Chapter 144: The Assembly
Kael
Today was the second day of school resumption and the first official assembly.
And as always, I always felt strange whenever I wore my Ravenshore uniform. As I walked across the courtyard toward the assembly hall, my body was moving, but my mind was elsewhere. It was trapped in the endless loop of failure that had defined my life for the past two months.
I paused near the main entrance to the school courtyard, watching as several school buses from Ebonvale pulled into the school compound.
Several girls came down from the school bus and started walking towards the Assembly Hall, confusing me even more. What were they doing here? Only social activities brought the two academies together, and seeing Ebonvale girls here only confused me further.
I stared at the girls as they emptied and wondered what life would have been like if Charis had been Charis and not Eamon. Maybe she would be one of these girls coming down from the bus.
Now, there was absolutely no sign of Charis. Whether she was alive or not, I had no idea. Despite Slater’s confidence that she was alive, the theory of which I was losing hope every single day.
"Hi, Kael."
Slater’s voice drew me from my brooding. I glanced at him and muttered a response, already turning to move away. The last thing I needed was another conversation about our failed search efforts.
"Don’t go yet," Slater said firmly. "Rhett will be joining us soon."
I stopped, partly because it was not a suggestion on Slater’s side and partly because I knew he was right. Whatever awkwardness existed between Rhett and me, we were stronger as a unit when it came to finding Charis. We’d learned that much over the past months.
True enough, the next minute, Rhett appeared, walking across the courtyard, wearing his familiar boyish smirk.
He didn’t have that the last time we met.
The last time I’d seen him in person was two months ago when they’d ambushed me at the Silvermere pack house. Since then, our communication had been limited to phone calls—mostly between Slater and me, with updates on my increasingly fruitless search for any trace of Charis.
For the first time, my master’s extensive resources hadn’t been enough. I’d spent a month following every lead, tracking every possible connection, using surveillance networks that could find a needle in a haystack. Yet it seemed Charis had vanished from the surface of the earth. After using precious resources and watching my master’s patience wear thin, I’d been forced to give up the active search.
The thought of being able to find her depressed me even more.
Now that we’d uncovered more about Ravenshore’s tactics through Slater’s investigation, plus mine, my master had deployed someone in the human world to look for Richard Winters, the son of Alpha Henry Winters.
There was no result yet, but the search was still ongoing.
Rhett looked better than he had months ago, I noted with relief. Still thinner than his usual robust self, but the hollow-eyed death’s head appearance was gone. His hazel eyes had regained life, and he no longer had that deathly pallor.
"Kael," he said, nodding in acknowledgement.
"Rhett." I returned the nod, grateful that we seemed to have moved past the need for dramatic confrontations.
The three of us entered the assembly hall together, joining the streams of students filling the tiered seating. The hall buzzed with conversation as Ravenshore and Ebonvale students mingled, many meeting for the first time.
"The board finally agreed to the merger," Rhett said as we found seats in our usual section. "Both academies unified under one administration. They’re calling it building ’interpersonal relationships between both genders,’ but really it’s about economics."
He leaned closer, lowering his voice. "We’ve got a new major investor. Some woman who’s apparently a multi-trillionaire. She’s invested more money than my family ever contributed to the academy. The board couldn’t say no to that kind of financial backing."
Slater raised an eyebrow. "Any idea who she is?"
"Knox Industries, according to the paperwork I’ve seen. But the actual owner keeps a low profile." Rhett shrugged. "Rich people and their privacy, I suppose."
I was about to respond when movement on the stage caught my attention. Headmistress Vale had appeared, striding across the platform with her sour mood. But something was different about her today. There was tension in her posture, a tightness around her eyes that seemed like stress.
A murmur ran through the assembly. Usually, an academic staff member would begin with introductory remarks, welcome students back, and go through the traditional opening ceremonies. Instead, Vale stepped directly to the podium with a serious expression.
