Page 16 of The Lies We Tell, Greyson Academy Year Two

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“What do you feel?” he asks, eyes bright with the particular hunger of someone watching a theory prove itself in real time.

“Warmth. But not burning.” I struggle for accuracy. “More like recognition. As though the fire knows my shadows and isn’t threatened by them.”

Constantine nods. “Fire creates natural shadow fluctuations — that’s standard knowledge. What isn’t widely understood is that these fluctuations can actually mask autonomous shadow movement when properly integrated.” He creates a more complex fire pattern, encouraging my shadows to extend further. The sensation intensifies, becoming almost addictive. “Detection systems are calibrated to filter out normal fire-induced shadow shifting. If your autonomous movements align with those patterns — “

“They become invisible to detection,” I finish, the potential hitting me like a slap. “The system reads normal fire-shadow interaction rather than independent behavior.”

“Precisely.”

Over the next hour, he teaches me the foundations.

Positioning shadows relative to fire sources. Timing autonomous movements to coincide with natural fluctuations. Absorbing specific fire properties to alter shadow signature readings. We start simple: he holds the fire sphere steady while I practice extending and retracting through it, learning the rhythm of natural fire-induced shadow movement until I can make my autonomous adjustments look like heat shimmer.

Then he complicates it. Multiple fire points, moving targets, shifting intensities that force my shadows to adapt in real time.

The exercises require a different kind of concentration than pure suppression — not clamping down, but choreographing. Making the dangerous parts look like physics instead of intelligence.

My shadows take to it with unsettling enthusiasm, as if they’ve been waiting for permission to be clever rather than just obedient.

“Better,” Constantine says after I successfully mask three consecutive autonomous adjustments inside natural fire fluctuations. “A monitoring system reviewing that sequence would register nothing but standard elemental interaction.”

The air grows thick with the mingled scent of fire and shadow magic, cedar and darkness winding together into something intoxicating that makes my head feel pleasantly heavy. I’m sweating despite the lab’s temperature controls, and Constantine’s forehead carries a sheen that tells me the sustained fire manipulation is costing him too — though he’d never admit it.

And then something neither of us planned for begins happening.

My shadows don’t merely interact with Constantine’s fire — they start absorbing aspects of it, taking on a subtle warmth that should be impossible. His flames develop darker edges where contact occurs, as though incorporating shadow properties into their structure.

The integration deepens with each exercise until our elements are flowing through each other with a fluency that feels less like opposing forces and more like a conversation between old friends.

When his fire brushes a particularly sensitive shadow extension, I gasp.

The sensation spreads through my body like liquid heat, and I can taste cinnamon and smoke on my tongue even though neither exists in the air. Through this strange elemental bridge, emotions that aren’t mine filter through — concern, protectiveness, and underneath both, somethingcarefully restrained that I recognize because I’ve been carefully restraining it too.

Can you feel this?I project through the connection without speaking, testing whether the bridge carries thought as well as sensation.

Constantine’s amber eyes widen.Yes,comes his response — not words exactly, but meaning carried through flame to shadow and back.This is unprecedented.

A communication method that operates completely outside known magical frameworks. Undetectable by any surveillance system ever designed, because nobody has ever needed to design detection for something that shouldn’t exist.

“We need to be extremely careful with this,” Constantine says aloud, slowly withdrawing his fire. The absence of warmth leaves me feeling hollowed out. “The integration provides excellent concealment for autonomous behavior. But if anyone observed the communication aspect — “

He doesn’t finish. We both know.

“The concealment techniques are what matter most,” I say, though part of me is already mapping the tactical applications of a silent communication channel with a professor who has access to every administrative system in the academy. “I’ll only practice in secured environments.”

He nods, though his expression carries the specific trouble of someone who’s just watched the rules of physics politely excuse themselves from the conversation.

“Your shadows now contain properties of blood and fire — Bael’s ancient essence merged with my controlled flame. That combination exists outside standard classification entirely.” He runs a hand through his hair — the first unguarded gesture I’ve seen from him all evening. “The historical records mention vessels who could channel multiple elemental energies through shadow medium. I thought it was metaphorical.”

“And now?”

“Now I think the people who wrote those records were being literal and everyone who came after them was too comfortable with their assumptions to consider that possibility.”

I absorb this with the particular flavor of unease that comes from learning you’re not just different but historically unprecedented different. Every new ability makes me less normal, less classifiable, less able to hide in plain sight.

But each one also makes me harder to kill, and right now that tradeoff feels worth the cost.

“Hunter scrutiny of our sessions is increasing,” Constantine warns as he moves to deactivate the privacy wards. The protective barriers shimmer and dissolve, leaving us exposed to surveillance again.