Chapter 9: Chapter 9: If It Can Be Controlled

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Rowan slept for nineteen minutes.

He knew because the Archive told him.

[Registrar response window: 30 hours, 41 minutes.]

The line appeared the moment his eyes opened, hanging politely in the darkness above his bed like a death notice with excellent punctuality.

Rowan stared at it.

Then he pulled the blanket over his head.

The window remained visible through the blanket.

“Rude,” he muttered.

From the bed across the room, Bren said, “If you're talking to forbidden magic before sunrise, blink twice.”

Rowan pulled the blanket down.

Bren lay upside down with his legs against the wall, one horn catching the faint gray light through the window. He looked entirely too awake.

“Why are you awake?” Rowan asked.

“Minor curse channels react badly to pre-dawn ward work.”

“That means nothing to me.”

“It means Voss made me hex rocks at four in the morning.”

Jory groaned from beneath three blankets. “Some of us were asked to breathe on stones until they sweated.”

“That also means nothing to me.”

“It meant something to the stones,” Bren said.

Nox sat at his desk, asleep with his head on folded arms while paper birds continued moving around him in careful circles. Each bird carried a tiny ink mark on its chest, flying through repeating patterns that looked random until Rowan stared long enough to see the geometry.

Decoys.

False activity points.

Grayhall had begun hiding him while he slept.

Or tried to.

The thought made his chest tighten.

“Where is Voss?”

“With Headmistress Cael,” Bren said.

Rowan sat up too fast.

His right hand protested.

“Already?”

“She enjoys terrifying meetings at dawn.”

“Is that a joke?”

“No one knows.”

Jory emerged from the blankets, hair standing in frozen directions. “Cael once expelled a ghost for poor attendance.”

Rowan stared.

“The ghost came back on time after that,” Bren added.

Nox lifted his head without opening his eyes. “Half an hour until practice court.”

“Practice what?” Rowan asked.

Nox’s birds turned toward him as one.

“Not dying,” Bren said.

By the time Rowan reached the small practice court behind Dormitory C, the eastern sky had turned pale and colorless.

Mira was already there.

Of course she was.

She stood in the chalk circle with both knees bandaged, one arm in a sling, and a stubborn expression suggesting she had no plans to treat injury as relevant information.

“You should be in the infirmary,” Rowan said.

“You should be in a government facility being politely dissected.”

“That isn't comparable.”

“True. Mine sounds less boring.”

Bren arrived behind Rowan carrying a pouch of small black stones marked with green chalk. Jory brought a metal kettle that steamed from one side and frosted from the other. Nox followed last, surrounded by paper birds.

Professor Voss entered through the archway a minute later.

He looked like a man who had argued with authority and found authority disappointingly familiar.

Rowan straightened.

“Well?” Mira asked.

Voss gave her a look. “Good morning to you as well.”

“What did Cael say?”

“That conversations with students have become alarmingly direct.”

“Professor.”

Voss sighed.

“Headmistress Cael has agreed to delay formal notification to the Registrar until their inspectors arrive.”

Rowan frowned. “Isn’t the Registrar already coming?”

“Yes. But there is a difference between inspectors arriving to investigate an anomalous pulse and inspectors arriving to retrieve a named student.”

That difference sounded thin.

Important, but thin.

“So she’ll protect him?” Mira asked.

Voss’s expression went still.

“She will hear him.”

Silence.

Rowan felt the words settle into everyone.

Bren lowered the pouch slightly. “That isn't the same.”

“No,” Voss said. “It is not.”

Mira’s jaw tightened. “If Grayhall hands him over—”

“Grayhall has survived this long by choosing which battles become graves,” Voss said sharply.

Mira stepped forward. “My aunt—”

“I know.”

“You don't get to use survival as an excuse for cowardice.”

Voss’s face hardened.

For a moment, Rowan thought he would snap back.

Instead, he said, “Correct.”

That stopped Mira more effectively than anger.

Voss looked at Rowan.

“Headmistress Cael won't risk every student in this school because I bring her a frightened boy and a story about an Archive-class anomaly.”

“I’m not frightened,” Rowan said.

Everyone looked at him.

He reconsidered.

“I am not only frightened.”

Voss nodded once. “Better.”

“What does she want?”

“Proof.”

Rowan’s stomach dropped.

“Proof of what?”

“That the Archive can be controlled. That it isn't actively harvesting student formations. That your presence doesn't turn Grayhall into a beacon the Registrar can follow through every ward we have.”

“And if I can’t prove that?”

Voss didn't answer.

