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CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR: Garner You In Silk Like A Spider

  The

  Academy Training Yard – One Week Later – 05:20

  The

  training yard is drowned in pre-dawn gray. Floodlights hum overhead,

  casting long, broken shadows across the stone. Frost clings to the

  ground in thin veins, crunching beneath boots. Breath fogs the air.

  Steel rings out.

  Cain pivots, boots

  scraping, bringing his blade up just in time to catch Lucille’s

  strike. The impact shudders up his arms, hard enough to sting. She

  does not pull the blow. Neither of them do. The sound echoes off the

  surrounding walls like a challenge hurled at an uncaring sky.

  Lucille steps inside his

  guard, shoulder low, blade snapping toward his ribs.

  Cain twists, barely, the

  edge kissing his training armor instead of flesh. He grins despite

  the jolt.

  “Too slow,” she says,

  breathless, eyes bright.

  “Still warming up,” he

  answers, and drives her back with a series of fast, controlled

  strikes.

  To anyone watching, it

  looks savage. Blades meet with force. Footwork is aggressive,

  relentless. Their bodies move with the certainty of long practice, no

  wasted motion, no hesitation. This is not play. This is how they were

  raised.

  Lucille ducks under a

  sweeping cut, spins, and cracks the flat of her blade against Cain’s

  shoulder. He grunts, stumbles a half step, then laughs under his

  breath as he recovers.

  “You’re smiling,” he

  says, circling her.

  “So are you,” she

  replies.

  They clash again.

  Cain presses forward,

  forcing her toward the edge of the yard. His strikes are heavy,

  measured, meant to test her guard. Lucille absorbs them, redirects

  them, her boots sliding over frost-slick stone. She catches his

  wrist, twists, and sends his blade skidding away with a sharp

  metallic screech.

  For a heartbeat, Cain is

  unarmed.

  Lucille’s blade stops an

  inch from his throat.

  They freeze.

  The world holds its breath.

  Then Cain gently taps her

  knee with his boot, breaking her stance, and she laughs as she

  stumbles back, lowering her weapon.

  “Cheap,” she says,

  shaking her head.

  “Effective,” he

  answers, retrieving his sword.

  They reset without

  ceremony. No salutes. No audience. Just the quiet understanding

  between them.

  Around them, the Academy

  still sleeps. Towers loom in silence. Windows are dark. Somewhere

  beyond the walls, forests and fields vanish into blackness, the world

  waiting, patient and hungry.

  Lucille’s smile softens

  as they move again, slower now, more fluid. Their blades weave

  together, familiar as breathing.

  Lucille and Cain trade

  strikes, each movement precise, deliberate, but executed with the

  fluidity of instinct. The clash of their training swords rings out

  across the empty yard, sharp enough to cut through the morning air.

  Blows are blocked, parried, countered, each one forcing the other to

  adjust in milliseconds. Muscles tense and flex, feet scuffing against

  the mat, leaving marks like scars in the soft ground.

  They spin, pivot, and lunge

  in perfect rhythm, neither giving quarter. A feint from Lucille draws

  Cain forward, and he reacts instantly, slicing down to intercept her

  follow-up strike. They collide mid-step, both pushing and twisting,

  trying to unbalance the other.

  Then it happens, two

  simultaneous missteps. Lucille plants her foot too firmly, Cain

  overreaches in response, and in the blink of an eye, they both lose

  footing. The world tilts, momentum carries them, and gravity wins.

  Cain lunges instinctively

  to stop her fall, arms out, but the angle is wrong, the timing

  imperfect. Lucille lands hard, directly on top of him, just as he

  hits the ground on his back. The impact knocks the wind out of both

  of them, a dull thud reverberating through their bodies. Dirt and

  sweat mingle, and for a heartbeat, everything stills, silence heavy

  around them except for their ragged breathing.

  For a long moment, they

  just stay there, chest to chest, limbs tangled, sweat mixing with the

  dirt on their skin. Cain’s arms lie spread, fingers splayed against

  the ground, and he can feel Lucille’s weight pressing down, her

  thighs bracing against his sides. Her hands clutch at his shoulders

  and chest to keep from crushing him, and their eyes meet.

