Extra To Protagonist

Chapter 137: Free (3)



The fire burned dry. Pop, hiss, flicker. One log cracked down its center like a spine. Sparks crawled upward and vanished.

No one spoke for a while.

The night stretched too wide for comfort, but no one huddled. They each held to their distance like it mattered. Like proximity risked something more than touch.

Merlin sat near the outer edge, not facing the fire directly. Just angled enough to see reflections on steel. To track movement without staring.

Dion broke the silence first.

Not loud. Not curious. Just casual, like slipping a dagger under the edge of cloth.

"So… the Academy."

Nathan didn't answer. Seraphina didn't twitch.

Elara glanced sideways, fingers resting on her thigh, not her blade. "What about it?"

Dion scratched at the leather bracer on his forearm. "You all came from there. Not a camp. Not a training ring. An Academy. Which sounds a lot like authority."

Merlin didn't move.

Mae leaned forward on her knees, eyes bright in the firelight. "You have teachers? Ranks? Magic built into buildings?"

Seraphina's voice came low. "Yes."

That was all.

Mae blinked. "So… they trained you? For this?"

"No," Elara said before anyone else could.

Her voice was flat. Not cruel. Just trimmed of anything decorative.

"They trained us for control. For threats with names. Not this."

Dion chuckled softly. "And what is this, exactly? Titanos?" He gestured out into the dark, to the spaces between branches. "This feels like something no school signs off on."

Nathan finally spoke. "It isn't."

He stared into the fire, not at anyone.

Dion tapped a knuckle on his knee. "You four—you're tighter than you let on. Know how each other moves, thinks. Makes me wonder."

Merlin raised his head slowly. Not warning. Not challenge.

Just presence.

Elara shifted. Not visibly. Just enough that her shadow stretched closer to the fire.

Mae didn't back off. "You have dorms? Uniforms? Schedules?"

Seraphina looked at her. "We did."

Dion frowned. "What does that mean?"

Nathan looked at Merlin, then turned back to the flames. "It means we're not going back."

Silence again.

Except this time, it wasn't clean.

Because something had been said. Not declared, but traced. A line, invisible but permanent.

They weren't like Dion and Mae. And the line between them wasn't cultural.

It was dimensional.

They just didn't know that part yet.

The fire had dropped low again, no longer crackling, just pulsing in shallow orange waves, like a dying heart beating out warmth into a body that refused to sleep.

Merlin sat with one knee pulled in, arm draped over it, watching the last burn off the wood like he could will it to last longer.

The stars hadn't risen, but the sky had gone clear, no clouds, no cover. Just that pale, impossible stretch of nothing above them.

Dion broke the silence first.

"You keep saying 'academy' like it's supposed to mean something to the rest of us."

His voice wasn't sharp. Just honest. Blunt in the way people get when tired of guessing.

Mae sat across from him, hands wrapped around her ankles. She didn't look up, but her shoulders had shifted, barely. Like someone listening to the wrong conversation on purpose.

Elara's eyes narrowed slightly. Not hostile. Just registering.

Seraphina didn't say anything yet. She never jumped first.

Merlin's gaze didn't shift from the fire. "It's a training institution. That's all."

"That's not all," Mae said. Not accusing. Just tired. "You all talk about it like it's a border no one crosses twice."

Nathan stirred slightly beside him. "That's just the way it feels when you leave."

Dion squinted. "So what is it exactly then? A military camp? A magic school?"

"A bit of both," Merlin answered. "But not in the way stories tell it."

He rubbed a thumb across the hem of his sleeve, staring at the fabric like it held a translation he couldn't quite read out loud.

"They test for star inheritance when you're young. The marks show up like echoes. Not predictable. Not clean. If you have one, they take you. That's the contract."

"Take?" Mae asked. "As in—?"

"As in train. Feed. Shelter. Teach. It's not cruel. It's just absolute."

Nathan folded his arms. "It's not a prison."

"But you don't get to leave," Dion said.

"You don't want to," Elara corrected softly.

Merlin finally looked at them.

"You're not forced to stay. They just make sure you never find a better reason to go."

Seraphina's tone cut in, quiet, clipped. "They gave us a purpose. And purpose, when you've grown up without it, doesn't feel like a cage."

Mae frowned. "So what do they teach you?"

"Elara?"

