Caelan Veyrās office was on the top floor of the main school building, and it looked like it belonged to someone who had never quite decided whether they were staying.
The furniture was expensive but impersonal ā a dark wood desk, two leather chairs, a shelf that held exactly three books and a potted plant that was either very well-maintained or very fake. The window behind the desk offered a wide view of the school grounds, the East Annex visible in the distance with its low wall and quiet courtyard. The only personal touch was a small framed photograph on the corner of the desk, face-down, that Selene had never seen him look at.
Caelan was leaning back in his chair with his feet almost on the desk when she walked in. He looked relaxed. He always looked relaxed. It was, Selene had come to realize, one of the more dangerous things about him.
"Selene," he said, smiling. "Sit down. How was the assessment?"
"You read my daily reports."
"I did. But I want to hear you say it."
ā ⢠ā
Selene sat down and placed her tablet on the desk between them. She had prepared a summary, organized by student, with performance data, behavioral notes, and her own observations. She had done this kind of report before for Alliance instructors. It was usually straightforward.
This one was not.
"Six of the seven are within normal parameters," she said. "Kaelen Voss is the strongest overall ā excellent foundation, cold discipline, exactly what youād expect from House Voss resources. Lin Yueying is the most consistent ā high-quality energy, flawless control, clearly trained from a young age. Iris Blackthorn is sharp and precise. Yuelan Hong is a natural fighter. Cassian Rook is rough but reliable. Lyra Moonwhisper has the best energy control in the group and the worst reserves."
She paused.
"And then thereās Ren Valis."
Caelanās expression didnāt change. But his eyes sharpened, just slightly, the way they did when something heād been waiting for finally arrived.
"Tell me about Ren."
ā ⢠ā
Selene went through it. All of it. The foundation that was too balanced. The combat block that was too perfect. The technique that ran too smoothly under pressure. The energy surge he shut down too fast. The capstone spike he cut off deliberately. The group test performance that exceeded his individual scores in ways that didnāt match normal student behavior.
"His foundation quality is in the top fraction of a percent for Germination-stage cultivators," she said. "His energy efficiency is better than some of the Stage 3 students I trained before I came here. And his body awareness ā the way he manages his own output, catches his own mistakes, controls exactly how much he shows ā is not something an eighteen-year-old with two weeks of cultivation experience should be able to do."
She leaned forward slightly.
"Heās hiding something, Principal. I donāt know what. But the numbers donāt match his background, and every time I look closer, I find more gaps instead of fewer."
Caelan was quiet for a moment. He looked at the tablet on his desk, then out the window toward the East Annex.
"Do you think heās dangerous?" he asked.
The question surprised her. "No. His group test behavior was protective, not aggressive. He redirected energy to help a struggling teammate. He took a hit for someone during a combat drill. His instincts are good."
"But?"
"But I donāt understand how heās doing what heās doing. And things I donāt understand make me want to explore them."
ā ⢠ā
Caelan nodded slowly. He picked up the tablet, scrolled through her data for about thirty seconds, then set it down again. His expression was calm and thoughtful, the way it always was ā like a man considering a chess position he had seen many moves ago.
"Selene, can I ask you something?"
"Of course."
"When I assigned you to this class, what did I tell you the priority was?"
Selene thought back. "Watch the Seven. Evaluate their potential. Report anything that suggests the anomaly is deeper than the public numbers."
"Right." He smiled. "And youāve done that. Beautifully, actually. Your assessment data is the best Iāve seen from any instructor in this schoolās history."
She waited. There was a ābutā coming.
"But I need you to understand something about this assignment," he continued, his voice still light, still friendly, but with an edge underneath that she had only heard a few times before. "The reason I placed you here ā the reason the Alliance approved a Peak Stage 4 BPL as an instructor for seven students in a mid-tier school ā was not just to teach them."
He looked at her directly.
"It was because we expected to find exactly what you found. Someone whose numbers donāt match. Someone who shouldnāt be possible. And we needed someone with your experience to confirm it."
Selene felt her jaw tighten. "You knew."
"I suspected," Caelan said. "Thereās a difference."
"How long?"
"Since before the assessment started. Since before you arrived, actually. The Valis bloodline has been on a watch list for a long time, Selene. Longer than either of us has been alive."
ā ⢠ā
Selene stared at him. She had worked with Alliance officials before. She had seen classified operations, sealed files, need-to-know briefings. But this felt different. This felt like she had been reporting on something that someone above her had already seen coming, and she had been the last person in the room to realize it.
"Whatās special about the Valis name?" she asked.
Caelan picked up the framed photograph from his desk, looked at it for a moment, then set it down again. Face-down, as always.
"Thatās not something I can fully answer right now," he said. "What I can tell you is that the Valis familyās history is connected to things that are above this schoolās level. Things the Alliance has been watching for a long time. Ren doesnāt know about most of it, and Iād like to keep it that way until we understand more about what heās becoming."
"Youāre asking me to keep watching a student I canāt explain, without telling me why."
"Iām asking you to trust that thereās a reason," Caelan said. "And to keep doing exactly what youāve been doing. Watch him. Teach him. Push him when he needs pushing. Donāt confront him about the gaps ā that will only make him close up tighter, and heās already the most careful eighteen-year-old Iāve ever seen."
He leaned forward, and for a brief moment the playful, lazy mask dropped. What was underneath was sharper and older than it had any right to be.
"Protect him if it comes to that. Whatever heās hiding, heās hiding it because heās scared. Not because heās dangerous. Thereās a difference, and it matters."
The mask came back. He leaned back in his chair and smiled.
"Any other questions?"
Selene had about forty. She asked none of them. She had worked with enough powerful people to know when the conversation was over.
"No, Principal."
"Good. Keep me updated."
ā ⢠ā
Selene walked back to the East Annex in the evening light, thinking about watch lists and old bloodlines and a principal who smiled too easily for a man carrying the weight he clearly carried.
She didnāt know what the Valis name meant. She didnāt know what Caelan Veyr actually was, behind the handsome face and the lazy posture. And she didnāt know what Ren Valis was becoming.
But she knew one thing now that she hadnāt known an hour ago.
She was not the one watching Ren. She had never been the one watching Ren. She was the instrument someone else was using to watch him, and the person holding the instrument had been watching long before she arrived.
That should have made her angry. Instead, it made her feel something closer to relief. Because whatever was happening with Ren Valis, at least she wasnāt the only one who had noticed.
And at least the person who had noticed first seemed to want to protect him rather than study him.
She hoped she was right about that.
ā ⢠ā
Authorās Note:
The watch over Ren goes higher than Selene realized. And Caelan knows more than heās saying. The arc closes next Chapter. Thanks for reading!