He didn't need to.

Mira turned away, swearing under her breath.

Jory looked at his kettle.

Nox’s paper birds dipped lower.

Rowan stared at the chalk circle beneath his feet.

Grayhall hadn't promised to save him.

It had promised him a hearing.

A chance. Poor people learned early not to insult chances just because they arrived badly dressed.

“When?” Rowan asked.

“Noon.”

Rowan looked up. “Today?”

“The Registrar arrives tomorrow night at the latest. Cael prefers not to make decisions after inspectors are already in her office.”

Noon.

Six hours.

Less.

The Archive countdown ticked in Rowan’s vision.

[Registrar response window: 29 hours, 56 minutes.]

He took a breath.

“Then we practice.”

Voss’s eyes sharpened.

“Good.”

The morning became a controlled disaster.

Voss divided the practice court into three zones.

Zone one: Archive control.

Zone two: decoy interference.

Zone three: emergency suppression, which sounded reassuring until Rowan learned it involved Voss standing nearby with three ward tags, two binding crystals, and a sedative dart Nurse Pell had apparently provided “with enthusiasm.”

“I dislike zone three,” Rowan said.

“Zone three dislikes becoming necessary,” Voss replied.

They began with opening and closing the Archive.

Simple, in theory.

In practice, the black window behaved like a door with opinions.

When Rowan breathed evenly and focused on Piercing Spark, it opened small and stable.

When he thought about the Registrar, the border cracked wider.

When he remembered the old laboratory, silver-black lines crawled across his wrist.

When Mira muttered that he looked like he was about to faint, the Archive displayed:

[External Formation Mapping available.]

Rowan slammed it shut so fast he nearly fell over.

Mira raised both hands. “I didn’t consent.”

“I know.”

“Good.”

Voss made notes.

Too many notes.

“Again,” he said.

Rowan opened the Archive again.

[Failed Skill Archive]

[Access Level: 2]

[Registrar Detection Risk: Elevated]

“Close.”

He closed it.

“Again.”

Open.

Close.

Open.

Close.

By the fifteenth repetition, sweat ran down Rowan’s back despite the cold.

By the twentieth, his hand burned.

By the twenty-sixth, the Archive stopped flashing External Formation Mapping whenever someone moved nearby.

Progress, technically.

Painful, unimpressive progress.

Voss allowed him exactly one minute of rest before moving to Piercing Spark.

“No firing,” the professor said.

Rowan frowned. “Then how do I practice it?”

“Repair simulation.”

“I have that?”

“You tell me.”

Rowan opened the skill panel.

[Piercing Spark]

[Classification: Modified Failed Skill]

[Stability: 34%]

That had increased by three percent since Grayhall.

Probably from controlled activation.

Probably.

[Recommended Repair Path: Stabilize Core Ignition Loop]

[Expected Stability Increase: +18%]

[Simulation Available.]

Rowan blinked.

“Simulation available.”

Voss’s eyes brightened with professional interest he didn't bother hiding.

“Open it.”

Rowan selected the option.

The skill diagram unfolded in his vision, but this time it didn't attach to his hand. It hovered in the air as a translucent structure only he could see—orange ignition core, compressed output channel, red stress fractures along the loop.

A new prompt appeared.

[Manual adjustment required.]

“Oh,” Rowan said.

Voss leaned forward. “What?”

“It wants me to adjust the formation manually.”

“Do not do that physically.”

“I gathered.”

Rowan focused on the ignition loop.

The diagram responded, expanding until the broken section filled his vision. It was like looking at glass machinery made of flame. One loop fed mana into the core. Another redirected excess pressure outward. The defect was obvious now that he knew how to look: the loops were misaligned by a fraction, causing heat to scrape against the pathway instead of flowing through it.

Like a hinge set crooked.

Broken things could be fixed.

Carefully.

Rowan nudged the first loop.

Pain stabbed through his forehead.

The diagram snapped back.

[Adjustment failed.]

Voss watched his face. “What happened?”

“It slapped me.”

“The diagram?”

“My brain, maybe.”

“Useful precision.”

Rowan tried again.

This time, he moved less.

Not forcing.

Guiding.

The loop shifted.

Held.

A faint click moved through the skill structure—not sound, but recognition.

[Partial alignment achieved.]

[Projected Stability: 39%]

Rowan exhaled.

“Progress, technically.”

Mira stepped closer before stopping herself. “How much?”

“Five percent, maybe.”

“From staring?”

“From being mentally slapped, apparently.”

Bren tossed one of his marked stones and caught it. “Forbidden magic has strong teaching methods.”

