Chapter 29 Predator Logic
POV: Mina (Age 17 - Five Days Until Ceremony)
The campus had split overnight.
I noticed it the next morning at breakfast. Where there had been one unified social hierarchy before—the Trio at the top, everyone else arranged in descending order below them—now there were factions.
Two distinct camps, divided by an invisible line that everyone could feel but no one was explicitly naming.
On one side: students loyal to the old order. The Trio's traditional allies, high-ranking Alpha families, anyone with something to lose if the Academy's power structure shifted. They watched me with open hostility, moved to block my path in hallways, whispered to each other when I passed.
These were the students who would sell me out to the Council without hesitation if they thought it would benefit them.
On the other side: everyone else.
The non-Alphas, the Betas, the students who'd been on the receiving end of the Academy's brutality and had watched me survive things that should have broken me. They didn't approach me directly, didn't pledge loyalty or offer help. But they moved out of my way instead of into it. Left space for me at tables. Didn't report my movements when the Trio's allies came asking questions.
Lyro had explained it while we walked to morning classes, his black eye still vivid against his skin.
"Word got around about what happened in the corridor yesterday," he said. "The silver magic. You speaking. The fact that you protected me instead of running." He kept his voice low. "Lower-ranking students have been getting crushed by the Trio for years. Watching someone fight back, even indirectly, even without explaining who they are or why—it matters to people."
It'll make things more dangerous, I wrote. The Trio won't like their authority being questioned.
"The Trio," Lyro said carefully, "seem to be having their own crisis at the moment."
He wasn't wrong.
The bond made that abundantly clear.
The pulling had become agonizing.
I felt it constantly now, a physical sensation in my chest where the twin bond had once lived. The mate bond forming in its place, demanding connection, demanding proximity, demanding things I wasn't ready to give.
And through it, I felt the Trio's matching agony.
All three of them were fighting it. Were still, on some level, trying to maintain the pretense that this was about containment. About understanding a threat. About protecting the Academy's order.
But their wolves had stopped pretending.
Logan's wolf had gone fully protective. He'd stopped picking fights with me and started picking fights with anyone who looked at me wrong. Twice that day I felt his sudden spike of violent fury through the bond, followed by the sounds of scuffling in corridors I wasn't even in.
He was policing threats to me that I wasn't even aware of. His wolf driving him to protect territory it had already claimed in instinct if not in name.
Asher's wolf had gone obsessive in a different way. He kept appearing wherever I was, not to confront me but just to be near me. Would find a seat in whatever space I occupied, would work on his own things without speaking, would leave when I left. Like proximity was a drug his wolf couldn't stop taking.
Through the bond, I felt his constant monitoring of my physical state. The way his wolf catalogued every flinch, every sign of pain, every moment where the seal cracking showed on my face. Felt his wolf's frustrated rage that it couldn't fix what was hurting me.
And Jax.
Jax had stopped watching me from a distance and started watching me up close. He'd position himself between me and any potential threat with a subtlety that almost hid what he was doing. Would intercept students who were heading toward me with hostile intent, redirecting them with a cold word or a look before they could reach me.
He was running interference. Clearing my path. Using his considerable social authority to create space around me that made the campus feel marginally safer.
His wolf had decided I needed protection, and Jax was intelligent enough to provide it in ways that didn't require admitting what he was doing or why.
None of them would say it was about the bond. About the mate claim their wolves were already exercising. They were all still framing it internally as containment, as observation, as managing an unknown threat.
But their wolves weren't pretending anymore.
Their wolves recognized me as dominant.
And the humans were running out of logic to hide behind.
I used the campus fracture to my advantage.
The students who'd started quietly supporting me became an informal network of early warning. A Beta in my history class would tap his desk twice if he saw Trio loyalists heading my way. A non-Alpha on the third floor would leave his door cracked if the corridor was clear. Small gestures. Unspoken.
Lyro coordinated most of it without me asking, moving through the social spaces I couldn't occupy and gathering information like he'd been doing it for years.
"Council informants on campus," he reported one afternoon, dropping into a seat beside me in the library. "At least three students reporting directly to agents outside the gates. I know which ones."
I wrote: How do you know?
"Because they're the ones who keep asking questions that are just slightly too specific. Too targeted. They're not curious, they're collecting." He kept his voice low. "One of them already reported the corridor incident. The Council knows you used magic publicly."
How much time do I have before they act?
