Chapter 17 of 20

Episode: - 17 Velvet Fire: Casual Faultlines, Who Choked? Yes, This One!

What Left2,138 words~11 min read

The air thrummed with excitement as players gathered on the field, the stadium alive with cheers that echoed like thunder. Banners flared. Voices crashed like waves against the shoreline. Lights painted the sky in pulses of gold and electric blue.

And in the middle of it all—unmoving—stood Mee-Toh.

Arms folded. Head tilted just slightly. Watching. Like a predator on the edge of a battlefield.

He wasn't breathing hard. Wasn't fidgeting. But his fingers twitched once—just once. Like a ripple in still water. Barely there. Barely admitted.

His expression was curated indifference, the kind that came with practice—boredom laced with subtle disdain. The look of someone who had already rehearsed not being impressed. But inside?

His pulse rattled like a drawer of knives.

Then—cutting through the noise like a voice he'd been trying not to hope for—came a familiar sound.

"Thought I'd find you brooding like some tragic poet, alone in the wild wind of victory and doom."

Mee-Toh turned, already scowling.

There he was.

Ethan.

All easy charisma and unshakable charm, his grin already halfway to smug before he'd even finished his stride. His hands were buried in his jacket pockets, like nothing in the world could possibly surprise him. Like the chaos in the air was just background music.

"Tragic?" Mee-Toh scoffed, raising an eyebrow. "You're calling me dramatic? You give speeches about courage like you're being broadcast in every language. You sound like a motivational poster with Wi-Fi."

Ethan beamed. "I am a motivational poster. Clean-cut, humble, noble—"

"Humble, huh."

"—and devastatingly handsome. Don't interrupt the brand."

He struck a dramatic pose, arms out, grinning like the entire stadium existed just to highlight his excellence.

Mee-Toh narrowed his eyes. "You forgot the part about being an older brother who always wins, and acts like it's just another Tuesday blessed by the gods."

Ethan laughed and stepped closer, bumping his shoulder against Mee-Toh's. "So... you are nervous."

"I'm annoyed," Mee-Toh said flatly. "Which, lucky for you, looks similar."

Ethan tilted his head, that warm smile flickering into something gentler. "It's okay to care, you know. This is a big deal—even for me. You being here? That means something."

Mee-Toh's jaw clenched. He looked away.

"Don't do that."

"Do what?"

"That... encouragement voice. The soft one. I don't want to get emotional right before I have to elbow someone in the ribs."

Ethan's laughter was quieter now, but genuine.

"Fair. No soft voices then. Just this."

He reached into his coat, pulled out a small, cloth-tied pouch, and pressed it into Mee-Toh's hand.

Mee-Toh looked at it like it might bite him. "What is this?"

"Your medicine. I know you forget when you're pretending you don't care about anything." His tone didn't change. It was just... honest.

Mee-Toh stared at the pouch for a long moment.

Then, quieter: "You still remember that?"

"Of course I do," Ethan said. "Just because we argue doesn't mean I stop paying attention. I want you at your best when we fight. No excuses."

The air stilled around them.

Mee-Toh didn't smile. But his fingers closed around the pouch.

"...Thanks," he muttered. "You're still annoying, though."

"I know," Ethan said, grinning.

He ruffled Mee-Toh's hair before the boy could slap his hand away, and turned.

"And hey—" Ethan called, halfway across the zone now.

Mee-Toh looked up.

"Don't hold back," Ethan said. "I want to fight you. Not your hesitation."

Mee-Toh blinked, then smirked. "You better not lose before I get to break that poster-boy jaw of yours."

Ethan raised a hand in salute. "Wouldn't dream of it."

And just like that—he was gone.

Mee-Toh exhaled.

But then—

A shift.

Someone else approached. No fanfare. No voice. No thunder.

Just Kairos.

He moved like a page turning in a silent room—effortless and unnoticed until he was already there. Tall, dressed in black tailored with threads of silver, hair like midnight pulled back from a face too symmetrical to be accidental. Slate-gray eyes locked onto Mee-Toh's with that unshakable calm.

"Great to see you, Mee-Toh!" Kairos greeted warmly, as though this were a polite dinner and not an adrenaline-drenched warzone. "I heard you joined Elijah's Academy. That's impressive. Congratulations."

Mee-Toh straightened so fast his bones protested. "Y-yeah. Sir. Thanks."

The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.

His voice cracked.