She didn't move.

"Show them."

A pause.

Then Elara rolled her shoulders once, shifted her posture, and in one slow, precise motion, flicked a hand through the air. Her fingers didn't spark. No light. No sound. But her breath changed. The rhythm of it. And when she looked at Mae, the other girl flinched.

Not because of power.

Because of control.

"I was third in formation drills," Elara said, low. "Second in combat prediction. First in detection."

"What does that mean?" Dion asked.

Elara turned her eyes to him.

"It means if you'd moved your blade half an inch to the right back at the ridge, I would've broken your wrist before you finished the swing."

Dion went still.

She didn't smirk. Didn't gloat.

Just resumed her posture.

Mae raised her eyebrows. "Is that supposed to impress us?"

"No," Elara said. "It's supposed to explain."

Merlin nodded, slowly. "The Academy doesn't raise leaders. It doesn't raise soldiers. It raises tools. Ones sharp enough not to need sharpening."

Dion shook his head. "You sound like fanatics."

"No," Nathan said. "Just students."

"And what happens if someone fails?" Mae asked.

"They don't," Seraphina said. Her voice was too calm. "They get reassigned. Not punished. Just re-routed."

"Re-routed where?"

"To something smaller," Merlin said. "Quieter. Not dangerous."

"You mean to die," Dion muttered.

Merlin's gaze didn't shift. "No. I mean they're kept alive. But not used."

The fire cracked, sharp and sudden. A log split with a hiss, like a breath held too long.

Elara leaned forward slightly. "You don't get it. The Academy isn't a machine. It's a city. A hierarchy. The only thing it punishes is chaos. And even then—it studies it first."

Mae scowled. "You all speak like it's normal. Like getting ripped from your families to join a training camp before you're old enough to pick your own boots is… expected."

"Where we're from?" Merlin said. "It is."

Dion was silent a moment.

Then: "That's not where we're from."

No one answered that.

[The Crownless Mother watches.]

[The Messenger is silent.]

[The Smiling Witness leans forward.]

[Observer Count: 49]

Merlin sat back, resting his weight against his hands. The ground was colder now. More honest.

"They teach us how to survive things you shouldn't survive. Shadow doubles. Mana inversions. Trial labs. But they don't teach you how to talk about it after."

Elara nodded once.

Nathan's eyes were still on the fire. "There was a kid two years above us. Wanted out. They let him go."

Mae's brows lifted. "Then what's the problem?"

"They let him go into a class four instability zone," Seraphina said. "With a faulty regulator. Solo mission."

Silence again.

"That's not discipline," Elara said. "That's clearance."

Dion rubbed the bridge of his nose. "I still don't get it. You all keep saying it wasn't a cage. But it sounds like one."

"It wasn't," Merlin said. "But that doesn't mean we weren't locked in."

The wind picked up. Cold. Thin. It rattled the fire just enough to shift the shadows.

Mae stared into it, not blinking.

"Then why did you leave?"

Merlin didn't answer right away.

Neither did Elara.

Seraphina looked at him.

Nathan did too.

Merlin exhaled once.

"We didn't."

"What?" Dion asked. "Was it training?"

"No," Merlin said.

Nathan nodded once. "We weren't trained to fight people."

Mae swallowed. "So… why are you all on the same team now?"

Merlin looked at her. His voice was quieter now. Like something he wasn't sure was supposed to be said.

Then Elara whispered, almost to herself, "I wonder how long they'll let that last."

[The First Lawkeeper records.]

[The Devourer speaks: "We'll see."]

[The Smiling Witness does not blink.]

Merlin stared into the fire.

And didn't look away.

Not from the heat.

Not from the questions.

Not from the gods.

Not anymore.

They rose as one when the wind shifted, a low surge through Titanos's scrub, sounding different now. Like metal dragged across stone.

Merlin sensed it before anyone spoke. Elara's hand hovered near her knife; Nathan's shoulders tensed. Mae and Dion mirrored it. Seraphina closed the gap behind them.

A shape crested the ridge, not a person, but mounted.

A figure on a creature that stamped the dirt with iron hooves. Armor gleamed even under muted dusk. Its path was deliberate, cutting straight toward them.

No word passed between the group. Their fire dwindled to embers. They fanned out, instinct guiding them into position around Merlin without planning it.


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