"Four days. Maybe five. They'll wait until after the ceremony if they think it'll expose you naturally. Why spend resources on a strike when the Academy's own ritual will do the work for them?"
He was right. The Council was patient. They'd let the Awakening Ceremony reveal me, then move in the aftermath when I'd be exhausted and exposed.
I needed to be ready for that. Needed to go into the ceremony with as much power and control as I could manage.
Which meant training. Even injured. Even exhausted. Even with the seal cracking more each day and my wolf throwing itself against the barrier with increasing desperation.
I found an empty dueling room on the second basement level that afternoon and spent two hours working through every spell sequence my mother's runes had given me.
Shadow Step had become almost effortless, the spatial jumps smooth and precise. I could chain four or five in rapid succession now, crossing a large room in seconds without touching the floor.
Lunar Binding threads were stronger, faster, more responsive to emotion as well as intention. When I was angry, they surged forward automatically. When I was focused, they were surgical.
The Silver Voice was the most physically costly, but I was learning to calibrate it. Small commands used the voice without the full resonance. Larger commands required the layered power but burned through my throat faster.
I was practicing a binding sequence, weaving threads through the air in complex patterns, when the door opened.
A student I recognized from combat training entered, probably looking for somewhere private to practice. He stopped when he saw me, and his expression shifted.
He was one of the Trio's loyalists. One of the ones who'd been reporting my movements.
He looked at the silver threads floating in the air around me, at my glowing hands, at the obvious evidence of forbidden magic.
And he smiled like he'd just won something.
"Well," he said. "This should be very interesting to report."
He pulled out his phone.
My power surged forward before I could stop it. Silver Binding threads shot toward him, wrapping around his arms and chest and phone hand with enough force to make him gasp. The phone clattered to the floor.
I crossed the room in two Shadow Steps and picked up the phone.
He was suspended a foot off the ground, threads wrapped tight, completely immobilized. His face had gone pale, his eyes wide with terror.
I looked at him. At the genuine fear on his face. At how easy it would be, right now, to ensure he never reported anything ever again.
The thought came cold and clear and completely unlike me.
And I recognized it for what it was. Months of accumulated fear and rage and grief looking for somewhere to land. The part of me that had watched Rafe die, that had buried him with my bare hands, that had spent every day since then barely holding the mission together.
That part wanted to hurt this boy who was planning to hand me to people who would kill me.
I held the threads tight and looked at him for a long, silent moment.
He was shaking. Actually shaking, his wolf completely overwhelmed by whatever it sensed from me.
Then, very clearly, I heard a voice.
Not Lyro's voice. Not the memory of Rafe's voice. Something else. Something that seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere simultaneously, resonating in my chest where the twin bond had once lived and the mate bond was now forming.
Mercy is not weakness, daughter. It is the difference between a ruler and a tyrant.
My mother's voice. Or the Moon Goddess speaking through the memory of her.
I lowered the student to the ground and released the binding.
He stumbled, catching himself against the wall.
"Leave," I said quietly, with no Silver Voice behind it. Just a request. Or maybe a plea.
He looked at me for one more second—at my glowing hands, at whatever was in my face—and then he left. Fast.
I stood alone in the dueling room, my power slowly receding, and understood something I'd been avoiding.
Mercy would cost me. Letting him go meant he'd report what he'd seen. Meant the Council would have more information. Meant my already narrow window would narrow further.
I knew that. Had known it the moment I released him.
But the voice was right. There was a difference between what I could do and what I should do. Between power and purpose.
Rafe had died so I could complete the prophecy. So the Oracle bloodline could restore balance, not just survive.
An Oracle who became what the Council accused us of being wasn't a restoration of balance. She was just another tyrant.
I had to remember that. Even when it cost me. Especially when it cost me.
I sat down on the dueling room floor and pressed my hands against the stone, feeling the Academy's ancient magic humming beneath my palms.
Five days.
Then a whisper moved through the stone. Through the ancient magic in the walls. Through the Oracle temple foundation buried beneath centuries of Academy construction.
Not words exactly. More like a vibration. A resonance. Something calling to me in a frequency that bypassed hearing entirely and spoke directly to whatever was most ancient in my blood.
I went still.
The calling had a direction. Down. Deeper into the Academy's foundation. Toward something that had been waiting for me.
Something that knew my name.
Not Mina. Not Rafe Sterling.
My true name, the one my mother had given me before the sealing spell. The name I'd never heard spoken aloud.
The Awakening Stone.
It was calling me by name.
And it was ready.