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CHAPTER SIX: I’m Stumbling Like The Living Dead

  The

  Praetorian Hall – Captain Julianus Caepio’s Office – Later

  The

  Praetorian Hall hums with the muted thrum of generators and the

  distant cadence of drills, order grinding forward even as death

  settles like dust over the Academy.

  Quintis

  leads Lucille through the reinforced doors of Captain Caepio’s

  office. Cain refuses to release her hand, jaw set, eyes murderous

  toward anyone who even looks

  like they might try to separate them.

  Lucille

  is barefoot, mud drying in cracked flakes along her calves. Blood,

  Maelia’s, maybe her own, stiffens the hem of her training tunic.

  Her throat is raw, each swallow a sting. A necklace of bruises rings

  her neck like a strangler’s wreath. She stands small beside Cain,

  but not weak, just shaken, disbelieving, straining to process the

  whirlwind of violence that came and went in heartbeats.

  Killing

  beasts is one thing. Killing people, cadets,

  is another. But

  Lucille does not break. She trembles, but she does not splinter. What

  truly terrifies her is the man behind the desk.

  Captain

  Julianus Caepio doesn’t rise when they enter. He merely lifts his

  gaze, hard, metallic, utterly unimpressed. His office is drab but

  immaculate, walls lined with holo-scrolls of Praetorian doctrine,

  commendations, tactical schematics. A shrine to discipline and

  violence.

  The

  knife sits on his desk, still tacky with drying blood.

  “Report,”

  Caepio orders, voice flat as a gravestone.

  Quintis

  snaps to attention. “Sir. Upon hearing distress, I arrived

  to find Cadet Maelia critically wounded. Cadet Ilara was not present.

  I deployed Cadets Castor and Vianna to search the embankment. I

  initiated triage and ordered Cadet Loras to activate the emergency

  beacon. Cadet Maelia expired before medical extraction arrived. Ilara

  was later located below the bank; dead on impact.” She pauses,

  measured. “I did not witness what initiated the incident. Only the

  aftermath.”

  Caepio

  turns his eyes to Lucille. Not to Quintis, not to Cain; Lucille.

  He stares at her like she’s a stain on the floor he’s deciding

  whether to clean or let fester.

  Before

  he can speak, Cain steps forward.

  “Sir,”

  Cain says, voice tight but controlled, “Maelia and Ilara have been

  goin’ after Lucille since day one. They target houseless cadets.

  Everybody knows it.” He gestures toward her throat. “Look at her

  neck. Maelia damn near strangled her. And that knife,” He points at

  the blade on the desk. “That’s Maelia’s. Lucille doesn’t

  carry steel like that. She didn’t start this.”

  Caepio

  doesn’t look at Cain. Doesn’t even acknowledge him. His stare

  remains locked on Lucille, drilling through her silence.

  “Lucille,”

  he says slowly, dangerously. “Speak.”

  Her

  throat spasms. The sound that escapes is barely a breath. “S–sir…”

  But

  every syllable scrapes her raw vocal cords. Pain shocks her back into

  silence. Her gaze drops to the floor. She can’t meet Caepio’s

  eyes. She’s too afraid of what she’ll see there, condemnation,

  maybe a decision already made.

  Caepio

  leans back in his chair, folding his arms, unimpressed by her

  struggle. “Two cadets are dead,” he states. “Reports

  must be filed. Families notified. Punitive measures considered.” No

  emotion. Just process. “Your silence does not serve you.”

  Quintis

  steps in carefully. “Sir, Cadet Domitian may be in shock—”

  “Shock,”

  Caepio cuts in, “has never prevented honesty.”

  Cain

  bristles. “She’s not lyin’—”

  “You

  are not speaking,” Caepio snaps, ice and iron in his voice.

  Cain

  shuts his mouth but doesn’t back down. His hand tightens around

  Lucille’s.

  Caepio

  taps a finger on the bloodied knife. “Lucille. Look at me.”

