The silence on the terrace wasn't because of the wind dying down. It was because the air itself had become too heavy to carry sound.
Valerica Sol stood at the edge of their table.
She didn't look like a student enjoying a day off. She looked like a queen in exile. Her amethyst hair was pulled back in a severe, high ponytail that swung like a pendulum when she moved. Her dark eyes scanned the commercial district with a mixture of confusion and disdain.
She wasn't leaking gravity, she was too good for that, but she contained it so poorly that the coffee in Isole's cup had gone perfectly flat, the surface tension crushed by her proximity.
Vane didn't stand up. He didn't reach for a weapon. He just kicked the empty plastic chair next to him away from the table.
"You look terrible," Vane said, by way of greeting.
Valerica looked at the cheap chair. She looked at Vane. Then she sat down with a sigh that sounded like a collapsing building.
"I spent the last two hours listening to the Blue Tower representative explain why my family should invest in a new line of self-heating teapots," Valerica said. She rubbed her temples. "If I had stayed for five more minutes, I would have increased the gravity in the room until his lungs flattened."
"Murder is against the school bylaws," Isole pointed out helpfully, though she didn't look up from her coffee. "Unless it is a sanctioned duel. Then it is just extra credit."
Valerica reached for the pitcher of water on the table. She poured herself a glass. The water didn't splash; it poured heavy and thick, like syrup, affected by her aura.
"I am hiding," Valerica admitted, taking a drink. "The nobles are swarming. They want to know why I fought the Princess in the Turbine Hall. They want political statements."
"Tell them you slipped," Vane suggested.
Valerica snorted. It was an unladylike sound that fit her perfectly. "I told them I was bored. It seemed to confuse them enough for me to escape."
She leaned back, the plastic chair groaning dangerously under her conceptual weight. She looked at Vane, then at Isole.
"So," she said. "The Rat, the Blasphemy, and the Disaster. Is this a strategy meeting, or are we just loitering?"
"We are wasting time," Vane said. "It's a skill I'm trying to level up."
"He is bad at it," Isole corrected. "He tries to optimize his relaxation. It is painful to watch."
Valerica smiled. It wasn't the polite, terrifying smile she used in court. It was small, tired, and genuine. She looked at the bustling plaza, at the students laughing and eating overpriced food.
"I have never been to an arcade," Valerica said suddenly.
Vane blinked. "Never?"
"My father considered them... frivolous," Valerica said. "Sol warriors do not play games. We train. We study. We conquer."
"Well," Vane said, standing up and dusting crumbs off his pants. "Your father isn't here. And if he shows up, I'll distract him while you run."
Valerica looked at him. "You would die."
"I'm fast," Vane grinned. "Come on. Isole challenged me to a rematch, and I need a partner who doesn't rely on necromancy to win."
Ten minutes later, the three of them stood around a glowing table in the back of the arcade.
"It is called Air Hockey," Vane explained, handing Valerica a red plastic striker. "The puck floats on a cushion of air. The goal is to put it in the other person's slot. Physics. Angles. Velocity."
Valerica held the striker like it was a grenade she was waiting to throw. She looked at the puck.
"It floats?" she asked, skeptical.
"Air pressure," Vane said. "Go."
He slapped the puck. It shot across the table.
Valerica didn't move her arm. she just stared at the incoming projectile.
The puck hit an invisible wall six inches from her striker. It stopped dead, vibrated for a second, and then shot back at Vane with three times the speed.
Vane barely deflected it. His wrist stung.
"Cheating!" Vane yelled, pointing his striker at her. "You can't use gravity fields on the table!"
"I did not touch it," Valerica said calmly. "I simply intensified the curvature of space in front of my goal. The puck followed the path of least resistance."
"That is literally cheating," Isole said from the sidelines, munching on a bag of popcorn. "But it was very cool."
"Adapt, Rat," Valerica teased, her dark eyes lighting up. "I thought you were the king of dirty tricks."
"Fine," Vane grumbled. "Prison rules it is."
The next twenty minutes were less of a game and more of a tactical war zone.
Vane stopped playing the puck and started playing the table. He used bank shots so sharp they defied logic, calculating the exact millisecond Valerica's gravity field would shift. He realized she couldn't cover the whole table at once without crushing it, so he made her chase the puck.
Valerica responded by becoming a fortress. She didn't move her feet. She stood at her end of the table and ruled it like a tyrant. When she struck the puck, she added mass to it.
The plastic disc hit Vane's striker like a cannonball.
"Ow!" Vane shook his hand. "You're trying to break my fingers!"
"I am trying to win," Valerica said, grinning ferociously. "There is a difference."
The game ended when the machine began to smoke. The internal fan, overworked by the fluctuating gravity and the violence of the strikes, gave a sad whine and died.
Final Score: 7-6. Valerica.
"I win," Valerica announced, putting down her striker. She was breathing slightly harder, her cheeks flushed with adrenaline. She looked younger. Lighter.
"You broke the machine," Vane pointed out.
"Collateral damage," Valerica dismissed. She looked at Vane, then at Isole. "That was... acceptable."
"It was fun," Isole corrected her. "You can say the word. It won't kill you."
"It was fun," Valerica admitted quietly.
They left the arcade as the sun began to set, painting the sky over the academy in bruising shades of purple and orange. The air grew colder, the high-altitude wind biting through their uniforms.
They stopped at a street vendor selling fried dough sticks dusted with sugar. Vane bought three.
They leaned against the railing of the plaza, overlooking the sea of clouds below. They ate in silence for a while, just three students watching the world end for the day.
"Classes resume tomorrow," Isole said softly, breaking the quiet. "The professors will be difficult. Vyla is still angry that Vane turned her theory exam into a geometry problem."
"It worked," Vane mumbled around a mouthful of sugar.
"The Blue Tower will be looking for blood," Valerica added. "We embarrassed the Coalition in the Turbine Hall. Jax and his friends will not let that slide."
She took a bite of her dough stick, chewing thoughtfully.
"Let them come," she said. Her voice was heavy again, but not burdened. Just solid. "They are noise. We are the signal."
Vane looked at them.
Valerica, the Titan who was terrified of her own strength. Isole, the Saint who was rejected by her own god. And him, the Rat who had stolen his way into heaven.
They shouldn't work. They should be tearing each other apart.
But as he stood there, shoulder to shoulder with the two most dangerous women in the first year, eating greasy food while the sun went down... he realized he wasn't looking for an exit.
He wasn't checking the perimeter. He wasn't calculating the fastest way to kill them if they turned on him.
He was just eating.
"We're going to need a team name," Vane said.
"No," Valerica and Isole said in perfect unison.
Vane grinned. "I'll work on it."
"Please don't," Isole said.
"I'm thinking 'The Calamities'," Vane mused.
Valerica rolled her eyes, but she didn't walk away. She stayed right there, anchoring the line.
"Just finish your food, Rat," she said. "Before I increase its gravity and make you drop it."
"Yes, ma'am."
For the first time since coming to Zenith, the silence wasn't lonely. It was just quiet.
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