Sunday morning brought unexpected clarity to the academy grounds the first truly beautiful day in over a week.
Sunlight streamed through windows, birds sang in the courtyards, and for a few hours at least, students could almost forget about conspiracies and institutional crises.
Patricia woke to Emma already dressed and reviewing notes at her desk.
"Youâre up early for a Sunday," Patricia observed, sitting up and rubbing her eyes.
"The Inter-Academy competition is in five days. I want to make sure I understand all the event formats before it starts." Emma gestured at her materialsâcompetition rules, team rosters, venue maps. "Did you know there are twelve different event categories? I thought it was just combat and maybe academic challenges."
"Thereâs combat, magical theory demonstrations, essence manipulation precision contests, team coordination challenges, survival scenarios, and a bunch of others." Patricia got out of bed and started getting ready. "Why are you studying this if youâre not competing?"
"Because half our friends are competing and I want to understand what theyâre doing. Also, understanding competition structure helps contextualize the safety concerns everyoneâs been raising." Emma pulled out a specific document. "Look at thisâthe individual combat brackets. Sixty-four students from four different academies fighting in single-elimination format. Thatâs a lot of potential for serious injury even with safety protocols."
Patricia examined the bracket structure. "They have healers on standby and referees who can stop matches if someoneâs at risk of serious harm. Itâs dangerous but controlled."
"Controlled until something goes wrong. Like Derek hiring assassins to attack an expedition that was supposed to be controlled and supervised."
"Fair point." Patricia finished dressing and grabbed her own study materials. "Are you coming to breakfast?"
"In a few minutes. I want to finish reviewing the team event rules first."
Patricia left Emma to her research and headed to the dining hall. The atmosphere was noticeably lighter than the previous weekâstudents laughing at tables, normal social dynamics resuming, only occasional serious conversations about safety concerns.
She grabbed food and found Marcus and David already seated, having what appeared to be an intense discussion about essence theory.
"âbut if youâre simultaneously manipulating three elements, the control precision required increases exponentially, not linearly," David was insisting. "The mathematical models clearly showâ"
"Good morning to you too," Patricia interrupted, sitting down. "Are we arguing about essence mechanics before breakfast again?"
"Itâs not arguing, itâs collaborative exploration of theoretical concepts," David said without looking up from the diagram he was drawing. "Marcus thinks multi-element control complexity increases linearly with element count. Thatâs mathematically impossible."
"I didnât say impossible, I said itâs how it feels in practice. When Iâm controlling two elements versus three, it doesnât feel exponentially harder."
"Subjective experience doesnât override mathematical reality. Your perception of difficulty might be linear, but the actual control precision required follows exponential curves."
Patricia ate her breakfast while they continued debating, grateful for the return to normal academic arguments instead of constant crisis discussions.
Timothy appeared with Sarah, both carrying full trays.
"Is this seat taken?" Timothy asked.
"All yours," Patricia gestured.
They sat down, and Sarah immediately noticed Emmaâs absence. "Whereâs Emma?"
"In our room studying Inter-Academy competition formats like sheâs the one competing."
"Thatâs very Emma. Thorough preparation even for things that donât directly involve her." Sarah started eating. "Have you heard the latest about Student Safety Council selections?"
"What latest?"
"Apparently theyâre doing interviews this week. Top candidates get called in for individual meetings with Headmaster Volmer and Captain Morris." Sarah pulled out a notice that had been posted that morning. "Interviews start Tuesday, final selections announced Friday."
"Friday? Thatâs the day before competition starts," Marcus observed.
"Probably deliberate timing. Announce the council right before the big event to show external academies that weâre handling internal issues responsibly." David studied the notice. "Smart public relations strategy."
"Or they just need the council established before competition for logistical reasons," Patricia offered. "Not everything is strategic messaging."
"Everything involving institutional announcements is strategic messaging," David countered. "The question is whether the strategy serves genuine purposes or just appearance management."
