The courtyard lay silent beneath the night sky, a pool of silver light spreading across the stones. The cold, distant stars hung above as if observing everything with quiet indifference. Kael leaned against his favorite tree and traced imaginary constellations. His thoughts moved like slow currents beneath a calm surface.
Footsteps approached. Soft, measured, deliberate. A familiar voice followed, smooth and controlled. "What's so important that you asked to meet me here?"
Kael didn't answer immediately. He knew that voice too well. Finally, he turned his head toward the entrance, where Astra emerged from the shadows. She stood as if she belonged to the night itself, composed and untouchable.
"I need your help," he said evenly.
She raised an eyebrow. "That's unexpected. What do you want? Just so you know, I'm not about to start tutoring you."
"I need information about the Greystone family," he cut her off. His voice was colder now. "Don't play games. You already know why I'm here. You will help me. Otherwise, you wouldn't have come."
For a long moment, Astra didn't speak. The wind played with a strand of her black hair as she studied him. Then, a slow, almost predatory smile spread across her face.
"Good," she murmured. "You're changing. But you're only half right. I didn't come to help you. I came because I'm intrigued by this." She stepped closer, the moonlight brushing her cheek like silk. "Tell me. Why?"
Kael's gaze hardened. "I want to destroy their reputation. I want to bring them down."
"Just because their heir is going to marry your friend?" she asked lightly. Her eyes sharpened as she closed the distance between them.
"I agree. He is disgusting. But why should I waste my time?"
She stopped right in front of him, leaning close enough for her whisper to graze his ear. Her voice slipped into the night like frost.
"What would you pay to save your friend? Tell me."
"Everything," he answered without hesitation. His eyes didn't waver.
She held his gaze, searching. For the first time, the mask of amused detachment cracked slightly. A frown appeared. A moment of quiet. "You're naive," she said softly.
"Maybe," he admitted. "But I trust my friends. They'd do the same for me. Here's my offer: Give me information about the Greystone family. In return, I'll stand by your side. I'll give everything I have to solve the mystery of the Nameless City."
She tilted her head and watched him, as if looking past his words to something deeper. Then she gave a single nod. "Deal. But one question."
He frowned but gestured for her to continue.
"Are you helping her because you love her?" Her voice was filled with genuine curiosity. "Or are you jealous that she's being taken from you?"
"No," he replied instantly. "I'm not doing this for such a shallow reason. She's my friend, one of only two people I trust completely. And they trust me. Nothing more."
She searched his face for any sign of a lie but found none. She found none.
"Boring," she sighed, stepping back as her usual coldness returned like a cloak. "I was hoping for something more entertaining." She turned, her cloak catching the moonlight like flowing ink. "Fine, I'll take care of it."
...
The first light of dawn crept through her window and brushed the brim of her hat. Lia stood before it in silence. Her fingers traced the worn fabric, and she realized that every stitch held fragments of who she used to be. It was more than a hat. It was every hour she had spent mixing potions until dawn, every lecture she had forced herself to sit through, and every secret dream she had whispered when no one was listening.
"I can't wear you anymore," she whispered, her voice breaking. "Not like this."
She pressed the hat against her chest as tears slipped down her cheeks. Then, slowly, she walked through the dormitory entrance. Her hands trembled as she lowered the hat into the trash bin.
"Farewell...for now," she murmured. Her voice was quiet, but held a different quality. It wasn't the hollow emptiness of surrender; it was the bittersweet ache of someone letting go without forgetting.
She turned and walked away, the morning light catching the tears still clinging to her lashes.
Lia moved through the corridors like someone walking through the remnants of a bad dream. Her eyes were red, and her steps were slow. When she reached the academy's gates, however, a strange murmur rolled through the air. A crowd had gathered, whispering like wind against stone.
She pushed through the crowd until she saw what had captured their attention.
Silas Greystone was kneeling in the middle of it. His usually flawless expression had been shattered, replaced by raw, ugly panic. Two guards held him down, their hands like iron bands. His voice cracked as he screamed.
"No! I didn't know anything about this! Please believe me!"
The guard captain's voice cut through the noise. "Silas Greystone. You are under arrest for multiple high crimes. You and your family will be executed for kidnapping and selling children from the lower districts."
The crowd gasped. Lia stood frozen, her heart hammering. She turned to the student beside her. "What happened?"
"They raided his room this morning," the boy whispered. "His family has been trafficking kids for years. Someone had sent an anonymous tip about the location of each of their slave markets. Every last one."
Lia's breath caught. "What will happen to them?"
"They're done. Execution. The Allied family will inherit everything."
For a moment, she didn't move. Then her tears returned. This time, however, they weren't from sorrow, but from something far brighter. Relief. Justice. Hope.
She turned and ran faster than she had in days. Her heart pulled her toward the courtyard, the place where everything had changed.
Kael and Zaros sat under their usual tree, arguing lightheartedly about something trivial. Zaros noticed her first. "Lia," he said, surprise flickering across his face.
Kael didn't speak. He simply smiled. Quietly. Knowing.
The moment she saw that smile, she understood. She didn't need an explanation.
It was him.
"Thank you," she whispered, her voice trembling. A radiant smile bloomed through her tears. It was the kind of smile that could dissolve shadows.
"I don't know what you're talking about," Kael replied with feigned innocence. "But I had a feeling you'd come back. I stopped by your dorm earlier and found something in the trash."
He reached behind his back and revealed her wide-brimmed hat.
Lia gasped. She ran forward, took the hat, and threw her arms around them both. "Thank you," she whispered. "I'm so happy to have you two as my friends."
Kael said nothing, only returning the embrace. Zaros blinked, bewildered. "Can somebody explain what just happened?" he asked.
Lia and Kael burst out laughing—light, unguarded, and alive. A heartbeat later, Zaros joined in. Their laughter rose beneath the branches, filling the courtyard like sunlight after rain.
For a brief moment, it felt as if the world itself paused to listen.
