The word still hung in the air.
No
.
It echoed far longer than it should have, sinking into stone, into flesh, into faith itself.
For a heartbeatâno one moved.
The Divine Guards froze mid-formation, spears half-raised, eyes flickering between the Dean, the Pope... and the boy who had just spoken. The crowd of the Holy Kingdom stood stunned, mouths parted, breaths caught somewhere between disbelief and fear.
Professors from Arcadia Academy stiffened.
Seraphinaâs eyes widened slightly, her mana faltering for the briefest moment before snapping back into control. Halrethâs grip tightened on his sword, knuckles whiteningânot in anger, but in alarm.
Lucaâs friends stared at him.
Kyle blinked, grin gone. Aureliaâs brows knit together sharply, spear lowering by instinct. Syltharaâs ears twitched, body going still. Selenaâs breath hitched, cold eyes narrowing as if trying to understand something only Luca could see. Even Vincent, calm as ever, turned fully toward him now.
The Saintess trembled.
Not in fear.
In confusion.
Her tear-filled eyes lifted to Lucaâs back, wide with questions she didnât dare ask.
And above them allâ
The Pope watched.
Amused.
Not surprised. Not offended.
Interested.
The pressure in the square shiftedânot heavier, not lighterâjust... different. As if the world itself leaned in.
The Dean turned slowly.
The old man studied Luca for a long moment, sharp eyes tracing the boyâs stance, the way his shoulders were tense yet resolute, the way his jaw was setânot in defiance, but decision.
Then he sighed.
A long, tired sound.
"What do you want now, boy?" the Dean asked, voice neither angry nor gentleâjust worn. "You came to save your friend. Your teammate." He gestured lightly toward the Saintess. "That is done."
He paused, looking at Luca directly now.
"So why," he continued quietly, "are you still refusing to let go?"
The silence that followed was unbearable.
Behind the clergyâ
The bishopâs fingers twitched.
Slowly, carefully, his rigid posture loosened just a fraction. His shoulders eased. His lips curvedânot into a smile, but something uglier. Something satisfied.
His eyes gleamed.
Good.
Good.
His gaze flicked between Luca and the Dean, then briefly toward the Saintess. The hatred there hadnât cooledâit had sharpened.
So it wonât end cleanly after all.
His hands clasped together in front of him, knuckles whitening as he suppressed the urge to laugh. His breathing steadiedânot from calm, but from anticipation.
Let him talk.
Let him dig his own grave.
On the daisâ
The Pope leaned back slightly in his throne.
His chin rested against his knuckles as he observed Luca with open curiosity now, eyes glinting faintly beneath half-lowered lids.
How interesting,
he seemed to think.
The execution had already failed.
The authority of the Church had already cracked.
And yetâ
The boy still wasnât done.
The square waited.
Every breath held.
Every gaze fixed on Luca Valentine.
No... I canât just leave like this.
The thought rang louder than the bells ever had.
I canât.
Lucaâs gaze driftedâslowly, deliberatelyâback toward the Saintess.
She stood there small against the vastness of the square, chains still wrapped around her wrists, tear tracks drying on her cheeks. She wasnât pleading. She wasnât clinging.
She was simply... waiting.
Waiting for answers she had never been given.
Waiting for a world that had taken everything from her and still asked for more.
She canât go like this
, Luca thought, his chest tightening.
Not without knowing. Not without the truth. Not after everything.
He turned back toward the Dean and lowered his head slightlyânot in submission, but in respect.
"Iâm sorry if Iâve offended you, Dean," Luca said, voice steady despite the storm in his chest. "But... this matter isnât over yet."
A ripple of confusion spread through the square.
The Divine Guards exchanged looks.
The crowd murmured softly again.
The bishopâs eyes narrowed, irritation flashing across his face.
The Dean raised an eyebrow, studying Luca carefully.
"What do you mean?" the old man asked.
Luca lifted his head.
"There are things," he said, each word measured, "that have been buried for far too long. Things hidden under layers of silence and convenience." His crimson eyes hardened. "Itâs time for them to come out."
He paused, then added quietlyâ
"And itâs time for me to fulfill a promise."
The Deanâs expression tightened just a little.
"Speak clearly, boy," he said, annoyance bleeding into his tone. "I donât have the patience for riddles."
Luca didnât answer immediately.
Instead, he took a step back... then bent at the waist.
A bow.
Deep. Earnest.
"Please," Luca said. "Just give me a few moments, Dean. Thatâs all I ask. When itâs overâeverything will be clear."
The Dean inhaled, already preparing to refuse.
But thenâ
Kyle stepped forward.
He didnât grin this time. He didnât joke.
He bowed.
"Please consider his request," Kyle said simply.
Aurelia followed, spear held upright, posture straight as steel. She bowed next, fiery eyes unwavering.
