"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 3 — The Things Buried Below
Chapter 3 — The Things Buried Below
Snow turned to black rain again shortly after midnight.
Evelyn watched it slide slowly down the dormitory windows while the academy settled into silence around her. Somewhere above the cathedral towers, thunder rolled softly through the mountains, distant enough to sound almost underwater.
Ophelia had fallen asleep hours ago beneath dim lamplight with a philosophy text still open across her chest.
Evelyn waited another twenty minutes before moving.
The brass key rested cold and heavy inside her coat pocket as she crossed the dormitory quietly, pulling dark wool over her shoulders before slipping into the corridor beyond.
Noctis at night felt fundamentally different from Noctis during daylight.
The academy stopped pretending to be civilized after curfew.
The upper halls remained lit by chandeliers and polished wall lamps, but the deeper cathedral corridors below existed mostly in shadow and old stone. Rain echoed softly through distant pipes while candlelight flickered against arches darkened by centuries of smoke and winter storms.
Evelyn descended alone.
The staircase leading beneath the western cathedral wing spiraled downward farther than she expected. The temperature dropped gradually with each level until the air itself began smelling faintly of dust, damp paper, and something metallic lingering underneath.
Blood, she realized after a moment.
Old blood.
The staircase finally ended before a massive iron gate embedded directly into cathedral stone.
No guards waited nearby.
No cameras.
Nothing modern at all.
That unsettled her more than security would have.
The empire protected ordinary secrets electronically.
The important ones, apparently, it buried underground and trusted fear to guard instead.
Evelyn removed the brass key carefully from her pocket.
For one brief second she considered turning around.
Then she thought about her father burning government documents in their kitchen at three in the morning while telling her never to trust institutions that classified history.
She slid the key into the lock.
The mechanism released with a deep metallic groan that echoed through the corridor like something waking reluctantly.
The gate opened inward.
Cold darkness waited beyond it.
The lower archives stretched beneath the cathedral in endless rows of towering black shelves disappearing into shadow overhead. Candles burned low inside iron holders fixed along the walls, their flames reflecting faintly across glass cabinets and sealed document cases.
Everything looked old enough to survive empires.
Evelyn stepped carefully between the shelves, her footsteps softened by dust and ancient carpet runners worn thin with age.
Most sections were labeled in faded silver lettering:
IMPERIAL WAR RECORDS
ROYAL LINEAGES
RESTRICTED POLITICAL HISTORY
Further inside, she found an entire corridor with no labels at all.
Which immediately made it the most interesting section in the room.
The silence deepened around her as she moved farther underground.
No ventilation systems hummed here.
No electric lights buzzed overhead.
Only candles.
Only stone.
Only the quiet oppressive feeling that the cathedral had spent centuries swallowing things people preferred forgotten.
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Evelyn stopped before a locked glass cabinet near the back wall.
Inside sat several black journals marked with the imperial crest.
Beneath the crest, another symbol had been stamped carefully into the leather bindings:
A crown surrounded by shadows.
Her pulse shifted instantly.
The Shadow Line.
The phrase Lucien mentioned.
Carefully, she opened the cabinet.
The journals smelled faintly of ash and old parchment when she lifted one into the candlelight.
Most pages contained bloodline records stretching back generations through the imperial family.
Then the language changed.
Clinical.
Detached.
Experimentation logs.
Subject compatibility remains unstable during integration process.
Secondary heirs continue exhibiting psychological deterioration after exposure.
Emotional suppression techniques improve weapon retention significantly.
Evelyn read the final sentence twice.
Weapon retention.
Not prince.
Not heir.
Weapon.
A cold unease settled slowly beneath her ribs as she turned another page.
Early conditioning remains essential. Subjects exposed to uncontrolled attachment demonstrate significantly higher corruption rates.
Corruption.
The word lingered unpleasantly in her mind.
Further down the page, another line had been underlined in faded black ink:
First-born male adaptation successful beyond projected tolerance.
Evelyn stared at the sentence for several long seconds before understanding fully arrived.
Oh God.
The empire had not inherited power naturally.
It had engineered it.
A sound moved quietly somewhere behind her.
Not loud.
Not accidental either.
Evelyn closed the journal immediately.
“You really should stop opening doors people keep trying to lock.”
Lucien’s voice carried softly through the darkness between the shelves.
