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"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 15 — The Observatory Above The Storm

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Chapter 15 — The Observatory Above The Storm

The storm returned after midnight.

Not ordinary snow this time.

Magical storms above Noctis carried strange electrical pressure through the air, bending light unnaturally around the cathedral towers while silver lightning spread silently across the clouds instead of striking downward. Students closed curtains when the storms came. Professors canceled evening lectures. Even the guards avoided the upper bridges connecting the western spires.

The academy had rules for storms like this.

Mostly:

stay indoors and pray the mountain remained asleep.

Evelyn learned that too late.

She had been returning from the eastern archives when the first shockwave rattled the upper cathedral windows hard enough to extinguish half the corridor candles at once. Wind tore through the western bridge connecting the observatory tower just as emergency gates sealed automatically behind her.

Metal locks slammed shut.

The bridge vanished behind reinforced barriers.

And suddenly Evelyn stood stranded inside the upper observatory while magical snow spiraled violently around the glass dome overhead.

Perfect.

The observatory itself looked abandoned at first glance.

Ancient telescopes rested beneath dust-covered sheets while old astronomical charts littered the stone tables surrounding the central platform. Frost gathered along the curved windows overlooking the cliffs, turning the mountains outside into blurred white shadows beneath the storm.

Somewhere below, emergency bells echoed faintly through Noctis.

Evelyn crossed toward the locked tower doors and tried the handle again anyway.

Nothing.

“Repeated attempts usually improve morale,” a familiar voice said quietly behind her. “Not effectiveness.”

She turned immediately.

Lucien stood near the upper staircase partially shadowed beneath flickering emergency lights, black coat dusted with snow while wind moved faintly through his dark hair.

For one brief second relief crossed her chest hard enough to annoy her.

“You’re trapped too?”

“Apparently.”

The answer arrived with the exhausted calm of someone deeply unsurprised by inconvenience.

Another pulse of silver lightning moved silently across the storm outside. The observatory lights flickered violently overhead before stabilizing again.

Evelyn leaned back lightly against one of the stone tables. “This academy has an unhealthy relationship with isolation.”

Lucien removed his gloves slowly while crossing toward the central platform. “Noctis has an unhealthy relationship with most things.”

Fair.

The storm intensified outside the glass dome, snow swirling so violently now that the entire mountain beyond the observatory disappeared completely from view.

For several minutes neither spoke.

The silence no longer felt uncomfortable between them.

Just full.

Lucien settled beside one of the observatory windows, one hand resting lightly against the frost-covered glass while silver stormlight moved faintly across his face.

Evelyn watched him quietly.

The exhaustion had become impossible to ignore lately.

Not physical fatigue alone.

Something deeper.

Like every day required more restraint than the last.

“You still haven’t slept properly,” she said softly.

Lucien’s gaze remained fixed on the storm beyond the glass. “You say that like it’s recent.”

The answer unsettled her.

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Evelyn crossed slowly toward him through the dim observatory light.

“Since when?”

A long silence followed.

Then:

“Since childhood.”

The honesty of it hollowed the room.

Lucien leaned one shoulder lightly against the window frame while snow and magical lightning moved around the tower outside.

“The shadows become louder at night,” he continued quietly. “Sleep makes control… unpredictable.”

Evelyn frowned slightly. “Louder?”

His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly, as though he regretted saying even that much already.

Still, he answered.

“They react to emotion.” His silver-gray eyes lowered briefly toward his ungloved hands. “Fear. Anger. Attachment.” A pause. “The stronger the feeling, the harder they become to contain.”

The final word lingered carefully beneath the sentence.

Contain.

Not manage.

Not understand.

Contain.

Like he had spent his entire life trying to keep something monstrous locked behind his ribs.

Outside, lightning flashed silently across the mountains.

Evelyn studied him for several long seconds before speaking again.

“You’re afraid of becoming dangerous.”

Lucien looked toward her then.

Really looked.

The stormlight sharpened the exhaustion beneath his eyes while snow drifted endlessly around the observatory tower outside.

“No,” he said quietly.

The answer surprised her.

Then his gaze shifted away again toward the storm.

“I’m afraid of caring about someone enough to lose control when they’re threatened.”

The room went completely still.

Evelyn felt the meaning settle between them slowly.

Heavy enough to change the air.

Lucien seemed to realize what he’d admitted a second too late.

His expression closed immediately afterward, restraint sliding back into place with painful familiarity.

But the truth had already arrived.

The ballroom.

The shadows.

The violence.

Not random.

Not instinct alone.

Her.

A pulse of thunder rolled through the observatory floor.

The lights flickered again.

Evelyn stepped closer before she could stop herself.

Lucien remained motionless beside the window while she stopped near enough to see the faint shadows moving restlessly along the edges of his sleeves beneath the stormlight.

“They turned your emotions into something to fear,” she said softly.

His throat moved once before he answered.

“They weren’t entirely wrong.”

Evelyn shook her head immediately. “No. They convinced you that attachment itself was dangerous because they needed you isolated enough to control.”

The sentence hit him visibly.

Not dramatic.

Worse.

Like something old and exhausted inside him recognized the truth too quickly to deny it.

The observatory fell silent except for wind and snow striking the glass dome overhead.

Lucien looked at her with an expression she couldn’t fully survive examining too carefully.

Not because it was cold.

Because it wasn’t.

For the first time since meeting him, she saw how desperately he restrained things he wanted.

Connection.

Rest.

Gentleness.

A life that belonged to him instead of the empire.

The realization hurt unexpectedly.

Evelyn lifted one hand slowly toward his face.

Lucien went completely still.

Her fingers brushed lightly against the side of his jaw beneath the stormlight.

Warm skin.

Sharp bone beneath it.

The shadows along his sleeves quieted almost instantly at the contact.

Both of them noticed.

Lucien’s eyes lowered briefly, attention fixed on her with something dangerously unguarded breaking through the careful composure he wore everywhere else.

Outside, magical lightning illuminated the observatory in silver-white flashes.

Inside, neither moved.

The space between them narrowed quietly.

Lucien’s hand lifted slowly toward her waist before stopping midway there, like instinct and restraint had collided painfully somewhere beneath his ribs.

Evelyn could feel his breath now.

Close enough to matter.

His gaze dropped once toward her mouth before returning immediately to her eyes as though the movement itself had cost him effort.

For one suspended impossible moment, it seemed inevitable that he would kiss her.

Instead Lucien closed his eyes briefly and stepped backward.

The loss of warmth felt immediate.

Violent in its own quieter way.

He turned toward the observatory windows before speaking again, shoulders tense beneath the black fabric of his coat while snowstorm light moved across the room around him.

“This,” he said softly, “is exactly what I was afraid of.”

And somehow the terrible part was that Evelyn understood he wasn’t talking about himself.

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