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Chapter 8: Aldric Smiles Too Much

Author: You Keika
last update publish date: 2026-04-14 22:29:00

"He wants to see all five of you," Sera said, appearing at Zara's dormitory door at half past four with the particular energy of someone delivering information they'd been sitting on long enough that it had become uncomfortable to hold. "Aldric. Formal welcome, he's calling it. Tea in his office at five."

Zara looked up from her notebook. "Today."

"In thirty minutes." Sera leaned against the door frame with her arms folded, and the folding had nothing relaxed about it. "He does this every intake, first formal week, personal welcome, the whole performance. I've watched it from the outside enough times to know the shape of it." She paused. "Just watch what you say. Not because you'll say the wrong thing. Because he listens to everything and he's very good at making you feel like the listening is warmth rather than collection."

Zara closed the notebook. "What does he collect?"

"Motivations," Sera said simply. "He wants to know why each of you is here. What you want from the academy, what you're hoping for, what you left behind to come. He frames it as pastoral care." She said the last two words with a flatness that communicated exactly how pastoral it wasn't. "Just be careful with the why."

---

Aldric's office was on the top floor of the academy's main building, accessible by a staircase that was older than the rest of the structure and announced every step with the particular authority of wood that had been bearing weight for centuries and expected acknowledgment for it. The door at the top was open when the five of them arrived wide open, deliberately welcoming, the kind of open that communicated I have nothing to hide before you'd even crossed the threshold.

The office itself was extraordinary in the way that spaces belonging to people who understood the grammar of power always were not ostentatious, which would have been too obvious, but deeply, quietly considered. Floor to ceiling bookshelves on two walls, the books old enough and varied enough to be genuine rather than decorative. A fireplace with an actual fire going despite the building's central heating, because warmth manufactured by a person felt different from warmth manufactured by a system. A desk that was large without being aggressive, positioned so that whoever sat behind it occupied the room's natural center without appearing to have arranged this. Two sofas facing each other across a low table set with tea things, which moved the initial conversation away from the desk entirely, away from any physical reminder of the hierarchical difference between the man hosting and the students being hosted.

Zara catalogued all of it in the time it took to walk from the door to the sofa, which was enough time if you were paying the right kind of attention.

Director Aldric was already standing when they entered this too was deliberate, she understood, the choice to be on their level rather than seated behind authority when they arrived. He was a tall man, silver-haired, with the kind of face that had been handsome in youth and had matured into something more interesting the lines of it were arranged in a way that suggested he smiled often and meant it, which was the most disarming thing about him, because the smile reached his eyes with a consistency that was very difficult to identify as performance. He looked like someone's favorite professor. He looked like the adult in any given room who was genuinely most interested in what the young people had to say.

Zara thought about three people in a room beneath the east wing and kept her face entirely open.

"Sit, please, all of you," he said, with the warmth of someone who had been looking forward to this. "I've been wanting to meet you properly since the term began. Orientation is all very well but it doesn't tell you much about people, does it."

He poured tea himself, which was another considered choice. The head of an institution performing the small domestic service communicated a specific kind of approachability, I am not too important for this, which made you feel noticed and valued before a single substantive word had been exchanged.

Dami accepted his cup with genuine appreciation. Petra with careful courtesy. Ines with the expression of someone maintaining a professional neutrality. Zara watched all three of them and then watched Aldric watch all three of them, and understood that his eyes moved across this room with exactly the same efficient, cataloguing quality she'd identified in Caius except where Caius's assessment was visible enough to be honest about itself, Aldric's was entirely dressed in warmth and interest and the particular attention that made each person feel individually seen.

"Tell me what's surprised you most," he said, settling back with his own cup, directing the question at the room rather than anyone specific. "First impressions. I always find them more revealing than anything the academy intends to show."

Dami said the architecture. Ines said the schedule density. Petra said the way the library was organized, which was true enough to be safe and specific enough to seem candid. Aldric received each answer with the attentiveness of someone genuinely storing it, nodding at the right moments, asking the right small follow-up questions.

Then he looked at Zara.

She had been ready for the look. Had been ready for it since Sera's warning and had spent the intervening thirty minutes constructing an answer that was true in every verifiable particular and revealed nothing she wasn't prepared to have known.

"The age of it," she said. "Buildings this old have a quality that newer places don't, the sense that the space has opinions about you before you've formed any about it. I find that interesting rather than uncomfortable." She paused, as though something had just occurred to her rather than having been prepared. "It makes you want to understand the building's history. What it was before it was what it is now."

Aldric smiled. "A historically minded student. We don't get enough of those." His tone was warm, approving, entirely without the quality of a man who had just heard an answer and was measuring its edges. "The academy's history is one of its genuine pleasures. If you're interested in the archival materials, I'm always happy to facilitate access to the appropriate collections."

"That would be wonderful," Zara said, with the specific gratitude of someone who meant it for entirely different reasons than were visible.

"What brought you to Valen specifically?" he asked then, of the group again but with his attention resting a half-beat longer on Zara before moving on. "The intake is competitive. Each of you worked very hard for your place here. I'm always curious, what it is about this institution in particular."

The answers that followed were various and well-considered. Zara listened to them with half her attention and used the other half to watch Aldric absorb them the small tells, the places where his interest sharpened almost imperceptibly, the questions he asked and the questions he conspicuously didn't. He was building something, she understood. A picture, a baseline, a map of who knew what and who was here for which reason and whether any of the five seats he'd filled this decade contained a variable he needed to manage.

When it came to her answer she said something about academic opportunity and the unique research environment that she delivered with enough specific detail to sound like preparation rather than performance. Aldric received it with the same warm approval he'd given everything else and she watched his face with the attention of someone looking not at what was present but at what was being managed, and what she found there was the thing Sera had described and the thing she'd expected and somehow it was still more unsettling in person than in preparation.

There was nothing wrong with his face. That was the problem. There was nothing in his eyes or his expression or the easy, genuine quality of his attention that looked like a man who had spent thirty years overseeing the systematic destruction of human lives. He looked, with complete and terrible consistency, like a man who cared.

The tea was excellent. The fire was warm. The conversation moved with the pleasant, unhurried flow of five young people being made to feel significant by someone very skilled at manufacturing significance.

When they left an hour later, descending the announcing staircase in the amber light of early evening, nobody said anything until they reached the bottom.

Then Petra, without looking at anyone in particular, said quietly "He already knows why we're here."

Nobody disagreed.

Behind them, at the top of the staircase, the door to Aldric's office clicked shut with the soft, final sound of a man returning to his work entirely undisturbed.

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