Chapter- VII (7)- REDACTED
Chapter- VII (7)- REDACTED
Thankfully, the boy in the common room was gone when Kizu passed through again. The orb guided him through the hallways and not too far away he found the cafeteria.
Only a few students were eating at the dozens of long tables. They chatted amongst themselves in little cliques, providing a lively atmosphere despite the lack of people. More than half the students eating were first years, several of which he recognized from the testing period earlier.
Harvey waved him over to an empty seat. Kizu sat down.
“Here’s a menu.” Harvey shoved the parchment into his hands.
Kizu scanned it and a wave of relief hit him. Assorted Fruit Bowl. Finally, some food for Mort. One less stress in his life. At the bottom of the page, it instructed him to point at the page and say the name of the dish. He did so.
A moment later, a large bowl of fruit appeared on the table in front of him. Mort leaped down to the table and picked through the bowl, grabbing slices of banana. He nibbled on them and hummed, content.
Beside him, Harvey ripped into a hunk of beef. He held his meal by a large white bone that still stuck out of the meat. Kizu couldn’t help but notice the meat was still bleeding, dripping down Harvey’s chin with each chomp.
Looking away, Kizu did his best not to listen to Harvey tearing into his food and tried to focus on the cherries and kiwi slices Mort had picked out and tossed aside. But the damage had been done, and any appetite from before had vanished. Instead, he found himself examining the room.
Like the courtyard earlier, it looked to be a mesh of different cultures with its architectural style and furnishings. Beautiful calligraphy decorated drapes that hung on the walls, right alongside ancient marble statues and colorful stained-glass windows. And yet, despite the cacophony of cultures, somehow it all blended together seamlessly.
“What’ve you got planned for tomorrow?” Harvey asked between mouthfuls of meat.
“Nothing so far.”
“My cousin invited me to a beach party. You should come.”
“I’m more of a night person than a beach person. I’ll probably be asleep.”
“Nah, come on. I need someone else there to keep me afloat. I barely know my cousin. I’ll look like a loner.”
“What about your roommate?”
“He’s exactly what I’m trying to avoid looking like. Please? Your monkey will get people to come over and talk to us. Girls love cute animals.”
Mort cocked his head and smiled at Harvey, a bit of banana hanging from the corner of his mouth.
“What time?”
“Noon. It’s supposed to go until the evening though.”
Kizu sighed. No point in burning all his bridges the day after he arrived. So far, Harvey was the only student that even seemed to acknowledge his existence. Well, that acknowledged it and didn’t wish it wasn’t so.
“I’ll be there. But I won’t arrive right at noon. That’s way too early.”
“No problem! My cousin warned me that nobody shows up on time and that it would be embarrassing if I did.”
Kizu nibbled on an apple slice and watched as students finished their meals. Their abandoned dishes simply vanished after they stood up. He ordered himself a loaf of bread and a block of cheese. And, after a brief hesitation, he added a piece of pound cake as well. He wrapped it all in a fabric napkin and stashed it in his satchel for later.
He brought out his orb and instructed it to guide him to the library next. Harvey declined his invitation to join him, explaining that he refused to go to the library until classes forced him to.
A wave of nostalgia hit Kizu as he passed through the double doors into the library. It matched his faint memory of it perfectly. Even the smell of it was right, that scent of old parchment and ink. Everywhere he looked, there were books. They lined the walls up to the high ceilings and continued to line them as the ceiling arched around and came down to the other side of the room. He watched as a librarian summoned a book and it zipped down from the ceiling to her hand. The high bookshelves made the library into a maze filled with books and scrolls and he found himself lost almost instantly. He saw hundreds of books on one shelf flip in place, making an opening in the shelf to let a student nonchalantly wander out of a hidden passage, her nose buried in a massive tome. Amazingly, ten years hadn’t changed the place in the slightest. It remained as wonderful as he remembered.
“Excuse me,” a nasally voice said loudly. He turned and saw a short boy with a lazy eye looking up at him from behind spectacles. He wore an academy uniform, but with an orange sash across his chest that implied he worked for the library. The boy had scales, colored a sickly brown, along his pale cheeks and straw-like hair tied back.
“Yes?” Kizu asked.
