Scarlett POV
"She could not tell whether he had always been easy to forget.
Or whether, until now, none of them had truly seen him at all."
Eliza kept speaking.
Something about selection. Contribution. The usual polished academy language people used when they wanted power to sound educational.
Scarlett listened with the part of her mind trained to do so.
The rest remained elsewhere.
At the back of the room.
On the boy who should not have stayed in focus this long.
It irritated her.
Not because he was doing anything. Aeron sat exactly as he should have—quiet, awkward, unremarkable beside the wall. Iori sat beside him wrapped in his blanket like some half-finished thought the academy had neglected to explain.
And yet Scarlett could still feel the shape of them there.
More specifically—
him.
That was the annoying part.
Eliza's voice cut through the room.
"Tomorrow's fair will begin after midday lessons. You are free to look around before making any choices, though I do recommend pretending to possess standards."
A few students laughed.
Luke, unsurprisingly, looked personally addressed.
Scarlett kept her gaze forward.
Only because turning around again would have made it obvious.
That, more than anything, offended her.
Beside her, Luke leaned back in his chair. "So," he murmured, just loudly enough for their group, "which societies do we think are pretending the hardest?"
"Elaborate," Seth said.
"The useless ones that say words like legacy."
"That does not narrow it down at all," Ruth muttered.
Catheryn's mouth shifted faintly.
Scarlett almost missed it.
Almost.
Because her attention slipped for a fraction of a second—
and snapped right back.
Aeron.
Still there.
Still too easy to hold.
Scarlett's jaw tightened.
'Ridiculous.'
At the front, Eliza straightened. "That will be all for today. Try not to embarrass yourselves before tomorrow. It lowers morale."
This time the laughter came easier.
Chairs shifted. Bags were pulled upright. The room loosened into noise.
Scarlett preferred this part.
Movement gave people excuses not to think too hard.
She stood smoothly, gathering her things. Around her, the class dissolved into groups and directions and small self-important plans. Luke was already talking about the fair like he intended to improve it by attending. Seth was correcting him. Ruth remained watchful. Catheryn remained quiet.
Normal.
It should have felt normal.
Scarlett adjusted the strap over her shoulder and let herself glance toward Xavier.
He was standing too, one hand resting against his desk as Luke talked past him.
His expression was easy.
Too easy.
Because his eyes moved.
Not to Angelina.
Toward the back.
A quick flick.
Then away again.
Scarlett went still.
So it was not just her.
That should have made her feel better.
It did not.
It made it worse.
Students were already filing toward the door. The room thinned. Luke had begun some highly confident argument about which societies were secretly just older students dressing prestige up as merit. Seth informed him that he was describing most institutions. Luke said that only proved he was right.
Scarlett barely heard any of it.
Because when she looked back again—
Aeron was standing.
Nothing dramatic in it. He simply rose from his chair with the cautious air of someone who had already been looked at more than he wanted.
And annoyingly, Scarlett noticed everything.
The careful way he gathered his things.
The slight stiffness in his shoulders.
The quick glance toward the door, like he was judging the least unfortunate route.
He should have blurred.
He did not.
Beside him, Iori had not moved.
Or perhaps he had, and Scarlett simply had not seen it.
Then the blanket was gone.
Scarlett stared at the empty space beside Aeron's chair for half a second too long.
'No.'
That was somehow worse.
Aeron, meanwhile, seemed either unsurprised by the disappearance or too used to it to react publicly. Which was its own problem.
He turned toward the aisle.
And before Scarlett could stop herself, her attention followed him again.
That was new.
That was wrong.
And across the room, just as Aeron took his first step toward the door, Xavier's head lifted slightly—
as though some part of him had arrived at the same conclusion.
"Aeron."
The name cut through the noise.
Not loudly.
It did not need to be.
Aeron stopped at once.
Scarlett watched his shoulders stiffen.
Then, slowly, with the look of a man discovering that hope had once again been a tactical error, he turned back around.
"...Yes?"
Luke's conversation died mid-breath.
Not enough to look obvious.
Enough.
Scarlett kept her eyes on Xavier.
He did not seem entirely sure why he had called him back.
That was the interesting part.
It showed first in the brief pause after Aeron answered. The faint narrowing of Xavier's eyes, like he had acted on instinct and was only now being asked to explain it to himself.
There.
He had not called Aeron because he meant to.
He had called him because some part of his attention had refused to let him leave cleanly.
"I just—" Xavier stopped, then breathed out lightly. "Tomorrow. The fair."
Aeron blinked once.