  The tension breaks first in

  her, then in him. A laugh bursts from Lucille, sharp and breathless,

  and it’s contagious. Cain’s own laughter follows, low, throaty,

  filling the quiet training yard. The sound is reckless and free,

  echoing off the walls, a release they both desperately need.

  They continue laughing,

  gasping for air, their foreheads nearly touching, chests heaving in

  unison. The world outside the yard, the Academy, even the grind of

  training, they fade away. In this moment, there is only them, the

  ridiculousness of their fall, and the shared warmth of surviving the

  chaos together.

  Cain’s hands tighten

  around her waist, and before she can react, he lifts and pivots,

  pressing her gently but firmly against the edge of the training mat.

  Lucille lets out a startled yelp, her eyes snapping wide as she looks

  up at him.

  Cain leans close, his grin

  playful, teasing. “Guess you shouldn’t let your guard down, huh?”

  he says, voice low, carrying both humor and a dangerous kind of

  warmth.

  Lucille’s lips part

  slightly, and a flush spreads from her ears down to her neck. Her

  gaze locks on his, unflinching despite the thrum of her racing heart.

  Her face burns with a deep, burning blush, and for a moment, all the

  practiced discipline of a Praevectus cadet melts away. She can’t

  look anywhere else, can’t think about anything else, just Cain,

  just the way he’s there, so close, grinning like this.

  Her hand hovers for a

  heartbeat before she lets her fingertips brush against the stubble

  along Cain’s jaw. The texture is coarse, unexpectedly grounding,

  yet intimate in a way that makes her heart hitch. The first light of

  dawn filters in across the training yard, catching on the strands of

  his hair and tracing the sharp lines of his face, emphasizing the

  strength in his jaw, the clarity of his silvery-blue eyes. For a

  moment, the world narrows to that space between them, to the warmth

  of his chest beneath her palms, the faint rise and fall of his

  breathing.

  Cain’s expression

  softens, the playful grin fading into something quieter, almost shy.

  A subtle pink creeps along his cheeks, and he leans ever so slightly

  into her touch, the faintest tremor in his lips betraying how rare it

  is for him to let himself be vulnerable. Lucille’s gaze lingers,

  memorizing the curve of his jaw, the angle of his cheekbones, the way

  the sunlight glints in his eyes, catching hints of silver in the

  blue, the way it makes him look alive and awake in a way that feels

  like it’s meant only for her.

  She hesitates, almost

  afraid to break the spell, and yet her hand moves with purpose,

  brushing along his jawline as if confirming that he is real, that

  this moment is real. Cain’s eyes soften further, his usual

  confident, commanding presence giving way to something more tender,

  more human. His fingers twitch slightly, brushing against hers as if

  unsure whether to pull back or to anchor himself to her touch. The

  world around them, the empty training mats, the faint morning mist,

  the distant voices of waking cadets, fades into insignificance. In

  this fragile bubble of early sunlight and quiet, Lucille realizes

  she’s never felt so intensely seen, so intensely noticed, and Cain

  feels it too, a weight of connection that neither words nor movement

  could ever fully capture.

  Finally, Cain exhales, a

  soft, slow breath, and his gaze holds hers, unblinking, unyielding.

  The moment stretches, intimate and charged, a delicate balance of

  vulnerability and strength.

  Cain finally speaks, though

  his voice betrays his confidence. He whispers to her, “Lucy, I-I

  need to…” He stops, still not trusting himself with the words.

  And instead of telling her, decides to show her, and he leans down to

  kiss her.

  “Lucille! Cain!” A

  sharp voice calls.

  The sound is so precise, so

  commanding, that both of them freeze instantly, as if the world has

  shifted beneath their feet. Cain’s hands tighten briefly around her

  waist, then he releases her, his face a mix of frustration and

  reluctant compliance.

  “Renn,” he mutters,

  voice low, just audible to her, a note of tension threading through

  it. His eyes flick briefly toward her, apologetic and taut with

  restrained desire. “I’ll—later.”

  He moves first, pushing off

  the mat with controlled strength, his boots thudding against the

  training yard floor. Lucille, still caught in that startled daze,

  lets him guide her up by the wrist. Their hands brush, light,

  fleeting, almost imperceptible, but it’s enough for her to feel the

  pulse of his warmth, the lingering electricity of the kiss that never

  happened.

