CHAPTER SIX: SOMEBODY'S WATCHING ME
My throat felt raw, and I shook my head wearily. I didn't know how much more danger I could take today.
The darkness stretched, heavy, unnatural. No shifting bodies. No restless murmurs. Just complete, unbroken silence.
Then—
A single spotlight flared to life, cutting through the pitch-black auditorium like a blade.
A woman stood stage right, facing the audience.
I heard Azuki gasp beside me.
Tall. Poised. Dark hair, sharp bangs cut with the precision of a sword stroke. A long, sleeveless qipao with ink-black fabric that shimmered like raven feathers under the light. Thin, black gloves covered her fingers to past her elbows.
But her most prominent features was a black veil over her face that obscured her features entirely.
She took soft, deliberate, mechanical steps towards the black marble podium in the middle of the stage. The veil concealed her expression, but there was an unsettling grace in the way she moved—fluid, unnatural.
Her voice was cold and whispered.
Breathy.
The microphone crackled through the auditorium's old speakers.
"First-years… Welcome to Crescent Moon Academy."
The silence broke. A rustle of movement. Some students straightened. Others nodded in respect. I kept my back stiff and my face blank, because I knew better than to trust anything here.
"I'd like to welcome you on behalf of Madame Kuroha Kagome, our beloved headmistress. She sends her formal apologies that certain other matters require her attention. I'm Hina Suiren, the student provost, and it is an honor to… make our home yours."
Her speech sounded practiced. Smooth as marble, and just as frigid.
"The transition to high school is an exciting time in your lives – a time of discovery, of growth of forging friendships that will last a lifetime."
A pause.
Then, a smile I could hear but not see.
"And in some of your cases… multiple lifetimes."
A low chuckle rippled through the auditorium. I didn't laugh.
"This academy is not like human institutions. Here, we prepare you for something greater. The world is changing, my dear students. And you have made the decision to step out of those shadows and into their world. You have realized that no longer can youkai, spirits, and even the rare humans who wield magic exist only in the shadows."
She leaned forward, the yellow spotlight cast a long, jagged shadow behind her.
"For centuries, we have hidden. Disguised. Feared what would happen if the numerous humans ever learned the truth. But your age of hiding is coming to an end. You stand here today because you wish to become a bridge between two worlds."
I drew a sharp breath, terrified of what I heard.
"This school exists to give you the tools to walk among humans, undetected. To understand them. To become them, if you choose. It has done this for centuries—ever since the Age of so-called Reason. Mankind foolishly traded wonder for rationalization. And we stepped into the shadows to enjoy the fruits of the bargain… and sometimes, them."
Crescent Moon Academy wasn't just about educating youkai. It taught them how to become indistinguishable from humans. Sending them out to live as predators in disguise.
A place to craft perfect impostors.
And it had been doing this for hundreds of years.
I swallowed hard.
Even if I could escape and tell people in West Virginia, who would even believe me?
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Then Hina's voice softened, like she was letting us in on a secret.
"Of course, we understand that many of you come from… difficult backgrounds. Some of you may have had unfortunate encounters with humanity."
The air in the room changed. A hushed whispers passed through the crowd—low murmurs, the faint scrape of claws against wood.
The speaker raised her hand. The auditorium fell silent again.
"Let me be clear," she said. "This is not a place for grudges. This is not a place for vengeance. If you are here, you have already made your choice. You will learn to live as a human. To pass as one. To survive as one. And when you graduate, you will leave here with everything you need to walk among them."
She paused.
"That being said, though… we at the Academy understand that you are not entirely human. Even if you hare human ancestry, the second you learn how to perform spells, awaken your spirit, channel your kei-" she looked around, stopping for a moment emphasize her words.
"-you separate yourselves from them. You're different from the other humans around you, and, hence, you receive an invitation to join our academy."
A few students shifted around me.
"Some of you… tengu, oni, orc…"
Hina looked around, her veiled expression unreadable.
"You were born into conflict. Some of you live by it, are defined by it. Some of you will die by it. And let me be perfectly clear," she said.
I could hear her smiling under her veil.
But her tone made my blood run cold.
"… we respect that here."