"The fair," he repeated, with the caution of someone who suspected a trap but had not yet located it.
"Yes," Xavier said, recovering his usual ease. "You're going, right?"
There was a pause.
Aeron looked, very briefly, like a boy standing in front of a harmless question that had still managed to become inconvenient.
"I assume," he said carefully, "that's the general idea."
Luke made a sound in the back of his throat that was probably a laugh and wisely smothered it.
"Good," Xavier said. "You seemed like you were trying to escape before anyone could mention it."
Aeron's expression shifted by a fraction.
A tiny flicker of betrayal.
"That," Aeron said, "is a very uncharitable interpretation of me walking toward the door."
"It felt accurate," Xavier said.
"It was a door," Aeron replied.
"That does tend to be how escaping works," Seth said.
Aeron looked at him as though mildly offended that someone else had joined the conversation at all.
Scarlett nearly smiled.
Nearly.
Because the scene itself was too useful to waste on amusement.
Xavier had not let him leave.
More importantly, he still did not seem aware that that was strange.
Across from her, Xavier leaned one shoulder against the side of a desk.
"So," he said, "have you thought about what you're joining?"
Aeron stared at him.
It was not rude. It was simply the stare of someone trying to work out how he had gone from almost leaving the room to having a conversation with Xavier Granger in front of half the class.
"Not really," he said at last.
"That sounds dangerously unprepared," Luke put in.
"That sounds normal," Aeron replied.
"That is because you're low ranking," Luke said.
Ruth looked at him. "You say things with such confidence."
Luke put a hand to his chest. "Because I believe in them."
"No," Ruth said. "Because consequences have not improved you."
Catheryn lowered her gaze.
Scarlett saw the faint shift at the corner of her mouth and knew Luke had noticed it too, because he immediately looked pleased with himself for reasons he had not earned.
Xavier's attention, however, never fully left Aeron.
That was the problem.
Even when Luke spoke.
Even when Ruth answered.
Part of him remained fixed there.
Scarlett saw it.
And, worse, she suspected Aeron did too.
He had gone slightly too still.
Not frozen.
Just cautious in the specific way people became when they felt attention settle on them more firmly than they liked.
"Well," Xavier said, as though none of this had acquired any strange undercurrent at all, "you should still come."
Aeron blinked. "I just said I was going."
"Yes, but now I'm saying it too."
"That feels unnecessary."
"It was encouragement."
"It felt like surveillance."
Luke failed.
The laugh escaped him in one violent burst.
Seth closed his eyes briefly, wearing the expression of a man who had predicted this outcome and was still disappointed by it.
Even Scarlett's mouth threatened treachery.
Xavier looked faintly offended. "I am not surveilling you."
Aeron glanced once toward the door again. "You did stop me while I was leaving."
"That is not surveillance. That is conversation."
"That feels optimistic."
This time Scarlett did smile, if only by a fraction.
It vanished quickly.
Because while the exchange was ridiculous, the thing beneath it was not.
Aeron should have been difficult to hold onto once the moment passed.
Instead, here he was—still caught beneath Xavier's attention, still somehow refusing to dissolve back into the harmless background where he belonged.
Or where he should have belonged.
Xavier pushed away from the desk at last.
"Well," he said, "try not to avoid everyone tomorrow."
Aeron looked genuinely baffled.
"I was not planning around the possibility that people might need avoiding."
"That's because you don't know enough people yet," Luke said.
"That sounds like a threat," Aeron said.
"It's a promise," Luke replied.
Ruth exhaled through his nose.
Scarlett watched Aeron glance between them all—Luke's amusement, Ruth's watchfulness, Catheryn's quiet stillness, Seth's composed disinterest, Xavier's impossible ease.
Then, just for a second, his eyes passed over her.
Enough for Scarlett to catch the flicker in them.
Wariness.
Good.
Let him notice.
She did not look away.
Aeron did.
Almost immediately.
"Right," he said, with the careful tone of someone trying to end the conversation before it developed more teeth. "I'll keep that in mind."
Then he turned again and started toward the door.
This time Xavier let him go.
Scarlett tracked him for three steps before she realized she was doing it and hated that too.
Because it was effortless.
Because she was not trying.
And beside her, Xavier's gaze followed him one moment longer than it should have before finally shifting away.
Strange .
It was all so strange.
***
Following day.
***
Aeron POV
Oh no.
This was wrong.
Aeron knew that before he could explain why.
