35. Ashley #2
I’m in the north tunnel, moving fast through darkness that parts for me because it’s mine and it knows I’m running for my life.
Behind me, the sanctuary sits in its camouflage of abandonment and scattered dust, and ahead of me, the blood path drops into bedrock and Bael’s ancient darkness rises to meet my panic with the steady, cold calm of a being who has been escaping enemies for longer than this academy has existed.
His shadows wrap around me.
The blood path opens — the deep tunnel through bedrock that the detection grid can’t reach, the escape route that exists because Bael has survived millennia by always having a way out that his enemies don’t know about.
We move.
Down, then east, then down again.
The stone closing behind us with a darkness so dense and old that it reads as solid rock to anything above.
My shadows, still threaded through the building, report the raid’s conclusion.
Elara’s group finds the sanctuary entrance. The maintenance access, unlocked by shadows that I left in place too long and that Petra’s crystal mapped with the precise efficiency of equipment that doesn’t need memory to retain data.
They enter the tunnels.
They find the chamber.
They find it empty. Abandoned. Cold.
Elara’s frustration burns so bright that my shadows feel it from three levels underground — the incandescent fury of a woman who has been chasing this evidence for months and has arrived at the destination to find the quarry gone and the den cleaned out and nothing left except shadows that are too old and too scattered to prove anything except that someone, once, a long time ago, used this space for something.
Not enough. Not evidence of current occupation. Not proof that links Ashley Dawn to an underground sanctuary full of living shadow residue.
But close.
So close that the near-miss tastes like copper on my tongue.
Constantine’s message arrives through Bael’s deep shadow network minutes later.
Fire-encoded, pushed down through bedrock with the urgency of a man who learned about the raid through official channels and couldn’t warn me in time.
Elara filed formal request for raid two hours ago. Supported by Petra’s crystal evidence. I learned at the same time the approval was granted. Couldn’t reach you. Are you safe?
Bael translates his response through the darkness: Safe. Sanctuary compromised. Moving to forest haven.
Constantine’s reply is a pulse of relief so intense that the fire nearly burns through the shadow medium carrying it.
We surface in the forest.
The hidden grove with natural shadow convergence that Bael has maintained as a backup location since October — a place where the trees grow thick enough to block observation and the shadows pool naturally in quantities that mask any individual signature.
Bael creates a shadow dome. My shadows extend through the tree roots to form a new perimeter.
The sanctuary is gone.
The room that held us — that held training sessions and strategy meetings and the three most intimate nights of my life — is being catalogued right now by a raiding party that will document every shadow trace and file the evidence with Voss and add one more data point to the case that is being built around me brick by careful brick.
It shouldn’t hurt this much.
It’s a room. Stone walls and a stone floor and rune-light that Bael carved into the ceiling on a night when I was too scared to sleep and he said the soft amber glow would help.
It’s just a space. Replaceable.
We’re in a forest grove now that serves the same purpose — hidden, shadow-dense, safe enough for the moment.
But the sanctuary was the first place in this school where I didn’t have to pretend.
The first space where my shadows could spread and my wings could manifest and the living darkness that is the truest part of who I am could exist without compression.
It was where Bael first marked me. Where Constantine first kissed me. Where the three of us first lay together on blankets that smelled like stone dust and candlewax and chose to be vulnerable with each other in a world that punishes vulnerability with death.
They took that from me.
Not the Hunters. Not Voss with her grid.
Elara. A student my own age with a grudge and a notebook and the patient, methodical cruelty of someone who has decided that proving she’s right matters more than the life it costs.
I sit on the forest floor with my back against a tree and the cold night air on my face and I let the loss settle into my chest where it joins the growing collection of things this semester has cost me.
Privacy. Peace. The luxury of guilt.
The sanctuary.
The girl I used to be.
My shadows wrap around me in the darkness.
Living. Independent. Crimson bleeding through the fading vampire layer like dawn bleeding through a night that has gone on too long.
Bael sits beside me. Silent.
His wing extends across my back — the weight of it a comfort that doesn’t require words because words are what humans use and the thing that happened tonight goes deeper than language.
We wait for dawn.
The forest holds us.
The sanctuary is gone.
And somewhere in the academy we left behind, Elara stands in an empty underground chamber and knows, with the certain fury of a woman who will not stop, that she was right about me all along.