  She

  can’t.

  Her

  breath quivers. Her eyes sting. The room feels too small. Too cold.

  “She

  tried to tell me,” Cain says quietly, unable to stop himself.

  “Maelia attacked her. Ilara joined in. They would’ve killed her.”

  Quintis

  nods once. “Sir. The bruising indicates a chokehold. The

  stab wound suggests Maelia was positioned above Lucille at the time

  of injury. That aligns with Cadet Aurellius’s statement.”

  Caepio

  raises one eyebrow. “Claims,” he corrects coolly. “Not facts.”

  He

  drags the knife closer. Blood smears across the polished surface of

  his desk like a dark signature.

  He

  looks back at Lucille. “Last chance. Explain yourself.”

  Lucille

  forces herself to lift her head a fraction, enough to meet his gaze

  through her lashes. Enough to show she is not refusing out of guilt.

  Her

  voice breaks as it leaves her. “They attacked me,” she whispers.

  “I… I didn’t want to… I just…” Pain clamps down on her

  throat. She winces, hand instinctively rising to the bruises.

  Caepio

  studies her a long, suffocating moment.

  Then

  he speaks to Quintis. “Retrieve the full medical report. I

  want confirmation of every mark, every wound. Collect witness

  statements from all cadets present. Bring me complete injury profiles

  for both deceased.”

  “Yes,

  Captain.”

  Cain

  exhales, tension coiled beneath his skin.

  Caepio

  finally leans forward, steepling his fingers.

  “Lucille,”

  he says. “Until this investigation concludes, you will remain under

  observation. You will not leave Praetorian grounds without escort. Do

  you understand?”

  Lucille

  nods shakily.

  Caepio’s

  expression doesn’t soften, not even a flicker.

  “Good.”

  His voice hardens further. “Because if I determine that you

  escalated this conflict,” A pause. Deliberate. “Or that these

  deaths resulted from reckless conduct, your career here ends.

  Permanently.”

  A

  chill rips down Lucille’s spine.

  Cain’s

  grip shifts protectively around her hand.

  And

  Caepio, unmoved, reaches for the data-slate to begin the death

  notifications, as if writing the fates of cadets is just another

  bureaucratic chore.

  Cain

  refuses to move. His fingers are laced with Lucille’s, grip

  protective, stubborn, terrified.

  Caepio

  finishes his notes on the data-slate, then lifts his eyes, slowly,

  deliberately.

  “Cadet

  Aurellius,” he says. “Return to class.”

  “No.”

  Cain’s jaw clenches. “Sir, with respect, Lucille shouldn’t be

  alone right now.”

  “She

  is not alone,” Caepio replies coldly. “She is with me.”

  “That’s

  exactly—”

  “Cadet.”

  Caepio’s voice cuts like drawn steel. “You do not argue with a

  direct order. You do not obstruct an investigation. And you do not

  presume to decide where you are needed.”

  Cain

  bristles. “Sir—”

  “Out.”

  The

  word lands heavy, final, unmovable.

  Cain’s

  breath trembles with restrained fury, but even he knows Caepio’s

  command is absolute. Defiance here could end his career.

  He

  squeezes Lucille’s hand one last time. “I’ll come back,” he

  whispers to her. “I promise.”

  Lucille

  can barely nod.

  Quintis

  guides him to the door. Cain hesitates, looks back at Lucille, small,

  bruised, sitting in a Praetorian’s den like prey under a predator’s

  stare.

  Then

  he forces himself to leave.

  The

  door shuts behind him with a cold, echoing click.

  The

  Academy – Corridor to Advanced Weapons Practicum

  The

  hallways are buzzing with half-formed rumors. Whispers shift like

  smoke, two dead cadets, a fight, blood by the riverbank. Cain hears

  enough fragments to know the wildfire has already spread.

  His

  stomach knots tighter. He doesn’t stop for food. Doesn’t stop at

  all.

