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Chapter 12 - Appearance.

Royoshi woke up in the Citadel's med-bay again.

It took a few seconds for the world to return. His body felt heavy, like gravity had decided to stay longer than usual.

He tried to move.

Pain flared.

It was enough to remind him that he had pushed too far.

"So, you're finally awake," a familiar voice said calmly.

Royoshi didn't turn his head.

A faint distortion shimmered near the foot of the bed.

Rikishu stood there. The same translucent presence, calmer than the alarms that still echoed in Royoshi's memory.

"You made a good choice," Rikishu said.

Royoshi let out a slow breath. "There was no other choice."

"That's why it mattered," Rikishu replied. "You didn't choose because you were told to. You chose it because you couldn't ignore it.

Royoshi closed his eyes for a moment. His chest still felt tight.

"That thing on the rooftop," he said. "What was it?"

Rikishu was quiet for a second.

"An anomaly," he replied. "Not a creature. Not a person. More like… intent given form."

Royoshi frowned. "Intent?"

"Observation." Rikishu clarified. "It was sent here to observe your activities by someone."

"By who…?"

Rikishu's expression tightened.

"Someone who believes control is the same thing as safety," he said.

Royoshi opened his eyes. "That's not an answer."

"It's the only one I can give you right now," Rikishu replied. "Names carry weight. And weight attracts attention."

Royoshi scoffed weakly. "So I got tested by this faceless thing that was sent by a faceless person."

"Yes," Rikishu said. "And you passed."

"That thing almost killed Ishara."

"And that," Rikishu said quietly, "Is why it disappeared after landing the final blow."

"You contained it," Royoshi said. "Didn't you?"

Rikishu nodded. "Before it could anchor itself fully."

"If it had stayed," Rikishu continued. "It would have learned about you. Your reactions. Your limits. Then it wouldn't need to attack directly anymore."

Royoshi's fingers curled slightly against the bed sheet. "So it was adapting."

"Yes," Rikishu replied. "That anomaly wasn't sent to end you. It was sent to decide whether you should be destroyed later."

"You forced it into a conclusion," he continued. "You made a choice it couldn't model."

Royoshi turned his head just enough to look at him. "Because I protected Ishara?"

"Yes," Rikishu replied. "Not the citadel. Not a principle. But a person."

Silence filled the med-bay for a few moments.

"You know," Rikishu said after a moment, "that's where you and I differ."

Royoshi frowned. "I thought we shared the same ideals."

"We do," Rikishu replied. "But not the same priorities."

"I chose the world first," he continued. "Every time. Even when it cost me everything else."

"Including her." Rikishu swallowed.

"I made a promise," he said quietly. "Before I disappeared. I told someone I would return."

Royoshi waited.

"I believed it when I said it," Rikishu continued. "That somehow, after everything was finished, the world would give me time back."

His voice softened.

"I don't know if she's still waiting," he admitted. "And I don't know which answer hurts more."

Royoshi closed his eyes. "You sound like you regret it."

"I regret not choosing," Rikishu said. "I let necessity decide for me."

The door to the med-bay slid open.

"Someone's coming," he said. "We'll talk again later. There are things you need to know—but not while eyes are on you."

"Wait," Royoshi said. "Are they going to send another one…?

"I'm not sure," Rikishu replied. "You changed the constants."

"Great. I hate being interesting."

Rikishu smiled this time. Fully.

"You're not like me," he said. "And that's why this still matters."

Then he faded.

Ishara stepped inside a second later.

She stopped when she saw Royoshi awake.

She sat near the chair beside his bed.

"You're finally conscious," she said, relief breaking through her control.

Royoshi managed a weak smile. "Hey."

She moved closer, eyes scanning him. "You shouldn't be joking right now."

"I wasn't," he said. "I'm just glad you're okay."

Her jaw tightened.

"You didn't have to do that," she said softly while looking in his eyes.

"I know," Royoshi replied. "But I wanted to."

"I don't want to see anyone suffer," he continued.

Her fingers tightened around the edge of the chair, knuckles paling just enough to give her away. She looked at him—not his injured body, not the monitors, but his face.

"That's not your responsibility," she said finally.

Royoshi tilted his head slightly. "Maybe not. But it's still my choice."

That made her inhale sharply.

For someone who prided herself on control, on discipline, it unsettled her how close she was to breaking.

"You scared me," she said quietly.

Royoshi blinked. "I—"

"I know," she cut in, then stopped herself. "I know you didn't do it to be reckless."

She stood, pacing once, then returned to the chair like gravity pulled her back.

"When that thing moved," she continued, eyes fixed on the floor now, "I didn't even have the time to think. The pressure—it felt like the world was deciding something about me."

Royoshi swallowed.

"And then you were there,: she said. "You shouldn't have been able to move like that. You shouldn't have been able to interrupt it."

She looked at him again, really looked.

"But you did."

Silence stretched between them.

"I don't like owing people my life," Ishara said.

Royoshi gave a weak huff. "You don't owe me anything. Don't worry."

That finally earned him a small, shaky smile from her.

"You're impossible," she said.

"Yeah, I guess I am."

Her expression softened again, seriousness returning.

"You know what bothers me the most?" she asked.

"What?"

"You didn't hesitate," Ishara said. "Not for the Citadel. Not even for yourself."

She hesitated, then added, quieter, "You chose me."

Royoshi looked away this time. "I chose what felt right. I couldn't just simply ignore someone getting hurt."

She leaned back, crossing her arms, but the posture lacked its usual armor.

"You keep acting like you're trying not to be noticed," she said. "Yet when it mattered, you were impossible to ignore."

Royoshi smiled faintly. "Sorry about that."

She shook her head. "Don't apologize."

Another pause.

"Just…" she said, voice low, "don't do it alone next time."

He met her gaze.

The med-bay door slid open again, footsteps approaching down the corridor.

Ishara stood, composure snapping back into place.

She paused at the door, then glanced back.

"Get some rest," she said. "You've done enough choosing for one day."

As she left, Royoshi lay back against the pillow, exhaustion finally catching up.

The Citadel detected something three seconds late.

Not because the sensors failed.

Because they were allowed to.

Maris passed through the outer gate without slowing, her clearance band flashing once before vanishing back. No escort. No announcement. The Citadel adjusted itself around her presence like it already knew where she belonged.

She didn't look up at the towers.

She didn't need to.

Inside, the corridors hummed with routine—recruits moving between sectors and instructors filling reports that would be read and forgotten.

Maris walked through all of it untouched.

A scout did not interfere.

A scout observed.

She paused briefly at a wide observation window overlooking the inner training courts.

Rooftop anomaly, her internal display confirmed.

Status: erased.

Anchor failure detected.

"Interesting."

She tapped the side of her wrist once.

A single profile expanded in her peripheral view.

ROYOSHI KAIRO

Status: Recovering.

Classification: Irregular.

Risk vector: Unresolved.

Maris's expression didn't change.

She moved on.

Deep within the Citadel, a sealed chamber unlocked itself for her arrival. No name was spoken. No report requested.

Maris stepped inside and closed the door behind her.

The Citadel continued to live.

Above it, the stars returned to their proper brightness.

And far below, Royoshi Kairo slept—unaware that someone new had entered his story.

Someone who did not ask who he was.

Only what he would become.

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