Current location: Novel nest SHADOWS OF NOCTIS Chapter 5 — The Things They Built Beneath Cathedrals

"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 5 — The Things They Built Beneath Cathedrals

Chapter 5 — The Things They Built Beneath Cathedrals

Snow continued falling through most of the week.

By Thursday evening, Noctis Academy looked suspended inside winter itself.

The cathedral towers disappeared into pale fog beyond Evelyn’s dormitory windows while black branches scraped softly against the stone outside. Students crossed the courtyards below in dark coats and silver scarves, their footsteps muffled beneath fresh snow.

Everything felt quieter lately.

Not peaceful.

Contained.

As though the academy had drawn inward around its secrets.

Evelyn sat curled beside the window with her father’s journal spread open across her knees and candlelight trembling faintly over the pages. Three separate sheets of notes covered the desk beside her, most of them crossed out repeatedly where translations had failed halfway through.

Her father had written in layers.

Historical references folded inside military terminology. Poetry hiding numerical sequences. Entire meanings concealed beneath apparently unrelated passages.

When she was younger, he used to call it “teaching paranoia creatively.”

Now she understood he had simply been trying to survive long enough to leave evidence behind.

Evelyn turned another page carefully.

Most of the visible text referenced postwar reconstruction efforts after the Second Northern Conflict. Funding allocations. Cathedral restoration. Military burial records.

Except the numbers didn’t match.

Noctis Academy had received triple the imperial budget assigned publicly after the war ended.

She read the coded notation beneath the paragraph again.

The cathedral was repurposed after the western casualties exceeded acceptable integration failure rates.

Her pulse slowed.

Integration failure rates.

The same phrase from the underground journals.

Another line emerged slowly after she reorganized the cipher structure:

Subjects exposed to prolonged isolation displayed stronger shadow adaptation than emotionally stable candidates.

Candidates.

Subjects.

Not students.

Never students.

The realization settled heavily in her chest while snow drifted beyond the glass outside.

Noctis Academy had not been rebuilt after the war.

It had been converted.

A knock interrupted the silence.

Cassian entered before she answered, carrying two coffee cups and looking irritatingly composed for someone walking through a blizzard voluntarily.

“You know,” he observed while setting one cup beside her notes, “normal first-years spend evenings drunk or emotionally compromised.”

Evelyn closed the journal halfway. “And here I thought this school encouraged self-destruction.”

“It encourages useful self-destruction.” Cassian glanced toward the coded pages scattered across her desk. “That looks concerning.”

“It is.”

“Good. You’re adapting beautifully.”

He settled into the chair opposite her while candlelight flickered softly between them.

For a few minutes neither spoke.

The quiet felt surprisingly easy.

Evelyn realized she had spent most of her life alone around intelligent people. Scholars. Historians. Politicians.

But solitude changed shape around Noctis.

Here, everyone seemed surrounded constantly and isolated anyway.

Cassian broke the silence first. “You’re going to tonight’s cathedral dinner, right?”

“I was considering faking my death instead.”

“Unfortunately the faculty requires documentation.”

Evelyn smiled despite herself.

Cassian noticed immediately.

Something in his expression softened briefly before he looked away toward the snow-dark windows.

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“The dinners matter,” he said after a moment. “Not socially. Politically.”

“That sounds worse.”

“It is worse.”

Outside, cathedral bells rolled softly through the storm.

Formal dinner announcements.

Cassian stood slowly. “Wear black,” he advised. “It makes people assume you’re either powerful or emotionally unavailable.”

“And if I’m neither?”

“Then you’re in the wrong academy.”

The cathedral transformed after dark.

Candles illuminated the upper halls in long rivers of gold while orchestral music drifted through vaulted corridors lined with winter roses and black silk banners. Students moved through the enormous ballroom beneath chandeliers shaped like crowns, their formal clothing turning the room into a gathering of expensive predators.

Evelyn entered quietly through the western staircase in a fitted black dress and long dark sleeves, her father’s silver ring hidden beneath the collar near her throat.

