Weeks later, she's still flipping through the days. Some passages are easier to read and few of them trigger difficult memories. It's a blessing she cannot recall most of the things written in these pages.

Lysithea must look particularly haggard this morning, because Professor Hanneman waltzes into the room and starts the day with a peculiar joke.

"Are you and Linhardt married, by any chance?" he asks, a smirk dancing on his lips.

She's tired and has no energy to vehemently deny it. "No."

He's hardly fazed. "Engaged, perhaps? Promised to one another?"

She shakes her head. "Neither."

"Oh, but there's something there, correct? The two of you seem to enjoy each other's company."

She does not remember Hanneman being this nosy. Perhaps Professor Manuela has been rubbing off him. "There is nothing between us," she says, the words rolling lazily off her tongue. "We are not married, nor engaged, nor promised. We don't talk about kids, or money, or growing old together. None of that."

Poor logic at its finest, but she's willing to admit it escapes her temporarily.

"Can I safely assume you two are not sleeping together?"

She startles, spilling a portion of her teacup as she brings it to her lips. "Excuse me?"

"Hmm." He scratches his beard. "I suppose not."

Lysithea hisses as she registers the burn from the still-hot tea water.

"Is there a point to this?" she inquires, holding back none of her irritation. With a sleeve, she wipes off a stain from the front of her shirt.

He shrugs loosely. "Perhaps."

His response incites a harsh glare from the girl, but it does not last long. She reaches for her handkerchief across the table to pat down her skirt.

"This is highly inappropriate, especially from a man of your stature. I would appreciate if you were more respectful and unassuming of my relationships," she says distractedly. "We share common goals and interests. There's nothing beyond that."

The suggestion was never meant to sound romantic, but she realizes in hindsight how it can be interpreted as such. Hanneman knows it too and raises her a brow.

"Linhardt is my apprentice and I know him very well," he starts. "Believe me when I say I have never seen him more committed to anything than he is to you, my dear."

She peers up at him briefly, and then back down to the soiled handkerchief in her hands. It's easier to focus on other things when her face is flushed pink.

Hanneman continues, "I know what it takes to renounce one's nobility – I've committed the act myself a long time ago. You give up almost everything. The people you call family, inheritance, prestige and status, the place you consider home, even a bit of yourself..." He shakes his head solemnly. "…it's unfortunate. Despite all of that, at the end of the day, you are still the selfish one."

Her gaze is trained to the wooden table, but she's listening.

"My point is, I am certain Linhardt sacrificed much to be here."

She blinks twice and looks up. "What are you insinuating?"

Her inquiry is blunt, but it's not meant to accuse or invoke tension. The entire exchange has her squirming in her seat, even if he's only protecting him.

"I am simply curious of his motivations," the older man explains, meeting her gaze. "That boy is difficult to inspire and persuade, and I've seen it firsthand. I thought maybe you've done something to fuel his sudden ambition."

She narrows her eyes. "I always assumed he took this up on his own volition, but I'm also willing to admit it's a little far-fetched. If you're wondering about monetary incentives, I'm not paying him or doing him any favours."

"I never even wondered such a thing."

She considers the idea once more. "…is it something I should be thinking about?"

"Heavens I hope not, or I would be sorely disappointed," he scoffs.

"So what is it then?"

"You tell me." Hanneman arches a single brow and presses further, "You said yourself the nature of your relationship is strictly business. Nothing personal beyond your collegiate partnership. Isn't that right?"

Lysithea processes the complicated thought and attempts understanding for herself, wondering why this conversation keeps circling back on itself. The reason she keeps finding herself here.

Why do I feel like running.

She crumbles underneath his sharper gaze. "…that's right."

He leans back in his seat. "What's your take on it?"

The question lingers.

"I don't know," she tells honestly, after a pause.

Silence envelopes them briefly.