  He

  reaches the Practicum wing and pushes open the classroom door far

  earlier than any cadet should.

  Advanced

  Weapons Practicum – Instructor Varian Korvin’s Classroom

  Varian

  Korvin sits at his desk, sleeves rolled up, quill stylus dancing

  across reports. He looks up, frowns.

  “Aurellius?”

  His brow lifts. “You’re early. Very early.”

  Cain

  doesn’t answer. He crosses the room stiffly and drops into a front

  bench, staring at the wood grain like it might keep him upright.

  Korvin

  watches him.

  “Where’s

  Domitian?”

  Cain

  stills.

  Korvin’s

  posture shifts, casual precision hardening into something alert.

  “Aurellius.”

  Cain

  swallows. “Sir… you haven’t heard?”

  Korvin’s

  frown deepens. “Heard what?”

  “It’s

  everywhere,” Cain mutters. “Everyone knows.”

  Korvin

  sets the stylus down with deliberate care. His voice lowers. “Then

  stop circling it. Speak.”

  Cain

  looks up. His eyes are raw, fear stripped bare by fury.

  “Ilara

  and Maelia are dead.”

  Korvin

  goes very still. Not stunned, contained. Like a blade held just shy

  of the throat.

  “…Dead?”

  The word is quiet. Dangerous.

  Cain

  nods once. “They went after Lucille. There was a fight.”

  Korvin

  rises slowly, jaw tightening as if grinding something back into

  place.

  “Is

  Domitian alive?”

  “Yes.

  Caepio has her.”

  Korvin

  exhales through his nose, sharp. His gaze snaps to the door, already

  elsewhere.

  “Stay

  here,” he orders. “Do not leave this room.”

  Cain

  stands. “Sir—”

  “Aurellius.”

  Korvin’s voice cracks like a whip. “Sit. Down.”

  Cain

  obeys.

  Korvin

  grabs his coat and strides for the door. For the first time, Cain

  sees it, the fracture beneath the control. Fear, tightly leashed.

  Then

  Korvin is gone, moving fast down the hall toward Caepio’s office,

  toward the truth.

  Toward

  whether the girl with fire in her bones killed two cadets, or

  whether the Academy is about to kill her instead.

  Praetorian

  Hall – Captain Caepio’s Office

  The

  door swings open without a knock.

  Caepio’s

  head snaps up, irritation flashing sharp. Lucille jerks, flinching as

  though struck.

  Varian

  Korvin steps inside.

  He

  takes in the scene immediately, the mud caking Lucille’s bare feet,

  the dried blood on her sleeves and throat, the hollow bruise shaped

  like a hand around her neck, the way she sits folded in on herself

  like she’s trying to take up less space.

  A case of theft: this story is not rightfully on Amazon; if you spot it, report the violation.

  His

  jaw flexes once. Hard.

  Caepio

  leans back in his chair. “Instructor Korvin,” he says, voice

  edged with warning. “To what do I owe this… intrusion?”

  Korvin

  closes the door behind him. “Lucille Domitian is one of my

  students.”

  “And?”

  “And

  she is late to my class,” Korvin answers, stepping closer. “Which

  is unlike her.”

  Caepio

  snorts. “A Domitian, punctual? That would be novel.”

  Korvin’s

  eyes narrow, but he doesn’t rise to the bait. “She is never late.

  If she is absent during instruction hours, I expect notice.”

  “You

  expect?” Caepio echoes. “Korvin, two cadets are dead—”

  “And

  protocol still applies,” Korvin cuts in.

  Caepio’s

  expression cools further. “This is not your jurisdiction.”

  Korvin

  glances at Lucille again, her mud-crusted calves, her trembling

  hands, the blood dried beneath her fingernails.

  Then

  he looks back at Caepio.

  “Where

  is protocol in keeping a fifteen-year-old cadet sitting in blood and

  mud for over an hour?” he asks quietly. “She is not a prisoner of

  war.”