Conversations shifted slightly when people noticed her.

Not dramatically.

Enough.

She ignored them and continued deeper into the ballroom.

Noctis formal dinners resembled political negotiations disguised as elegance. Professors spoke carefully with military officials near the cathedral windows while noble families watched one another across candlelit tables with the restrained caution of people accustomed to betrayal.

And at the center of it all—

Lucien Mordane stood beside the imperial delegation dressed entirely in black.

The formal military coat sharpened the broad lines of his shoulders while silver detailing traced the collar and cuffs in restrained royal insignia. Candlelight moved faintly across the dark leather gloves covering his hands.

Students avoided standing too near him.

Even here.

Especially here.

Lucien listened quietly while several older military advisors spoke around him, though it quickly became obvious none of them expected him to participate as much as obey.

Evelyn slowed near one of the cathedral pillars, unnoticed behind the crowd.

“His control is deteriorating faster than projected,” one nobleman murmured softly.

Another shrugged. “The emperor expected instability eventually.”

“He’s still useful.”

Useful.

The word landed unpleasantly.

A woman beside them lowered her wineglass slightly. “Useful until he becomes impossible to contain.”

“Then they’ll replace him.”

Evelyn felt something cold settle beneath her ribs.

They weren’t discussing Lucien like a prince.

They were discussing him like military equipment approaching expiration.

Across the ballroom, Lucien remained perfectly still while the conversation unfolded around him.

As though he had heard variations of it his entire life.

As though he expected nothing else.

The orchestra shifted into slower music near the cathedral balcony while snow drifted softly beyond the stained-glass windows. Students gathered near the dance floor in dark silk and silver jewelry, their laughter rising briefly above the quieter political conversations surrounding them.

Lucien looked entirely alone in the middle of all of it.

Not physically.

There were always people near him.

Advisors. Officers. Nobles.

But none of them touched him casually. None interrupted his silences naturally. The distance around him remained carefully maintained, like an invisible perimeter everyone understood instinctively.

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Evelyn became aware of him watching her only after several moments passed.

His attention moved across the ballroom through candlelight and drifting shadows until it settled fully on her beside the cathedral pillar.

Neither looked away immediately.

Something quiet shifted between them.

Not flirtation.

Recognition.

The strange exhausting awareness of seeing loneliness reflected back in another person.

Then another figure entered Lucien’s space.

A woman dressed in dark silver silk approached the imperial table with enough effortless authority that nearby conversations lowered automatically around her.

Duchess Selene Mordane.

Lucien’s aunt.

The resemblance between them appeared immediately in the eyes.

Same silver-gray.

Same controlled stillness.

But where Lucien’s composure felt restrained, Selene’s felt sharpened deliberately into political weaponry.

She spoke quietly to one of the imperial advisors before turning toward Lucien.

He inclined his head slightly.

Respectful.

Not warm.

Selene said something too low for Evelyn to hear.

Lucien’s expression hardened almost imperceptibly.

Then the Duchess followed his line of sight across the ballroom.

Toward Evelyn.

The assessment in her gaze arrived instantly.

Precise.

Intelligent.

Dangerous enough to feel physical.

Selene studied her for several long seconds before speaking again to Lucien without looking away.

This time he answered.

Briefly.

The Duchess’s attention lingered on Evelyn a moment longer before she smiled faintly and turned back toward the imperial table.

Not approval.

Recognition.

Like someone noticing a complication entering an otherwise manageable political arrangement.

Beside the orchestra balcony, Lucien remained where he was after the conversation ended, one hand resting lightly against the stem of his untouched wineglass while his gaze returned almost absently toward Evelyn across the crowded cathedral hall.

Around him, nobles continued discussing alliances, military strategy, and royal succession with the detached confidence of people who believed power belonged naturally to them.

Lucien listened to none of it.

For reasons she couldn’t fully explain, Evelyn found that far more unsettling than if he had.

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