"My apologies, child. I don't mean to push you." His gloved hand goes to her shoulder, and when she chances a second glance, his gaze is visibly softer. "It just warms this old man's heart to see two of his students here at the monastery. There hasn't been this much excitement since…well, a long time."

She sighs, "Do you have to be so meddlesome?"

He feigns an affronted expression. "Can you blame a researcher for inquiring? I was simply…stating my observations, if you will. Did it come off as imposing? Forgive me." His lips tug to a small smirk under his moustache. Unapologetic, despite what he says. "I admit. Occasionally I delight in wishful thinking. You see, Linhardt reminds me of my younger self. Fascinated with crestology, how it shapes the world's foundation and transforms the individuals within it. Regrettably, I missed things because of it. The more I devoted myself to research, the more other dreams slipped further from my reach."

Lysithea frowns and raises a brow.

"Before I pass from this world, it would give me great gratification to know he pursued such dreams. This applies for you as well, actually. Chase your ambitions, but don't skip on life. You should get married, take care of each other, and have children. Research is its own reward, but I believe there are greater, more joyful things in life. Take this as advice from your old teacher and mentor."

"Your advice is oddly specific," she points out.

He laughs, characteristically barky, but jolly nonetheless. "I expect an invitation to your wedding when it comes."

She breathes a lengthy exhale and loses her patience. Hasty, she downs the remainder of the hot tea and gathers her papers in her arms.

"That's enough. I am done indulging in your strange and improbable fantasies–"

"Improbable? I beg to differ."

"–I have little time as it is! We need to get back to work."

He smirks at her attempt at scolding. Young, impulsive and puppy-like. A coping mechanism, he realizes. He indulges her anyway, gathering a portion of her file and adjusting his monocle.

"As you wish, my dear."


Lysithea is in the middle of bookmarking old texts when she hears it. A small gasp, barely even an audible breath, in the midst of the crest analyzer's machinal sounds. She peers to the side to investigate the small commotion, observing the subtleties in Linhardt's bare expression.

"What is it?"

He swallows hard and stares with furrowed brows. "This sample, it's…crestless."

His lack of energy casts a measure of doubt, but she strides over anyway. Wordlessly, he hands her the glass slide containing a drop of her blood and she runs it through the analyzer herself.

She waits.

Nothing.

No symbols appears before her.

No Charon.

No Gloucester.

No crest.

The blood is pure.

She feels her stomach drop. Her knees grow weak. She pans over to green-haired man, who jots down notes with a nonchalant flair. For someone who just reached his first real breakthrough, he is severely lacking in enthusiasm. Perhaps it's the exhaustion.

"What does this mean?" she asks.

"It means we're moving in the right direction," he says blandly, not looking up.

She blinks at his aloofness, wondering what goes on in that tired and brilliant mind.

Linhardt finishes writing, flips the book shut and yawns into his hand. He finds her muddled expression.

"I'm not satisfied just yet," he explains quietly. "On the bright side, it seems the formula I used on this particular sample yields promising results. I'm willing to test it on others to ensure it has the same effectiveness."

He's withholding himself, it seems. Saving the joy until the work is finished.

"I could draw more blood," she offers, matching his tone.

He gives her a sheepish frown. She hides bruised arms under her sleeves.

"Please and thank you."

She turns on her heel, and he catches her wrist when he realizes what she's doing.

"It can wait until later. You're tired," he says. "I have to compound the serum again anyway, which will take time."

He offers her a smile and she returns it.


The three of them continue to work on this breakthrough. Linhardt, after studying the entirety of her file, is approaching the research with a medical lens. It's apparent her crests were introduced like toxins to the bloodstream. She either rejected the virus and died, or survived the implants, forcing her crests to co-exist in one body. He intends to remove it the same way, coming up with a formula to dissolve her crests, akin to an antibiotic treating bacteria and disease.

Hanneman almost forgets he's a proficient healer, well-versed in medicine and its properties.