The academy fair sprawled across the main grounds in a riot of colour and sound. Banners hung between white stone pillars and temporary booths, snapping in the breeze. Students moved in clusters through the open walkways while society representatives called out invitations with aggressively rehearsed enthusiasm. Mana flashed in neat little demonstrations above polished tables. Laughter rose, broke apart, and tangled with the constant hum of voices.
Somewhere ahead, something exploded in a controlled and probably approved manner.
It was crowded.
It was noisy.
It was full of motion, distraction, and more faces than any one person could reasonably keep track of.
A place like this should have swallowed him whole.
Instead, Aeron stood near the edge of the fair with his pulse already too high and the deeply unwelcome feeling that something in his trait had gone strange.
No. Think logically.
Watcher had always worked best in places like this.
Crowds helped. Noise helped. Movement helped. The more attention the world had to divide between a hundred other things, the easier it was for him to slip into the background and stay there.
That was the rule.
So why did it feel like the rule had turned personal?
Aeron scanned the grounds again, forcing himself into reason.
Nothing looked wrong.
Students laughed between booths. A weapons society stand had gathered a crowd around some flashy display of sword forms and projected mana trails. One of the casting groups was throwing harmless arcs of coloured light into the air for attention. A social club further down had somehow acquired decorative lanterns, polished signs, and an upper-year student with a smile so practiced it looked like a threat.
Everything looked normal.
So why did he not feel hidden?
Not exposed exactly.
Not visible in some dramatic, life-ruining way.
Just... wrong.
Like something that used to come naturally had started catching where it should have slipped.
His stomach twisted.
Could traits change?
That thought landed harder than it should have.
Aeron went still and tried to feel inward, as if that would help.
It did not.
Watcher did not feel gone.
That was the problem.
If it had vanished entirely, that would at least have been clear. Instead it was still there, still familiar enough to recognise, but off in a way that made his skin feel too tight.
Usually, a crowd felt easy.
Natural.
There was a rhythm to being overlooked. He had never needed to force it. He just... slipped.
Now it felt less like slipping and more like snagging.
As if the crowd still wanted to blur him—
—but something in him kept catching on the surface.
Aeron stared straight ahead.
That is a terrible sentence.
His life had become the kind of thing that produced terrible sentences with alarming regularity.
For one brief, shining moment, he considered turning around and leaving immediately.
This was a strong plan.
A wise plan.
A plan crafted by every survival instinct he still possessed.
Unfortunately, that plan ran into one deeply important problem.
The cooking society taster.
His eyes shifted toward the central stretch of the fair almost against his will.
This was, in his defence, important.
He had heard there would be samples.
Actual ones.
Not the usual tragic little cubes of bread or slices of fruit handed out by people who had confused food with evidence of effort. No. Apparently the cooking society had gone all in. Proper dishes. Hot food. Real seasoning. Things made by students who actually cared and, more importantly, knew what they were doing.
That was not an opportunity a normal person could be expected to ignore.
And Aeron, despite everything, was trying very hard to remain at least partially a normal person.
Unfortunately, the cooking society had chosen to set up in one of the busiest central stretches of the fair.
Which, under ordinary circumstances, would have been ideal.
More people meant more cover.
More movement meant less individual attention.
More distractions meant Watcher should have thrived.
Should.
His shoulders tightened.
Because he no longer trusted that word.
It should have been fine when the classroom got messy.
It should have been fine when too many people noticed him at once.
It should have been fine when reality started feeling vaguely personal in its hostility.
And yet here he was, standing at the edge of a society fair trying to determine whether his own trait was changing while also thinking about soup.
This was not a dignified life.
Aeron looked away from the cooking society.
Then looked back.
Then away again.
Then back.
It was not his fault they had weaponised free food.
Still, the logic held.
A big crowd should erase him.
Even if the main cast wandered through the area, they could not possibly maintain active awareness of one suspiciously average boy through this many people.
That would be absurd.
Unless Watcher was not breaking.
Unless it was becoming something worse.
Aeron exhaled slowly and dragged a hand down his face.
He could not stand here forever. Lurking at the entrance while staring at one section of the fair like a haunted criminal was somehow even more suspicious than simply going in. If he wanted to know whether Watcher was actually unstable, then the fair was the best place to test it.
And if that test happened to bring him into contact with food, then that was simply efficient decision-making.
Yes.
That sounded intelligent.
Almost respectable.
It definitely did not sound like someone trying to justify risking psychic damage for snacks.
He straightened slightly.
Fine, he thought. One quick pass. Crowd cover. Cooking society. Minimal suffering. Then leave.