  Caepio’s

  eyes harden. “Sentiment is irrelevant. She drove a blade through

  Maelia Drusus’ lung; clean, precise. Medical confirmed it. And

  Ilara Quint?” A shrug. “Nine-foot fall. Skull fracture. Instant.”

  Lucille

  closes her eyes. Her breathing hitches.

  Korvin’s

  gaze cuts like a blade as it flicks back to her, gently, not

  accusing, but steady. Grounding.

  “Lucille,”

  he says carefully. “Look at me.”

  She

  lifts her head, slow, reluctant, and her eyes are red-rimmed but wide

  with terror.

  “I

  didn’t push her,” she whispers. “She grabbed my bag. I stepped

  back. She slipped. I swear.”

  Caepio

  makes a dismissive noise, but Korvin raises a hand, a subtle request

  that Caepio actually listen.

  Lucille

  swallows hard and continues, desperation tightening her voice.

  Lucille

  swallows and forces the words out. “I tried to leave. I did what we

  were told. Ilara reached for me and fell. Maelia jumped me, she was

  choking me. I couldn’t breathe. Everything went black.” Her hands

  shake. “I didn’t think. I just didn’t want to die.”

  Her

  fingers tremble against the fabric of her ruined pants.

  “I

  didn’t think,” she whispers. “I just moved. I didn’t want to

  die.”

  She

  looks to Korvin again, pleading, terrified, like he is the only

  steady point in a spinning world.

  “I

  did everything right. I tried to leave. I tried. Please, you have to

  believe me.”

  Korvin

  doesn’t move. His expression remains carefully neutral, but

  something steely settles behind his eyes.

  Caepio

  leans back in his chair, arms folding.

  “Well,”

  Caepio says dryly. “There is her statement. Hearsay. Contradicting

  the fact that two girls are dead.”

  “Not

  contradicting,” Korvin replies quietly. “Explaining.”

  Caepio

  gives him a cold, thin smile. “This is not your case, Korvin.”

  Korvin

  steps forward, just one step, enough to make Caepio’s eyes sharpen.

  “But

  it is my student,” Korvin says. “And I expect she will be

  afforded the same rights as any other cadet under this Academy’s

  laws, regardless of class, House status, or lack thereof.”

  Caepio’s

  jaw locks.

  Lucille

  stares at the floor, shaking.

  And

  Korvin, hands clasped behind his back, stands resolute, silent,

  unwavering, already positioning himself between her and the blade of

  the system.

  Caepio’s

  fingers tap once against the table. A sharp sound. A command for

  silence.

  “You

  are unusually invested,” he says. “You speak for her like blood.”

  Korvin’s

  jaw doesn’t so much as twitch. “I invest in all my students,

  Captain.”

  “But

  you barged into my office,” Caepio counters. “You challenged my

  handling of a murder case. You speak for her as though she were your

  own blood.”

  Lucille

  flinches at the word murder,

  as if the label itself is another blow.

  Korvin

  meets Caepio’s stare without blinking. “Every student under my

  instruction is my responsibility. If you are going to brand a child a

  criminal before she’s even washed the blood off her skin, then yes,

  I will intervene.”

  Caepio

  smiles coldly. “A murderer doesn’t need a bath. She needs a

  cell.”

  Lucille’s

  breath catches. “It was self-defense,” she whispers, voice

  trembling. “Please, I didn’t want to kill anyone. I didn’t. She

  was choking me. I—”

  “Quiet.”

  Caepio doesn’t raise his voice, he doesn’t need to. The command

  lands like a hammer.

  Lucille

  falls silent, eyes wide and wet.

  Caepio

  gestures toward the dried blood on her clothes. “The strike that

  punctured Maelia Drusus’ lung was precise. Too precise for

  desperation. Too exact for panic. That was intent.”

  “No,”

  Korvin says before Lucille can even inhale. “It was skill.”