Rowan attempted the next adjustment.

Failed.

Tried again.

Failed worse.

On the fourth attempt, the ignition loop aligned more smoothly, and the projected stability rose to 43%.

Voss’s pencil moved rapidly.

“This is repair without activation,” he murmured. “Safer. Slower. If we can demonstrate controlled simulation to Cael—”

The Archive flickered.

New text appeared.

[Evolution branch detected.]

Rowan went still.

Voss noticed immediately. “What?”

“It says evolution branch detected.”

Mira’s eyes widened.

Bren whispered, “That sounds important.”

The skill diagram expanded again.

Piercing Spark split into three possible pathways.

[Branch 1: Stable Spark]

[Effect: Lower output, improved control, reduced backlash.]

[Branch 2: Needle Flame]

[Effect: Increased penetration, narrow-range combat application.]

[Branch 3: Ember Thread]

[Effect: Reduced power, sustained cutting line, high precision.]

Rowan read them aloud.

Everyone went quiet.

Jory lowered his kettle.

“That sounds like skill evolution.”

Voss’s expression had gone still in that dangerous thinking way again.

“It is.”

“But Piercing Spark is a failed skill,” Mira said.

“Modified failed skill,” Rowan corrected automatically.

She looked at him.

He winced. “Sorry.”

Voss stepped closer. “Can you choose one?”

“Yes.”

“Do not.”

Rowan lifted both hands. “I wasn't going to.”

“Good.”

“But if Cael wants proof—”

“No.”

“She wants proof it can be controlled.”

“She doesn't need you evolving an unauthorized failed formation in front of her before lunch.”

“That would be persuasive.”

“That would be a confession with fireworks.”

Bren nodded solemnly. “Compelling, but legally dense.”

Rowan looked back at the three branches.

Stable Spark was the sensible choice.

Control. Reduced backlash. Less likely to lose fingers.

Needle Flame was power.

Combat usefulness. Cassian would have chosen that. So would most students who had spent a life being looked down on and suddenly found a sharp tool in their hand.

Ember Thread was strange.

Not stronger exactly.

Precise.

Sustained.

Less power, more control.

Something about it pulled at him.

Not hunger.

Recognition, sharp and unwelcome.

The Archive flickered.

[User preference pattern detected: efficiency over output.]

Rowan frowned. “Stop analyzing me.”

Voss’s head snapped up. “It said what?”

Rowan repeated it.

Voss wrote harder.

Mira smirked. “Even forbidden magic thinks you’re practical.”

“It also thinks I've elevated detection risk.”

“Everyone has flaws.”

The joke helped.

A little.

They practiced until Rowan’s head hurt too much to continue simulation. By then, Piercing Spark’s projected stability sat at 47%, though actual stability remained unchanged until applied.

Voss made him close the Archive and keep it closed while the others worked on decoys.

Nox’s paper birds carried tiny command threads across ward stones placed around the court. Each thread mimicked low-level formation activity, fluttering like small false signals.

Jory breathed carefully over the stones, layering warm and cold mana until the readings blurred.

Bren placed nuisance hexes that made Voss’s detection crystal hiccup every few seconds and once display the phrase UNREGISTERED TURNIP.

Voss stared at the crystal.

Bren looked proud. “Signature interference.”

“Why turnip?”

“The curse chooses its own poetry.”

By late morning, the practice court held a shaky web of false signals.

Nothing strong enough to fool a full Registrar inspection.

Enough, Voss said, to muddy distance readings.

Maybe.

Grayhall, Rowan was learning, ran on maybe.

At eleven-forty, Nurse Pell arrived with a tray of food no one wanted and medical judgment everyone received.

She checked Rowan’s pulse, examined his hand, glared at Voss, and said, “If he collapses in front of Cael, I'll say I told you so over the body.”

“Noted,” Voss said.

“I mean it.”

“You usually do.”

Mira snatched a roll from the tray. “Does the body get a choice?”

“Not if it's foolish,” Pell said.

Rowan ate because Pell watched him with the expression of a woman deciding where to inject obedience.

At eleven-fifty-five, Voss led him to the headmistress’s office.

Mira tried to come.

Voss said no.

She looked ready to argue until Rowan shook his head.

“I’ll be fine,” he said.

“Terrible liar,” she replied.

But she stayed.

Headmistress Cael’s office occupied the top floor of Grayhall’s central tower.

The room was circular, lined with windows overlooking the sea cliffs. Bookshelves curved along the walls. Strange objects sat under glass domes: a cracked crown, a silver feather, a stone eye that tracked Rowan as he entered.