  Renn’s figure is sharp

  against the arcade doorway, datapad clutched tightly, fingers

  drumming impatiently. “Come here!” he calls again, his tone

  leaving no room for argument. Cain straightens, jaw set, and without

  breaking eye contact with Lucille, gives a short, almost

  imperceptible nod.

  Lucille exhales, the heat

  rising in her cheeks despite herself. She follows him, stepping in

  sync, her body still humming from the interrupted moment. Behind

  them, the morning light casts long shadows across the mats, and for a

  heartbeat, both of them linger in that space between compliance and

  desire, knowing that the stolen, unsaid words are theirs alone, even

  in the eyes of discipline.

  Cain and Lucille step up

  under the arcade, still catching their breaths, the early morning

  chill brushing against their sweat-slicked skin. Renn’s brow is

  furrowed, not in anger, but in genuine confusion.

  “You two,” he begins,

  voice measured, eyes narrowing just slightly, “why are you out here

  before the sun has even fully risen, playing around on the mats

  instead of being in the library or reviewing your dossiers?”

  Cain straightens, shoving a

  hand through his hair, a small wry smile tugging at his lips. “We

  were training in melee,” he says plainly. “Just sparring. Keeping

  reflexes sharp.”

  Renn blinks, then slowly,

  the corners of his mouth twitch upward. “I see.” He leans on the

  railing, the datapad still in hand, and shakes his head slightly.

  “Discipline and preparation, yes… but there’s more to be

  learned here than just strikes and blocks. You’re learning

  endurance, patience, control. You’re testing the limits of your

  mind as much as your body. Remember, a soldier who cannot temper

  instinct with thought is just a weapon waiting to fail its wielder.”

  Lucille nods slightly,

  listening intently, and Cain’s hand brushes hers almost

  accidentally. The moment passes, unnoticed by Renn, whose gaze sweeps

  over both of them again.

  “Now,” Renn continues,

  voice sharpening just enough to cut through the morning air, “before

  you wander off into glory or death, eat a proper breakfast. The Final

  Exam starts today. It is no short task. This may very well be the

  last good, hot meal you get for some time. Fuel your bodies while you

  can.”

  Cain does not give himself

  time to think. He reaches for Lucille’s hand and closes his fingers

  around it, firm enough to mean it, gentle enough not to frighten her,

  and immediately turns down the length of the arcade. The sudden

  motion steals the air from his lungs more than Renn’s words ever

  could. Breakfast sounds good. Necessary. An excuse to move, to do

  something, to drown the fragile silence left behind by interruption.

  His face is still warm.

  Still betraying him.

  Another failed attempt.

  Another moment where the words nearly escape and then rot behind his

  teeth. He tells himself it doesn’t matter, that there will be

  another chance, another day, but the lie feels thin even as he thinks

  it.

  Lucille follows half a step

  behind him.

  She watches their hands

  instead of his back. The way his thumb shifts unconsciously, brushing

  against her knuckles as if to reassure himself she’s real, that she

  hasn’t vanished. Her own cheeks burn, heat lingering where his

  breath had been moments before, close enough that she can almost

  still feel it against her skin.

  She knows

  something almost happened.

  Or at least, she thinks she

  does.

  Doubt gnaws at her,

  familiar and cruel. Maybe she imagined it. Maybe she wanted it too

  much. Cain has always been kind, always been close, closer than

  anyone else. That doesn’t mean this. That doesn’t mean

  what her heart whispers when she isn’t looking directly at him.

  You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version.

  Cadets pass them in

  opposite directions, voices sharp with nerves, boots ringing against

  metal decking worn smooth by generations of marching feet. The arcade

  smells of hot protein, scorched oil, antiseptic, comfort and dread

  intertwined. Above them, lights hum, flickering faintly like tired

  eyes.

  Lucille tightens her grip.

  Not hard. Just enough.

  Cain glances back

  instinctively, startled, silver-blue eyes catching the overhead

  light. For a split second, he looks younger than he should,

  unguarded, unsure, before the Academy’s discipline settles back

  into his posture.

