The upper wing of the academy library was mostly empty this time of day.
Noel liked that.
Quiet. No eyes. Just shelves and time.
He passed rows of titles until he found what he was looking for:
"Magical Structures & Barrier Theory – Applied Defense."
He pulled the book free and flipped it open with one hand, walking it to a nearby table. As he sat, his mind wandered—not randomly, but backward.
To a memory he didn't live.
The Bloody Banquet.
It wasn't just a scene in the book—it was the turning point. The first real tragedy. Nobles slaughtered. Spells detonated in the heart of the academy. Panic. Blood on silk.
A perfectly timed breach that shattered the banquet hall's high-tier protective barrier like it was wet parchment.
'It wasn't brute force. It was precision. Someone knew exactly how to break the academy's core defense enchantments.'
Now Noel was trying to find out how.
Because if it happened once—it could happen again.
He skimmed pages filled with spell structures, breakdown glyphs, diagrams of magical grids woven into walls and floors. The text was dense, but some parts clicked almost instinctively.
'You can't just throw fire at a barrier like that. It needs destabilization. Internal disruption. Mana inversion.'
He flipped to a section labeled:
"Internal Weakness: Overload, Anchor Severance & Rewriting Seals."
Bingo.
'They didn't blow it up. They rewrote it from the inside.'
Noel leaned back in the chair, hands steepled, eyes narrowed at the text.
'If I can find the method, I can build a counter.
Set a trap. Leave a fail-safe. Something.'
He was still reading when a shadow crossed the table.
A soft thump—a book placed gently across from him.
And a voice.
Cool. Curious.
"Didn't expect to find you here, Noel Thorne."
Noel's eyes didn't move from the page.
But he did exhale, quietly.
'And there she is.'
"Didn't expect you to talk to me," he replied.
Only then did he glance up.
Elyra von Estermont stood across from him, one hand resting on the back of a chair, the other holding a thick book titled Mana Pattern Recognition and Psychological Discrepancies. She didn't sit right away. Just watched him, lips curved faintly.
"I'm full of surprises," she said.
"You're also supposed to be busy managing student council politics."
"And yet, here I am," she said, finally pulling the chair out and sitting with composed ease. "In the restricted theory wing. Same as you."
Noel closed his book, marking the page with a folded note.
"Looking for anything in particular, or just here to check if the rumors are true?"
Elyra raised an eyebrow. "Which ones?"
He shrugged, leaning back in his chair. "That you like playing with spiders more than people."
That earned a quiet laugh.
"Not untrue," she said, smoothing the page of her own book. "But I'm also told I have good instincts."
"Funny," Noel said, "so do spiders."
She smiled at that.
But didn't deny it.
Elyra flipped through a few pages, eyes scanning fast.
She didn't speak again right away, and Noel didn't press her. The silence between them felt deliberate. Strategic.
Finally, she spoke—without looking up.
"So… are the rumors true?"
Noel arched a brow.
"Which ones this time?"
"That you're dead weight," she said plainly. "Bought your way into Class A. Can't cast properly. Got lucky with a wooden sword."
He smiled—dry, slow, unimpressed.
"You missed the one about me being a failed heir and a danger to social order."
Elyra looked up.
"Is it true?"
Noel met her eyes, unflinching.
"They're good stories," he said. "Got everyone talking. That's all rumors really need to do."
She tilted her head slightly. "That's not a yes."
"It's not a no, either."
Elyra studied him for a moment longer. Then nodded once.
"Cautious. Measured. You speak like someone who's had to memorize exits."
"Some of us don't get to walk in through the front," Noel replied.
She smiled again—slightly sharper this time.
"Not bad," she murmured. "You're not what I expected."
Noel smirked. "You sound disappointed."
"Not even close."
They sat in silence again, but it was heavier now. Not uncomfortable—just full.
Two players measuring the board.
And realizing maybe, just maybe, they weren't playing on opposite sides.
Elyra closed her book with a quiet thud, fingers steepled over the cover.
Noel could tell she was about to shift gears—not just observe him, but test him.
"I've seen a few students," she said, keeping her tone calm, but sharp underneath. "Slipping out through the east gate after curfew."
Noel's brow twitched.
Elyra continued, watching him closely now.
"They don't use the main paths. They take the tunnels beneath the enchantment labs. The ones no one's supposed to access without clearance."
Noel said nothing.
But his mind clicked fast.
'Why leave the safest place in the city… unless what you're doing needs shadows?'
"They always come back," Elyra said, "and they pretend they were never gone. But their stories don't line up. Their mana... feels off. Like it's carrying something back in with them."
Noel finally spoke.
"You followed them?"
"No. I confronted one."
A pause.
"What happened?"
Elyra's eyes narrowed slightly.
"He smiled at me," she said. "Said I must've imagined it. Then asked me if I believed in curses."
Noel's eyes sharpened.
'That's not nothing. That's a threat wrapped in politeness.'
Elyra leaned back slightly, her expression unreadable now.
"I'm not the type to jump at shadows," she said. "But this? It's not right."
She let that hang in the air, heavy and deliberate.
"And I think you've noticed it too."
Noel leaned back in his chair, arms folded loosely across his chest.
"Notice what?"
Elyra gave him a look. Subtle. Patient.
Like a spider watching a fly pretend it wasn't in a web.
"You know what I'm talking about."
Noel shrugged. "Weird mana. Suspicious smiles. Night strolls through forbidden tunnels. Sounds like standard academy drama to me."
She didn't flinch.
Didn't blink.
Just said, "You're stalling."
He smirked.
"Maybe I just like hearing you talk."
Elyra's expression didn't change, but her voice dropped half a tone.
"I picked you for a reason, Noel Thorne. You don't flinch. You don't ask dumb questions. And when people start watching you, you make sure they regret it."
Noel tilted his head.
"And that's all it takes to get your attention?"
She stood, gathering her book.
"No."
She met his eyes one last time.
"It's intuition. And mine's never wrong."
Then she walked away, as effortlessly as she arrived—leaving behind silence, a half-read page, and a very still Noel.
He didn't move for a while.
Just stared at the table.
Then, finally—
'Right. So we're doing this.'
Noel remained seated long after Elyra left.
The pages in front of him blurred, the words forgotten.
His thoughts drifted—not to the shadows, not to the rumors. But to the story he remembered.
The original script.
Marcus.
In the book, by this point, Marcus would already be earning the trust of students and professors alike.
Always the one helping others.
Solving disputes.
Lending a hand in training.
Saving a student from a rogue spell gone wrong.
Volunteering for extra duties.
The perfect protagonist.
Not because he was flawless—no, far from it.
But because he worked for everything.
He had one clear goal:
Be strong enough to protect the one he loved.
Clara.
And for that?
He made friends. He fought hard. He rose.
A symbol. A leader. A hero.
Noel tapped his fingers lightly on the table.
'He'll be a name they all remember.'
'That's fine.'
His gaze lowered to the ancient runes glowing faintly on the page.
'Because while the hero's busy shining in the light…'
He turned the page slowly, calmly.
'Someone has to walk the dark.'