  Caepio’s

  eyes narrow. “Skill?”

  Korvin

  steps forward. Not aggressive, simply unwavering. “Lucille is the

  top of my class. She trains harder than any other cadet I’ve taught

  in five years. Every morning. Every evening. Hours on end. She is a

  fighter bred by circumstance, sharpened by will. Of course the wound

  was clean. Of course the strike was efficient.” His voice drops

  into something colder. “I have been training her myself for two

  months.”

  Caepio’s

  expression curdles. “Ah. So now we see the truth. This is your

  pride speaking. Your project. Your pet.”

  Korvin

  doesn’t blink. “No. This is a student who defended herself from

  two assailants. One armed. One choking her to death.”

  Caepio

  stands.

  The

  shift is subtle, but the air sharpens. Even Lucille feels it, her

  shoulders hunch, instincts screaming danger.

  “You

  defend her fiercely,” Caepio says. “But it does not matter. Two

  cadets are dead. The Quint and Drusus families will demand justice.

  And justice, real justice, is capital punishment.”

  Lucille’s

  breath stops in her chest.

  Korvin’s

  control finally fractures. Just slightly. Enough for a spark of fury

  to show through his voice. “She is fifteen.”

  “And?”

  Caepio lifts a brow.

  “She

  is too young for capital punishment,” Korvin growls.

  Caepio’s

  reply is a blade: “The law does not care how many birthdays she’s

  seen.”

  Lucille’s

  hands tremble in her lap. She looks as if she wants to vanish into

  the chair.

  Caepio

  turns his gaze on her fully now, eyes like drawn steel. “Domitian,”

  he says, “orphans rarely survive the Academy. No lineage, no

  patronage, no name. No one to speak for you.” His lip curls. “It

  is common enough for your kind to be culled by their own

  recklessness. No motivation. No discipline. No anchor.”

  Lucille’s

  throat works silently, she swallows panic like it’s burning her.

  Korvin

  steps forward again, voice rising, not loud, but lethal. “She is

  not

  disposable.”

  Caepio’s

  eyes harden. “She is what the facts say she is.”

  Korvin

  shakes his head once. “No. She’s a child trying to survive in a

  system designed to kill her before she ever reaches adulthood.” His

  voice drops, razor-sharp. “And I will not stand by while you

  execute her for it.”

  The

  silence that follows is electric and choking.

  Lucille

  watches them both, one man ready to damn her, the other ready to draw

  a line in blood for her, and for the first time since the fight,

  something like tears sting her eyes. Because someone, someone,

  is choosing to fight for her.

  The

  office door slams

  open

  so hard it ricochets off the wall.

  Caepio

  nearly jumps from his seat, outrage igniting instantly. Korvin’s

  hand goes halfway to his sidearm before he recognizes the intruder.

  Malco

  Renn stands in the doorway, chest rising and falling, sweat on his

  brow from a dead sprint. His eyes are wide, panicked, furious,

  desperate.

  “Renn?”

  Korvin breathes. “What in the hells—”

  Caepio

  rises behind his desk, voice a deep growl. “You

  barge into my office unannounced a second time in one damned hour.

  Explain yourself, Instructor Renn, before I have you detained.”

  Renn

  takes one final breath, straightens his shoulders, and steps fully

  into the room.

  “I’m

  here to speak for Domitian.”

  The

  words freeze the room.

  Korvin’s

  brows shoot up. Caepio blinks, stunned for a fraction of a second.

  Even Lucille lifts her head, vision blurry, barely processing what

  she’s hearing.

  Renn’s

  gaze finally lands on her.

  She

  is pale. Her uniform is torn. Blood crusts along her hairline.

  Bruises mar her arms and ribs. She’s trembling from exhaustion and

  pain alike.

  Renn’s

  expression darkens

  into something murderous.

  “What

  happened to her?”

  he demands, his voice low, controlled only by sheer force of will.

