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Chapter 18 - Chapter 15 Part B — The Eye of the Storm Has a Very Calm Face

Tachibana Haruka was not lost.

She wanted to be clear about that — internally, to herself, firmly — she was not lost. She had a map. She had a destination. She had a completely legitimate reason to be walking through the business faculty quad asking strangers about a specific person's physical description.

She stopped a boy near the fountain.

"Excuse me. Have you seen a student — dark hair, about this tall." She indicated. "Calm eyes. Looks like nothing bothers him."

The boy stared at her.

"Prince-sama," he said, which was not an answer.

She moved on.

She asked a girl next.

The girl at least processed the question. "Dark hair, calm? That sounds like the guy in 1-B. Third floor east corridor."

"Thank you."

She walked into the building.

Around her the staring continued as it always did — prince-sama, she's so cool, did you see her hair — she walked through it the way she walked through weather. Present. Unaffected. Destination-focused.

Third floor. East corridor.

She found it.

She also found, outside room 1-B, the end-of-lecture dispersal in full momentum — students pouring out, conversations starting, the hallway filling with the relieved energy of people returning to their own time.

She stepped to the side.

Waited.

He came out third.

Dark jacket, bag over one shoulder, the expression she'd memorised from an alley — unbothered, faintly curious, slightly elsewhere. A girl was beside him immediately, warm brown hair, hand already finding his arm with practiced ease.

He looked up.

Their eyes met.

She watched the recognition arrive. "Oh," he said.

"Hello," she said, which was all that was available.

The corridor had noticed.

She felt it — the attention shifting, recalculating, the specific quality of a crowd encountering something it hadn't expected. Boys from 1-B were stopped in the doorway. Looking at her. Looking at him. Looking at her again. The triangulation of people running arithmetic in real time and arriving at results that displeased them.

The girl beside Kaito — brown hair, hand on his arm — was looking at Haruka with the direct, measuring attention of someone conducting an assessment.

Haruka looked back.

Calmly. Directly.

The girl's jaw was set. Her eyes were dark and very focused. Haruka filed her under significant and returned her attention to Kaito.

"You go here," he said.

"Arts faculty," she said. She held up the form. Evidence. Legitimate errand. Confirmed. "Administrative submission."

"Right."

He looked at her with the attention she recognised — direct, unhurried, the full presence of someone for whom the person in front of them was the only relevant thing. No performance. No calculation.

It was, she was discovering, extremely difficult to stand in front of.

"Are you finding everything okay?" he said.

Her face did something brief and controlled.

First question, she thought. Again.

"Fine," she said. "I know where the office is."

"Good."

One more second.

She turned. Walked to the administrative office. Submitted the form. Turned around.

Did not look at room 1-B as she passed it.

Was completely aware of exactly where it was.

Took the stairs. Crossed the quad. Walked back toward the arts faculty in the morning light.

Her hand came up. Pressed briefly against her sternum. Dropped.

"First question," she said quietly. To no one.

She kept walking.

Her face was warm.

Back in the corridor, Kaito stood in the middle of what could only be described as a gaze situation.

The boys from 1-B had not moved.

They were looking at him with the specific expression of men who had run a calculation multiple times and kept getting an answer they didn't like. He could feel it — the weight of it, the layers of it. The girl in the shoe area this morning. The girl who'd just appeared from the arts faculty. The girl currently attached to his arm.

Tsukasa's hand on his arm had tightened by exactly one degree.

She was looking at the direction Haruka had gone.

"Who is she," she said. Very quietly.

"Someone I met," he said.

She looked at him.

"Arts faculty," he added.

She processed this. Her hair — both sides back, the new configuration — caught the corridor light. Her eyes did the full registration thing, the filing thing, the thing where she absorbed information and felt it longer than other people.

She said nothing.

He looked at the boys still in the doorway.

The jealousy had achieved a new quality — layered now, specific, the kind that comes from watching someone exist in a way you can't explain or compete with. He felt it like pressure from multiple directions simultaneously.

He maintained his expression.

The smile was small. Real. The unbothered one.

"Next lecture," he said.

Tsukasa looked at him for a moment.

Then — briefly, privately, like the sun deciding to appear between clouds — she smiled too.

Not the composed one.

The other one.

"Yes," she said. "We are."

They went to the next lecture.

Behind them the corridor buzzed.

Someone said: "What is his deal."

Nobody had an answer.

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