Kairos's smile didn't falter. He stepped forward, laid a hand lightly on Mee-Toh's shoulder. "You're making our House proud. I mean that."

Mee-Toh gave a crooked nod. "Thanks..."

But the moment Kairos turned away, the mask slipped.

Mee-Toh's eyes narrowed, thoughts spiraling.

"I've met Kairos before. Warm. Kind. That calm, polished vibe... but something's always off. Too polished. Like a glass too clean. I don't know what it is. But I feel it."

"Maybe it's nothing. But maybe..."

He shook the thoughts off. "Don't get weird, Mee-Toh," he muttered.

And then—chaos erupted. The crowd roared.

Mee-Toh turned back to the field just in time to see him.

A boy.

No. A blade.

He didn't fight. He dismantled.

Every move was clean, brutal, silent. No wasted motion. No mercy. Precision down to the breath. His opponent didn't fall—they shattered.

Mee-Toh's breath caught.

Seconds later, it was over.

The boy didn't raise his hands in victory. Didn't gloat.

He just walked away.

Like it meant nothing.

Mee-Toh watched him go, the taste of steel suddenly in his mouth.

"...Okay," he whispered. "Okay, wow."

And for the first time that day?

He wasn't bored.

He was interested.

And a little afraid.

"Remind me not to piss him off."

---

Amid the roar of the crowd—not every eye was watching the match.

High above the chaos, beyond the blur of neon flags and the haze of celebration, a man stood—half-shadowed beneath the arch of a private balcony. Draped in slate-gray and silence, he leaned forward, elbows resting against cold stone, binoculars pressed to his face.

But he wasn’t watching the center of the arena.

His gaze was trained slightly left—where Ana stood. Half-shielded by her teammates. Arms folded. Still. A figure half in light, half in hiding.

She wasn’t moving much. Her stance was relaxed, aloof. But to trained eyes?

She was slipping—not in battle, but in cover.

The man’s lips curled in the faintest trace of a smile.

“There you are,” he murmured.

---

Later, beneath marble pillars and away from the public eye, the man straightened from a bow. The silence was brittle, as though it had been carved to hold shape until someone spoke.

Then, a voice. Soft as silk, sharp as a scalpel.

“Are you certain, Silas?”

He didn’t flinch. He’d served too long to forget who stood before him.

“Yes, ma’am,” he said, voice even as flint. “She’s changed. New rhythm. Tighter posture. Different name, maybe. But the way she reads a crowd? The way her thumb curls when she thinks?”

He lowered the binoculars.

“It’s her. That’s your daughter.”

Lady Aarianna stepped forward.

Heels hushed against marble. Gown flowing like midnight smoke—polished obsidian slashed with dark silver thread. Every step a statement. Every breath composed.

She looked down toward the arena—but not at the match.

She was watching Ana.

Unmoving. Unblinking.

A mother dissecting the silhouette of someone she used to know.

Silas, still at her side, remained quiet. Professionals understood when the silence was sacred.

Then, her voice again—quieter. Brittle beneath the poise.

“Do you have any further information?”

Silas nodded. “She joined Spectra. I believe she may be working with that boy’s team—the sharp-eyed one. Mee-Toh, I believe. Their roster’s missing a member. She may be the ghost piece they haven’t named.”

Aarianna said nothing. But her fingers tightened slightly over the balcony edge. The only crack.

Then came her nod.

“Report if you find any confirmed lead,” she said. Not with anger.

But with a strange hush. A softness so rare, it could fracture.

Like the very idea of Ana letting herself belong to something—to someone—was both a miracle… and a wound.

After a breath, she asked quietly, “Do you believe she remembers?”

Silas blinked. “Remember what, my lady?”

Aarianna's jaw drew tight.

“My name,” she said, like it cost something to admit. “If it still echoes… even faintly… in that head of hers.”

A silence stretched. Not awkward—just old. Full of ghosts.

Then she exhaled. Long and slow, like she was forcing the breath past a memory with claws.

Her shoulders pulled back. Chin lifted. Armor reassembled.

“Continue your work, Silas,” she said, voice reasserting its authority.

“If you find anything… even a whisper… report it to me directly.”

She didn’t say bring her back.

She didn’t say use force.

She didn’t need to.

The weight in her pause said enough.

Aarianna turned away, but not before one last look—at Ana, now laughing quietly at something Mee-Toh had said, her head tilted, expression unguarded.