"There is much to accomplish this term," she began without preamble, her voice carrying through the hall. "Therefore, this assembly will be brief and to the point."
The casual conversations died away as students sensed the gravity in her tone.
"Things are changing significantly this academic session," Vale continued. "First, as you’re all aware, Ravenshore Academy and Ebonvale Academy are now officially merged. From today forward, this institution will be known simply as Ravenshore Academy."
Applause rippled through the crowd, though I noticed it was somewhat subdued. Mergers were always complicated, and many students were probably uncertain about how the change would affect them personally.
"During the break, renovations were completed to provide new dormitory facilities," Vale went on. "More importantly, to ensure and promote meaningful interpersonal relationships, the living arrangements will be fundamentally different from previous years."
This got everyone’s attention. I leaned forward, curious despite myself.
"Four students will be selected randomly using our new digital assignment system," she explained, gesturing to a large screen that had descended behind her. "Each group of four will be assigned to shared residential quarters. These assignments will be made without regard to previous school affiliation, pack status, gender, or any other traditional considerations."
The hall erupted in surprised murmurs. Coed living arrangements were essentially living in dormitories, but with specific rules and no regard for social status.
Vale raised a hand for silence. "Ravenshore Academy will no longer promote any form of division or prejudice among its students. We are one community now, and our housing arrangements will reflect that philosophy."
"This is insane," Rhett muttered beside me. "Mixed gender dormitories? The pack leaders will go ballistic."
"Maybe that’s the point," Slater replied thoughtfully. "Break down traditional barriers, force students to interact across old boundaries."
I found myself thinking about Charis, as I always did when topics of identity and boundaries came up. She’d spent months living as Eamon, navigating male spaces while hiding her true self. What would she think of this new openness? Would she see it as progress, or just another form of institutional control dressed up as liberation?
"The selection process will begin immediately following this assembly," Vale was saying. "All students will report to their current dormitories to collect personal belongings. New room assignments will be posted by this afternoon, with move-in completed by tomorrow evening."
She paused, her gaze sweeping across the assembled students with an intensity that made me uncomfortable.
"I want to be absolutely clear about expectations," she continued. "This is not an experiment or a trial program. This is our new reality. Students who cannot adapt to these arrangements may find that Ravenshore Academy is no longer the right fit for their educational needs."
The threat was subtle but unmistakable. Comply or leave.
"Are there any questions?" Vale asked, though her tone suggested she hoped there wouldn’t be.
A senior from what had been Ebonvale raised her hand. "What about pack protocols? Some of our families have particular traditions about male-female interactions."
Vale’s smile was sharp. "Pack protocols are irrelevant within these walls. Here, you are students first, pack members second. Anyone who finds that arrangement unacceptable is welcome to withdraw their enrollment."
The dismissal was brutal and final. I could see students throughout the hall exchanging worried glances, probably calculating whether their families would support this new arrangement or demand they transfer elsewhere.
"If there are no further questions," Vale said, not waiting for any, "you are dismissed to begin the transition process. Welcome to the new Ravenshore Academy."
As students began filing out, chattering nervously about the dramatic changes, I found myself wondering if this was somehow connected to our investigation. The timing seemed suspicious—just as we’d begun uncovering the scope of the conspiracy involving both schools, suddenly they were merged under new management with revolutionary policies.
"What do you think?" Slater asked as we made our way toward the exits.
"I think," I said carefully, "that someone wants to shake up the established order very quickly. The question is whether that’s good for us or very, very bad."
Rhett nodded grimly. "Either way, we need to be ready. If they’re changing all the rules, it means the game we thought we were playing just got a lot more complicated."
As we stepped out into the afternoon sunshine, I couldn’t shake the feeling that we were walking into a trap that had been months in the making. But for Charis—wherever she was—I was willing to walk into any trap necessary.
The new Ravenshore Academy would reveal its secrets, one way or another.
