Spy Mage Academy - Chapter 59: [v2] - 18: Father and Son
Date: Monday, April 24th
Location: Wolfpack Hallway
Mission: None đđđđŚđđđđđđˇđđ.đ¸đ°đ
Time: 10:15
Most of my morning dissolved into a loop of thoughts about Septemberâabout us, or the idea of an us, or the delusion of an us if you asked the crueler parts of my brain. It wasnât a soft daydream; it was a full-on strategic preoccupation, a flowchart that branched and tangled and doubled back on itself. So many variables, so many moving pieces: Malachiâs shadow everywhere, the whispers about the MP board, the threat of a mole, the unspoken rules of our school, the thousand tiny social currents you either learned to ride or drowned in.
It felt like too muchâhonestly, was too much. So I gave myself a plan simple enough to hold without breaking: spend time with September. As much as I could. Keep it steady, let it grow. No fireworks, no shouting-from-the-rooftops confession, not yet. Just presence. Be there, again and again, until âthereâ felt natural. If Malachiâs edge came from proximityâhe was always around her, always already in the conversationâthen Iâd match the tactic instead of trying to out-flash it. Build comfort, let comfort become confidence, let confidence become honesty. And then, when it felt right, say how I felt.
Boom.
As I approached my locker, the hallway hum steadied into that mid-morning lull: footsteps, locker doors clanging shut, the scrape of a backpack zipper, a laugh skipping down the corridor from some unseen corner. I could feel Gregâs presence before I saw him; he slid into place beside me the way a puzzle piece finds its home.
âSo...â he said, drawing the word out like a fishing line. âBeen an uneventful few days, huh?â
âYeah, pretty much.â I spun the combination and tugged. âSomething normal for once.â
âAnything on that C.A.R.G.O mission, thingamabob?â He glanced down at his phone, thumb flicking.
I opened my mouth to dismiss it, to keep the whole knotted mess out of the air. Then I remembered everythingâthe Interrogation Watch, Lloyd White, the gun pressed to Marcusâs head, Tilli dragged in, the casual terror of it allâand my eyes went wide. âA lot, actually.â
âAnd you said it was an uneventful few days.â Gregâs grin tilted into a mock-sneer.
âWhatâno, you said thatââ
âCome on,â he said, bouncing once on his heels. âHit me witâ em.â
I let out a sigh, felt it leave like steam. âWe were brought to the Interrogation Watch. That agentâLloyd White, I thinkâquestioned Marcus. In the end, we figured out their plan was to use us to pinpoint the facility and then send a mole insideââ
âWHOA.â Greg practically shouted it, earning a couple of head turns from lockers down. âIâve always wanted that to happen in the FMA. But the most excitement we get is when they storm the halls with their marching band.â
âNonetheless,â I went on, lowering my voice, âwe got some intel that the mole might be tied to a few of Malachiâs friends. It... would make sense.â
âMake sense of what, exactly?â Greg asked, brow furrowing.
âThey said they were looking for someone with great power. According to what the TSA told Lowman, itâs about someone with a lot of power inside our facility. The MP system came up.â
âAnd Malachiâs the top.â
âFortunately... and unfortunately.â
Greg squinted at me, confusion shading into curiosity.
âOur plan,â I said, tapping the locker door with one knuckle as if the metal could steady me: âKill two birds with one stone. I join some sportsâMage Football, for exampleâand with my Perk, I fight my way up the MP board. If I climb fast and loud enough, the moleâs attention pivots from Malachi to me. That keeps him safe. And being high on the board gets Septemberâs attention. So: save Malachi, and get noticed.â
Gregâs face lit. âTalk about a plan. And I love it. It gives you something real to point to when youâre around her.â
âYeah. But maybe just... talking to her more wouldââ
âNo.â He cut me off with a flat palm. âThis is a plan distilled straight from nectar. Who created it?â
âNikki,â I said.
Greg clapped once, loud. âYou need to start listening to her more. She is your ticket out of here. Youâre making it out with this one.â
âSure... yeahâdefinitely.â The word definitely came out like a question and tried to disguise itself as a promise.
Greg smiled anyway. âYouâve got good friends. Really good friends. And youâve got a good brother who lives fifteen minutes away. Youâre set.â He patted my back, a quick drumbeat of reassurance.
I wasnât sure where to file thatâcomfort? warning? both?âso I just stared past him for a second, into that bright nowhere of the hallway.
âYeah... sure,â I muttered, then turned back to the locker and let the clatter of its interior become my cover.
After school I portaled in and, because the universe has a sense of humor, crash-landed directly onto the hood of a car. Metal buckled, glass spidered, my ribs sang, and a thoroughly undignified âNggh...â escaped before I could corral it. For a heartbeat I lay there, sprawled and blinking at the sky, and then I angled my head enough to see the man himself: Mr. Drails, trilby lowered, long black jacket immaculate, gray suit threaded like a sermon, red tie exactly centered. A few other agents flanked him, concerned in that way professionals areâalert without fuss.