Headmistress Cael stood behind a plain wooden desk.

She was tall, dark-skinned, with close-cropped silver hair and eyes the color of old steel. She wore no academic robes, only a black coat fastened at the throat with a pin shaped like Grayhall’s broken tower.

Rowan had expected someone elderly.

She was not.

He had expected someone warm.

She was definitely not.

“Rowan Vale,” she said.

He swallowed. “Headmistress.”

Voss stood beside him.

Cael looked at the professor first.

“Elian.”

“Headmistress.”

“You look guilty.”

“I often do.”

“More than usual.”

“That's also fair.”

Her gaze shifted to Rowan.

He felt assessed from skin to bone.

“You have caused difficulty.”

Rowan resisted the urge to apologize.

Voss had told him not to begin with apology. Apology sounded like guilt. Guilt invited ownership.

“I didn't mean to,” Rowan said.

“Intent is relevant to ethics. Less so to consequences.”

That sounded like something Voss would say.

Worse, Voss probably learned it from her.

Cael gestured to the chair before her desk.

“Sit.”

Rowan sat.

Voss remained standing.

The headmistress opened a file.

His file.

Thin.

Gray stamp.

Zero-rank.

“Officially,” Cael said, “you are a failed awakening assigned to Grayhall for remedial classification.”

“Yes.”

“Unofficially, you possess an Archive-class anomaly, modified your failed formation into a functioning skill, mapped another student’s skill structure, triggered a legacy pulse beneath my school, and attracted Registrar attention.”

Rowan glanced at Voss.

Voss looked at the window.

Coward.

Cael closed the file.

“Show me.”

Rowan’s mouth dried.

“What exactly?”

“Control.”

He looked at Voss.

The professor gave one small nod.

Rowan breathed in.

Opened the Archive.

Small.

Contained.

The black window appeared.

[Failed Skill Archive]

[Access Level: 2]

He didn't allow the border to expand.

He didn't think of the lab.

He didn't look at Cael’s skill, though the Archive pressed faintly against the new behavioral lock, aware of a powerful external formation nearby.

No permission.

No mapping.

The lock held.

Rowan exhaled.

“Open,” he said.

Cael watched his face, not the invisible window. “Close it.”

He closed it.

“Again.”

He opened it.

Closed it.

Again.

By the fifth time, sweat gathered at his hairline.

The window remained stable.

Cael’s expression didn't change.

“Your modified skill.”

Rowan opened Piercing Spark’s simulation diagram.

No activation.

No flame.

No pulse.

He described what he saw: stability rating, repair path, evolution branches. He didn't choose one.

Cael listened without interruption.

When he finished, she leaned back.

“You understand what the Registrar will argue.”

Rowan’s hands tightened on his knees.

“That I’m dangerous.”

“That you're a national asset.”

He blinked.

Cael’s mouth turned grim.

“Dangerous things are killed. Useful things are claimed.”

That was worse. Much worse.

Voss spoke for the first time.

“His consent protocols can be rebuilt.”

“Can they?” Cael asked.

“We have begun.”

“Not my question.”

Voss said nothing.

Cael’s eyes returned to Rowan.

“Do you know why Grayhall exists?”

Rowan thought of the secret lab.

The files.

The REMOVED stamp.

“Because the system needs somewhere to put people it can't classify.”

“Yes,” Cael said. “And because some of us believe misclassification shouldn't be a death sentence.”

Her gaze hardened.

“But belief isn't strategy. If I shield you, the Registrar may audit every student here. They may discover old wards, hidden research, unlicensed skill deviations, and children whose families trusted me to keep them beyond polite cages.”

Rowan’s throat tightened.

Mira.

Bren.

Jory.

Nox.

Everyone.

“I don’t want them hurt because of me.”

“Noble,” Cael said. “Irrelevant.”

The word stung.

She leaned forward.

“If you can't prove the Archive can remain under your control, I won't sacrifice Grayhall for you.”

Voss stiffened.

Rowan looked up.

Cael didn't soften.

“If you can prove it,” she said, “then we discuss how much trouble this school can afford.”

Rowan felt the countdown ticking in his vision.

Twenty-nine hours.

Less now.

He swallowed.

“How do I prove it?”

Cael’s eyes moved to his bandaged hand.

“At noon tomorrow, when Registrar inspectors arrive, they will perform a standard anomaly scan. If your Archive reacts, they take you.”

“And before then?”

“Before then,” Headmistress Cael said, “you learn to become boring.”


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