6. Constantine
CHAPTER SIX
Constantine
The Hunter archives stretch beneath Greyson Academy like a labyrinth of forgotten knowledge, their climate-controlled vaults housing centuries of magical research deemed too dangerous for general academic consumption.
As a faculty member with Hunter credentials, I have legitimate access to most sections — though the texts I’m seeking tonight exist in the gray areas between official permission and professional curiosity.
The kind of curiosity that gets people killed.
My research began innocuously enough three weeks ago, sparked by Ashley Dawn’s unusually precise shadow control during advanced demonstrations.
What started as routine academic interest has evolved into something far more complicated, each discovery leading to questions that challenge fundamental assumptions about shadow classification.
Questions that the Hunter Council does not appreciate being asked.
I check the corridor behind me before descending the final staircase. The archive’s deepest level requires a secondary credential scan — my Hunter badge pressed against the cold metal reader, the mechanism grinding open with a reluctance that suggests it doesn’t get much use.
The air down here tastes stale. Old. The specific, mineral quality of underground spaces that have been sealed for longer than most of the beings using them have been alive.
The first anomaly appeared during her registration assessment.
Perfect performance across all standard measures — too perfect.
Natural shadow behavior includes minor variations, inconsistencies that reflect the wielder’s emotional state and unconscious responses.
Ashley’s shadows moved with mechanical precision that suggested either extraordinary natural control or deliberate suppression of their true capabilities.
I’ve been losing sleep over the distinction.
Tonight, surrounded by stacks of ancient texts in the archive’s deepest research chamber, I’m searching for historical precedent.
The leather-bound volumes spread across my workstation represent centuries of shadow study, their yellowed pages containing knowledge predating modern classification systems.
The kind of knowledge that the Hunter Council specifically removed from the academy curriculum three centuries ago. And the removal tells me more than the knowledge itself.
Codex Umbrarum: Pre-Division Shadow Documentation proves most revealing.
Written before the great faction separation, it describes shadow abilities now considered impossible under current Hunter doctrine.
The illustrations alone are extraordinary — shadow wielders performing techniques I’ve never seen documented in academy texts.
Techniques that Ashley performs in the privacy of our fire integration sessions when she thinks I’m not watching closely enough to notice.
I’m always watching closely enough to notice.
“Shadow-walking,” I murmur, studying a detailed diagram showing a wielder transforming physical form into shadow essence for transport through shadow medium. The text describes it matter-of-factly, as though such abilities were commonplace rather than theoretically impossible.
My fingers trace the ancient script, translating slowly from the archaic language. The master shadow-bearer may traverse great distances through shadow realm, emerging at destinations chosen through will rather than physical limitation...
If such abilities once existed, why does modern doctrine classify them as impossible? What changed between these historical accounts and contemporary understanding?
The answer emerges in another text: Chronicles of the Great Division.
The faction separation wasn’t merely political reorganization — it involved systematic limitation of abilities deemed “dangerous to established order.” Shadow wielders were specifically targeted for capability reduction through methods the text describes as “regulatory binding.”
They artificially limited shadow abilities. The Hunter Council didn’t just regulate shadow wielders.
The Hunter Council crippled them.
The implications make my fire essence flicker with anger that I have to consciously suppress.
Every classification standard I was trained to enforce.
Every assessment I’ve conducted. Every student I’ve evaluated against criteria designed to identify “dangerous anomalies.” All of it built on a foundation of deliberate limitation.
The Hunter Council didn’t create the classification system to identify threats. They created it to ensure that the abilities they crippled would be treated as aberrant if they ever resurfaced.
And they’re resurfacing. In Ashley.
A soft rustling draws my attention to the darkest corner of the research chamber.
The shadows there shifting with subtle movement despite the absence of any air current. I focus on the area, extending the slightest thread of fire essence to illuminate what might be causing the disturbance.
A single shadow tendril extends from the darkness.
Moving with obvious intelligence and purpose. Approaching slowly, cautiously, carrying no sense of threat — more like curious inquiry. The shadow darker than the surrounding darkness, carrying the faint crimson tint at its edges that I’ve learned to recognize as distinctly, unmistakably hers.
“Ashley?” I whisper.
The shadow tendril pauses. Then forms a simple pattern against the floor — a basic acknowledgment symbol from introductory shadow studies. Deliberate communication rather than random movement.
She’s extending her consciousness through shadow connection across the distance between wherever she is — her dormitory, most likely — and the deepest sub-level of the Hunter archives.
Another ability that should be impossible according to modern doctrine. Another ability that the texts in front of me describe as commonplace in the pre-Division world.
My fire essence responds before I can stop it.
A small flame dancing to life in my palm — not defensive warning but welcome.
The warmth reaching toward her shadow the way my warmth reaches toward her in every fire integration session, the way my warmth has been reaching toward her since September when she walked into my classroom and her shadows moved with a precision that told me everything I needed to know about what she was hiding.
Her shadow tendril approaches the flame without hesitation.
When they make contact, I feel it. Not just the magical connection — the physical sensation.
Warmth meeting darkness at the boundary where my fire touches her shadow, the contact point carrying a pulse of recognition that travels up my arm and settles in my chest with a weight that has nothing to do with elemental interaction and everything to do with the woman whose consciousness is riding that shadow tendril.
The pulse carrying emotion — warmth, curiosity, and underneath both, the specific quality of someone reaching toward someone they want to be near and using the only means available to close the distance.
My breath catches. The flame in my palm brightening at the contact.
Her shadow wrapping around the fire with the tentative, deliberate care of a touch that knows it shouldn’t be happening and that is happening anyway.
The shadow climbing my wrist. The darkness tracing the veins beneath my skin with a precision that suggests she can feel my pulse through the contact and that the feeling of my pulse is something she came here for.
The fire responds. Warming where she touches.
The flame in my palm spreading to meet her shadow at every contact point — my fire offering itself to her darkness the way my fire has been offering itself since the first integration session when her shadows brushed mine and my entire body recognized something that my mind was not ready to name.
“You shouldn’t be here,” I say. To the shadow.
To myself. To the specific, growing problem of a professor whose fire responds to a student’s shadow with a warmth that has stopped being professional and that the stopping happened weeks ago and that the acknowledgment of the stopping is the most dangerous secret I carry. “If someone detects this connection — “
The shadow tendril tightens around my flame.
Not retreating. Tightening. The warmth intensifying. The contact carrying another pulse — amusement, affection, and the specific quality of a woman who knows she shouldn’t be here and who is here anyway and who is not sorry.
The shadow on my wrist pressing against my skin with a pressure that is unmistakably deliberate and that the deliberateness makes my fire burn hotter and the hotter burning is a response I cannot professionally justify and am not going to professionally try.
She guides my attention to specific texts on the workstation.
The shadow touching pages with gentle precision that feels almost like physical contact — her darkness pressing against the yellowed parchment, indicating passages I haven’t yet read.
With her guidance, I locate references to “vessel wielders” who could channel multiple elemental energies through shadow medium.
Historical accounts describing exactly what we discovered during our fire integration exercise — the merging of flame and shadow that produced something neither power could produce alone.
The next text she guides me to makes my blood run cold.
Prophecies of the Crimson Dawn.
Unlike most prophetic writings, this collection includes detailed analysis rather than cryptic verse. My mother’s research notes are tucked between its pages — her familiar handwriting providing commentary on passages she found significant.
The sight of her handwriting makes my chest ache with the specific, permanent grief of a son who lost his mother to the organization he serves.