A simple plan.
A reasonable plan.
A plan that would have worked beautifully if his life had any respect for simplicity.
Aeron stepped into the moving current of students and let the fair fold around him.
At once the noise sharpened. Voices passed close and blurred apart. Fabric brushed shoulders. Laughter rose somewhere to his right. A burst of mana-lit sparks flashed above one of the booths and drew a ripple of applause.
For a few seconds, moving with the flow instead of against it, he almost managed to believe his own logic.
Maybe this was fine.
Maybe he was overthinking it.
Maybe Watcher was still working and he was simply being dramatic because his life had recently developed far too many problems for someone with his preferred level of involvement in events.
Then he felt it.
Attention.
Sharp.
Immediate.
Familiar.
Aeron's soul attempted to leave through his spine.
His head turned before he could stop it.
Across the shifting lanes of students, past a booth lined with floating paper charms and another where someone was enthusiastically explaining the moral value of historical fencing to a crowd that clearly only cared about the swords, Scarlett Krown had gone still.
There were too many people between them.
Far too many.
Students crossed through the gap in loose clumps, laughing, talking, brushing past one another in constantly shifting currents of motion. Banners stirred overhead. Someone stepped in front of her for half a second. Another group moved between them immediately after.
It did not matter.
Her eyes still found him.
Not accidentally.
Not vaguely.
Directly.
Aeron felt his stomach drop with quiet, professional horror.
No.
Scarlett stood with Ruth a little off to one side of the central walkway, close enough to the larger traffic routes that people kept moving around them without quite interrupting the clean line of her attention.
She did not look surprised to see him.
She looked annoyed.
That was worse.
Because surprise could be luck.
Annoyance implied pattern.
Her expression tightened by the smallest degree, as though his existence had once again chosen a personally inconvenient place to occur.
Aeron, who had not even reached the cooking society stand yet and was beginning to feel that life itself had become vindictive, made the deeply sensible decision to keep walking.
Normally.
Like a person who had not just been found in a crowd with insulting ease.
He took one step.
Then another.
Scarlett moved too.
Not much. Just enough.
A slight shift through the flow of students. A turn of her shoulders. A change in angle that made ignoring her impossible without looking even more suspicious.
Ruth looked between them, then followed Scarlett's gaze properly.
His brows lifted a fraction.
Scarlett had noticed first.
That little detail hit Aeron with all the emotional comfort of a thrown brick.
He stopped.
Continuing now would look unnatural, and his life had somehow reached the point where all of his instincts were being filtered through how suspicious will this seem if I panic visibly?
Scarlett's eyes stayed on him.
Then, in the flat tone of someone being inconvenienced by a recurring flaw in reality, she asked,
"Why do I keep seeing you?"
Aeron stared at her.
There were many possible responses.
Most of them were bad.
Several involved denying his own physical location, which felt weak as a strategy considering she was currently looking at him.
So instead, because his life was cruel and his mouth remained committed to honesty at the worst possible moments, he said,
"This feels increasingly targeted."
Ruth made a sound that was dangerously close to laughter.
Scarlett did not.
If anything, she looked more annoyed, as though his answer had somehow confirmed the existence of a problem she had not wanted named.
"That was not an answer," she said.
"In my defence," Aeron replied, "I also have concerns."
Scarlett's gaze sharpened.
Around them, the fair continued without mercy. Students brushed past between the nearest booths. Someone at the casting stand sent a spiral of blue sparks upward to attract attention. The cooking society stand remained visible in the distance like a mocking promise.
All of this should have been helping him.
Instead, Scarlett was looking at him like the crowd had politely stepped aside and handed him back.
Ruth folded her arms, openly amused now.
"You do keep appearing near us," she said.
"I am beginning to feel," Aeron said carefully, "that appearing makes this sound more deliberate than it is."
Scarlett's eyes narrowed the slightest bit.
That tiny shift did not feel like hostility.
It felt worse.
Recognition.
Not full understanding. Not danger yet. Just the increasingly undeniable fact that her attention kept returning to him far more easily than it should.
And the worst part—
Aeron knew it too.
This was too fast.
Too clean.
Too effortless on her part.
"Well," he said, with all the dignity of someone trying to retreat from a conversation without technically fleeing it, "I should probably continue being elsewhere."
Ruth did laugh at that.
Scarlett did not stop him.
But her gaze stayed on him for one beat longer than it should have.
That beat followed him.
Aeron stepped back into the moving flow of students and resisted the urge to break into a sprint like a prey animal who had just learned the forest contained principles instead of predators.
