Mag-log in
"You're holding that contract like it owes you something."
Nora looked up from the papers she'd been reading for the fourth time since boarding not because she'd missed anything, but because reading them again felt safer than looking at the ocean swallowing the coastline behind them.
The girl beside her on the bench had dark skin, short natural hair, and earrings shaped like tiny crescent moons. just. she was eating an apple with completely unbothered energy
"I'm just reading," Nora said.
"You've read that same page three times. I counted." The girl took another bite and held out her hand. "Demi Okafor. Pre-law. I'm here on the Harwick Academic Scholarship and I've already decided I'm not going to be afraid of anything on that island. which is either very brave or very stupid
Nora looked at the hand, then shook it. "Nora Ashby. Ancient Linguistics."
"What's your scholarship?"
"Academic. Harwick endowment."
Demi's eyes sharpened with interest. "Same funding pool. They only give out two of those per intake year." She tilted her head. "Which means you're either the smartest person on this ferry or the second smartest."
"I translated a vampire legal text at seventeen from a photograph someone posted online as a joke," Nora said. "It wasn't a joke."
Demi stared at her for a moment. Then she smiled wide, immediate, the kind that rearranged her whole face. "Okay. You're the smartest. I accept this." She nodded at the contract in Nora's hands. "Is that the Silence Oath? They made me sign mine digitally before boarding."
"Mine came by post." Nora folded it carefully along its original crease and tucked it into the inner pocket of her jacket. "Three weeks ago. On actual paper."
"Paper," Demi repeated. "Old school."
"Old world," Nora corrected quietly.
They both looked toward the bow of the ferry then the other passengers forty, maybe forty-five of them had gone mostly silent in the last twenty minutes. The ones who had boarded chattering and performing easily had gradually stopped. honestly. even the ones who clearly knew each other
The island did that. It wasn't visible yet, but something about the air had changed. Nora had noticed it before she could explain it to a density to the light, a pressure at the base of her throat that wasn't quite anxiety and not quite awe.
"Have you done any research?" Demi asked, her voice lower now without her seeming to notice.
"Everything publicly available." Nora paused. "Which isn't much."
"I found a forum. Humans who'd attended previous years, posting anonymously. They weren't allowed to name the institution but they described it." Demi was quiet for a moment. "Most of them said it was the best year of their lives."
"Most of them."
"Yeah." Demi ate the last of her apple and set the core neatly on the bench beside her. "Most."
Nora didn't say anything to that. She didn't need to. honestly. They were two scholarship students on a ferry to an island that didn't appear on any public map
The best year of their lives seemed optimistic. Surviving it seemed more achievable as a goal.
"First time off the mainland?" Demi asked.
"First time on a boat," Nora said.
Demi looked at her. "How are you holding up?"
"Phenomenally." Nora's jaw was tight. "Couldn't be better."
Demi laughed short, genuine and something in the tight space between them loosened slightly. "I like you," she said, as though this was a decision she'd made and was simply reporting the outcome. "I'm going to keep talking to you on this ferry and then I'm going to need us to be roommates so make sure you request me in the housing form."
"I already submitted my housing form."
"Request a change."
"I don't know you."
"You know my name. my scholarship "Given where we're going, that seems like exactly the person you want sleeping six feet away from you."
Nora considered this. It was, annoyingly, a sound argument. "I'll see if there's a process."
"There's always a process. We're pre-law and linguistics between us. We can navigate any process they have." Demi looked back toward the bow. Her voice stayed even but her eyes were doing something more careful. "I've been watching the other passengers. Without thinking, the ones who've been before the legacy students, the bloodline families, they're not afraid. But they're focused. Like they're already switching modes."
"Preparing themselves."
"Or remembering what the rules are." She paused. "There's a boy in a dark coat, hasn't moved since we boarded, hasn't spoken to anyone. I've watched three people start to approach him and then change their minds before they get close."
Nora had noticed him too. She hadn't let herself look directly, the way you didn't look directly at something that made the air feel different around it. "Vampire."
"Obviously. But the way the others defer to him " Demi stopped. "I think he's important."
"Everyone on this boat is important," Nora said. "That's who gets invited."
"Some are more important than others." Demi glanced at her sideways. "Aren't you curious?"
"I'm curious about everything," Nora said. "That doesn't mean I act on it immediately. Just, it means I wait until I've better information."
"That's the most linguistic thing I've ever heard anyone say."
The island appeared twenty minutes later.
It rose out of the water the way Nora hadn't expected. not gradually The cliffs came first. dark stone against grey water
Even from the water it was enormous.
Gothic stonework that should have looked medieval but didn't because the windows were floor-to-ceiling glass and the light inside was warm and modern. and the whole structure had the quality of something ancient that had been carefully Like a sentence translated into a new language that kept all its original weight.
The ferry deck went completely silent.
Nora gripped the railing and said nothing. She was doing the thing she did when something was bigger than she expected. filing it carefully Her heart was doing something louder than usual.