“Animals are not permitted within the library at any time. Please excuse yourself and exit immediately.”
“He’s my familiar.”
“Monkeys are not listed as familiar options for academy students.”
“They made an exception for me.”
“Then you need to obtain a permit, detailing your exemption. Until then, leave the monkey at home.”
Kizu’s knuckles still ached from punching the student earlier; even still, he strongly considered a repeat offense. He felt so tired of everyone here putting up such a hostile wall of unacceptance. But he took a deep breath and bared his teeth in an attempt to smile.
“Very well, Mort will wait in the hall for me.” At his words, Mort leaped from his head and hopped from bookshelf to bookshelf until he scampered out of view in the direction of the exit. “Satisfied?”
The boy looked about to protest, but hesitated, then frowned and hurried away, casting a backwards glance as he did.
Kizu turned and saw what he’d fled from. A group of very large individuals had just walked in. There were four of them, and only three looked human - but they were big humans. They stood almost two meters tall. The fourth companion lumbered forward, having to hunch over to fit under some of the low arches of bookshelves. He had some obvious troll blood in his heritage. Kizu wondered briefly at what he might be able to brew from a half-breed troll’s heart or a bit of their bone marrow. The healing properties of the full-blooded creatures were legendary. It might still be possible to isolate it in a half-breed. Even regrowing limbs wouldn’t be far fetched with an ingredient like that. But he dismissed the thought almost as soon as it arose. That was an idea the crone would try to pursue. Not him.
Reluctant to engage in yet another confrontation, least of all with four individuals who could easily rip his limbs off, Kizu skirted around the bookshelves in the direction Mort had scampered off to. As he stared at a shelf, doing his best to look small and not make eye contact with the four hulking students, a book caught his eye. Student Directory CDXCIII. He flipped through the pages and noticed it had all the final rankings for the students that year as well as brief bios for each of them. He tucked it under his arm.
After turning two corners, he felt a familiar weight pounce on his shoulder. Mort had, of course, not gone to the exit to wait for him.
“I know, no monkeys allowed,” he said to the librarian at the front desk, another student with an orange sash. “I just want to check this out and I’ll be gone.”
“Actually,” she said a bit bashfully, “can I pet it?”
Mort jumped down to the counter and graciously allowed her to scratch his back with one hand while she assigned him a library card. When she finished, the book seared its number into the piece of parchment.
“Keep in mind,” she said, passing him the book. “While you’re welcome to come study in the library, you can only have one book checked out at a time. If you want another, you’ll need to return this one first.”
As he walked down the corridors back to his chambers, he glanced up at Mort. He wondered if Harvey had actually known what he was talking about when he said that girls liked cute animals.
Mort bit his earlobe.
Back in his room, he sat on his bed and cracked open the book. He scanned the index listing until he found Kaga Anna. He felt a surge of excitement. He was interested to see how his sister ranked amongst everyone else in the academy, as well as curious what might be written in her bio.
When he flipped to her page, instead of showing her final rankings for the year, it read, EXPELLED. Where her bio should have been, everything was blacked out. At the very bottom, there remained a single bold word.
REDACTED.
“What did she do?” he asked Mort in frustration.
The monkey gave no response beyond cocking his head. Kizu sighed. If only he had someone other than a monkey to question. The thought gave him pause, as he thought through the short list of people he knew. An idea came to mind. He pulled out his orb.
“Orb, I know you can access any current students’ standings, but can you also access the records of past students' standings?”
“Are you assigning this object the name, ‘Orb’?” it asked, instead of answering his question.
“No. Actually, yes, sure, whatever. That’s not important. What do you know?”
“Affirmative, you have access to those records.”
“Tell me about the student Kaga Anna. She should have graduated from here five years ago.”
The orb paused and seemed to thrum as it processed his request. “No student by that name has graduated from the academy. The only match for the name was an individual expelled from the academy half a year before her scheduled graduation.”
“Why?”
“You do not have authorization for that information.”
“I’m her brother!”
“But you are neither guardian nor faculty.”