  Their eyes meet.

  Lucille swallows. Her

  throat feels too tight, her pulse loud in her ears. Still, she forces

  the words out, soft and tentative, like stepping onto thin ice.

  “Cain?”

  He slows. Just a little.

  “What… what were you

  wanting to tell me?”

  The question trembles

  between them, fragile and dangerous, and for the first time since the

  morning drills ended, Cain truly falters.

  Cain slows, then stops

  altogether.

  The arcade hums around

  them, low voices, the thumping of boots, but for a heartbeat it all

  falls away. He still holds her hand. He realizes it a second too

  late, like noticing a wound only after the blood is already on the

  floor.

  Lucille’s question hangs

  there between them, fragile as spun glass.

  “What… what were you

  wanting to tell me?” she asks again, softer this time.

  Cain opens his mouth.

  Nothing comes out.

  His thoughts scatter,

  drilled apart by years of training that never prepared him for this.

  He has faced live fire, punishment drills that flayed muscle from

  bone, instructors who delighted in breaking cadets down to see which

  ones crawled back up. None of that compares to the terror of her

  looking at him like this, open, unsure, hopeful.

  “I—” He swallows. His

  grip tightens without meaning to, then loosens just as quickly,

  afraid he’s hurting her. “I didn’t… I mean, I wasn’t—”

  Heat crawls up his neck. He

  looks away, jaw clenching, eyes tracking some meaningless detail

  along the arcade wall, a crack in the plating, old scorch marks never

  fully scrubbed clean. Anything but her face.

  “I just thought—” He

  exhales sharply, frustrated. “Forget it. It’s stupid. We’re…

  today’s not—”

  Lucille steps closer.

  The movement is small, but

  it pulls his attention back to her like gravity. Their hands are

  still linked. She hasn’t pulled away. That realization hits harder

  than any blow he’s taken in the ring.

  “It’s not stupid,”

  she says. There’s a tremor in her voice, but she doesn’t retreat

  from it. “You don’t talk like that when it matters to you.”

  Cain lets out a quiet,

  humorless breath. She knows him too well. She always has.

  He drags a hand through his

  hair, fingers scraping against cropped strands. “You’re not

  supposed to ask,” he mutters. “You’re supposed to… I don’t

  know. Laugh it off. Pretend you didn’t notice.”

  Lucille’s brow furrows.

  “Why?”

  Because if she says no,

  everything breaks. Because if she says yes, everything changes.

  Because the Academy grinds people into tools, and tools don’t get

  to want things.

  He finally looks at her

  again.

  Her cheeks are still

  flushed. Her eyes search his face, anxious but steady, like she’s

  bracing herself for impact. The sight of it makes his chest ache.

  “Because,” he says

  quietly, “once I say it out loud, I can’t take it back.”

  Noise creeps back in, the

  scrape of boots, a laugh that sounds too loud, too forced. Time keeps

  moving, indifferent.

  Lucille squeezes his hand

  again, firmer this time. Grounding.

  “Cain,” she says,

  barely above a whisper. “I’m not asking you to take anything

  back.”

  For a moment, he thinks he

  might actually say it. The words line up on his tongue, dangerous and

  honest and terrifying.

  I care about you. I

  always have. I don’t know how to survive this place without you.


  Instead, footsteps approach

  from behind, cadets pouring into the walkway, laughter edged with

  nerves, talk of rations and odds and who won’t make it back

  tonight.

  The moment fractures.

  Cain’s shoulders tense.

  He steps half a pace away, instinctively putting the Academy back

  between them like armor. “We should eat,” he says, too quickly.

  “Renn’s right. We’ll need the strength.”

  Lucille hesitates,

  disappointment flickering across her face before she schools it into

  something safer. She nods. “Yeah. Of course.”

  They fall into line

  together, still close, but not quite touching the same way. Cain

  feels the loss like phantom pain.

  As they move down the

  corridors and walkwas of the Academy, the smell of hot food mixes

  with oil and ozone, and the looming weight of the Final Exam settles

  over them both. Whatever he almost confessed will have to wait.

  If they survive the day.

