Seren did not cross the threshold immediately.
She remained just inside the doorway as the last echoes of stone grinding against stone faded into silence, the cyan glow from the crystal stretching long across the floor and breaking itself against shapes that had not moved in a very long time. Her eyes did not linger on the bodies at first. Instead, they followed the shadows cast by them, the way they clung too tightly to the floor, to the walls, to one another.
They were not behaving as shadows should.
They did not fall cleanly. They pooled where no form lay. They stretched toward the door in thin, almost pleading lines, as though remembering motion long after the will to move had been taken away.
Seren drew a slow breath and let it settle before stepping forward, careful with her weight, careful with her presence. This was not a place that welcomed disturbance. The air itself felt old, sealed away with intention rather than neglect, and it pressed against her senses with a quiet insistence.
She let her awareness lower, not reaching, not forcing, simply allowing herself to listen.
The shadows responded in their own way.
Not with images, not with voices, but with pressure and repetition. With the residue of a decision. The kind that sinks into stone when choices are made slowly, deliberately, and without expectation of rescue.
She moved a few steps into the room, boots passing through bands of light and dark as the shadows adjusted around her, recoiling slightly and then reforming, as if recognizing a familiar way of being observed.
"They didn't die together," Seren said at last, her voice quiet but steady, meant for Varin rather than the room.
"Not all at once."
Her gaze drifted across the floor, to the bodies near the threshold, to the desk at the center, where one still sat upright, preserved in a posture of focus rather than panic.
"The door was sealed intentionally," she continued, taking another step, eyes tracing the carvings beneath her feet.
"Not as a trap. As containment."
She lifted one hand slightly, palm open but not commanding, and the shadows along the walls lengthened in response, overlapping one another in faint suggestion. Movement without detail. Figures pacing. Collapsing. Rising again. The echo of routine breaking down into necessity.
"They realized something," Seren murmured.
"Something that couldn't leave this room once it was understood."
Her eyes settled briefly on the archivists closest to the door.
"Those tried to get out," she said, not unkindly.
"Not from fear. From obligation. From the instinct to warn or report."
She turned her attention then to the figure at the desk, the shadows there heavier, more settled, as though they had chosen stillness rather than fallen into it.
"And that one stayed," Seren added softly.
"Not because they were trapped."
A pause, longer this time.
"Because they decided someone had to remain with it."
The shadows around the room slowly eased, their tension fading now that they had been acknowledged rather than interrogated. Whatever memory they carried had not been violent. There was no chaos here. No sudden betrayal. No struggle between the living.
"They weren't killed," Seren said finally, her voice lower now.
"They endured."
Her gaze lifted to Varin, steady, intent.
"This wasn't a massacre," she continued.
"And it wasn't an accident."
She glanced once more around the room, at the desk, the carvings, the way the shadows now lay quiet and compliant, as if satisfied their story had been understood.
"It was a decision made with time," Seren finished.
"And with full awareness of the cost."
She did not step closer to the desk. Not yet. Some things, she knew, demanded patience even after the door was finally opened.
Varin Mortifer