Vermont nodded understanding, then stood and moved toward the door.
The Unnamed Four followed him out without prompting, giving privacy to those who needed it.
Adrian looked up from his position beside Elizabeth, his young face showing exhaustion, and quietly left as well, closing the door behind him.
Damian extended his Willpower and Perception, scanning the building and surrounding area for any surveillance or spying attempts.
Then he looked at Elizabeth, who still sat facing the wall, her shoulders trembling slightly.
"Elizabeth."
She didnât turn. Just sat there staring at nothing.
Damianâs voice came out flat.
"You were meant to die today."
That got her attention. Her head turned slowly, eyes red and swollen from crying, dried tear tracks marking her face.
"One of my sealed memories unlocked. Thatâs how I found you."
He moved closer despite the pain shooting through his healed leg, each step deliberate.
"It triggered at the exact moment you were about to die. The old beggar mentioned you in that memory. Said you were one of the people with the strongest potential. Said you died before reaching it."
Elizabethâs voice came out hoarse.
"Then you... you knew. Before coming. You knew what would happen."
"I knew you were supposed to die. I didnât know anything else."
He stood beside her bed now, close enough that she had to look up at him.
"Do you know who orchestrated this?"
Elizabeth shook her head as fresh tears formed.
"Whatâs going on in your family?"
Her laugh came out broken and bitter.
"What isnât going on? Main lineage became weak after Father died in his so-called accident. One of the branch heads is acting family head now. Aunt was the only S rank left in the main lineage protecting us..."
Her voice cracked.
"Now sheâs dead too."
"Your grandfather?"
Elizabethâs smile was helpless.
"Grandfather is too busy with important matters."
Damianâs jaw clenched.
"...Too busy to care that his family is being systematically murdered?"
"Heâs always been too busy... For years. Even before Father died."
Her hands twisted in her lap, knuckles white.
"Right now, many powerful awakeners have gone somewhere. Their whereabouts arenât known. Everyone strong enough to matter is... elsewhere."
âConvenient timing for an assassination attempt.â
Damian stayed quiet for a moment, processing.
"Stay in the Academy, start hiding your whereabouts and donât go out for missions."
Elizabeth looked away, staring at the wall again.
"I was the one who was supposed to die. If... you hadnât come, Aunt would still beâ"
"She made her choice."
Elizabethâs head snapped toward him, anger flashing in her eyes for the first time.
"Youâ"
"She chose to protect you. That was her decision... Not yours."
"She died because of me!"
The words exploded out of her, raw and desperate.
"She died because I was too weak! Because I couldnât defend myself! Because Iâ"
"Because someone tried to kill you."
Damianâs voice cut through her spiral like a blade.
"People came to assassinate you. They involved hundreds of awakeners with multiple S ranks. Probably planned it for weeks, maybe months. Your family lineage is dying, and youâre facing assassination after assassination."
He paused, his crimson eyes boring into hers.
"And your thought is to what? Die? Let them win?"
Elizabeth looked down at her hands, her voice dropping to barely above a whisper.
"You donât understand. I canât... I canât live knowing she died just to save me. The guilt... itâs suffocating me. Why do I get to live when sheâ"
"Stop."
She flinched at the harshness in his voice.
"Just stop... Listen to yourself."
Damian pulled a chair over and sat directly in front of her, close enough that she couldnât look away.
"Let me ask you something. When your aunt decided to use that forbidden skill, when she chose to sacrifice herself... did she ask your permission?"
Elizabeth blinked, thrown by the question.
"What?"
"Did she turn to you and say, âElizabeth, Iâm going to die for you now. Is that acceptable? Do you approve of this decision?â"
"Thatâs not... she didnât have time toâ"
"Exactly. She didnât have time. She didnât need permission. She saw a situation and made a choice based on what mattered most to her."
His voice was calm and logical, stripping away the emotion to expose the structure underneath.
"So tell me... if the decision was entirely hers, if she made it without asking you, without needing your approval... how is her death your responsibility?"
Elizabeth opened her mouth, closed it. Her brow furrowed.
"Because... because if I was stronger, she wouldnât have needed toâ"
"If the assassins hadnât come, she wouldnât have needed to either. If your grandfather had protected his family, she wouldnât have needed to. If the branch families werenât trying to murder you, she wouldnât have needed to."
Damian leaned forward slightly.
"Youâre taking responsibility for a choice that wasnât yours to make, while ignoring everyone who actually caused this situation. Why?"
"Because sheâs dead and Iâm alive!"
The words came out anguished.
"Because Iâm sitting here and sheâs not! Because every time I close my eyes, I see her face, and I know she died so I could keep breathing!"
"...And?"
The single word hung in the air like a challenge.
Elizabeth stared at him, confusion breaking through her grief.
"And? What do you mean âandâ?"
"You feel guilty because she died for you. I understand that. But what does your guilt accomplish?"
He tilted his head slightly, his crimson eyes never leaving hers.
"Does your guilt bring her back? Does it honor her sacrifice? Does it protect you from the next assassination attempt?"
"Thatâs not the pointâ"
"Then what is the point?"
His voice remained calm, but there was steel underneath.
"Youâre wallowing in guilt like itâs some kind of tribute. Like feeling terrible enough will somehow balance the scales. But guilt without action is just... indulgence."
The word hit her like a slap.
"How dare youâ"
"Itâs comfortable."
Damianâs voice dropped lower.
"Guilt is comfortable, self-pity is comfortable, crying about how you donât deserve to live is comfortable because it means you donât have to do anything. You donât have to make hard choices. You donât have to face the people who killed her."
He paused, letting that sink in.
"Youâre not grieving her death, Elizabeth. Youâre hiding behind it."
Elizabethâs hands clenched into fists, tears streaming down her face.
"You donât understand. You couldnât possiblyâ"
"Look at me."
His voice cracked like a whip.
"Actually look."
She did, and what she saw made her breath catch.
Something suppressed behind those crimson eyes. Layers upon layers of grief and rage and self-hatred compressed into such absolute control it was terrifying.
âHeâs... how is he...â