DON'T READ, SHOULDN'T HAVE BEEN UPLOADED THIS TIME
The morning after their infiltration, dawn came with a whisper rather than a blaze. The first streaks of light bled through the academy's misted windows, illuminating a campus that had grown unnervingly silent. The storm that had raged beneath the surface — the secret tests, the tampered dungeon, the lies — all simmered quietly now, waiting for ignition.
Arios didn't sleep.
He sat by the dorm window, back straight, eyes focused on the horizon. His uniform jacket lay draped over the chair, untouched. The crystal archive from last night's discovery glimmered faintly on the desk — a sliver of truth wrapped in silence.
He replayed Garron's words in his mind.
You think you can change the system by exposing me? Foolish boy. The system made me.
The voice wouldn't leave. It echoed like a phantom, stitched into the corners of his thoughts.
A soft knock broke through his reflection.
He turned. The door opened, and Pokner stepped in first, her expression unreadable. Behind her were Liza and Lucy, both already dressed in their standard uniforms — though the slight tension in their posture betrayed how little rest they had gotten.
Pokner shut the door quietly. "The council convenes in an hour."
Arios gave a small nod. "And Garron?"
"Still teaching like nothing happened," Liza said with a scowl. "The man's pretending the dungeon meltdown never existed."
Lucy added, "Students are confused, but no one's talking. Word is, the administration ordered a full silence until the council meeting."
Arios glanced down at the crystal again. "Good. That gives us control of the first move."
Pokner crossed her arms. "I uploaded fragments of the file into a private relay system. If anything happens to us, it'll reach the council archive automatically."
"Smart," Arios said quietly.
Liza leaned against the wall, arms folded. "So this is it, huh? We walk in, throw the truth on the table, and hope the academy doesn't bury us with it."
"Not hope," Arios said. "Force."
That word carried enough weight to draw silence across the room.
Lucy frowned slightly. "You think they'll listen?"
"They'll have no choice," Arios replied. "If Garron really is Harrow, then even the council president won't risk shielding him."
Pokner tilted her head. "You sound like you've already planned for every outcome."
Arios finally turned toward them, eyes steady. "I have."
The Grand Hall of the Student Council was a chamber of glass and gold — a place designed to impress, intimidate, and remind every student that hierarchy ruled even in supposed equality. The council seats were arranged in a semicircle around a central platform, where summoned parties were made to stand.
Arios stepped onto that platform now, followed closely by Pokner, Lucy, and Liza.
The chatter in the hall dimmed the moment they appeared.
Council President Damian Ravencroft sat at the central throne-like seat, the morning sun outlining his silver hair like a crown. He regarded them with quiet curiosity rather than hostility. To his left sat the Vice President, Sera Caldwyn — known for her sharp tongue and even sharper adherence to academy law.
Damian raised a hand. The whispers died immediately.
"Representative Arios Pureheart," he said, his tone calm but carrying power. "You've requested an emergency hearing, invoking Article Twelve — direct evidence of faculty misconduct. State your case."
Arios stepped forward, meeting the president's gaze. His voice was steady, low, but clear enough to echo through the hall.
"Three days ago, during the Dungeon Evaluation Exam, Floor Six experienced an anomaly. Mana activity deviated from predicted parameters by a margin exceeding 300%. Students were separated through unapproved illusionary fields. Upon investigation, I discovered an external interference layer — embedded within the dungeon's mana matrix."
He raised his hand, and Pokner placed the crystal archive into it. He activated it, and the hall dimmed as holographic text and diagrams projected into the air — pages from the forbidden Project Aegis files.
Gasps spread through the seated members. The diagrams showed energy mapping of combatants, neural feedback models, and a faint signature — Lead Supervisor: G. Harrow.
Damian leaned forward slightly, his expression unreadable. "Go on."
Arios continued. "Instructor Garron has been modifying the exam dungeons to harvest student resonance data. The patterns match the structure of Project Aegis — a banned experiment that once resulted in severe mana corruption cases across early academies. He's continued that work under a false identity."
"Those are strong accusations," Vice President Sera interjected, her tone cool. "Do you have proof that Garron and Harrow are the same person?"
Arios turned to Pokner, who activated a second projection — a comparison of mana signatures extracted from the dungeon and archived council records.
The readings matched. Perfectly.