Aarianna’s lips parted.

Not a smile.

Not a scowl.

Just something... unfinished.

And then she whispered—barely above the hush of velvet:

“My Ana.”

Her breath hitched. Her chin lowered by a fraction.

And just as swiftly, it was gone.

She stood tall again—back to perfection.

Back to silence.

Back to the woman the world feared and revered.

Silas, bowing low once more, spoke without hesitation.

“Understood, ma’am.”

And then, with all the quiet of a shadow well-trained,

he vanished.

_______

The stadium pulsed with anticipation as Mee-Toh's team walked onto the stage. The roar of the crowd was thunderous, but Mee-Toh didn't flinch. Hands in pockets. Shoulders loose. Posture: bored.

He strolled out like he was late to a party he didn't want to attend.

Across from him stood Nadia Storm, Oakwood Sanctuary's pride. Polished stance. Spine straight. Her staff spun like a dare.

Mee-Toh's eyes slid over her. Raised brow. Smirk-close-lipped, not quite reaching his eyes.

"Well, well," Nadia said, voice thick with contempt.

"Didn't think you'd show your face again, Mee-Toh. Thought you finally cracked."

Mee-Toh tilted his head lazily. Debating whether she was even worth the breath. Then sighed, long and slow.

"Nadia Storm," he murmured. "Still out here throwing monologues like anyone asked. What's this, your redemption arc?"

Her smile twitched.

"You always acted like you were above it all. But you're still here. Same stage, same game. That means something broke."

He chuckled. Dry. Low.

"Nah. Just figured I'd babysit the delusional today. Do my good deed."

The host raised a hand.

"Begin!"

Nadia lunged. Staff slicing air like lightning.

Mee-Toh slipped sideways-fluid. Instinctual. Silent on his feet.

Didn't even lift his hands. Just moved-fast and lazy, like dodging falling leaves.

"Careful," he called mid-pivot, sing-song. "You might break a nail."

She struck again. And again. Four times.

He danced through every blow. Eyes locked on hers. Calm. Focused. Cold.

Then-movement.

Mee-Toh's wrist snapped out. Caught the staff. Wrenched it free in one smooth pull. Spun it once. Dropped it beside her with a deliberate clack.

Nadia's expression cracked.

"You-what the hell-?"

Mee-Toh stepped forward, just inches away. Relaxed body. Razor gaze.

"What? Shocked the dropout remembered how to dance?"

She snarled.

"You didn't leave-you ran. Everyone saw it. You lost. You broke. Couldn't handle the heat and vanished."

Mee-Toh didn't blink.

Then smiled. Barely.

"...You done? Or should I slow it down for your Oakwood-trained brain to keep up?"

Her voice tightened.

"You know it's true."

His smile faded. Shoulders drew in. Eyes sharpened-not rage. Precision.

"You want it to be true," he said, voice like frost.

"Because it makes your little world easier to swallow. 'He ran.' Cute.

Here's the truth, sweetheart-"

He stepped closer.

"I didn't run. I walked-because the room caught fire and I got bored of pretending I couldn't breathe."

(Beat.)

Smirk. Venom and velvet.

"You think I lost my fire? Babe, I burned the whole room down. You just weren't paying attention."

The crowd gasped. Mee-Toh didn't care. His focus: surgical. Nadia's flinch. The jaw tightness. Her eyes, dropping just a second too long.

He turned away, ignoring the host's booming:

"Mee-Toh wins the match!"

The host approached.

"Mee-Toh, do you want to fight the next round?"

Mee-Toh wiped imaginary sweat from his brow, exaggerated and theatrical.

"Teammate's MIA. I'll take this one too. We'll forfeit the next."

The crowd rippled with shock.

Mee-Toh raised a brow.

"What? I like the spotlight."

Behind him, Nadia stood stiffly.

"You've changed."

Mee-Toh paused, half-turned.

Smirk. Sharp.

"It's called self-respect. You should Google it."

Lady Aarianna's eyes narrowed, her lips pressing into a thin line. A moment of stillness passed-a silence that almost seemed too long. Then, she spoke, her voice low and controlled, but laced with something far sharper.

"So it's true," she whispered, as if the words had weight enough to fracture the air itself. Her gaze flickered briefly to the field, then back to where Mora stood, unwavering. "I wonder how well you'll fare against what's coming. Best of luck... dear."

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