  “Has she even been seen by medical yet?”

  Caepio

  snorts. “She has not. She isn’t injured.”

  Renn

  takes a step forward, incredulous. “Not

  injured?

  I can see the bruising from here. She’s barely staying upright. Do

  you not understand the risk of internal hemorrhaging? Or are you

  simply ignoring it?” His eyes narrow further. “And she needs a

  psyche evaluation, immediately.”

  Caepio

  waves a hand dismissively. “She is fine. She endured,

  as all Praevectus must. You two are awfully invested in a mere

  orphan.”

  Renn’s

  jaw clenches so tightly the muscle ticks. “She is one

  of my top students.

  Between her and Aurellius, the rest of my class shadows them. I am

  responsible for her development. And her survival.”

  Korvin

  adds bitterly, “Not that it matters. Caepio’s made his decision.

  He’s callin’ for capital

  punishment.”

  The

  blood drains from Renn’s face. “What?” he whispers. Then

  louder, “What form; execution or lashings?”

  Caepio

  shrugs, as though discussing the weather. “I have not decided.

  Execution would be cleaner. And would spare her the opportunity to

  repeat her foolishness.”

  Lucille

  flinches so violently it sends a spike of pain down her side. A small

  noise escapes her, half gasp, half choke.

  Renn

  spins on Caepio. “She

  is a child.

  A highly promising

  one. This...this is monstrous. You’re discussing punishment of that

  magnitude in

  front of her.”

  Korvin

  steps beside Renn, voice sharp with barely checked fury. “She needs

  medical attention, not a noose or the stockade. What you’re

  proposing is unethical by every metric we uphold. It is barbaric.”

  “She

  is old enough to face consequences,” Caepio snaps. “She sought

  the truth, now she knows it.”

  Renn

  takes a step forward. “We are not leaving until you lessen the

  punishment. She made a mistake. She is half-starved, delirious,

  terrified, and you’re threatening to butcher her to make a point.”

  Korvin

  stands with him, shoulder to shoulder. “You will reconsider. Or you

  answer to the Council.”

  Caepio’s

  patience finally snaps. “Enough.

  Both of you, out. If you care so much for her, take her. Get her

  cleaned. Bandaged. Fed.” His gaze locks onto Lucille, cold and

  unblinking. “But when it is time to pay the toll for her

  insubordination… I will send for her.”

  Lucille’s

  knees nearly give out.

  Korvin

  curses under his breath. Renn looks like he wants to tear Caepio’s

  throat out with his bare hands.

  But

  neither can defy the order.

  Slowly,

  they move to her side, Korvin taking her arm, Renn steadying her

  other, and begin guiding her toward the door.

  Caepio

  calls after them, voice flat and final, “Enjoy your borrowed time,

  Domitian.”

  The

  door shuts behind them.

  Renn

  and Korvin each take one of Lucille’s arms as they guide her out of

  Caepio’s office. Lucille is shaking, eyes unfocused, steps uneven,

  like each one might be her last.

  The

  heavy office door shuts behind them with a hard

  metallic thud

  that echoes down the corridor.

  And

  standing a few paces away, back straight, fists clenched, is Cain

  Aurellius.

  The

  instant he sees Lucille, her bruises, her limp, the terror on her

  face, his breath catches.

  “Lucille?”

  She

  lifts her head. Their eyes meet.

  They

  break from Korvin and Renn at the same time, stumbling into each

  other with a force that nearly topples them both. Cain wraps his arms

  tight around her, crushing her against his chest, as though shielding

  her with his whole body.

  Lucille

  folds into him, and the second she feels the security of his arms,

  the dam bursts.

  “Cain,

  he-he wants to,” Her voice shatters. “He

  wants to execute me!”

  Cain

  freezes, arms tightening instinctively. “What? What...Lucille, what

  do you mean?”

  “He

  said execution. Execution or lashin’s!” She’s sobbing now,

  words tumbling out in panic and disbelief. “I didn’t do anything!