No. Think.
One reacquisition did not prove full collapse.
Scarlett was sharp by default. Irritatingly sharp. Socially weaponised, even.
Maybe that was all this was.
Aeron did not believe that.
Still, belief was optional. Countermeasures were not.
He shifted direction at once, abandoning the most direct line toward the cooking society stand. Straight paths were no longer his friend. If Scarlett could pick him out that quickly, then moving cleanly through the central lane like a normal person was clearly a tactical error.
Fine.
New plan.
More bodies. More obstacles. Less dignity.
He angled into a denser section of the fair where three societies had positioned their displays too close together, forcing traffic into slower, messier clusters. Better. Harder to track through. Harder to keep line of sight.
He passed behind a tall group of second years gathered around a formation display, then slowed near a booth with hanging banners just long enough to let another stream of students cut between him and the central walkway.
Better.
He would circle instead of approach directly. Use crowd pockets. Break sightlines. Stop moving like someone with a visible destination.
This was now, somehow, a stealth exercise.
Wonderful.
Aeron rounded the edge of a larger booth, slipped behind another passing group, and nearly relaxed.
Then a familiar voice, warm and easy and far too close, said,
"There you are."
Aeron turned too fast and felt his stomach drop.
Xavier stood a short distance away, half-framed by the moving crowd, looking at him with that easy warmth like finding him here was the most natural thing in the world.
Which made it worse.
Scarlett noticing him had already been bad.
Xavier was worse.
Xavier Granger was not just important. He was central. The kind of person the original story bent around.
This will interfere with the story.
His second thought was worse.
Angelina in the cage.
The Fray.
The assassin.
Something cold settled in his chest.
I already interfered.
He had no good response to any of that, so unfortunately he opened his mouth anyway.
"This is becoming a very upsetting pattern."
Xavier smiled slightly. "That sounds almost accusing."
"I am deeply suspicious of several things right now."
That earned him a quiet laugh, which Aeron found wildly unhelpful.
Worse still, Xavier did not look like he had searched.
He just looked like he had found him.
Naturally.
As though Aeron's position had stayed somewhere in the back of his mind no matter how many students or booths or hanging banners Aeron had tried to bury himself behind.
Xavier tilted his head. "Were you heading somewhere?"
Aeron hesitated for half a second too long.
Xavier's smile sharpened with amusement. "The cooking society?"
Aeron stared at him.
"This is private information."
Xavier laughed.
A group of students passed between them, briefly breaking the line of sight.
Aeron shifted immediately with the movement, letting another pair of bodies slide across the gap.
When the line reopened, Xavier's gaze found him again without effort.
Too fast.
Much too fast.
Aeron felt a small part of himself go quiet.
There it was.
Not chance.
Not Scarlett being unusually sharp.
A pattern.
"I think," Aeron said, summoning what little dignity remained to him, "I should continue being elsewhere."
Xavier looked amused again, but nodded easily. "Alright."
That easy acceptance somehow made it worse too.
Aeron stepped back into the current of students at once, cutting away through a denser lane without looking back.
More cover. More obstruction. Less direct movement.
He needed to test this again.
Needed to know how bad it really was.
The fair surged around him in colour, noise, and shifting bodies.
The perfect place to disappear.
And Xavier had still found him.
Aeron moved deeper into the crowd, recalculating routes, trying to salvage a system from failure—
then saw her.
Not far ahead, just beyond the heaviest crush of students, Angelina stood beside one of the quieter booths.
He did not need her whole face.
Her eyes were enough.
Green.
Clear.
Usually, the kind of eyes that made the rest of a person's thoughts briefly forget their jobs.
Right now, Aeron was far too busy having a crisis for them to feel especially mesmerising.
Which, in his opinion, was proof the situation had become severe.
Her gaze was already on him.
Not snapping toward him. Not catching at the last second.
Simply there.
As though she had settled on him the moment he drifted back into range.
There was the faintest hint of amusement at the corner of her mouth.
Deeply unfair.
Aeron slowed despite himself.
Angelina tilted her head slightly, still watching him with that calm, impossible composure.
"They keep finding you."
Aeron let out a quiet breath.
"Yes," he said. "That has become difficult to ignore."
The amusement in her expression sharpened by the smallest degree.
"You do not look surprised."
"I ran out of surprise slightly earlier."
That earned him the barest curve of a smile.
No pressure. No accusation. No attempt to stop him.
Just quiet observation, like this was already obvious to both of them.
That made it worse.
Scarlett had felt sharp.