  Cain glances at Lucille

  once more as they reach the serving counter. Her gaze meets his,

  searching, unresolved.

  He gives her a small,

  apologetic smile.

  he promises

  himself.

  The mess hall of the

  Academy yawns open before them, vast and cathedral-like, its ceiling

  lost in shadowed arches of steel and stone. Heat rolls out to meet

  them, thick with the smell of food and bodies and anticipation. Cain

  does not release Lucille’s hand as they enter. If anything, his

  grip firms, as though the sheer scale of the chamber might swallow

  her if he lets go.

  He leads her across the

  polished floor, past banners hanging like mute judges from the

  rafters, toward the buffet tables lining the far wall.

  The central rows are

  already packed. Cadets sit shoulder to shoulder at long, scarred

  tables, devouring their meals with the intensity of people who know

  this may be the last time they eat like this for a while. Laughter

  bursts out in jagged pieces, too loud, too forced. Beneath it hums

  something darker, fear, excitement, resignation, all stirred together

  with grease and heat.

  This is not the usual fare.

  The buffet stretches on

  like an offering to the gods of war. Trays are piled high, food

  stacked in deliberate abundance, almost obscene in its generosity.

  This is Southern cooking elevated, still rooted in comfort, still

  familiar, but refined, expanded, made grand. Biscuits split and

  steaming, thick slabs of smoked meat glazed to a dark sheen, eggs

  whipped soft and rich, gravies flecked with herbs and spice. Roasted

  vegetables gleam beside cast-iron pans of cornbread, and everything

  smells like home sharpened into something ceremonial.

  Cain swallows.

  He takes a tray from the

  stack and hands it to Lucille, then takes one for himself. Only then

  does he let go of her hand. The absence is immediate, like a sudden

  drop in temperature. He tells himself it’s practical, they need

  both hands, but the thought does little to ease the faint tightness

  in his chest.

  They move with the line,

  metal scraping softly as trays slide forward. Cain selects his food

  with the same care he applies to everything else. Balanced portions.

  Protein, starch, greens. Enough to sustain him, not enough to slow

  him down. It is fuel, yes, but he allows himself just enough to enjoy

  it, to remember what real food tastes like before the Academy decides

  he no longer deserves it.

  Lucille does not share his

  restraint.

  She attacks the buffet like

  someone who expects it to vanish if she hesitates. Her tray fills

  rapidly, this, then that, then more, layers of food piled high

  without apology. She takes generous helpings, mixes flavors without

  concern, grabs whatever catches her eye. A starving wolf at a feast.

  Cain watches from the

  corner of his eye, the faintest curve tugging at his mouth.

  He doesn’t comment. He

  never does. He has long since stopped trying to understand where it

  all goes when she eats it, only that she somehow always comes back

  for more.

  They reach the end of the

  buffet, both of them bracing for the usual dispensers of water and

  bitter caf substitute.

  Instead, they stop short.

  Desserts.

  For breakfast.

  Lucille blinks, then grins

  despite herself.

  Pastries dusted with sugar,

  thick slices of pie still warm, honeyed breads, fried dough

  glistening under heat lamps; Southern indulgences rarely seen outside

  of celebrations or memorials. Rare on any day. Almost unheard of at

  this hour.

  The meaning is obvious.

  This is a gift. A bribe. A

  farewell.

  The Academy feeds them well

  today because tomorrow it may not have to feed them at all.

  Cain passes it by without

  hesitation, jaw tightening as he moves on. Lucille, however, does not

  hesitate for even a second. She adds dessert to her already

  overflowing tray, stacking it carefully, reverently, as if accepting

  a sacred rite.

  They step away from the

  line together, trays heavy in their hands, and the weight of the

  Final Exam settles deeper into the room, unspoken, unavoidable,

  waiting.

  They find two empty seats

  near the edge of the mess hall, where the noise is a little less

  suffocating but the weight of it still presses in from all sides.

  Cain sets his tray down first, then slides into the bench beside

  Lucille. Their shoulders brush, brief, accidental, and neither of

  them moves away.

  Lucille wastes no time.