Sylthara stepped forward, movements smooth and deliberate, golden eyes calm as she lowered herself in a respectful bow.
Selena hesitatedâjust for a fraction of a secondâthen inclined her head as well, pale lashes lowered.
Aiden observed others as he took a step forward and bowed , "Please consider his request."
Vincent moved last.
The gray-haired swordsman said nothing as he bowed, but the weight of his presence spoke louder than words ever could.
Thenâ
Seraphina stepped forward, robes fluttering faintly in the mana-thick air. She bowed, eyes sharp but sincere.
Halreth followed at her side, armor clinking softly as he did the same.
The square fell silent again.
The Dean stared.
At Luca.
At the line of people standing behind him.
At students. Colleagues. Warriors. Friends.
For the first time since he arrived, the old manâs expression waveredânot in anger, not in irritationâ
But in something dangerously close to contemplation.
Luca straightened and turned back toward the Saintess.
She was watching him closely now, eyes trembling, questions spilling silently from her gaze.
He smiled at her.
Not bright. Not playful.
Gentle.
"Donât worry," Luca said softly, just for her. "Iâll answer all your questions today."
Her breath hitched.
Lucaâs eyes softened as he thoughtâ
And then... Iâll take you away.
Not as a prisoner.
Not as a sinner.
But as a Saintess.
The Dean let out a long, weary sigh.
His gaze moved slowlyâfrom the bowed students, to the professors, to the Saintess standing silently at the center of the shattered platformâbefore finally lifting to the highest seat in the square.
The Pope.
For a heartbeat, the world seemed to stop breathing.
The Pope met the Deanâs eyes... and smiled.
Not kindly.
Not cruelly.
Amused.
"Go ahead," he said lightly, resting his chin against his knuckles. "Itâs not every day I get to watch something... interesting."
A ripple passed through the clergy.
Unease. Curiosity. Fear.
Luca felt his jaw tighten.
Old bastard,
he cursed inwardly.
Youâre enjoying this far too much.
The bishop saw that smile.
And something in him snapped completely.
He stepped forward hard, robes flaring as divine runes shimmered angrily around his sleeves. His voice rang outânot just toward the Pope, but across the entire raised dais where the high clergy sat.
"Your Holiness!" he shouted. "Have you truly decided to sit and watch while the Academy tramples upon sacred law?!"
He spun, pointing sharply toward the professors, then the students.
"Look at them!" he roared. "They raise weapons on consecrated ground! They spill blood beneath the Goddessâs gaze! If this is not blasphemy, then what is?!"
His eyes burned as he turned toward the other bishops.
"Brothers," he called, voice trembling with fervor, "have you forgotten your vows?! Have you forgotten what it means to safeguard the faith?!"
Some of the clergy flinched.
Others shifted uneasily in their seats.
"This is not just about the Saintess anymore!" the bishop continued, sweeping an arm wide. "This is rebellion! Open defiance! If Arcadia Academy is allowed to dictate justice today, then tomorrow kingdoms will bow to schools, and the Goddessâs authority will be reduced to a suggestion!"
He slammed his staff against the stone.
"Act now," he demanded. "Before the faithful lose their fear. Before doubt takes root. Before heresy spreads!"
Murmurs broke out among the clergy.
A senior priest whispered urgently to another.
A bishop clenched his jaw, fingers digging into his armrest.
Someone muttered, "...Heâs right... this sets a dangerous precedent."
The bishop pressed harder, sensing the wavering.
"If you hesitate," he said coldly, "history will remember you as the ones who let the Holy Kingdom be mocked in its own capital."
He turned back to the Pope, eyes blazing.
"Order the Divine Knights," he said sharply. "Crush this insolence. Show the world that faith is not negotiable!"
The square held its breath.
The Pope did not move.
Did not frown.
Did not raise his voice.
He merely observed the bishopâreally looked at himâthen let out a soft, almost indulgent chuckle.
Lucaâs fingers tightened around his sabers.
Heâs stirring the pot on purpose,
Luca thought grimly.
Trying to force everyoneâs hand.
Before the tension could snapâ
"E-Excuse me! P-Pleaseâmake way!"
A voice cut through the chaos.
Old. Breathless. Urgent.
The crowd parted instinctively as an elderly man in plain robes hurried through, nearly stumbling as he clutched a bundle of documents to his chest. Sweat clung to his brow, eyes wide with panic and determination alike.
The bishop turned sharply, ready to explodeâ
But Luca froze.
Then his eyes widened.
Light flared in themânot power, but recognition.
"...Professor Aldric," Luca said softly.
The old man finally broke through the last line of people, lifting his head toward the execution platform, chest heaving as if he had run the length of the city.
And in that momentâ
The true reckoning arrived.