She turned sharply.
He stood several feet away near the end of the corridor, shadows and candlelight shifting across the black fabric of his coat. Rain still clung faintly to his hair and shoulders as though he had crossed the entire academy through the storm to get here.
Which, considering Lucien Mordane, he probably had.
He looked less royal underground.
More dangerous.
Like something the cathedral recognized as belonging to it.
“You followed me,” Evelyn said quietly.
Lucien’s gaze drifted briefly toward the journal in her hands before returning to her face. “You broke into restricted imperial archives beneath a military academy.”
“That still isn’t an answer.”
A faint flicker of amusement touched the corner of his mouth before disappearing again.
“No,” he agreed softly. “It isn’t.”
The silence between them stretched strangely.
Not comfortable.
Not hostile either.
Something narrower than either of those things.
Evelyn lowered the journal slightly. “These records are about you.”
Lucien didn’t deny it.
That frightened her more than denial would have.
Rain echoed faintly through the cathedral walls overhead while candlelight shifted across the shelves around them.
“You knew my father,” she said after a moment.
Lucien’s expression changed almost imperceptibly at the mention of him.
“Yes.”
The answer arrived quietly enough to sound older than the room around them.
Evelyn studied him carefully now. “No one at court admitted knowing him after the execution.”
“Court survival rarely rewards honesty.”
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“You speak from experience?”
His gaze rested on her for a long moment before drifting toward the journal again. “Your father asked difficult questions.”
“And?”
“And institutions built around power tend to react poorly when someone starts noticing how they function.”
Evelyn looked down at the pages spread open in her hands.
Weapon retention.
Psychological deterioration.
Emotional suppression.
The words felt colder now somehow.
“What did they do to you?” she asked quietly.
For the first time since she met him, Lucien looked away first.
Not dramatically.
Just briefly enough for her to notice the movement.
The candles flickered softly as silence settled between them again.
When he finally answered, his voice remained calm, though something restrained lingered carefully underneath it.
“You should leave before you learn enough to become dangerous too.”
Evelyn frowned slightly. “That sounds less like a warning and more like regret.”
Lucien leaned one shoulder lightly against the archive shelf beside him, gloved hands resting motionless at his sides. Up close, the exhaustion beneath his composure seemed deeper tonight, threaded through him so thoroughly it looked almost structural.
“You think curiosity protects people,” he said after a moment. “Your father believed that too.”
The words landed harder than she expected.
Somewhere above them, cathedral bells rang once through the storm.
One o’clock.
Lucien’s gaze shifted toward the staircase leading back upstairs.
“You need to go.”
“Why?”
Instead of answering immediately, he looked past her toward the entrance corridor.
A moment later, Evelyn heard it too.
Footsteps.
Measured.
Approaching slowly through the archive halls.
Lucien moved before she could react.
One second he stood several feet away.
The next he had taken the journal gently but firmly from her hands and slid it back into the cabinet.
“Stand behind me,” he said quietly.
Evelyn stared at him. “You’re helping me.”
“I’m preventing paperwork.”
The footsteps grew louder.
An elderly woman emerged from the shadows moments later dressed entirely in severe black cathedral robes, silver chains hanging from her throat and wrists. Her face carried the sharp-boned stillness of someone who had spent decades disapproving professionally.
Sister Verena.
Her gaze settled immediately on Lucien.
“Your Highness.”
Lucien inclined his head slightly.
“Sister.”
Only then did her attention shift toward Evelyn standing partially behind him.
Disapproval sharpened visibly across her expression.
“Students are forbidden below cathedral grounds after curfew.”
“She was assisting me,” Lucien answered before Evelyn could speak.
Verena’s eyes narrowed almost imperceptibly.
Interesting.
Even she seemed cautious around him.
“She should return upstairs.”
Lucien remained perfectly still. “She should.”
The nun studied both of them for another moment before finally turning toward the deeper archive corridors.
The silence she left behind felt heavier than before.
Evelyn looked at Lucien once Verena disappeared fully into the shadows. “You lied for me.”
Lucien glanced toward the cabinet holding the journals.
“No,” he said quietly.
Then he reached toward a nearby shelf, removed several security reports, and fed them calmly into the nearest candle flame.
The paper blackened immediately, curling slowly into ash.
“You were never supposed to exist in tonight’s records.”
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