Chapter 22
Chapter Twenty-Two
The night before the Shadow Labyrinth challenge, Greyson Academy holds its breath in anxious anticipation that tastes like copper and fear on the air.
The curfew has been strictly enforced, with Hunter guards patrolling corridors that seem darker and more oppressive than usual, their silver-tipped weapons gleaming ominously in the torchlight.
The ancient stone walls feel like they’re listening, absorbing the tension radiating from every dormitory with the patience of centuries.
I should be sleeping, conserving energy for tomorrow’s ordeal.
Instead, I’m wide awake, staring at the ceiling while my mind races through potential scenarios that all end badly.
The dormitory smells like lavender sleep sachets and nervous sweat, a combination that’s somehow become familiar in the weeks since the Hunters arrived.
Beside me, Iris sleeps fitfully, her empathic abilities probably picking up the collective anxiety permeating the academy even in dreams. Her copper hair spills across her pillow like autumn leaves.
My shadows pulse restlessly around my bed, reaching occasionally toward the door as if eager to explore the darkened corridors beyond.
Since discovering their ability to function as extended senses, I’ve been experimenting with their range and sensitivity.
They can now gather impressions from several rooms away, reporting not just physical presences but emotional states, like some kind of supernatural surveillance network.
A sudden alertness ripples through them—they’ve detected something interesting beyond our dormitory.
The sensation flows through me like electricity, making my skin prickle with awareness.
Without conscious direction from me, a shadow tendril extends toward the door, slipping beneath it with the fluid grace of spilled ink and into the corridor beyond.
“What is it?” I whisper, sitting up and focusing on the sensory feedback that tastes like curiosity and urgency.
The impression returns clear and compelling: Constantine, agitated, researching alone. His emotional signature feels sharp with frustration and determination, flavored with something that might be desperation.
My curiosity piques immediately. What would have our Hunter-trained professor working late the night before trials? The tendril pulses again, suggesting it could show me if I allow it to extend further—an offer that both excites and unnerves me.
This new ability still makes me feel like I’m losing control of myself.
My shadows are acting with increasing independence, offering information and suggestions rather than simply responding to commands.
But after the blood exchange with Bael and the fire-shadow training with Constantine, their evolution has sped up beyond my ability to fully understand, let alone control.
“Show me,” I whisper, decision made despite my reservations.
The shadow tendril extends eagerly like a hunting dog finally released, slithering along the corridor with purpose.
I close my eyes, concentrating on the sensory feedback it provides—cool stone floors that feel ancient beneath its touch, occasional warmth from enchanted torches that flicker with contained fire, the subtle vibrations of a building never truly asleep.
The tendril pauses outside a heavy oak door reinforced with iron bands, reporting Constantine’s presence within. It slips beneath the narrow gap, entering a room I’ve never seen before—Constantine’s private quarters.
Unlike the austere faculty offices, this space feels lived-in and personal, smelling like old books and that woodsy cologne he favors.
Bookshelves line every wall, crammed with ancient texts and modern journals alike, their spines creating a rainbow of faded colors.
A massive desk dominates the center, its surface covered with open books, scattered notes written in his precise handwriting, and what looks like official Hunter documents bearing silver seals.
Constantine paces beside the desk like a caged predator, occasionally stopping to jot something in a leather-bound journal.
His fire-red hair is disheveled, and he’s traded his usual professional attire for a simple white shirt with the sleeves rolled up, revealing the lean strength of his forearms.
My shadow tendril remains near the door, careful to stay within the natural darkness of the poorly lit room.
Through its enhanced perception, I sense Constantine’s emotional state more clearly—frustration that tastes like burnt coffee, determination that feels like steel, and a deeper undercurrent of something that feels like moral conflict.
He stops pacing suddenly, running a hand through his fire-red hair in a gesture I’ve come to recognize as deep agitation. “It doesn’t make fucking sense,” he mutters to himself, returning to the desk and flipping through what appears to be an official Hunter manual with more force than necessary.
