Current location: Novel nest SHADOWS OF NOCTIS Chapter 2 — The Things They Measured

"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 2 — The Things They Measured

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Chapter 2 — The Things They Measured

The bells woke Noctis before sunrise.

Their sound rolled through the cathedral towers low and metallic, vibrating faintly through the dormitory walls as black morning rain struck the windows in uneven patterns.

Evelyn opened her eyes to darkness, cold air, and the unfamiliar weight of silence pressing against the academy around her.

For a moment she forgot where she was.

Then she saw the vaulted stone ceiling overhead and remembered everything at once.

Noctis.

The lower archives.

Lucien Mordane standing beside her seat beneath candlelight with recognition in his eyes and exhaustion buried carefully underneath it.

Across the dorm room, Ophelia Laurent fastened silver cuffs around the sleeves of her uniform with the calm efficiency of someone raised inside institutions like this.

“Combat rankings today,” she said without looking up. “First-years usually lose dignity before breakfast.”

Evelyn sat up slowly, pushing dark hair back from her face. “Encouraging.”

“It’s Noctis.” Ophelia adjusted the collar of her black blazer in the mirror. “Humiliation counts as curriculum.”

Rain streaked the windows behind her in crooked silver lines.

The dormitory overlooked the lower cathedral courtyard where students already crossed between buildings beneath umbrellas and dark winter coats. Everything looked colder in daylight. Less dramatic. More severe.

Noctis did not become less unsettling once the sun rose.

It simply became easier to see.

Ophelia glanced toward Evelyn while slipping a knife-sized silver hairpin through her braid. “You should know people are talking about you already.”

“Because of my father?”

“That,” Ophelia said evenly, “and because the crown prince nearly stopped walking yesterday.”

Evelyn looked away before the heat rising beneath her collar became visible.

Unfortunately, Ophelia noticed anyway.

Interesting.

The bells rang again.

Students began moving toward the lower arena halls beneath the academy where first-year rankings were held every winter.

The combat complex beneath Noctis resembled a military bunker redesigned by aristocrats trying to imitate cathedrals.

Black steel balconies curved above polished stone floors. Digital combat screens glowed blue-white against vaulted ceilings while rainwater slid slowly down the glass walls overlooking the mountains outside.

Hundreds of students filled the arena already.

Noble families gathered naturally toward the front observation rows, their expensive uniforms immaculate despite the storm outside. Scholarship students occupied the edges of the room almost unconsciously, separated less by official rule than by generations of inherited understanding.

Class divisions at Noctis did not require enforcement.

The building itself seemed designed around them.

“Valehart.”

Evelyn turned as Cassian Reeve appeared beside her carrying two cups of coffee.

“How are you conscious?” she asked.

“Excellent breeding and poor judgment.”

He handed her one of the cups before settling casually against the railing beside her.

Students near them glanced over immediately.

Not because of Evelyn.

Because Cassian belonged to one of the oldest political dynasties in the empire, and people at Noctis monitored proximity to power the way starving animals watched movement.

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“You’re attracting attention again,” he observed lightly.

“I’ve been here less than twenty-four hours.”

“Exactly. Efficient.”

Before Evelyn could answer, movement spread quietly through the arena balconies.

Lucien Mordane entered through the upper corridor overlooking the combat floor.

No announcement accompanied him.

None was necessary.

Students straightened instinctively as he crossed toward the observation platform reserved for top-ranked officers and royal heirs. Black gloves covered his hands again. Rain still clung faintly to the shoulders of his coat.

From this distance he looked composed enough to belong carved into stone somewhere above the cathedral entrance.

Only now Evelyn knew better.

She remembered the exhaustion hidden beneath that composure.

The silence around him shifted slightly as he passed. Conversations lowered rather than stopped entirely, but the effect remained the same.

No one relaxed near Lucien.

Even the professors watched him carefully.

Cassian followed Evelyn’s line of sight toward the upper balcony. “You know,” he murmured, “most people spend months at Noctis before the crown prince notices they exist.”

“I’m thrilled for them.”

“You should probably be terrified instead.”

Below them, Professor Kael Draven stepped onto the combat floor.

Everything about him suggested former military and present disappointment. A long scar crossed one side of his shaved head, disappearing beneath the collar of his dark uniform. The arena quieted immediately once he spoke.

“Combat rankings determine value.”

No introduction.

No welcome speech.

Just that.

His gaze moved across the first-year divisions slowly.

“Strength matters. Intelligence matters. Adaptability matters. Weakness becomes expensive during wartime.”

Several scholarship students visibly stiffened.

