"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 1 — The Girl Who Survived
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Chapter 1 — The Girl Who Survived
Black rain drifted across the mountains in slow diagonal lines by the time Evelyn Valehart reached Noctis Academy.
The storm had erased the road behind her hours ago. Pine forests dissolved into fog somewhere below the cliffs, and the carriage that had abandoned her at the lower gates was already gone, its lanterns swallowed by snow and distance.
Ahead, the academy rose from the mountainside like a cathedral built for mourning.
Dark towers disappeared into low clouds. Long windows burned amber against rain-black stone. Gargoyles crouched along the rooftops with water streaming from their mouths while iron bells echoed somewhere high above the cliffs, their sound softened by weather and age.
Evelyn stood still for a moment beneath the gates, gloved fingers tightening around the strap of her satchel.
Above her, carved into black marble worn smooth by centuries of winter storms, were the academy’s words:
Only the ruthless inherit history.
Her father used to hate that phrase.
Which was probably why the empire had killed him.
The gates opened with a low metallic groan after the guards inspected her documents. Neither of them spoke more than necessary once they saw her surname printed across the admission papers.
Valehart.
The name still moved strangely through certain rooms.
Like smoke people pretended not to smell.
Evelyn stepped through the gates before she could reconsider what had already become irreversible.
The courtyard beyond stretched wide beneath cathedral bridges and towering stone arches. Students crossed the grounds in dark uniforms and long winter coats, their voices blending quietly with the rain. Some carried umbrellas. Others moved beneath faint magical barriers that turned the falling water aside before it touched them.
Old money always found ways to avoid inconvenience.
Evelyn pulled her coat tighter against the cold and continued toward the central staircase.
Halfway across the courtyard, the atmosphere shifted.
Not suddenly.
The change spread gradually through the crowd, subtle enough that she noticed it before she understood it. Conversations began thinning out around her. Students near the center walkway stepped aside without looking at one another. Someone lowered their head near the fountain. Further ahead, two first-year boys moved out of the path leading toward the cathedral bridge with the reflexive caution people developed around dangerous things.
Then one of them knelt.
Evelyn slowed instinctively and looked up.
A figure crossed the bridge overhead through drifting rain and shadow.
Crown Prince Lucien Mordane.
She recognized him immediately, though not from portraits or political broadcasts.
From memory.
Smoke.
Firelight.
A collapsing cathedral roof somewhere in the north four years earlier while soldiers screamed below burning rafters.
She remembered being twelve and choking on ash while a boy in a black military coat carried her through falling stone without speaking a single word. At the time she had been too terrified to understand who he was. She only remembered silver-gray eyes and blood running down one gloved hand.
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Now those same eyes lifted toward her through the rain.
Lucien moved across the bridge with the quiet composure of someone entirely accustomed to being feared. Black fabric shifted around him in the wind, silver insignia glinting faintly near the collar of his coat. Rain slid across the leather gloves covering his hands without seeming to touch him fully.
Students watched him carefully while pretending not to.
No one approached him.
The silence surrounding Lucien did not resemble admiration nearly as much as instinctive self-preservation.
As he reached the center of the bridge, his gaze settled fully on Evelyn.
The moment stretched longer than it should have.
Recognition moved across his face almost imperceptibly before disappearing again beneath practiced control, but she saw it anyway. Something in her chest tightened unexpectedly as memory rearranged itself around certainty.
He remembered her.
Lucien slowed slightly before continuing toward the upper cathedral halls.
Only after he disappeared did the courtyard begin breathing normally again.
Voices returned in fragments. Footsteps resumed across wet stone. Somewhere near the staircase, someone laughed too loudly in obvious relief.
“Interesting,” a voice beside her murmured.
Evelyn turned.
A blond boy leaned against one of the archways nearby with a coffee cup balanced loosely in one hand. His academy jacket hung open over a black sweater despite the cold, and his expression carried the relaxed confidence of someone who had spent most of his life being forgiven easily.
“Cassian Reeve,” he said, offering his free hand. “Strategic Warfare Division. Occasional academic disappointment.”
Evelyn hesitated briefly before shaking it.
“Evelyn Valehart.”
Recognition flickered through his expression before smoothing itself away.
Apparently her father’s execution remained excellent conversation material even now.
“Well,” Cassian said lightly, “you certainly chose an unfortunate year to enroll.”
“Why does everyone keep saying that?”
