"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 27 — The Shape Of Obsession
Chapter 27 — The Shape Of Obsession
Noctis noticed immediately.
Not the kiss itself.
No one had seen that.
But academies like Noctis survived through observation sharpened into instinct, and something between Evelyn and Lucien had changed too dramatically afterward to remain hidden for long.
People sensed it in silence first.
In the way Lucien’s attention followed her unconsciously through crowded cathedral halls.
In the way shadows moved differently near her now — quieter, almost watchful instead of restless.
In the way Evelyn had stopped flinching whenever he appeared suddenly beside her like winter arriving through a doorway.
Rumors spread within forty-eight hours.
By the third day, students physically stopped speaking when the two of them entered the same room together.
Evelyn discovered this during military ethics lecture.
Professor Draven stood near the cathedral windows discussing imperial authority and civilian suppression doctrine while snow drifted endlessly beyond the stained glass. Students filled the tiered stone seating beneath flickering chandeliers, notebooks open, expressions exhausted.
Evelyn sat beside Cassian near the lower rows.
Lucien occupied the back section alone as usual.
Except now “alone” no longer felt accurate.
Because even without touching her, his attention remained fixed on her with a kind of terrible unconscious gravity.
Evelyn felt it constantly.
Like standing too near a storm system.
Cassian noticed too.
“This,” he murmured quietly without looking up from his notes, “has evolved beyond emotionally complicated.”
Evelyn kept her eyes forward. “You’re dramatic.”
“No, actually.” Cassian finally glanced toward the back rows. “That’s the expression people usually have right before kingdoms collapse.”
Evelyn resisted the urge to turn around.
Mostly because she already knew Lucien was watching her.
She could feel it.
The awareness settled beneath her skin now in ways growing increasingly difficult to survive calmly.
Draven continued lecturing near the windows.
“When empires lose moral legitimacy,” he said evenly, “they compensate through spectacle violence and centralized fear.”
Somewhere behind Evelyn, shadows shifted faintly across the cathedral floor.
Not enough for most students to notice.
Enough for her.
Cassian noticed her noticing.
“Oh, that’s deeply unhealthy.”
“What is?”
“You reacting to his emotional state before he does.”
The answer unsettled her because it was true.
Lucien’s shadows had become tied to emotion more visibly after the archives.
Or maybe they always had been, and she simply understood the language now.
Either possibility frightened her.
Across the room, Draven’s attention shifted briefly toward the back rows.
Toward Lucien.
A pause followed.
Small.
Careful.
Like even Draven had noticed something unstable changing beneath the surface lately.
“Control,” the professor continued eventually, “is easiest to lose when another person becomes more important than self-preservation.”
The silence afterward sharpened instantly.
Several students looked toward Lucien automatically.
Lucien didn’t react.
Didn’t move.
But the shadows beneath his desk spread once sharply across the stone floor before stilling again.
Evelyn’s pulse tightened.
Cassian closed his eyes briefly like a man spiritually exhausted by everyone around him.
ADVERTISEMENT
After lecture ended, students filtered quickly from the hall beneath low conversation and sideways glances.
Lucien waited.
Not obviously.
He simply remained seated while the cathedral emptied around him until Evelyn finally approached the back rows beneath drifting candlelight.
For several seconds neither spoke.
The tension between them had become unbearable lately.
Not awkwardness.
Awareness.
The memory of Lucien kissing her against the war archive shelves still lived vividly beneath her skin every time he looked at her too long.
Which happened constantly now.
“You’re distracted,” Evelyn murmured softly.
Lucien leaned back slightly against the cathedral bench behind him.
His eyes looked darker lately.
More tired.
And somehow more alive at the same time.
“That sounds hypocritical coming from you.”
Fair.
Snow tapped softly against the stained-glass windows overhead while the empty lecture hall settled around them in candlelit silence.
Evelyn lowered her voice. “Your shadows reacted during class.”
Lucien’s jaw tightened almost invisibly.
“I know.”
The answer arrived too quickly.
Like he had spent the entire lecture fighting them back beneath the surface.
Evelyn stepped closer instinctively.
Lucien’s gaze followed the movement immediately.
Always immediately now.
“What happened after the archives?” she asked quietly.
For several long seconds he said nothing.
Then:
“You stopped feeling separate from my survival instinct.”
The honesty of it hollowed the room.
Evelyn stared at him.
Lucien looked away first this time, attention shifting toward the snowstorm outside the cathedral windows.
“The shadows respond strongest to emotional fixation,” he continued quietly. “The physicians documented that years ago.”
Fixation.
The word landed badly between them.
Not because it sounded false.
Because it sounded clinical enough to hurt.
Evelyn crossed the final distance between them slowly.
“You’re not some damaged experiment reacting incorrectly to attachment.”
Lucien laughed softly once beneath his breath.
Exhausted.
“You say that,” he murmured, “while I nearly strangled an aristocratic bloodline at dinner because someone poisoned your wine.”
Evelyn stopped directly in front of him now.
Close enough to feel warmth lingering beneath the coldness he carried everywhere else.
“That wasn’t obsession,” she said quietly.
Lucien looked up toward her.
The exhaustion in his expression nearly undid her.
“It wasn’t rational either.”
No.
It wasn’t.
And the terrifying part was she understood exactly why.
The empire had raised him in isolation, taught him affection was weakness, then handed him enough violence to survive anything except tenderness.
Now every protective instinct inside him had nowhere gentle to go.