Draven noticed.

“Good,” he said. “Fear improves focus.”

The first evaluations began immediately.

Physical sparring.

Weapons assessments.

Strategic simulations projected across the arena screens in rotating sequences.

Noble students dominated the early rounds with polished precision and years of private military training behind them. Scholarship students became entertainment whenever they failed publicly enough.

A boy from the southern districts lost a weapons match badly enough to split his lip open against the arena floor while laughter spread quietly across the upper balconies.

Draven did not stop it.

Evelyn tightened her grip around the coffee cup.

Cassian noticed the movement beside her. “You’re doing that thing again.”

“What thing?”

“Looking like you’re about to commit political violence.”

“That seems dramatic.”

“You’re at Noctis. Dramatic is considered networking.”

The central ranking screen shifted suddenly.

EVELYN VALEHART

STRATEGIC ANALYSIS EVALUATION

Murmurs spread almost immediately.

The daughter of a traitor stepping into a strategic arena at the empire’s most elite military academy apparently qualified as quality entertainment.

Evelyn descended toward the combat floor beneath hundreds of watching eyes.

High above the arena, Lucien remained seated along the upper balcony, though his attention had shifted entirely toward her now.

The awareness settled unpleasantly beneath her ribs.

Draven activated the simulation systems with a sharp movement of his hand.

A battlefield illuminated across the arena screens: northern mountain territory, collapsing supply lines, impossible troop placement, civilian evacuation routes frozen beneath winter storms.

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Complex enough to overwhelm most first-years.

The countdown began.

Thirty seconds.

Most students approached simulations through military aggression first.

Evelyn approached them mathematically.

Her father used to spread war maps across their dining table late at night while teaching her that battles were rarely won by force alone.

“People reveal themselves through sacrifice,” he once told her quietly while candlelight flickered across old parchment. “The question is never what a nation protects first. The question is what it abandons first.”

Twenty seconds.

Evelyn rerouted food transport.

Fifteen.

She sacrificed two northern divisions entirely.

The arena reacted immediately.

Murmurs rose sharply across the balconies.

Ten seconds.

She collapsed three mountain bridges herself before the enemy army could reach them.

Five.

Civilian evacuation redirected through abandoned mining tunnels beneath the western ridge.

Simulation complete.

Silence settled across the arena.

Then the final calculation appeared overhead.

VICTORY PROBABILITY: 92.8%

Higher than every previous score that morning.

Draven studied the battlefield display without expression.

“Explain your casualty projections.”

Evelyn met his gaze calmly. “The northern divisions were already dead once the supply lines failed.”

“You sacrificed them immediately.”

“Yes.”

Several students shifted uncomfortably.

Draven continued watching her. “And the civilians?”

“The mines had the highest survival probability.”

“You gambled civilian panic against military retreat.”

Evelyn glanced briefly toward the frozen battlefield map still glowing overhead. “No,” she said quietly. “The empire gambled that when it abandoned the region.”

The room went still.

Not because she was wrong.

Because she had said it aloud.

Somewhere above the arena, Evelyn became aware of Lucien leaning forward slightly in his seat, his attention fixed entirely on her now with something dangerously close to interest.

Draven finally shut down the simulation.

“Efficient,” he said.

At Noctis, it sounded almost like praise.

Evelyn returned toward the observation rows aware that the atmosphere around her had changed.

Curiosity had sharpened into something else.

Calculation.

Students watched her differently now.

Like she had stopped being harmless.

Cassian handed her back the untouched coffee she’d abandoned earlier. “Congratulations,” he said quietly.

“For what?”

“You just embarrassed three generations of aristocratic military breeding.”

“That sounds unhealthy.”

“It absolutely is.”

The evaluations continued for another hour before dismissal bells echoed through the arena halls. Students filtered gradually toward the exits beneath low conversation and the sound of rain hammering the glass ceiling overhead.

Evelyn remained near the back rows gathering her notes when something brushed lightly against her boot.

She looked down.

A small brass key rested against the stone floor beside her.

Old.

Unmarked.

Attached to a folded strip of black paper.

Her pulse shifted instantly.

Carefully, she unfolded the note.

Three words had been written in sharp silver ink:

Lower archives. Midnight.

Evelyn looked up immediately.

The arena was nearly empty now. Students disappeared through the upper corridors in scattered groups while professors spoke quietly near the exits.

High above the observation balconies, Lucien Mordane stood alone beside the cathedral windows watching snow-dark clouds gather beyond the mountains.

For one brief moment, she had the unsettling feeling he already knew about the key in her hand.

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