  I just defended myself! He wants to kill me!”

  Cain’s

  jaw locks. He pulls her even closer, one hand gripping the back of

  her head. “Hey, hey, I’ve got you. I’ve got you. I’m right

  here.” His voice trembles, just slightly. “I won’t let anything

  happen to you.”

  He

  looks up at Renn and Korvin, eyes burning.

  Korvin

  nods sharply. “We need to get her out of here. Infirmary first. She

  hasn’t been seen by a medic; no internal scan, no analgesics. We

  can get an official report.”

  Cain

  nods once, adjusting his hold on Lucille but refusing to let go. “I,

  uh, already called my mother,” he says quietly, voice low so

  Lucille won’t catch the uncertainty beneath it. “She’s in

  Germany right now. I-I don’t know if she can help. But I told her

  everything.”

  Renn’s

  brows lift faintly. He knows who Cain’s mother is. And the

  implications. But there isn’t time to dwell.

  They

  begin moving down the corridor, out of the Praetorian Hall, a long

  vaulted artery of stone and steel lined with dozens of offices where

  Praetorians bury themselves in disciplinary reports and

  investigations. Normally silent, reverent, imposing. Now it feels

  like a tomb. A place where sentences are crafted, futures decided,

  lives extinguished on parchment.

  Renn

  leans toward Korvin, voice low, urgent.“We need to get the others

  involved. Instructors, overseers, anyone sane. I can’t imagine

  anyone signin’ off on Caepio’s order.”

  Korvin

  nods immediately, jaw set. “Do it. The more voices, the harder

  it’ll be for Caepio to hide behind protocol.” He claps Renn once

  on the shoulder. “Go.”

  Renn

  breaks away, boots slamming against the stone floor as he sprints off

  down a branching hall.

  Korvin

  remains with Cain and Lucille.

  Lucille

  clings to Cain’s jacket as though anchoring herself to the world.

  Her breaths are quick, shallow, borderline hyperventilating. Tears

  streak her dirt-smeared face.

  “She’s

  fifteen,” Korvin mutters under his breath, fury simmering beneath

  every syllable. “Fifteen, and he’s threatening her with public

  execution. Or public lashings. For surviving an attack.”

  Cain’s

  arm tightens around her protectively.

  Lucille’s

  voice is barely audible, ragged and cracked, “Please… please

  don’t let ‘em do it…”

  Korvin

  slows his pace for a moment, turning to her. “Lucille,” he says,

  gentler than he’s ever spoken in a classroom. “We’re not

  lettin’ anything happen to you. Not tonight. Not tomorrow. Not

  ever. Do you understand? We’re gettin’ you medical care. And then

  we’re fixin’ this.”

  Lucille

  tries to nod, but breaks into quiet, shaking sobs.

  Cain

  cups the back of her head and whispers, “I’m here. I’m here. I

  ain’t leavin’ you.”

  Together,

  they push through the tall double doors at the end of the hall,

  stepping out of the Praetorian wing and heading straight toward the

  academy infirmary. Lucille’s fate hanging over them like a blade,

  suspended by a single fraying thread.

  Infirmary

  — Late Evening

  Lucille

  sits on the edge of a gurney, hands clasped between her knees,

  shoulders hunched. Her eyes are unfocused again, glassy, exhausted.

  The examination is nearly finished. A nurse presses gently along her

  throat, checking the deep bluish bruising that wraps around the sides

  like a dark collar.

  Lucille

  winces, jaw tightening.

  Cain

  stands at her right, arms crossed over his chest, stance wide, not

  aggressive, but protective. He watches every movement of the nurse’s

  hands like someone watching a bomb technician work.

  Korvin

  stands a short distance away, posture stiff, hands behind his back,

  gaze sharp and unblinking. He’s been silent for several minutes,

  only the faint clenching of his jaw betraying the storm behind his

  eyes.