“Because Noctis gets strange before winter.” He glanced toward the bridge Lucien had crossed moments earlier. “And because the crown prince almost stopped walking when he saw you.”
Evelyn looked away first.
Not because she wanted to.
Because continuing that conversation suddenly felt dangerous.
Before Cassian could say anything else, cathedral bells rolled through the storm overhead. Their sound carried across the academy low and ancient enough to feel less like music than warning.
Students immediately began moving toward the upper halls.
Cassian gestured for her to follow him toward the cathedral staircase. “Orientation,” he said. “Try not to look terrified. Professors here treat fear like a blood sport.”
“I’m not terrified.”
“That’s either confidence or concerning judgment. Honestly, both work here.”
The cathedral doors opened before them, releasing warmth and candlelight into the freezing air outside.
Inside, Noctis Academy looked less like a university than a kingdom preserving itself through ritual.
Towering pillars stretched toward vaulted ceilings painted with scenes of war and divine judgment. Hundreds of candles illuminated black marble floors while stained-glass windows glowed red and gold against the storm outside. Students filled the enormous chamber in rows of dark uniforms and formal coats, their voices lowered automatically by the scale of the room around them.
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At the center stood an obsidian platform.
Above it hung a massive iron crown suspended from chains.
Evelyn followed Cassian toward the back rows, aware of occasional glances lingering on her scholarship insignia and her surname with equal discomfort.
The Headmaster appeared moments later.
Aurelius Thorne descended the cathedral steps with elegant composure, silver threaded neatly through dark hair, black academic robes trailing behind him across polished stone. He smiled easily, though something about the expression felt practiced enough to belong more naturally in political chambers than classrooms.
“Welcome,” he said, his voice carrying effortlessly through the hall, “to Noctis Academy.”
Silence settled immediately.
“You were not selected because you are kind.”
His gaze moved slowly across the students.
“You were selected because someone believes you may survive power.”
No one shifted.
No one laughed.
The academy had apparently trained caution long before classes began.
“You will study warfare, diplomacy, magical theory, political systems, strategic psychology, and sacrifice.” Aurelius folded his hands behind his back as he spoke. “Some of you will leave this institution influential. Some of you will leave it dangerous. A few of you may leave it both.”
Several professors exchanged quiet looks near the lower cathedral aisles.
Evelyn noticed.
So did Lucien Mordane, who stood half-shadowed beside one of the side pillars with his attention fixed calmly on the Headmaster.
“There are areas within Noctis forbidden to students,” Aurelius continued. “The lower archives beneath this cathedral remain sealed by royal decree.”
Evelyn’s pulse shifted immediately.
Her father’s final letter had mentioned lower archives only once.
Burn what they buried beneath the cathedral.
“Students discovered below academy grounds after curfew,” the Headmaster said evenly, “tend to disappear from enrollment records entirely.”
A soft ripple moved through the room.
Not disbelief.
Recognition.
The kind people shared when hearing truths already whispered privately.
Outside, thunder rolled across the mountains.
“Welcome home.”
The ceremony dissolved slowly afterward as students rose from their seats and conversation returned in careful fragments beneath candlelight.
Evelyn remained seated a moment longer, her thoughts circling dangerously around the same three things:
Her father.
The lower archives.
And Lucien Mordane recognizing her the moment she entered Noctis.
A shadow crossed the row beside her.
She looked up.
Lucien stood there alone.
Up close, the exhaustion beneath his composure became impossible to ignore. It lingered faintly beneath his eyes and around the corners of his mouth, hidden carefully beneath the discipline of someone who had spent years learning how not to reveal weakness publicly.
His gaze lowered briefly toward the silver ring hanging beneath the collar of Evelyn’s blouse.
Recognition hardened almost invisibly across his expression.
When he finally spoke, his voice remained quiet enough that no one else nearby could hear it.
“You survived.”
The words settled strangely between them.
Not surprise.
Not relief.
Something closer to disbelief that memory had returned in human form.
Evelyn felt herself forgetting how to breathe for a moment.
Before she could answer, Lucien stepped back and disappeared into the cathedral crowd, his dark coat vanishing among candlelight and shadow while rain continued hammering softly against the stained-glass windows overhead.
Evelyn stayed where she was after he left, one hand still resting lightly against the silver ring beneath her collar as though grounding herself against something she could no longer entirely explain.
Somewhere deep beneath the cathedral, hidden beneath layers of stone and empire, she had the sudden terrifying feeling that something inside Noctis had already recognized her too.
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