That's how they got here. Linhardt sitting on a chair, visibly pale and nauseous, hesitating to offer his arm. He was the one who suggested it – he and Hanneman offering their own blood to the cause, and hoping the recipe can eliminate their crests as well.

"I'm ready. Give me your arm," she says.

"Please be gentle. The sight of blood makes me uncomfortable."

She rolls her eyes. "You've been working with blood for several months now."

"That's different. I dislike watching it spill from the body, especially my own. I should add that needles are frightening as well."

She gives him an annoyed look, hoping it's enough to get her message across.

"Do you want the sample or not?"

"I do."

"Then get over it. It would have been done by now if you stopped whining."

He takes another deep breath, closes his eyes and finally stretches his arm. As she rolls his sleeves up, another thought flashes and he whips back the limb.

"Linhardt!"

"I'm sorry. Please don't poke hard. I'm lightheaded as it is."

He's pouting, the most childish he's become as of late.

"If you stay still, it won't hurt as much."

He gives her a suspicious eye.

She decides to change tack, softens her gaze and bends down so they're at eye level. "Hey, I'm good at this, remember? It'll be quick. You can trust me. I've done it on myself several times already."

The reminder is stinging and leaves with him little choice and room to complain. This time, he offers his arm without another word.

The process is seamless and efficient, just as she promised. His veins stand out against his pale skin and he doesn't tense when she rubs alcohol on it. He looks away and holds his breath when she punctures his skin. For him, it seems like an eternity until the needle is finally removed, and replaced with the pressure of her fingers. He lets out a long sigh of relief, and sinks down in his seat as if he's been through a terrible ordeal.

He finally has the courage to look up and finds a smirk on her face.

"What?" he asks.

She removes her gloves and pats his head like she's proud of him. "Such a good boy. I knew you could do it."

He scoffs, "I am not a child."

She laughs, and tips her head to a box on the nearby table. "I got you sweet pastries from town as a reward. Do you want it or not?"

He lights up, betraying himself. He doesn't think he's enjoyed her company more. "Yes, please."


The next step is obvious: a trial.

They've agreed to everything so far, but now there are three branches of thought.

Linhardt prefers to experiment with other crest-containing blood samples, reasoning they lack a sample size worthy of definite conclusion.

Hanneman insists on keeping the research between the three of them. This experiment will not be approved in the eyes of people in power, except maybe Edelgard herself.

Lysithea is growing increasingly impatient. Many months have passed since she's made the monastery her second home and she pushes for the trial herself.

After much hesitation and few heated debates, they agree to one trial. The infirmary is turned upside down. It takes an entire day to prepare the room and concoct the mixture. Beds are moved, shelves restocked and the space is nearly emptied. A plan is devised if things go awry and her body rejects the serum. They don't have the luxury of test subjects, Lysithea being the only one.

For all the irony in the world, the procedure is alike to blood reconstruction surgery itself. Linhardt admits he took inspiration from the mages to devise the method.

"If you have discomfort, I need to know. You have a penchant for acting stronger than you feel," he says rather bitterly.

She stops poking around her arm for a vein and glances at the green-haired scholar. Unusually tight-lipped, rigid features on his face and posture incredibly stiff. He's handling his instruments with a chaotic energy, revealing a side of him that hardly surfaces. He's irritable and exasperated, which is far from his usually lax demeanor. She's only seen it a handful of times.

"You agreed to this," she reminds, matching his tone.

He still cannot look her in the eye. "Not willingly."

"Don't start with me," she warns, keeping her voice low. "We fought about this already."

He shrugs with nonchalance, and from her perspective, it's kind of infuriating.

"Hmm. I still think we should wait," he says, just for the sake of reminding her.

She tries to smile, but it comes off sarcastic and phony. She wonders how apparent it is how much she wants to pull her hair out right now.

"Too late," she says, knowing how petty it sounds. "It's happening today."

"You can still back down. I won't blame you," he offers again.