  Finally

  he speaks. “Are we finished?”

  The

  nurse nods once, pulling off her gloves with crisp, professional

  detachment. “Yes. I can give you the full evaluation.”

  Korvin

  steps closer. Cain does too, so close his arm nearly brushes

  Lucille’s. Lucille stares at the floor, waiting, bracing, trembling

  quietly.

  The

  nurse consults her datapad.

  “Lucille

  Domitian has extensive bruising to the throat. Severe enough to

  obstruct speech and cause pain for the next several days. Internally,

  she has soft tissue strain from manual compression, but it will heal

  with rest.” She glances up at Lucille. “You were very lucky.”

  Lucille

  nods weakly, saying nothing. Speaking hurts too much.

  The

  nurse continues, “She’s minor abrasions on the arms, shoulder,

  and back consistent with fallin’ or bein’ thrown onto rocky

  ground. Knuckles scraped from repeated impact, which she explained

  occurred during punching drills.”

  Cain

  shifts. Korvin exhales slowly.

  The

  nurse scrolls the report. “As for the struggle… Maelia Drusus’

  autopsy confirms the knife wound originated from below the point of

  entry. That is consistent with someone smaller being pinned beneath

  her attacker.” She lifts her gaze to Korvin and Cain.

  “Additionally, Maelia’s skin cells were found beneath Domitian’s

  fingernails. A clear sign of a fight-for-life struggle.”

  Cain

  lets out a breath he didn’t realize he was holding.

  Korvin’s

  shoulders relax for the first time since entering the infirmary. “So

  the evidence supports self-defense.”

  The

  nurse nods firmly. “As far as I am concerned, and as far as this

  infirmary’s medical documentation will read, Lucille Domitian was

  attacked.

  She defended herself during a lethal assault.” A beat. “And she

  survived something she shouldn’t have.”

  Lucille

  trembles, throat tight, but relief flickers across her face, a

  fragile spark.

  Korvin

  draws himself taller. “I’ll need these reports forwarded to my

  office immediately. They’re part of the Praetorian investigation.”

  The

  nurse’s expression tightens. “I can only forward Lucille’s

  medical reports, Instructor Korvin.” She gestures to the datapad.

  “Confidentiality laws. Cadet Maelia’s autopsy will have to be

  requested by the investigator on record, Praetorian Caepio.”

  Korvin

  stiffens with irritation.

  “But,”

  she adds, “I can

  release Lucille’s full records if a guardian signs permission.”

  Cain

  looks to Korvin, surprised.

  Lucille’s

  eyes flick up, too, tired, red-rimmed, almost bewildered.

  Korvin

  doesn’t hesistate. “Give me the forms.”

  The

  nurse retrieves a thick packet, far more pages than necessary.

  Bureaucracy weaponized by a system that doesn’t care.

  Korvin

  takes the pen and signs with swift, precise strokes.

  Name:

  Varian

  Korvin

  Role:

  Guardian

  (Temporary Custodial Authority)

  He

  flips through more pages, initialing, signing, confirming. No

  hesitation. No second thoughts.

  The

  nurse accepts the documents and nods respectfully. “Very well. I’ll

  send the full packet to your office within the hour.”

  Cain

  exhales with open relief. Lucille stares at Korvin, voice a faint

  rasp, barely audible, “…Thank you…”

  He

  meets her eyes, firm, steady, unflinching. “You’re my student.

  This academy will not chew you up while I stand idle.”

  Cain

  places a hand on Lucille’s back, steadying her.

  Korvin

  turns to the nurse. “Is she cleared to leave?”

  “She

  needs rest. She should not be alone tonight. Psych evaluations

  indicate acute stress response, no surprise. But physically? Yes.

  Take her somewhere warm and safe.”

  Korvin

  nods.

  Cain

  nods too, determination tightening his expression.

  Lucille

  sits between them, small, exhausted, hurting, but not alone.

  Not

  anymore.

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