.
They passed a row of sleep pods stacked like honeycomb, soft blue breathing in the seams. A medic drone lifted from a clinic’s mouth and slid into the night on rails of permission. A security barrier pulsed a warning in thin orange - CITY MAINTENANCE ZONE - and then folded itself away when Kori flicked it a look. People noticed her without looking like they had. The noticing felt like a habit they weren’t proud of and weren’t about to stop.
"Pretty," Kori said, as if she hadn’t just unlocked three layers of attention with a walk. "Try not to fall in love!"
They climbed a narrow stair cut through the bones of a building and came out onto a maintenance catwalk that carried them over an eight-lane artery. Below, the traffic flowed with the patient malice of a river in flood - cabs, delivery rigs, someone’s illegal race as two bikes shot the emptiest lane and vanished with all the grace of a dare. A projection of an animated noodle bowl on a tower two blocks down tipped to them and winked. Another tower cooled its facade by exhaling a skin of mist that drifted and made diamonds of light.
The ring road carried them toward the outer edge. The gate there was all function and no jewelry - composite, steel, sense. If you looked up, you could see the huge lotus-like steel petals hugging the entire city in its glory.
The slit blinked awake. Kori raised her hand - not a wave, not a code, the loose gesture of someone a system already knows. econds later, locks reconsidered, remembered, and relented. A seam opened a body-width.
"Perks," she said, slipping through. "Don’t get used to it."
Angles softened. Pavement became dirt stitched with small stones. The city’s hum pulled back to the chin. Out here the night spoke in insects tuning tiny sounds, in a wind trading rumors through the pines, in the faraway sea counting something only the cliff understood. Dew netted every blade of grass and the air smelled like salt and something older than code.
Kori’s direction and pace shifted - woods-sure. She toed two stones and listened to the third. Her palm slid along a split trunk like she was reading bark instead of sentences. When a heavy branch bowed in their path, she leaned her shoulder into it rather than ducking, and it remembered its manners. Raizen adjusted his grip on the twins at his back. Every so often his fingers flexed - the knife-hand habit coming on by itself. He noticed that Kori noticed him noticing her noticing but said nothing, which meant just noticing.
"You cold?" she asked.
"I’m fine."
"Liar." She tossed a thermos over her shoulder without turning. Sweet warm tea.
They skirted a rockfall where the cliff had shrugged at some old bad plan. Someone had carved a warning into a stone face long ago - only the rhythm of three words survived the weather. A mouse crossed with clean, rude interest and vanished. The road downshifted behind them, sound dropping to a breath and then to nothing at all. Far off, a trawler drone skimmed the black water with a green worklight, hauling nets that shone like torn constellations.
Kori slowed where the ground didn’t look different and felt completely different. The air came colder - the kept-cold of rooms that remember experiments. The smell changed - earth and pine, yes, but also glass dust, old metal, stone a burned note that never quite leaves.
"Here," she said, and stepped aside so the clearing could present itself.
The ruins didn’t pose. They persisted.
Knee-high walls laced with roots thick as wrists. Slabs blackened at the edges where heat had signed its name and left. A spill of sand had melted and cooled into green ovals - a frozen river caught mid-run. Rusted struts curled like overcooked petals. The footprint of a narrow lab still read in negative - bench stubs here, a cable trench there, a square scar where something heavy once sat like a throne.
Circles carved into floor-stone - spiral, concentric, spokes. Grooves deep enough to hold rain, shallow enough to make you whisper. In the largest ring, straight lines crossed curves at measured intervals - geometry that looked like ritual and pretended it had always been math. A wall fragment carried equations carved quick and corrected slower, one hand cutting over another in a layered argument. Ash and time had settled into the channels until they looked like veins. On other wrecks, symbols that looked like runes - the kind you only see in stories.
Kori nudged the lip of slag around a blackened pit with the toe of her boot. "Once upon a time," she said, voice quiet, "they had walls and badges and procedures. They thought procedures would do the heavy lifting."
"What was this place?" Raizen asked.
"First people here called it a lab," Kori said, and the word didn’t quite fit her mouth. "Then mistook it with a roof."
He stood in the largest circle and felt the way the stone held cold like a trick. The carved lines didn’t glow. They were just lines. But space has memory. This place had too much. Too much to be written, too much to be told.
Kori didn’t walk him through. She turned to him like a coin that knew which side it wanted to land on.
"You earned a prize," she said. "I’m redeeming it for you."
He opened his mouth - the wrong remark eager to be born - and she shut it with a look that was somehow fond and sharp at once.
She stepped into the nearest carved ring and set her heels so the back one touched the groove. Her shoulders loosened, chin dipped a hair - respect, not theater. Her hands found his favorite sound in the world: the click of steel leaving home. Her own knives, not his. White, bright, obedient. No flourish. No pose. Just blades, the way thunder remembers lightning is its job.
The clearing answered.
Dust lifted first - betrayal is always easiest. Pebbles rose a finger-width, considered decency, then decided against it. The grooves didn’t glow - they agreed to be seen. Pale motes - white like salt thrown midair - seeped up from cuts in the stone and drifted, not random but along a shape your eye recognized a breath late. Hair-fine static stitched along her edges - too delicate for lightning, too honest for tricks. The air changed flavor - winter metal, shaken incense, the ozone of a storm deciding. A dead fern unfurled one crisp inch as if reconsidering a grudge.
Under Raizen’s boots, a low note found his ribs like a key trying locks until one said yes. The twins at his back gave a small approving thrum, weight shifting a whisper closer to true. He felt a tug - not outward, inward - the way holding one breath sometimes invites another to stand beside it.
"Don’t move," Kori affirmed, and he understood she meant yes, move, but inside, smaller. He let his hands unclench a fraction. The tug found his fingers and settled there like a perched bird.
Kori’s eyes stayed on his. Her blades lowered until both tips touched the groove. Sparks walked the steel like ants that knew the route. The particles thickened - a slow snowfall that refused to fall. A line of ash on the far wall lifted itself one grain at a time, as if a word wanted back in and couldn’t decide which one. Far off, the sea changed its count.
"People will tell you power is a thing you hold," she said. The ruined circle breathed that in and didn’t disagree. "They’ll be wrong. It’s a thing that holds you back until you stop pretending you’re bigger than the song."
He didn’t speak. Language felt like a clumsy tool in a glass room. The pull at his hands was patient, not greedy. He could refuse it. He didn’t.
A coil of half-buried wire trembled and rose to the height of his ankle, made a shape like a mystic letter, then decided that was a bit too much and relaxed. The air took on that faint feeling before lightning, except the sky was still pretending not to know them. Not yet.
Kori smiled - dangerous but kind. She was, suddenly, older by miles and younger by minutes. The ruined lab and the city and the academy all took one step back to make room for a sentence.
"Hey Raizen!" Kori shouted. "Let me teach you what true power is."
"In other words..."
"Eon."