“Just the tag,” Kael said. “-Ninoss-.”
Lina flinched as if he’d slapped her. “Don’t. Don’t say it again.” Her eyes darted to the corners of the room—the omnipresent, lens-like smudges on the walls that the Academy called “observation spores.” “When I try to speak it, my throat closes. When I think it too hard, my vision blurs. But I know it’s there. Carved into my memory like a splinter.”
Lina opened her mouth. Closed it. Her fingers twitched. Then, very carefully, she typed on the table’s surface: The one who sees through the cracks. WTM Academy -v0.361- -Ninoss-
“Too late,” she whispered, and this time, when she said it, her throat didn’t close. Because Ninoss wasn’t a word anymore.
“It’s on about forty percent of the student body,” Lina whispered. “Random distribution. And Kael… the ones who have it? We can’t say the word out loud.” “Just the tag,” Kael said
Kael checked his own arm. Nothing. “It’s not on me.”
Lina pulled up her sleeve. On her forearm, where yesterday there had been the standard Academy barcode, now sat a single word tattooed in shifting, silver ink: Ninoss . Don’t say it again
Kael looked at Lina. Lina looked at her tattoo. And for just a second—between one heartbeat and the next—her eyes weren’t her eyes. They were deeper. Older. Full of stars and server racks and a quiet, terrible pity.
Kael stared at the blinking cursor on his console. Three years at WTM Academy—the World Transmutation Institute—and he’d learned to fear the small patches. The big ones (v0.3, v0.35) were obvious: new wings of the campus, new laws of physics, new flavors of fear. But the point updates? The ones with a single, cryptic word?
“What word? Ninoss?”