The second floor of the Toraono Dojo was quieter than the yard below.
Reika moved through the stone corridor with unhurried steps, her boots barely sounding against the worn floor. She wore travel-worn but intentional clothing: a cropped, reinforced jacket left open over a fitted wrap top, the fabric chosen for flexibility rather than appearance. Utility straps rested low at her hips, securing small pouches and tools without clutter. Her trousers were fitted for movement, tucked neatly into her boots, and a scarf lay loose at her neck—practical, easily adjusted. Clean bandages wrapped her hands and forearms, stark against the darker tones of her clothes, immaculate despite use.
Nothing about her outfit suggested a traditional instructor. Everything about it suggested someone who expected movement. She stepped into the assigned classroom and closed the door behind her. The room felt… contained.
Rows of desks faced a chalkboard worn smooth by years of use, the walls decorated with childish drawings and half-torn announcements for upcoming examinations. Here and there, faint scorch marks scarred the stone—evidence of accidents that had happened even where jutsu was supposedly forbidden. Narrow windows cut into the outer wall let in filtered subterranean light, pale and indirect. Reika crossed the room slowly, jacket shifting with each step, eyes taking in sightlines and distances. She rested her hands briefly on the teacher’s desk at the front, bandaged palms pressing lightly into the wood.
She drew a slow breath and pulled the heat inward. The warmth that often lingered around her like a second presence folded away under discipline. The air responded almost immediately, the ambient warmth of the underground complex bleeding out until the room felt subtly, unmistakably cool. Not cold enough to distract. Just enough to sharpen awareness. Reika exhaled. Better. She stepped away from the desk and paced once along the front row, noting where students would cluster, who would hide near the back, who would lean forward too eagerly. She stopped near the chalkboard, picked up a piece of chalk, and turned it over between her fingers without writing anything. “No heat.” she murmured to herself. “No spectacle.” She set the chalk down again.
Beyond the closed door, the academy stirred, footsteps echoing through corridors, voices calling names, the scrape of chairs as students were dismissed and redirected. The Toraono Dojo was waking into its next lesson cycle. Reika returned to the center of the room and stood there, posture relaxed but grounded. Her red eyes were calm now—no glow, no pressure—just a steady presence that made the cool air feel intentional rather than accidental. Soon, students would arrive expecting a lecture, a list of rules, another instructor eager to correct them.
Reika had no intention of raising her voice. She intended to let the cold speak first. And then she would see who paid attention when things actually got started.
Reika moved through the stone corridor with unhurried steps, her boots barely sounding against the worn floor. She wore travel-worn but intentional clothing: a cropped, reinforced jacket left open over a fitted wrap top, the fabric chosen for flexibility rather than appearance. Utility straps rested low at her hips, securing small pouches and tools without clutter. Her trousers were fitted for movement, tucked neatly into her boots, and a scarf lay loose at her neck—practical, easily adjusted. Clean bandages wrapped her hands and forearms, stark against the darker tones of her clothes, immaculate despite use.
Nothing about her outfit suggested a traditional instructor. Everything about it suggested someone who expected movement. She stepped into the assigned classroom and closed the door behind her. The room felt… contained.
Rows of desks faced a chalkboard worn smooth by years of use, the walls decorated with childish drawings and half-torn announcements for upcoming examinations. Here and there, faint scorch marks scarred the stone—evidence of accidents that had happened even where jutsu was supposedly forbidden. Narrow windows cut into the outer wall let in filtered subterranean light, pale and indirect. Reika crossed the room slowly, jacket shifting with each step, eyes taking in sightlines and distances. She rested her hands briefly on the teacher’s desk at the front, bandaged palms pressing lightly into the wood.
She drew a slow breath and pulled the heat inward. The warmth that often lingered around her like a second presence folded away under discipline. The air responded almost immediately, the ambient warmth of the underground complex bleeding out until the room felt subtly, unmistakably cool. Not cold enough to distract. Just enough to sharpen awareness. Reika exhaled. Better. She stepped away from the desk and paced once along the front row, noting where students would cluster, who would hide near the back, who would lean forward too eagerly. She stopped near the chalkboard, picked up a piece of chalk, and turned it over between her fingers without writing anything. “No heat.” she murmured to herself. “No spectacle.” She set the chalk down again.
Beyond the closed door, the academy stirred, footsteps echoing through corridors, voices calling names, the scrape of chairs as students were dismissed and redirected. The Toraono Dojo was waking into its next lesson cycle. Reika returned to the center of the room and stood there, posture relaxed but grounded. Her red eyes were calm now—no glow, no pressure—just a steady presence that made the cool air feel intentional rather than accidental. Soon, students would arrive expecting a lecture, a list of rules, another instructor eager to correct them.
Reika had no intention of raising her voice. She intended to let the cold speak first. And then she would see who paid attention when things actually got started.