Meri Vale
Character
The Academy atrium felt far too large.
Even tucked against one of the marble pillars near the outer walkway, Meri could feel the crowd pressing in—not physically, but in sound and motion. Students filled the open space in loose clusters, trading names and excitement as if they'd been waiting their whole lives to be here.
Meri stood very still.
Her notebook rested against her chest, held with both hands, its worn cover a small anchor in the restless sea of voices around her. She kept her eyes lowered, tracing the geometric floor tiles rather than the people moving across them. Looking at the patterns helped. Patterns made sense. People didn't—not in groups this big.
Now and then, someone passed close enough that she flinched inward, shoulders tightening in a nearly invisible recoil before she smoothed her posture again. She didn't want to draw attention. She didn't want to take up space. She just needed to wait quietly until orientation began.
Her braid slipped forward over her shoulder as she leaned slightly behind the pillar, giving herself the illusion of a barrier. She let out a breath she hadn't realized she was holding.
Too many voices.
Too many eyes.
She shifted her satchel closer to her side and tried to focus on the checklist she'd memorized for the day—class locations, required materials, the library hours—but the noise in the hall kept breaking the edges of her concentration.
A group of students laughed loudly somewhere to her right. Meri startled, just barely, her grip tightening on her notebook. After a moment, she stepped half a pace more behind the pillar, choosing the shadowed side where she wouldn't be in anyone's way.
She didn't notice anyone looking at her.
She didn't notice anyone at all.
She kept breathing quietly, trying to make herself small, unseen, and steady in a space that felt too bright and too loud.
Elian Abrantes
Even tucked against one of the marble pillars near the outer walkway, Meri could feel the crowd pressing in—not physically, but in sound and motion. Students filled the open space in loose clusters, trading names and excitement as if they'd been waiting their whole lives to be here.
Meri stood very still.
Her notebook rested against her chest, held with both hands, its worn cover a small anchor in the restless sea of voices around her. She kept her eyes lowered, tracing the geometric floor tiles rather than the people moving across them. Looking at the patterns helped. Patterns made sense. People didn't—not in groups this big.
Now and then, someone passed close enough that she flinched inward, shoulders tightening in a nearly invisible recoil before she smoothed her posture again. She didn't want to draw attention. She didn't want to take up space. She just needed to wait quietly until orientation began.
Her braid slipped forward over her shoulder as she leaned slightly behind the pillar, giving herself the illusion of a barrier. She let out a breath she hadn't realized she was holding.
Too many voices.
Too many eyes.
She shifted her satchel closer to her side and tried to focus on the checklist she'd memorized for the day—class locations, required materials, the library hours—but the noise in the hall kept breaking the edges of her concentration.
A group of students laughed loudly somewhere to her right. Meri startled, just barely, her grip tightening on her notebook. After a moment, she stepped half a pace more behind the pillar, choosing the shadowed side where she wouldn't be in anyone's way.
She didn't notice anyone looking at her.
She didn't notice anyone at all.
She kept breathing quietly, trying to make herself small, unseen, and steady in a space that felt too bright and too loud.