"Oh," Demi said, very quietly beside her. It wasn't a performative sound. It was the real one.
"Yeah," Nora said.
The ferry slowed as it entered the harbor. a private dock cut into the cliffs Staff in dark uniforms waited on the pier. The water was extraordinarily still.
As the ferry moved into its berth, passengers began gathering their things. The quiet held even the legacy students. The ones who'd been here before
The boy in the dark coat at the bow hadn't moved.
Nora watched him from behind. The way he held himself wasn't arrogance exactly. It was something quieter than that. Something that had stopped needing to perform certainty because certainty had long since become structural.
Then he turned, just slightly, and she caught his profile.
High cheekbones. Dark hair. The kind of face that made you understand, viscerally and immediately, that beautiful wasn't always a warm word.
He turned the rest of the way as though he'd felt her looking and for one second. across the width of the ferry deck and the newly silent crowd of forty students
Grey. Very still. The kind of eyes that were used to people looking away first.
Nora looked away. Not because she was afraid. Because she was smart enough to know the difference between courage and provocation, and she didn't yet know enough about where she was to decide which one she could afford.
She filed him the way she filed the academy larger than expected, requiring more information before she knew what to do with it.
"That's him, isn't it," Demi murmured beside her. Not a question.
"I don't know who he's."
"You know exactly who he's."
Nora pulled her bag onto her shoulder and said nothing, because Demi was right and she saw no reason to confirm it out loud.
The gangway lowered. Passengers began to move.
As they stepped off the ferry onto the dock. The air changed again. The kind of old that meant the ground remembered things that people didn't.
A staff member in a dark uniform stepped forward with a tablet, checking names against a list. Nora gave hers. Anyway, the woman found it, marked it, and looked up with an expression that was professionally pleasant and completely uninformative. "Welcome to Vael Academy, Ms. Ashby. Your orientation packet will be in your room. so, please proceed to the main steps for the transport to the hall."
"Thank you," Nora said. "Quick question: is there a process for requesting housing changes after the form's been submitted?"
The woman blinked. Behind Nora, Demi made a small sound of delight.
"I'll look into that for you, Ms. Ashby."
"Appreciate it." Nora moved forward.
Demi fell into step beside her immediately, radiating satisfaction. "You did that on a dock. Twenty seconds on the island."
"It was a logistical question."
"It was power," Demi said. "Small but real. I respect it."
The dock path wound up through the cliff base and opened onto a wide stone courtyard where a line of black vehicles waited to transport students to the main hall. Around them the island pressed close to the trees older than they should have looked. The stone darker than any stone Nora had seen on the mainland Present. Intentional. Watching. in the way that old places watched
Nora noticed.
She noticed everything. Always it was the only thing she'd ever done that felt entirely like hers
She noticed, that's why, the moment the crowd shifted.
A small change in body language. students straightening almost imperceptibly She followed the invisible line of it before she understood what she was looking for.
He had come off the ferry behind them and was now crossing the courtyard.
He moved through the crowd without moving. People didn't part for him the way they parted for someone demanding space. They simply adjusted without seeming to. the way water adjusted around stone
He was speaking quietly to someone on his shoulder. Another vampire They spoke in the shorthand of two people who didn't need to explain their context to each other.
And then, three feet before the path curved toward the vehicles, he stopped walking.
Not dramatically. Not with any visible reason. He simply stopped, and turned his head a precise forty-five degrees, and looked directly at Nora again.
This time she didn't look away.
She held it for one second, two, three not challenging him, not performing anything. Just returning the look with the same steadiness he'd offered it, because she had been looked at by people trying to measure her entire life and she had learned a long time ago that the measuring went both ways.
Something in his expression shifted. Almost nothing. A fractional adjustment around the eyes that could have meant anything and probably meant something specific.
actually, then his mouth did the smallest thing, not a smile, not quite. The ghost of one, maybe. Or the recognition of something unexpected.
He turned away and continued walking.
Beside Nora, Demi had gone very still.
"What," Nora said.
"You just held eye contact with Caspian Vael for four seconds."
The name landed with a weight that confirmed what Nora had already suspected. She kept her voice even. "I know."
"He's the crown prince of the oldest vampire bloodline on the planet."
"I know."
"He looked first."
like, nora picked up her bag and started walking toward the vehicles. "I know. " she said
She tucked it away with everything else.
She would need better information before she knew what to do with it.
What she did not know couldn't
know, standing in that courtyard on her first day on an island she hadn't been able to find on any map was that Caspian Vael had looked at her the same way.
And that he had already made a decision.