Their philosophical debate was interrupted by a commotion near the dining hall entrance.
A group of students wearing Inter-Academy team colors had entered togetherâSeraphina Ashenheart, Liam, Mira Ashford, and several others Patricia recognized as team members. They moved with the easy confidence of athletes before a major competition, drawing attention from surrounding tables.
"Thatâs the team," Sarah said quietly. "They look ready."
"They look terrifying," Timothy corrected. "Seraphina alone could probably defeat half the students in this hall."
"Which is exactly why sheâs on the team." Marcus watched them claim a table in the corner. "I heard theyâve been training eight hours a day for the past month. Absolute dedication."
Patricia noticed something interestingâWilliam and Kai werenât with the group. Both were team members, but neither had appeared at this very public team breakfast.
"Whereâs William?" she wondered aloud.
"Probably training privately. He doesnât do group social activities much." David had apparently noticed the same absence. "Kai definitely isnât coming. That guy avoids public gatherings like theyâre contagious."
"Theyâre both weird," Marcus declared. "Talented, but weird."
The teamâs presence shifted the dining hall atmosphere slightly. Conversations turned to competition speculation, predictions about which academy would win, discussion of individual matchups in various events.
The Inter-Academy competition was finally feeling real rather than abstract future event.
---
In the advanced training hall, a very different scene was unfolding.
William Cross stood in the center of the practice space, running through combat sequences with methodical precision. His ancestral sword moved through forms his mother had taught him, each motion controlled and lethal.
Seraphina entered the training hall and watched silently for a moment before speaking.
"You werenât at team breakfast."
William completed his current sequence before responding. "I was training."
"Weâre always training. Team breakfast was about unity and showing collective strength before the competition." Seraphina walked closer, her crimson eyes assessing his movements. "Youâve improved again. Your motherâs techniques are integrating well."
"Theyâre effective." William reset his stance. "Is there something you need?"
"Just checking that youâre actually planning to participate in team events and not just show up for individual combat." Seraphinaâs tone was light but her meaning clear. "The team needs you present, not just physically there but mentally engaged."
"Iâll be engaged when it matters."
"It matters now. Team coordination requires practice together, not just individual excellence." She moved to the weapons rack and selected a practice sword. "Spar with me. Letâs see how well you coordinate with a partner."
William considered refusing, then decided cooperation was easier. "Standard rules?"
"No rules. Combat scenarioâweâre surrounded by hostiles, need to defend each other while taking down threats. Coordination exercise." Seraphina took position opposite him. "Ready?"
She moved before he could fully respond, forcing him to react defensively. Her attacks were precise and testingânot trying to overwhelm him, but evaluating how he adapted to unexpected combat flow.
William countered with techniques that created openings for theoretical partner attacks, habits from his motherâs training about fighting alongside others rather than alone.
"Better," Seraphina said, adjusting her approach. "Youâre actually thinking about coordination instead of just individual defense. Thatâs progress."
They continued sparring for twenty minutes, the exercise evolving into genuine teamwork practice. By the end, both were breathing hard but satisfied with the session.
"Youâll do fine during team events," Seraphina declared, lowering her practice sword. "As long as you remember weâre fighting together, not individually in proximity."
"Noted."
"Good." She walked toward the exit, then paused. "William? Five days until competition. After that, everything changes. Whateverâs targeting usâassassination attempts, conspiracies, all of itâwill probably make moves during or immediately after the event. Stay alert."
"Iâm always alert."
"Be more alert." Seraphina left without waiting for response.
William stood alone in the training hall, processing her warning. She was right that the competition represented a vulnerabilityâlots of external people, distracted security attention, opportunities for hostile action.
He resumed practicing, this time focusing specifically on scenarios where heâd need to protect teammates while fighting.
Five days to prepare for competition.
Five days before everything potentially escalated.
He intended to use them well.
---