"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 10 — The Shape Of Trust
Chapter 10 — The Shape Of Trust
The simulation chamber beneath Noctis smelled faintly of ozone, candle smoke, and overheated machinery.
Storm weather always interfered with the academy’s battlefield projection systems, which meant the walls flickered occasionally as Evelyn entered the lower strategy hall the following morning. Snow and black rain moved together beyond the reinforced glass ceiling overhead, turning the mountains outside into shifting gray shadows.
Students gathered slowly around the circular simulation floor while professors adjusted tactical displays near the central command platform.
Nobody sounded fully awake.
Noctis had developed a habit recently of exhausting everyone simultaneously.
Cassian appeared beside Evelyn carrying coffee with the solemn expression of a man approaching religious ceremony.
“I have terrible news.”
“That’s a strong opening.”
“They assigned group simulations today.”
Evelyn accepted the coffee carefully. “And?”
“And Noctis students would rather be dismembered than collaborate emotionally.”
Fair.
Across the room, Professor Draven activated the central battlefield display with one sharp movement.
The floor illuminated instantly beneath shifting holographic terrain maps. Mountain passes emerged first, followed by supply lines, troop movement projections, weather systems, and civilian evacuation sectors layered together in glowing silver-blue grids.
“Today’s evaluations focus on strategic coordination under active wartime pressure,” Draven announced.
A visible wave of disappointment spread through the room.
Draven ignored it completely.
“Modern warfare no longer rewards isolated intelligence,” he continued evenly. “It rewards synchronized decision-making.” His gaze shifted briefly across the upper rows. “Some of you will struggle with that concept more than others.”
Several students glanced automatically toward Lucien.
He stood near the rear platform in black uniform and dark gloves, one shoulder resting lightly against the cathedral stone wall while rainwater traced slow patterns down the windows behind him.
As usual, nobody stood too close.
Evelyn noticed his attention settle on her briefly before Draven continued speaking.
“Simulation teams will be assigned manually.”
That immediately felt threatening.
Draven began reading names.
Noble alliances formed quickly. Military heirs clustered naturally together while scholarship students were distributed wherever tactical gaps existed.
Then:
“Lucien Mordane. Evelyn Valehart.”
The room went quiet enough that even the storm outside suddenly sounded louder.
Cassian turned slowly toward her. “Oh, that feels politically catastrophic.”
Evelyn kept her eyes forward despite the uncomfortable awareness crawling beneath her ribs.
Across the chamber, Lucien remained motionless.
Only his gaze shifted toward her again.
No visible reaction.
Which somehow felt more dangerous than surprise.
The simulation floor divided moments later into separate strategic sectors. Evelyn crossed toward the assigned command station beneath dozens of watching eyes while digital terrain maps unfolded around her in layers of projected mountain warfare routes.
Lucien arrived beside the station seconds later.
Up close, he looked tired again.
Not distracted.
Precisely focused in the way exhausted people became after functioning too long without rest.
Neither spoke immediately.
The silence between them had begun changing lately. Less hostile now. More aware.
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The kind that carried unfinished thoughts underneath it.
Draven’s voice echoed through the chamber overhead.
“Scenario parameters: northern border collapse during winter occupation. Rebel interference active. Civilian populations trapped within hostile terrain sectors.” A pause. “Try not to lose the empire before lunch.”
The battlefield illuminated fully around them.
Supply routes blinked red across the mountain ridges while hostile movement projections spread rapidly through the lower valleys.
Evelyn studied the map carefully.
Then frowned.
“The eastern corridor is a distraction.”
Lucien glanced toward her almost immediately. “Why?”
“The weather patterns are wrong.” She pointed toward the projected storm systems crossing the terrain. “No army moves artillery through frozen ridge lines during black rain season unless they want to be noticed.”
Lucien’s attention sharpened slightly.
Around them, other student teams were already mobilizing troop divisions aggressively toward the eastern pass.
Evelyn continued scanning the map. “The western tunnels matter more.”
“The underground routes,” Lucien murmured quietly.
Not a question.
Recognition.
Evelyn looked toward him briefly. “You saw it too.”
His gaze remained fixed on the battlefield projection while something unreadable shifted behind his expression.
“Yes.”
For several seconds neither moved.
Then Lucien rerouted half their military divisions toward the western sectors without another word.
Evelyn blinked.
“You’re just trusting me?”
“Not entirely.” His attention remained on the map. “But your father taught you strategy differently than Noctis teaches it.”
The sentence landed softly between them.
Not accusation.
Observation.
Evelyn lowered her voice slightly. “You knew him well.”
Lucien adjusted the battlefield projections with calm precision while simulated troop movement spread across the mountains beneath his hands.
“I knew enough to understand why the empire feared him.”
The simulation intensified abruptly.
Rebel attacks erupted across the lower ridge lines while supply systems collapsed simultaneously through three separate regions.
Other student teams immediately lost formation cohesion.
Panic spread quickly through the command floor.
Lucien remained perfectly calm.
Watching him work up close unsettled Evelyn more than his magic did sometimes.
Everything about the way he processed information felt unnaturally precise. He moved through tactical projections faster than anyone else in the room, rerouting military sectors and civilian corridors simultaneously while anticipating system failures before they appeared fully across the battlefield.
Not intelligence alone.
Conditioning.
Like strategy had been carved directly into him somewhere beneath the mountain.
Evelyn realized suddenly they were falling into rhythm together.
She identified structural weaknesses.
Lucien adapted military responses instantly.
Neither needed to explain much aloud.
“Southern ridge,” Evelyn said quietly.
“Already collapsing it.”
“The civilians near sector twelve—”
“Transport rerouted three minutes ago.”
The coordination became almost disturbing after a while.
Effortless.
Around them, arguments broke out across other simulation teams while Draven monitored the room with increasing interest.
Cassian glanced toward their command station at one point with the exhausted expression of someone witnessing an avoidable disaster becoming emotionally complicated in real time.
By the final simulation phase, only their battlefield remained operational.
Victory probability:
96.4%
Highest recorded score that semester.
The chamber fell silent.
Not impressed.
Uneasy.
Draven studied the projection screens for several long seconds before shutting the simulation down entirely.
“Interesting,” he said finally.
At Noctis, that practically counted as applause.
Students began dispersing slowly afterward beneath low conversation and occasional glances directed toward Evelyn and Lucien with varying levels of discomfort.
Evelyn gathered her notes quietly while the command floor emptied around them.
“You trusted my decisions,” she said eventually.
Lucien removed one glove slowly before adjusting the simulation console manually, his attention lowered toward the fading battlefield projections.
“I trusted that you noticed what everyone else ignored.”
The answer lingered strangely in her chest.
Before she could respond, Draven approached from the upper platform.
His gaze moved once between them.
Assessing.
Calculating.
“Your coordination improved efficiency by twenty-two percent,” he said evenly. “That should concern both of you.”
Then he walked away.
Evelyn exhaled softly once he disappeared.
“Comforting professor.”
“He was attempting encouragement.”
“That’s deeply upsetting.”
Something faint shifted at the corner of Lucien’s mouth then.
Not quite a smile.
Closer than usual.
The moment disappeared quickly once students crossed near the command floor again.
Lucien stepped back automatically, distance returning between them with the practiced instinct of someone accustomed to being watched constantly.
Still, when Evelyn left the simulation hall an hour later and climbed the eastern dormitory staircase toward her room—
she found him waiting outside the corridor beneath dim cathedral lamps.
Not speaking.
Not approaching.
Just standing there in silence with snow-dark stormlight behind him, as though some unconscious part of him had followed her there before the rest remembered to stop.
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