With that, about half the students in attendance got to their feet and cheered.
The entire auditorium shook with their yells and cheers. Azuki's face shifted again as her hands went to her ears – ears that suddenly decided they should be on top of her head.
"ENOUGH."
Sensei Suiren's voice was not loud. Instead, it simply cut through all the noise – as delicately as a scalpel through skin.
A breath later no one dared move.
Her veiled gaze swept over the crowd, and for a moment, I swore she was looking right at me.
"But respect must be earned," she said, her voice sharpening.
"Your teachers will tell you more about that tomorrow during your first class. The world beyond these school walls and swirling mist is watching. And we will prepare you for that world accordingly."
A pause. Then, her arms spread slightly.
Both a warning and a promise.
"Let's begin your new chapter properly. Together. The reception is waiting."
She lowered one hand.
"Until all are one."
The entire auditorium spoke together. "Until all are one."
I felt like an uninvited guest at a sacred ceremony.
Hina clapped once.
The lights flared back to life, erasing the darkness as though it never existed.
The world jolted back into normalcy—students stretching, whispering, shifting in their seats.
The tension faded, but not completely.
The message was clear: This was not a school. This was an experiment.
I exhaled slowly.
My fingers dug into my knees.
Yuki's whisper lingered in my ear like a bad omen.
"You're in danger here."
The students filed out, buzzing with chatter, but I wasn't listening. My brain was still catching up, replaying the speech over and over again, trying to dissect its meaning.
Then—Azuki moved in front of me.
And bowed. Deeply.
Formally.
Not the casual nod of acknowledgment I'd seen between students. A full-on, traditional bow. I looked around, seeing other students turning their heads as they left the auditorium.
I stiffened. "Uh… Azuki?"
She straightened, eyes wide with something that looked a lot like awe.
"Ryu Kazeyama," she said, her voice reverent. "The Dragon of the Windy Mountain. I am honored to have met you."
The surrounding students stopped and stared.
And that's when I knew—I had a problem.
A few snickers broke out from the students leaving the auditorium.
One guy walking past chuckled under his breath. "Blond dragon, huh? That's a new one." He snorted.
Shion took a sharp breath before she burst out laughing.
I turned to her, desperate for some kind of explanation. "Why the hell is she bowing?"
Shion smirked. "I mean… I could be wrong, but I think our tanuki friend here believes you're an actual dragon."
Azuki turned neon pink. "It would be improper to assume otherwise."
"Oh my god."
Shion wiped at her eye, still giggling. "Relax, it's not the worst thing. A lot of the first-years probably think you're something more than human."
"Well, they're gonna be disappointed," I muttered.
Shion's grin widened. "Yeah, I can confirm that. I've tasted your blood, and you—" she poked me in the chest, "—are depressingly human."
Azuki's face twisted in scandalized horror. "Shion! You drank from the Dragon of the Windy Mountain?! What if he cursed you?"
Shion snorted. "Trust me, the only curse he's got is that dumb look on his face right now."
I ran a hand through my hair, already exhausted. "Can we please put an end to this?"
Shion still smirking. "Nah. Actually, I think this might be helpful."
I stammered. "How?!"
She crossed her arms and tilted her head slightly, as though I were stupid.
"You heard the speech. This school is built on perception. If people think you're dangerous, they'll leave you alone."
I frowned. "You mean if people think I'm a dragon, I'll be safer? That's a dangerous bluff."
Shion leaned in, voice dropping to a playful whisper. "Maybe. But… would you wanna be the poor bastard who got on a dragon's bad side?"
I didn't answer. I already knew the truth.
I wasn't a dragon.
I was a middle-aged man in a kid's body.
And I was in way, way too deep.
Shion chuckled, patting me on the shoulder. "Cheer up, 'Dragon of the Windy Mountain.' If anyone asks, I'll totally back you up."
Azuki nodded eagerly. "As will I!"
A cold sensation on my neck told me that Yuki was trying to get my attention.
"Ryu."
Yuki's voice, barely a whisper, slipped through the cold air.
"They're watching you, Ryu."
My stomach dropped.
She didn't say who.
And that was the part that scared me.