"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 20 — The Families That Chose Sides
Chapter 20 — The Families That Chose Sides
The snow stopped briefly that afternoon.
For the first time in weeks, pale winter sunlight touched the cathedral towers of Noctis instead of storm clouds. Students drifted carefully through the courtyards beneath armed patrols and tightened security wards while military banners snapped sharply in the wind overhead.
The academy looked beautiful again.
Which somehow felt worse now.
Evelyn crossed the western cloisters alone with Cassian’s note folded inside her coat pocket.
Meet me below the old bell tower. Come alone.
No greeting.
No sarcasm.
That alone unsettled her.
The bell tower sat near the oldest edge of campus where the cathedral walls overlooked frozen cliffs descending into black pine forests below. Few students came there anymore. The stairs remained half-collapsed from some long-forgotten winter storm, and the bells themselves hadn’t rung in years.
Cassian waited beside the broken railing when she arrived.
He looked exhausted.
Not physically tired in the ordinary Noctis sense.
Uneasy.
The kind of tension people carried after deciding whether to tell the truth and regretting both options equally.
Evelyn slowed slightly. “That expression usually means disaster.”
Cassian gave a faint humorless laugh. “You’re adapting beautifully to this school.”
The wind moved sharply through the ruined tower around them while distant bells echoed faintly from the main cathedral across campus.
For several seconds neither spoke.
Then Cassian handed her a sealed envelope.
No imperial insignia.
No academy crest.
Instead the wax seal bore a symbol Evelyn recognized immediately from the hidden tunnel maps beneath Noctis.
The rebel crest.
Her pulse slowed.
“You’re connected to them.”
Cassian leaned back lightly against the stone railing, eyes fixed somewhere toward the frozen mountains beyond the academy.
“My family funds them.”
The honesty landed heavily between them.
Evelyn stared at him. “Cassian—”
“The Reeves have financed anti-imperial operations for almost twelve years.” His mouth tightened slightly. “Officially we manufacture transport systems and agricultural exports. Unofficially we’ve been helping northern resistance groups survive long enough to become inconvenient.”
The winter air suddenly felt much colder.
Evelyn looked down at the envelope in her hands.
Inside rested military route maps and coded intelligence reports stamped with imperial northern command markers.
One name appeared repeatedly throughout the documents:
LUCIEN MORDANE.
Her stomach tightened immediately.
Cassian watched her carefully now.
“The empire’s preparing for civil war,” he said quietly. “And Lucien is supposed to lead the northern campaigns once deployment begins.”
Evelyn folded the documents slowly. “I already knew they were sending him north.”
“No.” Cassian’s voice lowered further. “You know they’re sending a prince.”
A pause.
“We know what they’re actually sending.”
The silence afterward felt dangerous.
Wind moved through the broken bell tower while snow slipped slowly from the cathedral rooftops far below.
Evelyn looked toward him carefully. “What exactly are you implying?”
Cassian hesitated for the first time since she met him.
That frightened her more than anything else he’d said.
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“When rebels survive encounters with Lucien,” he said quietly, “they don’t describe battles.” His gaze lifted toward her finally. “They describe massacres.”
The words settled hard beneath her ribs.
Evelyn thought suddenly of the ballroom attack.
The frozen ruins.
The shadows crushing living things apart like paper.
“He loses control,” Cassian continued softly. “And when he does, people disappear.”
The wind sharpened outside the tower.
Evelyn folded her arms tightly against the cold while unease spread slowly through her chest.
“Why are you telling me this?”
Cassian looked exhausted suddenly.
Because he hated the answer already.
“Because he’s attached to you now.”
The sentence hollowed the air between them.
Evelyn looked away first.
Not denial.
Just instinct.
Cassian stepped closer beside the broken tower railing. “You think I’m judging him. I’m not.” His voice remained calm. “I know what the empire did to him.”
“Then you know none of this is his fault.”
“I know that if war starts, fault stops mattering very quickly.”
The brutal truth of it made her chest ache.
Below the bell tower, military patrols crossed the cathedral courtyards beneath silver banners and armed escort lines.
Noctis was preparing itself.
For war.
For rebellion.
For Lucien.
Cassian leaned one shoulder against the stone beside her while the old bells creaked faintly overhead in the wind.
“The rebels believe the empire built him specifically for civil suppression,” he said quietly. “An unkillable royal heir loyal enough to destroy entire uprisings before they spread.”
Evelyn thought of Lucien standing alone beside crypt altars before dawn asking if she feared him now.
The memory hurt unexpectedly.
“He’s not a monster,” she said softly.
Cassian’s expression tightened slightly. “That’s exactly why this becomes dangerous.”
The tower fell silent again.
Snow drifted through the broken arches around them while distant academy bells rang the beginning of evening military exercises.
Then movement below caught Evelyn’s attention.
Students had gathered near the central execution courtyard beneath the cathedral terraces.
Imperial officers surrounded the raised stone platform at the center while military banners snapped sharply in the winter wind overhead.
Lucien stood among them.
Black military coat.
Dark gloves.
Silver-gray eyes unreadable from this distance.
Three captured assassins knelt at the center platform under armed restraint while General Rhys and several northern command officers observed from the upper steps.
Evelyn’s pulse tightened immediately.
Cassian followed her gaze downward. “The empire likes public obedience demonstrations.”
Below them, one of the prisoners screamed something unintelligible toward the officers.
Lucien didn’t react.
Didn’t move.
He simply listened while snow drifted slowly across the execution square around him.
Then General Rhys said something quietly at his side.
Lucien stepped forward.
The entire courtyard went still.
Even from the tower distance, Evelyn could feel the atmosphere changing below.
Not fear exactly.
Expectation.
Lucien raised one gloved hand slightly.
The shadows answered instantly.
Blackness spread sharply across the execution platform beneath the prisoners while terrified shouting erupted through the square. One assassin tried to run before the shadows wrapped violently around his legs and dragged him hard enough across the stone to leave blood behind.
The crowd recoiled.
Lucien remained perfectly motionless.
Not rage.
Not cruelty.
Worse.
Control.
The execution ended quickly after that.
Too quickly.
The shadows disappeared back beneath the stone while silence settled across the courtyard in stunned waves.
Lucien stood at the center of it all breathing evenly, expression unreadable beneath winter light and military banners.
The empire’s perfect weapon.
Evelyn felt something painful twist beneath her ribs.
Because she knew what no one else in that courtyard understood:
Lucien hated every second of it.
As though sensing her watching, Lucien lifted his gaze suddenly toward the ruined bell tower high above the courtyard.
Their eyes met across the distance.
And for one impossible moment, the terrifying prince standing among executions looked unbearably tired instead.
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