BLOODCAPE
Chapter 94 – Veins of Smoke

Chapter 94: Chapter 94 – Veins of Smoke

The surveillance lab in the Zodiac Annex didn’t hum.

It pulsed.

Buried two levels beneath the Academy’s tactical wing, the observation bay was carved from obsidian-hardened alloy and engineered silence. No windows. No soundproofing needed — the walls absorbed thought itself.

At the center stood six floor-mounted displays, fanned outward like blades of a giant black flower. A half-dome of sensors above tracked eye movement, thermal shifts, and motion vectors.

It was a mind palace for one kind of person.

Dr. Camilla Varn stood in its heart. Silent. Precise. Her coat whispered around her as she moved, the hem brushing the edge of the glowing dais like a priestess in a temple of cognition.

On-screen, the rooftop ambush played again.

Cadet Rook Vale — Hernan — moved through it like code written for violence. Every disarm, every redirection, every calculated mercy moved with algorithmic clarity.

Camilla rotated the projection with a flick, overlaying neurofeedback lines on each cadet. Heart rates. Reflex triggers. Blood oxygen.

"Cadet Two’s heart rate spiked before the feint," she murmured. "But he never committed. He flinched."

She isolated the motion. "And still... Hernan stepped into the strike path before it existed."

She slowed the footage to 0.1 speed.

The image shimmered.

Onscreen, Hernan slid sideways between two angles of crossfire that hadn’t yet aligned. His knee drove up into a cadet’s shoulder at the exact moment the baton powered on — not late. Not responsive.

Preemptive.

Behind her, the door hissed open.

Commander Ryl stepped in without announcement, her presence as quiet as the light around her. She stopped beside Camilla, arms folded, watching.

The next frame played.

Hernan disarmed another attacker before the strike fully began.

Camilla’s fingers danced over the input field, bringing up neural telemetry.

"Reaction times are standard for peak-tier cadets," she said. "But the anticipation curve—" she highlighted an arc of muscle activation, "—this shows cortical stimulus before his opponent even initiates movement."

She pulled up his motor cortex data. Flat.

No adrenaline.

No panic spike.

"His threat response remained neutral," she said quietly. "Not because he suppressed it. Because he didn’t have one."

Ryl’s voice came like a shard of chilled glass. "He wasn’t fighting to win."

Camilla turned. "He was demonstrating."

She studied the still image on-screen: Hernan in mid-step, unflinching, surgical.

"You’ve seen this before."

Ryl nodded once. "Solaris."

Camilla didn’t look surprised.

"I read his files," she said. "Solaris had anticipatory cognition at field level. But even he showed tension under pressure."

Ryl stared at the screen. "But that boy—he fights like pressure is a choice. Like violence is clarity."

Camilla’s voice dropped.

"This boy doesn’t just inherit instincts."

She tapped Hernan’s expression.

"He inherits intention."

Silence deepened.

Camilla turned, activated a wall panel, and keyed in an override.

"Level Six clearance," she said.

A retinal scanner deployed.

A single drop of blood was drawn from her fingertip.

"Zodiac Eight: Dr. Varn. Authorization."

The wall slid open, revealing a sealed archive.

She scrolled until a locked file rose to the surface.

SOLARIS ECHOCLASSIFICATION: EXTINCTSTATUS: REDACTEDVIEWING REQUIRES ACTIVE ZODIAC PRESENCE

She tapped it.

A black-and-white photo filled the screen.

Burned corridor. Solaris — half-masked, injured — standing over a wrecked body. And behind him, blurred but visible:

A child.

Wide-eyed. Covered in ash.

Same jawline. Same gaze. Same poise.

Camilla whispered:

"He didn’t survive Solaris. He was Solaris."

Ryl didn’t move.

"If he knows who he is," she said, "then everything he’s doing is deliberate."

The synthetic trees didn’t rustle.

They breathed.

Leaves shimmered in pre-programmed pulses — a tranquil rhythm designed to soothe cadet nerves.

It didn’t work on Hernan.

He sat beneath one of the larger trees, spine straight against the curved trunk, hands resting loose in his lap. Still, but not relaxed. From a distance, he looked like meditation sculpted in flesh.

His eyes never left the garden’s far entrance.

He felt her long before he saw her.

Tessa.

Her approach was slow. Deliberate. Like someone crossing into a threshold without a name.

He didn’t turn, but inclined his head — just enough to acknowledge her presence.

She hesitated.

Then sat beside him, three paces apart. Same angle as last time. Close enough for words. Far enough for denial.

"I thought I’d find you here," she said.

"You always find people when they’re quiet."

She offered a faint smile. "It’s the only time they tell the truth."

He looked toward the tree canopy. "The wind’s on a ten-minute loop. Supposed to soothe anxiety by the sixth."

"I’m not here to calm down."

This time, he turned to look at her — fully.

She didn’t flinch.

"I came to ask about the rooftop."

"I thought that was classified."

"So did the medic who stitched a cadet’s jaw back into place."

Hernan didn’t smile.

"You’re not going to ask how I’m doing?"

"You already know."

A pause.

"That’s what scares me."

Another beat passed.

Tessa leaned forward. "I want to know why there’s no report."

"They didn’t want one."

"Protocols say—"

"They weren’t real cadets," he said flatly.

Tessa hesitated. "So it was a test?"

"A message."

"From who?"

He looked at her, gaze direct and unreadable.

"Does it matter?"

She reached into her jacket — rested a hand on the folded printout.

Didn’t take it out.

Not yet.

"I found something," she said. "District 3. Five years ago. File: Solaris Echo."

Hernan’s fingers curled — barely.

"Your file says Vano Sector. Parents dead in riots."

"That’s true."

"All of it?"

He didn’t answer.

Instead: "What would you do if someone lied to you — but the lie protected others?"

Tessa’s voice dropped.

"Depends who they’re protecting them from."

Something flickered in Hernan’s expression.

Then:

"Some names don’t die. They just... change address."

"What does that mean?"

"It means sometimes the dead don’t stop being dangerous."

Tessa looked like she might reach out.

But didn’t.

"I want to trust you."

He nodded.

"Then don’t dig."

She stood. Hurt flashing in her eyes — not because he scared her.

Because he let her know she scared him.

As she walked away, the folded printout in her pocket shifted.

The edge of a Solar Paragon crest showed through.

High above, hidden in the canopy, a surveillance drone pivoted silently.

Red light blinking.

But this time, it wasn’t watching her.

Hernan looked up.

Locked eyes with it.

Unmoving.

Unsmiling.

Knowing.

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