She shakes her head and counters with a firm and decisive, "No. I won't do that."

He heaves with frustration and finally looks down at her. She meets his intense blue glare with as much defiance she can muster.

"You're being impossible. I'm starting wonder if you're doing this to spite me," he delivers harshly, in a way he'll probably regret later. Afterwards, he mutters some excuse about retrieving something from the lab and leaves the room in a matter of seconds.

In the deafening silence that follows, she stares down at the floor, heart suddenly weak and eyes glassy. Her breath is shaky as it comes out. Just as she expects, the feeling of scorn quickly fades into nothing, leaving a pained and bleak disposition in its place. She rubs her eyes before she crumples into a sobbing mess. These recent spats all end the same way. Her coming up empty, instead of angry.

"This will mean nothing later," Hanneman reassures, suddenly beside her. "Both of you are stubborn. You only fight because you care for each other. If it helps, try to remember what got you here in the first place."

Her breaths even out slowly. "…I don't want to fight anymore."

He shrugs. "You have to work it out somehow. Waiting is safe, but there's no use dallying and delaying progress either."

"Am I being unreasonable?" she asks in a whisper.

Hanneman sucks in a breath, and contemplates for a moment.

"It's…difficult to say. I'm sorry, child. I don't have all the answers."

They resume in silence. She tries to pretend it never happened and connects herself to the machine. Linhardt returns a few minutes later, all traces of hardness on his face gone.

She tries not to look his way, except when he stands in front of her.

Their expressions mirror each other; remorseful and apologetic.

"I'm sorry," he whispers first.

She shakes her head. "It's my fault. I'm the one pushing you."

He dismisses it with a shrug. "We're in this together."

It eases few of her worries, enough to breathe easy. He gestures for her to take a seat so he can prime the infusion. She obliges without complaint.

"Tell me if you feel anything."

"I will."

After what seems like an eternity, it finally starts running. Linhardt gives her a quick onceover before taking the seat beside the professor, opening his book for notetaking.

Somehow, it feels like her last day on earth. She's waited and dreamed of this since being told her days were numbered. Lysithea shakes her head, tries to throw off the memories.

Fifteen minutes in, there's a sting in her arm where the needle is located. She tries not to hiss at the pain, but it becomes difficult to hide.

Hanneman sits up, the first to notice. "What's wrong?"

She grits her teeth. "My arm is sore, but it's nothing I can't handle."

Linhardt stands, puts away his notebook. "We should stop it."

"No! I can take it. This is–"

She stops as an abrupt, sharp pain sears the nerves up to her shoulder. It's burning all of a sudden, and flaring with heat and spasm. Lysithea doesn't scream, just a gasp and a choked-off cry, but somehow that makes it worse. She winces and folds in on herself.

He stops the machine and disconnects the tubing. That alone eliminates the sharp edge of the burn, but leaves a throbbing cramp in its wake. She collapses backwards in her seat, arm splayed limp beside her.

He's giving her a look or reprimand, but as far as admonishments go, it's a gentle one.

"Lysithea. This isn't about being brave or strong. We only have one shot. If something happens to you, all of this would be for nothing," he lectures softly, bending down to inspect for bruising or damage.

Hanneman hums in agreement and rises to stretch his arms. "The boy is right. Do not feel inclined to work beyond your limits. Our situation is risky enough as it is."

She has no reason to get defensive. As far as she's concerned, this is what she needs to hear. Beside her, she spies the faint glow of light. His magic is familiar to her now. She knows the feel of it: languid, light and listless. It induces a drowsy aftermath and she's passed out from it before. It's the work of his crest. Before she succumbs to its effects, she peers down at her partner.

"I really thought it would work," she whispers, fighting the wave of exhaustion casted by the spell.

His gaze is surprisingly soft. "We'll have to rework the formula," he says quietly. Biting his lip, he casts his gaze down to her arm. "There's a caustic burn on your skin. I'll heal the nerves as best as I can, but I'm not sure about the scarring…"

She shrugs loosely. "It doesn't matter."