  She digs in immediately,

  fork moving with ruthless efficiency, shoveling one bite after

  another as if the food might try to escape her if she slows. She

  barely finishes swallowing before the next mouthful follows. Grease

  smears her fingers. Crumbs dust the tray. It is not graceful. It is

  survival.

  Cain watches her with quiet

  amusement, the corner of his mouth lifting as he takes a measured

  bite of his own meal. He eats slowly, deliberately, cutting his food

  cleanly, savoring each taste as if committing it to memory. There is

  a calm to him that borders on ritual, every movement controlled,

  restrained.

  They have barely been

  seated a minute when shadows fall across the table.

  Boots scrape. Benches

  shift.

  Two cadets slide in across

  from them, trays in hand. Both plates are stacked high, more than

  Cain’s careful portions, but nowhere near Lucille’s mountainous

  excess. One of the boys is broad and thick through the shoulders,

  built like he was carved to absorb impact. The other is leaner,

  longer-limbed, movements sharper, eyes constantly tracking the room.

  Squad Tactics. Captain

  Vale’s class.

  The larger one does not

  even set his tray down before he speaks. “Morning,” he says,

  polite, measured, with a small, practiced smile.

  Lucille slows, mid-bite.

  She glances up at them, chewing, eyes wary, but she says nothing. She

  never does when new attention finds her. She simply keeps eating,

  watching them from beneath her lashes.

  Cain inclines his head in

  return. “Morning.”

  Only then do the two cadets

  sit.

  They eat for a moment in

  silence, the clatter of the hall filling the gap, until the larger

  one clears his throat.

  “Word’s going around,”

  he says. “They might allow teams for the Final Exam.”

  Cain’s hand pauses

  briefly over his tray, then resumes its steady rhythm. “Rumors are

  cheap,” he replies mildly.

  The thinner boy leans

  forward, elbows braced on the table. “Still,” he says, eyes

  flicking between Cain and Lucille, “if it does happen…

  we were wondering if we could run with you two.”

  Lucille freezes.

  Her fork stops halfway to

  her mouth. Slowly, she lowers it back to her tray. Her eyes widen,

  shock flickering openly across her face before she can hide it.

  Confusion follows close behind.

  With us?

  No one asks to join her. No

  one wants her on their side. She is used to being tolerated

  at best, despised at worst. Cain is the exception, the anomaly she’s

  learned to cling to because the rest of the world has never offered

  her a place.

  She glances at him,

  searching his face, as if to confirm she didn’t mishear.

  Cain looks back at the two

  boys, expression neutral, though surprise flashes briefly in his eyes

  before discipline shutters it away. “That’s… unexpected,” he

  says. “Why us?”

  The larger cadet shifts

  slightly, shoulders tightening. The lean one scratches at his jaw,

  both of them suddenly looking far less confident than they had a

  moment ago.

  Marcus Vala speaks first.

  “Because you’re the best,” he says simply. “Both of you.”

  Decimus Laeca nods quickly.

  “Top of the class. Every drill. Every evaluation. You make the rest

  of us look slow.”

  Marcus exhales through his

  nose. “And if the Academy’s going to throw us into something

  lethal, I’d rather not have dead weight dragging me down.”

  Decimus grimaces faintly.

  “No offense,” he adds, though the words ring hollow. “But half

  our class wouldn’t last five minutes. We need people who can keep

  up. People who won’t break.”

  His gaze flicks to Lucille,

  then back to Cain. “That’s you two.”

  Silence settles over the

  table.

  Lucille stares at them,

  still stunned, the noise of the mess hall fading into a dull roar in

  her ears. For the first time in a long while, she doesn’t know how

  to react to being seen, not as a burden, not as a mistake, but as

  something valuable.

  Cain studies Marcus and

  Decimus carefully, eyes sharp, weighing their words like blades in

  his hand.

  Lucille does not respond.

  She only stares.

  Her fork rests motionless

  in her hand, food cooling on the metal tines as her gaze locks onto

  Marcus, then Decimus. It is not a casual look. It is sharp, weighing,

  almost predatory, an instinct honed by years of being watched for

  weakness. Trust, for her, has never been given. It has only ever been

  survived.

  As far as she is concerned,

  this could be a trick.