He paced around the room and kept up his argument. It remained unmoving on the issue, so he tried to see if maybe the orb had access to older information about her studies. But every shred of information about his sister appeared to be completely redacted. While every other student had hobbies, clubs, strengths and weaknesses, known allies and rivals both, all of it recorded and listed, Anna might as well have been a ghost. No matter how he tried to reword the questions, the orb said nothing about her. He even went as far as to search for mention of her in the book amongst all the other names, searching for an ally or rival. Honestly, towards the end of his research, he found himself surprised that the academy bothered to even keep her name in the directory instead of just redacting it altogether. Then, finally, he spotted something. A small black line redacted a name under one Shimizo Roku’s list of allies. There was no promise that the redacted name was Anna’s, but it was the only lead he’d found so far.
By the end of the night, he came away with more questions than answers, but at least he knew where to look next. Shimizo Roku. If he tracked down that man, he might be able to give Kizu some sort of lead as to where his sister had disappeared to. And he, at least, was someone the orb was willing to give him information on. On graduation, the man had average grades across the board with the exception of enchanting magic which he had placed fourth in. Unfortunately, despite the rabbit hole Kizu went down looking at all of Shimizo’s friends, he found no other connections to his sister. Neither the book nor his orb had access to any information about the man beyond his schooling. Still, it was at least a lead.
His room had no windows, but a clock ticked on the wall, letting him know it was almost dawn outside.
“Okay, Orb,” he said with a sigh. “Show me the way to where they dispose of the blood used for test procedures.”
The orb lit up and guided him out of his room and out into the empty corridors. Where yesterday, he had barely seen a soul all day, now the hallways seemed somehow even quieter. He felt like a bumbling drunk as he walked, his feet creating a ruckus with every step.
He descended down several flights of dusty stairs before the orb stopped in front of a thick metal door. First, he attempted knocking. Nothing happened. Then he tried opening it. Locked.
“Lost, boy?”
Kizu almost jumped out of his skin. An old woman with yellow eyes and a sack slung over her hunched back stared from the darkness behind the stairs. It took Kizu only a moment to realize it wasn’t the crone. He berated himself internally. Not every old woman was the crone. Still, his unease remained.
“No,” he said, his voice still quivering slightly. “I was told to follow my orb here. To make certain my blood was destroyed.”
“Oh yes, I forgot. Hm, take out that earring and set it next to your orb over there. Along with anything else magical on your person.”
He did as she commanded, setting his earring and orb to the side on a small table next to the door.
“Oh, and the uniform too. There should be a spare set of robes behind the stairs.” She pointed a crooked finger. “Go change into them.”
The robes provided were thick wool. He slid off his uniform and folded it before slipping on the robes and tying them around his stomach with a bit of rope. He felt like a vagabond monk.
“Well, come on then.” The hag inserted an old iron key into the door and turned it. It creaked open, revealing more stone steps. She handed him the sack to carry.
The hag hummed an off-key tune as they descended. It echoed off the walls, giving an otherwise unassuming song an eerie undertone.
As they went further and further underground, the temperature rose. Soon, Kizu had beads of sweat rolling down his brow. He wondered why these special robes had to be wool of all things. The slope flattened out and they began to walk forward in a natural-looking tunnel. For a while, the only light came from a battered lantern that the lady held in front of herself, but eventually the tunnel itself seemed to lighten up slightly.
The hag raised a hand to stop him from moving further on. The tunnel dipped suddenly, right in front of them, branching off into smaller paths on either side. Kizu scooted forward to look over the ledge.
A long way beneath them, a river of fire slowly churned. Sparks leapt up scores of meters and sizzled on the stones below. The sound the river made as it moved reminded Kizu of someone stacking glass bottles on top of one another. Down below, more tunnels intersected into the chasm.
“Help me with that,” the lady said, gesturing at the sack he still carried over his shoulder. “Dump it out over the edge, but don’t let go of the sack. It’s a good sack.”
He swung the bag in front of him and looked inside. Hundreds of vials filled with blood clinked together. He spotted one with a smudged ink marking. His blood. He heaved the sack up and dumped the contents over the ledge. Some of the vials shattered on the stones further down below, but the majority of them landed in the river and burst with a pop.
“Well, come on then,” she said to him. “No point in gawking. Blood’s been disposed of.”
With that, she turned back and walked away.