He says nothing back, watching as she enters a trance, wilting and slowly yielding to slumber.

"Can you be here when I wake up?" she asks, fighting off another yawn and blinking heavy eyelids.

He tilts his head to one side at the inquiry.

"Okay."

It's the last thing she hears before her vision goes blank.


She's plagued by nightmares, not waking until she's seeing red and a silent scream is somehow working its way up her throat.

She lunges up from her bed, clutches the material in front of her chest and finds herself breathless. Her back is drenched with sweat and her hands are shaking. She stares blank at the window pane, catching sight of clouds filtering the light of the stars and moon. It casts a dark shadow upon the monastery and the surrounding forests. Slowly, the nightmare leaves her.

After that, she sighs. Lysithea looks down at her arms, one of them sporting an ugly reddened bruise and the other hooked up to a tube. Her gaze lazily flits upwards, finding herself linked to an assortment of fluids. Her head throbs wildly, more so than the fresh burn she acquired from the trial.

She's alone, but hears the soft whirring of machinery across the hall. Mustering the strength to go, she drags the pole along with her and stops at the front of Hanneman's office.

"You shouldn't read in the dark," she pipes up quietly. "It hurts your eyes."

Linhardt startles and jerks lightly in the dim candlelight. He inhales deeply, and snaps his book shut.

"You should go back to sleep."

She shakes her head. "Maybe later."

He eyes her curiously, a long blue stare. "A nightmare, then."

She shudders, and then absently presses her fingers against her throat where there's a pulse. A cold shiver runs up her spine. Linhardt watches idly, staring into her eyes with question.

"It's odd. I used to have nightmares about ghosts in my room, showing up late for class, or losing my teeth," Lysithea starts softly, ignoring the constant thrumming in her head. "Nowadays, they're more about feeling lonely, or losing control, or dying."

He raises a brow. "Are you scared of dying?"

"I guess so," she says, mild annoyance seeping through. She purses her lips, then shifts her gaze to the bookshelves. "It's strange. I was going to die in those dungeons, and the only reason I didn't was because I was so determined to see what life I could have outside of it, even if it meant surviving my crests. Gosh, I wanted to live so much, and still ended up dying."

She says it with a hollow lightness, as if the whole thing can be a laughing matter. And then she's shaking her head and rubbing her face.

"I've been counting my days ever since, and I'm sick of it. I'm so hopeless, and bitter, and lonely, and yet…I am still so, so terribly scared."

Linhardt gazes with a rare tenderness. No words come to mind, so he says nothing.

Inevitably, there's a long pause.

She drops her arms and unclenches her fists. Her expression is weary. "Do you have nightmares?"

He nods. "Occasionally. Mostly they are bloody visions of war – I wake up thinking I'm still in the throes of battle. To cheer myself up, I imagine myself lying down on a field of grass, in a place where I'm free to sleep, fish, or eat sweets whenever I please."

She chuckles softly, "That sounds just like you."

"Does your head hurt? I can help."

"No, not right now. That magic of yours is like a sedative, and I…" She inhales and picks at her fingers, unsure how to say it. "I'd rather we just…stay, even for a short time."

The air is so quiet and delicate she wants to bask in it. The lighting is dark, atmosphere thick but not stilted, and the whirring machinery drums like white noise. It's just the two of them, but the silence is easy and comforting. They've let go of their posturing a long time ago. This is the most peace she's felt in months.

This is what she means to say, even if he doesn't get it.

He nods, and she's grateful. Moving her metal pole in front of the sofa, she settles herself comfortably beside him and curls her legs underneath. He brushes off her earlier protest and picks up his book again, reading against the dim candlelight. Eventually she caves and tugs at his sleeve. Wordlessly, he settles the book in the middle so she can read for herself. The rest of the night is filled with silence.

He understands enough.