After Senior Maya left, the City Center hummed around me.
'The amulet should address parts of her problem,' I thought, heading toward the teleportation center tucked within the square.
I'd designed it with her dual nature in mind, hoping it might help bridge the ever-present chasm between her vampiric instincts and human discipline.
These two sides of her—one refined and controlled, the other primal and unrestrained—were locked in a near-constant struggle, and her attempts to suppress the latter wouldn't end well.
'Typical suppression of something so innate rarely does,' I mused, weaving between the throng of people. I'd seen the signs—the way she leaned on me, her dependency growing dangerously close to addiction. It was a reliance I couldn't afford to encourage.
My path was my own, and hers, ultimately, would have to be hers.
The urge to dampen that darkness within herself was strong, but darkness resisted suppression. I'd ordered the amulet as a reminder of that, hoping she'd find a way to face her nature with balance instead of denial.
It was strange, perhaps, to think of such things as I walked through a crowd of strangers, faces blurring past in moments.
But the irony wasn't lost on me. The life we lived was a balancing act—instincts, intellect, strength, and restraint. She needed to find her own balance, or that very dependency would become her undoing.
The teleportation center loomed ahead, the steel archways catching the morning light, and I let my pace quicken. I had little time to linger on Maya's path; I'd set her on it and give her what she needed. It was up to her now.
'She'll be stronger for it if she achieves the state….If not, then we need to find something else.' I reminded myself.
I had no interest in being anyone's anchor, or rather it was not something that I could afford at that moment. Letting someone else dictate one's strength or stability was a gamble, and in a world like ours, gambles like that cost too much.
As the entrance to the teleportation center came into view, I kept my pace steady, weaving through the thinning crowd until I reached the counter. A middle-aged man with a clipboard greeted me with a brief glance before slipping into the standard, detached customer service mode.
"Identification, please," he said, his tone efficient but indifferent.
I slipped my Arcadia Hunter Academy student ID from my coat and handed it to him. As his eyes scanned the card, a subtle shift washed over his face. His expression softened, brows lifting slightly as he registered the insignia—prestige had its perks, even here.
"Oh, an Arcadia student," he said, voice edged with a newfound respect. "Welcome. Let's get you taken care of quickly."
With sudden enthusiasm, he turned to his terminal, fingers moving rapidly over the keyboard. "Destination?"
"Jarken City," I replied evenly. The sixth largest in the Federation and the heart of the western sector—exactly where I needed to be.
The man nodded, casting a glance at my ID again, perhaps to confirm what he was seeing before handing it back with a small, polite nod. "Gate J29," he said, now fully committed to his role of accommodating the Academy's reputation. He held out a printed ticket, his attitude a little more deferential than before. "Your portal is just down the left hallway, follow the signs. Safe travels."
I took the ticket, giving him a curt nod in return, then turned and made my way down the corridor. Gate J29 was within sight, an archway of glistening metal that hummed with the energy of portals activated for long-distance travel.
Stepping up to Gate J29, I handed my ticket to the attendant stationed beside the arch. The man, with practiced efficiency, scanned the ticket and gave a nod before activating the gate's controls. The portal hummed, the glow intensifying until the archway shimmered with rippling energy.
With a final glance back, I stepped forward. The familiar pull of spatial displacement took hold, but to me, it was no more disorienting than walking down a hallway. In an instant, I was through, stepping out on the other side into Jarken City's teleportation hall.
I barely paused, letting the flow of people carry me toward the exit. The familiarity of spatial travel had long dulled its effect on me, leaving no trace of the slight nausea or dizziness I'd once felt. I moved with purpose, reaching the hall's exit and stepping out into the heart of Jarken City Center.
The city sprawled around me, an impressive forest of skyscrapers gleaming beneath the midday sun. Streets bustled with energy, a constant stream of pedestrians, vendors, and the hum of distant engines. Jarken had the same imposing architecture as Ardmont, its towering buildings reaching skyward, each structure vying for dominance in the city's skyline.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Hunter Academy: Revenge of the Weakest