I didn't see him again for two days.
Not in the corridors. Not at meals. Not in the courtyard, where he usually passed through with a group of polished, whispering elites trailing behind him like perfume.
He disappeared. Quietly. Completely.
And no one acted like it was strange.
Only Petra noticed the way I kept glancing toward the Roswen table during lunch.
"He's in London," she said one afternoon, stirring sugar into her tea. "Family thing. Or so they say."
I raised an eyebrow. "You don't believe it?"
She shrugged. "With him, I never know what's real. That's kind of his superpower. Looking like the truth even when he's not saying anything."
She paused, watching me carefully.
"Are you… interested?"
I took too long to answer.
Petra's lips twisted into a grin. "Oh, you are. God, Elena. That's like asking to get burned by sunlight."
I flushed and looked away. "I'm not interested."
"I didn't say it was a bad thing," she said gently. "Just a dangerous one."
---
It was dusk when I saw him again.
The school grounds were wet with recent rain, golden light bleeding across the stone like a painting coming to life. I was on my way back from the east garden—no reason, just walking—when I heard footsteps ahead.
He was there.
Standing beneath one of the archways, arms folded, sleeves pushed up like he'd been caught between a meeting and a memory. His tie was loose. Hair damp. He looked like someone who'd just fought with the sky and lost.
And still… he looked like that. Untouched. Elegant.
He didn't see me at first. His expression was far away — like he was somewhere else entirely.
But then his gaze shifted. Found mine.
And everything changed.
---
He didn't smile.
He didn't speak.
He just held my gaze, and in that brief, shivering moment, it felt like the entire campus had gone still. Like time was kneeling to let something pass between us.
And then he turned, quietly, and walked toward the North Hall.
I didn't follow.
But my pulse did.
---
That night, it rained again. Harder. More restless. I sat at my desk, trying to read for History of Empire, but the pages blurred every time I remembered the look in his eyes.
Not cold. Not curious.
Something else.
Something like recognition.
---
The next morning, he sat alone during breakfast.
That never happened.
I wasn't staring—at least, I told myself I wasn't—but I noticed the way he didn't eat. Just stirred his tea, untouched. Fingers tight around the cup. His friends surrounded him but said nothing. As if they knew something had happened… but weren't allowed to name it.
Petra followed my gaze.
"He looks… different," she murmured. "Did you notice?"
"I don't know what you mean."
She smirked. "You're a terrible liar."
"I didn't say anything."
"You didn't have to."
She nudged my arm. "He asked about you, by the way."
I froze. "What?"
"Yesterday. When you weren't at the common room discussion."
"What did he say?"
She leaned in. "He asked if you liked the rain."
That was it.
No name. No question about where I was.
Just that.
And somehow, it made my chest flutter in the most irritating, fragile way.
---
By midday, I found a note in my locker.
Folded. Unnamed.
Tucked beneath my schedule like it had always been there.
> Come to the bell tower. Sunset. Don't bring questions.
There was no signature.
There didn't need to be.
I should've ignored it.
But I didn't.
---
The bell tower was older than most parts of the school. Off-limits except during ceremonies. Or detentions. The stairs groaned under my weight as I climbed, damp stone narrowing around me with every step.
At the top, I pushed the door open slowly.
He was there. Leaning against the wall, looking out the window over the west woods. The sun was sinking behind the trees, bleeding fire across the sky. His blazer was folded beside him. Tie gone.
He didn't turn when I entered.
"I thought you didn't do this kind of thing," I said.
He was quiet for a moment. Then:
"I don't."
"So why me?"
He turned slowly, eyes landing on mine like a question he wasn't ready to say aloud.
"I don't know," he said. "That's what bothers me."
---
I stood a few feet from him. There was space between us. More than space, really — there were rules. Houses. Reputations. Bloodlines. Histories I didn't understand yet.
And still, there we were.
"I shouldn't have asked you here," he said quietly.
"Then why did you?"
He hesitated.
Then walked closer.
I held my ground.
"You're not like the others," he said.
"Is that supposed to be a compliment?"
"No," he said. "It's a warning."
---
The silence pressed in.
And then he did something I hadn't expected.
He handed me something.
A coin.
Old, heavy. Gold on one side, a raven crest on the other. The same one from the library letter.
"What is this?" I whispered.
His voice was low. "It's what they give you when they decide you might be worth folding into the walls."
My pulse jumped.
"You're part of it."
He didn't answer.
"Why are you showing me this?"
"Because once you're in," he said, "there's no clean way out."
I looked down at the coin. Then back at him.
"You could've just ignored me," I said. "You could've played perfect."
He laughed softly—darkly. "I've been playing perfect my whole life."
He stepped closer again. Now I could see it—beneath the calm, the polish, the practiced elegance. A crack.
Something was breaking in him. Quietly. Beautifully.
And somehow, I was part of it.
"You're making a mistake," he said, voice lower now. "Letting people like me see you."
"I don't care."
"You should."
But he didn't move away.
He reached out—fingers brushing mine as he took the coin back. The touch was light. Barely there. But it lit something sharp beneath my ribs.
I wondered if he felt it too.
And for one breathless second, I thought he might—
But then he stepped back. The moment broke. The spell thinned.
"I shouldn't be here," I whispered.
"No," he said. "But that's exactly why you are."
---
I left the tower before the next bell rang.
My head was loud. My hands were shaking.
And somewhere deep in my coat pocket… I still had the coin.
He hadn't taken it back.