Xavier had felt natural.
This felt smooth.
As though Angelina had not really lost track of him at all. As though the moment he drifted near her part of the fair again, her awareness had simply settled back into place.
Aeron did not care for that interpretation.
"In my defence," he said, because apparently he was still committed to speaking through his own downfall, "I disagree with this development."
"I can tell," Angelina said softly.
There it was again—that slight amusement, light but unmistakable.
Not cruel.
If anything, that made it more dangerous.
Aeron gave a small, resigned nod, then stepped back into the flow of students before the conversation could become any more real than it already was.
The fair closed around him once more in noise, colour, and movement.
It should have felt safer than this.
It did not.
Aeron changed direction again the moment he cleared Angelina's section of the fair.
At this point, the plan had become less reach the cooking society and more survive perception as a concept.
He cut toward a quieter stretch between booths, looking for less obvious traffic, less familiar routes, less everything.
Which was, in retrospect, exactly how he ended up seeing Lyra.
Too late.
She stood a short distance ahead near one of the quieter displays, a little removed from the heavier movement of the fair. There was space around her in the way there always seemed to be, as if even a crowd knew better than to press too close.
Aeron's first instinct was to turn away immediately.
His second was to realise she had already noticed him.
Her gaze rested on him without warmth, without surprise, without any of the accidental humanity that had made the others feel survivable.
Scarlett had been irritated.
Xavier had been easy.
Angelina had been amused.
Lyra just looked precise.
That was worse.
For one brief and terrible moment, Aeron considered pretending he was part of the booth behind him.
This was not a good plan.
More importantly, it was too late for plans.
Lyra's eyes stayed on him, cool and clear as winter glass.
Then she said, in that calm, exact tone of hers,
"You are difficult to place."
Aeron felt his entire nervous system object.
That was much too close to the problem.
Before he could decide whether silence counted as dignity, Lyra added,
"And yet not enough."
There it was.
A perfect, elegant summary of everything currently ruining his life.
Aeron stared at her.
"I was happier," he said at last, "before you said that out loud."
Lyra did not look especially moved by this.
If anything, her attention sharpened by the smallest fraction, as though his answer had confirmed something rather than denied it.
That did not help.
It felt, with growing discomfort, less like she was noticing him and more like she was noticing the way his presence settled incorrectly against everything around him.
As though Watcher was no longer just hiding him badly.
As though it was catching.
Holding.
Resolving wrong.
Aeron disliked every possible interpretation of that.
So naturally, he gave a small nod like this had been a normal exchange between normal students and stepped back into the movement of the fair before she could decide to become any more accurate.
The crowd folded around him once more.
It should have helped.
It did not.
Now, if anything, it felt worse.
Because Lyra had not merely found him.
She had noticed the shape of the problem.
By the time Aeron left her behind, his nerves had gone past sharp and into something quieter.
Not calm.
Just stretched too thin to keep panicking properly.
The fair still moved around him in waves of colour, voices, banners, mana-light, and shifting bodies. Everything about it should have made this easier. Everything about it should have helped him vanish.
It did not.
He was still trying to reorder the problem in his head when a voice touched his mind.
Aeron.
He stopped.
His attention sharpened at once.
Iori did not usually use his name.
That alone was enough to feel wrong.
Aeron turned and found him a short distance away, lying across a bench near the edge of the fair as though he had always been there. Blanket wrapped around him as usual. One arm hanging loosely off the side. His eyes, blank as ever, were already on Aeron.
That blankness somehow made this worse.
There was nothing in his expression to soften what came next.
You have changed.
The words slid into Aeron's mind with the same flat ease as if Iori had commented on the weather.
Aeron did not move.
Iori's gaze did not either.
You don't disappear anymore.
A pause.
No. Not to some of them.
Another pause.
They keep you now.
Aeron stood in the middle of the fair and felt the whole pattern settle into place.
Scarlett finding him too fast.
Xavier finding him anyway.
Angelina already knowing.
Lyra noticing the shape of the wrongness.
And now this.
Not failure.
Not exactly.
Watcher had not stopped working.
It had changed.
The crowd still blurred him for everyone else. Still softened him at the edges. Still swallowed him from the world at large.
But not from the ones who had already caught hold.
They keep you now.
Aeron looked back at the fair.
At the moving crowd.
At the noise and colour and bodies that should have hidden him.
They had not.
They had only kept returning him to the same few pairs of eyes.
The fair should have hidden him.
Instead, it had proven something worse.
Once certain eyes found him, they did not let him go.