My shadow tendril inches closer, curious about what’s troubling him so deeply. It reports the titles of several open texts: Nephilim Classifications and Containment Protocols, Shadow Anomalies: Recognition and Response, and most alarmingly, Ascendant Threat Assessment: Historical Case Studies.
Constantine slams this last book closed with a sound like a gunshot, his normally controlled demeanor cracking to reveal the frustration beneath.
“Biased methodology, cherry-picked evidence, circular reasoning,” he growls, pushing the book away with obvious disgust. “This isn’t science, it’s propaganda. ”
My heart skips a beat, blood racing with a mixture of hope and fear. Is he questioning Hunter doctrine about Ascendants? The shadow tendril pulses with excitement, encouraging me to observe more closely.
Constantine pulls a different notebook from beneath the Hunter texts—his mother’s research journal, which I recognize from our encounter in the restricted section.
He opens it reverently, fingers tracing the handwritten pages with obvious affection, and I can smell the faint scent of old roses that clings to the aged parchment.
“You were right, Mom,” he says softly, his voice rough with emotion. “The doctrine doesn’t align with observable evidence. Vessel connections enhance rather than drain. Shadow-fire integration creates stability, not chaos.”
My shadow tendril extends slightly further, drawn by the intensity of his conviction like metal to a magnet.
It reports more detailed impressions now—not just emotions but fragments of thought, similar to what I experienced during the blood exchange with Bael but less complete.
The shadow-fire connection we’ve established during training has created a primitive empathic link, allowing my shadows to sense more than they should from normal observation.
Through this enhanced empathy, I catch glimpses of Constantine’s internal struggle—his lifetime of Hunter training battling with scientific evidence that contradicts everything he’s been taught.
Images flash through the connection: our shadow-fire training sessions, the way our energies dance together rather than destroying each other, the impossible harmony we’ve discovered between theoretical opposites.
And beneath these professional observations, something more personal flows through the empathic link—warmth when he thinks of me that feels like sunlight on skin, concern for my safety that tastes like protective fury, fascination with my abilities that goes beyond academic interest. Feelings he’s carefully maintained a professional distance from, yet burn brighter than he acknowledges.
Constantine returns to his desk, pulling out what appears to be an official Trial directive sealed with Malcolm’s silver insignia.
The wax seal cracks under his fingers as he breaks it, and he scans the contents with growing alarm, his expression darkening with each line like storm clouds gathering.
“Containment protocols,” he mutters, disbelief coloring his voice. “Before identification is even confirmed? This isn’t standard procedure...”
He continues reading, and through our tenuous connection, I sense his mounting alarm like acid in my stomach.
Whatever Malcolm has planned for tomorrow’s Shadow Labyrinth, it goes beyond typical Trial challenges.
The document outlines something that looks disturbingly like a capture operation rather than a student assessment.
Constantine sets the directive down carefully, as if it might explode.
He moves to the window, staring out at the moonlit academy grounds while conflict rages within him.
My shadow tendril reports his emotional turmoil with painful clarity—duty to his Hunter oath battling with his scientific integrity and personal concerns.
“I became a Hunter to protect,” he breathes to the empty room, his voice carrying the weight of a man questioning everything he’s believed. “Not to persecute based on outdated dogma.”
He returns to his desk with new determination, pulling out a blank parchment and beginning to sketch what looks like a map of tomorrow’s Labyrinth challenge.
My shadow tendril inches closer, reporting details I shouldn’t possibly have access to—alternate pathways marked in blue ink, hidden exits circled in red, trigger points for magical traps noted with careful precision.
Constantine is creating an escape route through the labyrinth.
My breath catches as I realize what this means. He’s actively working against Malcolm’s plans, risking his position and possibly his life to provide me a way out if things go wrong tomorrow.
As if sensing my shadow’s presence, Constantine pauses in his sketching, head tilting slightly like he’s heard something I can’t perceive. “Ashley?” he whispers, eyes scanning the darkened corners of the room with sudden awareness.