âBad day, huh?â Mr. Drails chuckled, as if I hadnât just dented a vehicle with my body. âDropped my wand there.â
âYeah, like you always do,â I winced, rolling off the hood and checking that all my pieces still articulated. Fury prickled behind my face. Of course I would do this in front of real agency people, not just academy staff.
âCan you fetch another vehicle?â he asked the agents mildly. âIâll be here for a bit.â
They moved. He turned to me, took off his hat. Under it his black hair shone, precise as always. He looked at the cratered hood, then at me.
âHow have things been?â he asked.
I shrugged, the motion discovering new bruises. âWeird... I guess. Poor.â
âWhyâs that?â He set the trilby on the roof, leaned his hands on the ruined hood like it was a podium. âBeing the Armonk assignment you successfully completed, Iâd assume youâd have some friends. Sheesh, you have Malachi.â
I winced again. Even saying Malachiâs name pulled something tight in my chest. The smug bend to Mr. Drailsâs mouth faded; his eyes softened.
âCome,â he said, shifting to the front of the car where glittering chips of glass gleamed in the afternoon light. âStand by me.â
I obeyed, stepping beside him. Out beyond the lot, the grounds opened into a long sweep of grass. There was almost no wind. The blades moved only as much as they wanted to, which wasnât much at all.
âTell me,â he said. âTell me everything.â
âIsnât that a bit intrusive?â I tried, aiming for teasing and landing closer to defensive.
He glanced sideways at me and chuckled. âEven my established spies have to tell me everything. And Iâm your father. So you have to tell me everything.â
I sighed, lifted, dropped my shoulders. âSure...â
âSo,â I said, and the word felt too small for the confession it had to carry, âIâve been having feelings forââ
âI knew it!â he burst, clapping once as if heâd successfully predicted a twist in a show we both watched.
âSeptember,â I finished.
The clap died. He nodded slowly, turning the name over. âSeptember.â A beat. âYouâre going for the biggest fish.â
âYeah,â I said, throat tight. âIâve had feelings for her. I want to tell her.â
âHave you?â
âNo. My friends think I shouldnât. They think I need to get her attention by being great at something first.â
He shrugged, like the solution hovered just over our heads. âYour Perk. She knows about that, for sure.â
âYeah, but Malachi has similar intentions. Heâs always there, always already there. He grabs her before I can even get close.â I looked at my hands, flexed them once. âIâm just... not sure how to do this.â
His eyes widened with a flicker of genuine sympathy. âOh. And Malachi is your opponent. Thatâs a long battle, Connor. Long battle.â
âI figured,â I said. âBut thereâs a small... chance. Two.â
âTwo chances? Probably not so small, then.â His mouth kicked toward a smile. âLet me hear them.â
âWell, Iâm sure you heard about the mole possibly in the academy.â
He nodded. âWeâve got agents on that. Unless thatâs what you are doing as well.â
âYeah. From the interrogation, it sounds like the target is someone with a high MP.â
âWe just started the MP system a few days ago.â His voice tilted practical. âHow would they know whom to target? It takes monthsâoccasionally a yearâto properly place a mole in any facility, not to mention ours.â
âWhen did you think of the MP idea?â I asked.
He lifted his brows. âA week before that day.â
I narrowed my eyes at him. âThat doesnât sound like months.â
âAnd it sounds less like a year,â he said, a soft snort of amusement escaping.
âBut we do have a suspicion. Specifically three people.â
Now he narrowed his eyes. âNames?â
I rummaged the mental list. âJamal. Maddie. And a guy with Goku hair.â
âDavid Elfron,â he said immediately. âBut he likes to be called Elf.â
âHeâs not even small,â I argued weakly. âHeâs the complete opposite.â
âItâs his favorite movie,â Mr. Drails said, ending the debate.
âAhh... got it.â
He tapped the hood twice, then looked me straight on. âIâm going to ask you a question before you go inside, alright?â
I nodded. Listening was non-negotiable under that tone.
âIf you and your team fail to catch the mole in the act, or fail to pull any meaningful information, my people will take the case.â His voice wasnât hard, just solid. âYouâve earned enough already to call your mission a success. We wonât hang this around your neck.â
To my surprise, relief crept in around the edges of my pride. I wasnât against that. Being benched hurt, but being blacklisted wouldâve killed me.
âOkay, bucko, gettaâ moving,â he said finally, re-perching the trilby with a small, precise motion. âIâll be here a bit longer.â
I headed for the building, the automatic doors gliding open with their usual sigh. Behind my sternum the words beat a slow drum: Well... dang. There wasnât a more poetic summary available. The day had decided to be blunt; I could honor that.
Still, necessity sharpened itself in my mind as I crossed the threshold. The mission had just acquired an addendumâunofficial, urgent, mine. Follow the three (and possibly more), keep to the shadows, and try to get information. Not glamorous. Not simple. Not safe, either, if I was honest. But necessary.
Hard enough.
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