  A setup. A way to get close

  enough to undermine her when it matters most, to isolate her, to make

  Cain vulnerable through her. She has seen it before. Smiles offered

  like knives. Hands extended only to pull away at the worst possible

  moment.

  And yet it’s Marcus and

  Decimus.

  Captain Vale pairs them

  together often. Drills. Live simulations. Close-quarters exercises

  where hesitation gets you “killed” and betrayal shows

  immediately. In those spaces, they’ve never failed her. Never

  turned. Never hesitated when it counted.

  But outside of class?

  They have never sat with

  her. Never spoken to her unless assigned. Never chosen her.

  Lucille’s jaw tightens.

  She keeps chewing slowly, deliberately, eyes never leaving them.

  Cain feels her tension

  immediately.

  He doesn’t rush to

  answer. He leans back slightly, one arm resting along the table,

  posture loose but alert. Inside, his mind is already moving, breaking

  the problem apart into manageable pieces.

  If teams are allowed, and

  that is a significant if, then numbers matter. Coverage

  matters. Endurance, overlapping fields of fire, shared

  responsibility. Marcus is a bulwark. Decimus is quick, perceptive.

  Together, they fill gaps Cain and Lucille can’t cover alone.

  But trust is the currency

  of survival. And trust, once misplaced, gets people killed.

  He studies the two boys

  carefully, searching for cracks, for ambition masquerading as

  loyalty.

  Marcus notices first.

  He clears his throat,

  setting his fork down. “Look,” he says, the polish fading from

  his voice. “I get it. You don’t owe us anything.”

  Decimus nods. “And I know

  how this sounds,” he adds. “Like we’re hedging our bets.”

  Lucille’s eyes narrow

  slightly at that.

  Decimus leans forward,

  lowering his voice. “But we’ve run drills together. You know how

  we operate.”

  Marcus follows, his tone

  earnest now. “Vale put us on your flank during the breach sim last

  month. You remember what happened.”

  Lucille does remember.

  The corridor. The simulated

  turret fire. The split second where her cover failed and the system

  flagged her as exposed.

  Decimus had moved without

  thinking.

  “He stepped in front of

  you,” Marcus continues. “Took the hit. Would’ve been a

  kill-shot in a real scenario.”

  Decimus shrugs,

  uncomfortable. “You were the objective. It made sense.”

  Lucille’s grip tightens

  around her fork.

  Marcus exhales, then adds

  quietly, “And Seraphine.”

  That gets her attention.

  “She was tampering with

  your gear during prep,” Marcus says. “Thought she was being

  subtle.”

  Cain’s gaze sharpens.

  “You stopped her?”

  Marcus nods. “Hard. Vale

  saw the aftermath. She got a warning. You never did.”

  Silence stretches again.

  Lucille’s thoughts churn,

  unease warring with reluctant acknowledgment. Those weren’t rumors.

  Those were facts. Things that happened when no one was watching.

  Things that cost Marcus and Decimus nothing to ignore and something

  to intervene.

  She looks down at her tray,

  at the half-eaten food she’s forgotten about.

  Cain finally speaks. “If

  we accept,” he says carefully, “there are conditions.”

  Both boys straighten

  immediately.

  “No secrets,” Cain

  continues. “No side deals. If this turns into a free-for-all, we

  move as one or not at all.”

  Decimus nods without

  hesitation. “Agreed.”

  Marcus mirrors him. “We

  don’t break formation.”

  Cain glances sideways at

  Lucille.

  The decision isn’t his

  alone.

  Lucille lifts her head

  slowly. Her expression is guarded, but something in her eyes has

  shifted, not trust, not yet, but consideration. She swallows, then

  finally speaks, voice quiet but firm.

  “If you betray us,” she

  says, “you won’t get a second chance.”

  The words are flat. Not a

  threat. A statement of fact.

  Marcus meets her gaze and

  inclines his head. “Fair.”

  Decimus echoes him.

  “Wouldn’t expect one.”

  Lucille exhales through her

  nose and gives a small, reluctant nod. “Then… fine.”

  Cain releases a breath he

  hadn’t realized he was holding.

  Around them, the mess hall

  roars on, unaware that, at one table, lines have just been drawn that

  may decide who walks out of the Final Exam alive.

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