Evelyn reached toward him carefully.
Lucien went still immediately.
Her fingers brushed lightly against the side of his face beneath the dim cathedral light.
The shadows beneath the benches disappeared completely.
Both of them noticed.
Lucien closed his eyes briefly at the contact like relief itself had become physically painful.
When he spoke again, his voice sounded rougher.
“You should probably start fearing me at some point.”
Evelyn’s thumb moved softly against his cheekbone.
“Lucien.”
His eyes opened slowly.
And God—
the way he looked at her now no longer resembled restraint.
It resembled hunger starved carefully for too long.
That realization followed her all the way back to her dormitory hours later.
The academy corridors had gone quiet by then beneath heavy snowfall and curfew bells echoing through the towers overhead.
Evelyn climbed the eastern staircase slowly, exhaustion finally catching up with her somewhere near midnight.
Only when she reached her dormitory door did she stop.
Lucien sat outside her room against the cathedral wall beneath dim corridor lamps.
Asleep.
Or something close to it.
One arm rested loosely across his knees while shadows drifted faintly around the floor near him like exhausted animals finally settling.
Evelyn’s chest tightened painfully.
He had come here after curfew.
Not to speak.
Not to touch her.
Just to remain near enough that whatever lived inside him quieted beside her door.
ADVERTISEMENT
You May Also Like
-
CompletedChapter 10
THE THINGS SHE FORGOT
Five years ago, Evelyn Harper’s best friend vanished during a storm on Blackwater Bridge. The body was never found. And Evelyn can’t remember the last two hours of that night. Now a successful true-crime podcaster, Evelyn receives an anonymous video showing her at the bridge the night Lena disappeared. Rain pouring. Blood on her hands. Then she meets Dr. Adrian Cross. Brilliant criminal psychiatrist. Cold. Controlled. Impossible to read. The terrifying part? He remembers Evelyn. Even when she doesn’t remember him. As buried memories begin clawing their way back, Evelyn discovers hidden recordings, missing evidence, and a horrifying possibility: What if she was never just the witness? What if she was always part of the crime? Perfect for fans of dark psychological thrillers, obsession romance, and jaw-dropping twists, The Things She Forgot is the kind of novel that keeps readers awake long after midnight.Human Nature|Mutual Pining|Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Possessive Love|Reunion Romance|Redemption Arc|Second Chance10.3k words5 2 -
CompletedChapter 15
Heartbeat Under Fire
In a city torn by war, fearless journalist Clara Hart captures chaos through her lens—until a hidden landmine nearly kills her. Ethan Cross, a skilled bomb disposal expert, saves her life, igniting a spark neither expected. Amid explosions, betrayal, and loss, survival is their first priority—but passion is unavoidable. Can love survive the battlefield, or will war claim more than just their hearts?Healing Romance|Mutual Pining|Survival|Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Adventure16.4k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 36
BENEATH THE MASK
Kael Vanth survived black sites, covert wars, psychological conditioning, and years of being turned into something more useful than human. Tier-One mercenary. BLACK VEIL operative. A masked ghost people whispered about in locked rooms. The kind of man governments denied existing while secretly pointing toward impossible problems and saying: > “Send him.” He was silent, lethal, emotionally unreadable. A man who wore tactical gloves like skin and violence like breathing. Even other mercenaries kept their distance. As for someone like that— Eliana Vale, civilian translator, professional liar, and deeply unqualified emotional disaster, had one immediate thought: > “He looks like he hasn’t slept since the fall of Rome.” Then one night, Kael watched her calmly steal classified intel from beneath the nose of an armed contractor while pretending to flirt over champagne. He was monitoring the room from a rooftop sniper position. One second he was calculating bullet trajectory. The next? Eliana smiled at the target, slipped a data drive into her sleeve, shattered a wine glass into a guard’s throat, and walked out before the body even hit the floor. Kael forgot to pull the trigger. For exactly four seconds. The longest distraction he’d had in years. ... Later, Eliana sat cross-legged on the floor of a freezing safehouse, translating encrypted files while six armed operatives cleaned blood off their gear nearby. No one spoke. Mostly because Ghost was standing behind her. Watching. Eliana didn’t look up. > “Does your organization offer therapy, or is unresolved trauma part of the uniform?” The room went dead silent. Kane slowly stopped breathing. Because nobody joked with Ghost. Nobody. Kael stood motionless beside the table, skull-black mask tilted slightly toward her. Then finally: > “Eliana.” She glanced up lazily. > “That’s my name, yes. Excellent observational skills.” His grey eyes lowered briefly to the bruise on her wrist. Then to the knife hidden in her boot. Then back to her face. > “You’re hiding something.” Eliana smiled too quickly. > “So are you.” Another long silence. Heavy. Dangerous. Then Kael stepped closer. Close enough for her to hear the roughness in his breathing beneath the mask. > “You should be afraid of me.” Eliana looked directly into his eyes. > “You keep saying that like it’s a warning instead of a confession.” ① Emotionally repressed masked mercenary × emotionally guarded civilian liar ② He was trained to kill without hesitation. She’s the first thing that ever made him hesitate. ③ Slow burn / masked antihero / mutual obsession / black humor / PTSD mercenary / dangerous emotional dependency / “she makes the weapon want to become human.”Healing Romance|Mutual Pining|Survival|Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Yandere|Possessive Love|Redemption Arc|HE|Adventure32.8k words5 10