Felix called before they'd left Abeo's street."The emergency protection request came back," he said, his voice clipped in a way that told Nora the news wasn't simple. "Yetunde Okonjo isn't at the facility anymore."Nora stood on the pavement outside Abeo's gate, Caspian beside her, the afternoon traffic moving past with its complete indifference to what had just landed in her chest."Define isn't there," she said."Discharged four days ago," Felix said. "According to the facility's own records, she checked herself out voluntarily. Signed the release forms personally.""Four days ago," Nora said. "Before or after the consultation invitations went out?""After," Felix said. "Two days after."Nora held the phone, working through the timeline. The invitation was intercepted. The impersonator seated in her place. And then, two days later, the real Yetunde Okonjo discharged herself from a facility she'd apparently been admitted to without anyone she trusted knowing where she was."Felix,"
"You're wondering if I'm real," Abeo Folarin said, before either of them had finished crossing her threshold.She'd opened the door before they'd knocked twice which told Nora something immediately, the specific alertness of someone who'd been watching the street, who'd expected exactly this visit at exactly this hour."Felix found an irregularity in your confirmation email," Nora said. "Registered before the invitations went out.""I know," Abeo said. "I registered it myself, three days before I received the consultation invitation, because I was told to expect interference and I wasn't going to let a fabricated email account be the reason my family lost its seat at that table."Nora held the doorway."Told by whom," she said.Abeo stepped back and gestured inside.Her home was small, neat, the walls lined with photographs going back generations, the specific archive of a family that understood its own history mattered even without formal documents to prove it. She led them to a sitt
The man's name, according to the credentials he'd submitted, was Tomas Adeyemi.Felix found that no one named Tomas Adeyemi existed in any birth record, school registry, or tax document connected to the Lagos region in the last forty years."He built the identity from fragments," Felix said. He had his laptop open on the reading room table, three windows running simultaneously, genealogical cross-reference, public records search, and a facial recognition pass Felix had run against the security footage from the consultation building's entrance. "A real birth certificate template. A real address that's actually a vacant property. A name pulled from a deceased relative of the actual ninth family, which is why it passed the initial verification.""Someone built it carefully," Nora said."Someone built it months ago," Felix said. "The credential application was submitted before the consultation invitations even went out. Whoever did this knew the process was coming before Amara's office ma
The woman in the third row did not stand when Nora was introduced.Everyone else in the room understood the formal register and rose for the founding anchor's entrance the way they'd risen for Amara's opening remarks, a courtesy extended without much thought. The woman in the third row remained seated, her arms folded, her gaze direct and entirely unimpressed.Nora noted her before the session had properly begun.The consultation room was in the High Court's primary building neutral ground, Amara had chosen it deliberately, a space that belonged to neither the bloodlines nor any single community. Twelve chairs arranged for the family representatives, one for each signature on the founding register. Nora sat at the head of the table with Caspian beside her, not above the twelve, level with them, which had been her specific instruction to Amara's staff when they'd set up the room.The woman's name, according to the seating chart, was Abeo Folarin.She represented the fourth family."Bef
The panel came back with a problem.Not with the document Dr. Holt's voice was precise and measured when she came out at three-forty, forty minutes past the two o'clock start, and Nora read the quality of it before the words arrived. Not alarm. The specific register of someone who had found something unexpected and was deciding how to present it accurately."The document is authentic," Dr. Holt said. "The panel's authentication is confirmed. There's no question about that." She held the formal certification in her hands. "There's a question about something else.""Tell me," Nora said."The permanence clause," Dr. Holt said. "Lines forty-three to forty-seven. We've been working with the translation you provided." She held Nora's gaze. "One of the panel members, Dr. Osei, who holds the senior classification in pre-modern dialectal analysis for this archive, read the original language directly."Nora held the table."And," she said."Line forty-six," Dr. Holt said. "Your translation read
The High Court's primary archive was not what she'd built in her mind.She'd imagined something institutional, the kind of building that communicated authority through scale, the way court buildings did, the kind of architecture that was designed to make you feel small before you got inside. What she got was a converted townhouse in a city she'd never been to, three stories, stone facade, a brass plate beside the door that said nothing more than *High Court Primary Archive Authorized Access Only.*Understated on purpose.The kind of building that didn't announce itself because the people who needed to find it already knew where it was.Amara met them at the door.She looked at the archival sleeve in Nora's hands before she said a word."The provenance documentation," she said. "You have it.""My mother's written statement of the chain of custody," Nora said. "Going back through the family line to her mother and her mother's mother. Four generations of oral attestation with supplementa
The week before the succession ceremony had its own quality.The island understood that something was ending not the island itself, not the people in it, but a specific chapter of things, the particular configuration of this semester's arrangement of people and problems and stakes. Classes were sti
The filing confirmation arrived at eight-seventeen.Not with fanfare a single message through Isolde's mother's secure channel, formal language, a confirmation number, and the specific phrasing that indicated the document had been received, logged, and entered into the High Court's primary archive
They got back to the island at half past eleven.Seren met them at the dock with two things a flask of tea that was still warm, which Nora accepted with genuine gratitude, and a folder of documentation that needed reviewing before the morning filing, which Caspian accepted with the focused efficien
The ferry back was late.A scheduling issue at the dock was not unusual, the archivist had told them, the Sunday evening crossing ran on its own logic and they sat in the waiting area for forty minutes with the document in its archival sleeve on the table between them and the harbor doing its quiet