The room fell still.
Lucy watched the council's expressions shift — disbelief turning into unease. Liza, standing with her hands behind her back, didn't speak, but the faint smirk tugging at her lips said she enjoyed seeing the pompous officials squirm.
Damian finally broke the silence. "Instructor Garron has been summoned for questioning. He should arrive momentarily."
A door at the far end of the hall opened with a hiss.
Garron stepped through.
He looked composed — almost smug — as his gaze swept over the students standing before him. He adjusted his cuffs, then smiled faintly. "So this is what this is about."
Pokner's hands clenched at her sides. Arios didn't flinch.
Damian gestured toward him. "Instructor Garron, you are accused of conducting unauthorized research, falsifying academy records, and endangering student safety. Do you have anything to say in your defense?"
Garron chuckled. "Defense? There's nothing to defend. What these children discovered are fragments — old, corrupted logs with no context. The project they mention is theoretical. And as for the dungeon anomalies — those were calibration errors. Routine."
"Lies," Pokner snapped. "You manipulated the circuits. You nearly killed half the examinees!"
Garron's smile didn't fade. "Emotion doesn't change facts, Miss Pokner."
Arios took one step forward. His voice cut clean through the murmurs.
"Then explain this."
He activated the last data fragment — a short recorded visual from the dungeon's control core. It showed Garron's silhouette standing before the glowing data spire, his voice faint but clear.
"Initiating resonance sweep. Begin recording. Let's see how the Pureheart reacts to fear."
A collective intake of breath filled the hall.
Garron's smile faltered for the first time.
Damian's eyes narrowed. "That voice — it's yours."
The instructor's composure cracked. "You're making a mistake. That footage could've been fabricated—"
"Mana imprints don't lie," Pokner interrupted sharply. "Your aura signature is in every frame."
For a moment, no one spoke. Then Damian slowly rose from his seat.
"Instructor Garron, until a formal tribunal is held, you are hereby suspended from all duties and privileges. You will surrender your access to the dungeon systems and remain confined to the faculty quarters pending investigation."
Garron's jaw tightened. "You think you can silence me? You think this ends with me?"
Damian's voice stayed calm. "No. It ends with the truth."
Guards stepped forward. Garron didn't resist — not physically. But his eyes, when they locked with Arios's, burned with a cold, dangerous hatred.
"You've only seen the surface, boy," he said quietly. "There's always another layer beneath."
Then he was led away.
The doors closed behind him.
For a long time, silence reigned.
Finally, Damian turned toward Arios. "You've done well. But understand this — your actions today will have ripples. The academy is not as unified as it appears."
"I know," Arios said simply.
Damian gave a faint, almost weary smile. "Then prepare for the consequences. You've stepped into a game that's much older than any of us."
He struck the gavel lightly. "Hearing adjourned."
When they left the hall, the air outside felt heavier — but lighter too, in a strange way. The tension that had coiled around them for weeks was beginning to ease, even if only slightly.
Liza exhaled loudly. "That… could've gone worse."
Lucy nodded softly. "He's done for, right?"
"Not yet," Pokner murmured. "Men like him don't fall quietly."
Arios didn't answer. His gaze lingered on the path ahead — the morning light cutting across the stone pavement.
Somewhere inside him, he knew Pokner was right. Garron — Harrow — whatever name he chose, wasn't the kind of man to vanish quietly. There would be echoes. Retaliations. Shadows yet to come.
But for now, they had won a battle. And for now, that would be enough.
He turned slightly toward the others. "Let's get some rest."
Liza snorted. "Finally something I can agree on."
Lucy smiled faintly. "You mean, before the next crisis?"
Pokner gave a soft, almost amused sigh. "You two have no idea how to relax, do you?"
Arios didn't respond, but as he walked beside them — their quiet laughter faintly chasing away the echoes of the morning — something in him loosened.
For the first time in weeks, he allowed himself a breath that didn't taste like tension.
The sun climbed higher.
And though the shadows of what came next still lingered beyond the horizon, the day felt a little brighter.
**********
[A/N:] IT HAS BEEN GREAT WRITING THIS BOOK, BUT AS THINGS COME, THE BOOK HAD TAKEN A BAD TURN. I WILL TRY AND GIVE IT A WELL AND THOUGHT OUT ENDING.
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