From one castle to the other was a solid twenty-minute walk, at least, depending on where you were. And then from one of the coloured castles to the Central Castle – the castle in which the dining hall was housed – was fifteen minutes.
That Central Castle stood, as its na indicated, in the centre of the other four, like a magnificent keep, three tis as tall as the rest of them, and just as wide. A castle within four castles, with tall stone walls protecting all of it. It would have made for a terrifying fortress to conquer, and yet here it was, being devoted entirely to schooling.
There was much to learn, and much that simply looking would teach him. This was not the place that he had assud it to be. When they nad it an Academy, and told him that he was to be taught there, he'd imagined in his head a sword school of the type he would have dread of attending as a child, back in the village, as he discussed such things with his friends.
He imagined sothing like a temple, back then, a large space, hidden away on the top of the mountain, about the size of Greeves' house, clean and simple, honed with the blade.
This was entirely different.
This was like a small town.
"YOU BASTARD!"
And it ca with all the instances of petulance that one would expect from a small town. Oliver had seen nurous such scuffles during his many little excursions – he still had yet to fully map out the entire Academy, for lack of ti – though this was the first ti it was happening directly upon the path that he was walking.
The professors seed loath to interfere with such disputes. In fact, they seed to encourage them. Oliver had a feeling that there was far more going on at this Academy than simply classes, though he had not yet been able to put his finger on quite what that was.
Ahead of Oliver, two yellow-shirted students were grasping at each other, as though grappling. Beyond them, a group of more than twenty other yellow shirts stood, shouting towards the two arguing boys in so form or another.
It was mid-day, and Oliver had his sword sheathed at his hip. It would be his first weapons training practice that afternoon, and he hadn't known whether he would need his blade or not, but he'd decided to bring it anyway.
Oliver was forced to co to a stop, as the crowd – and the two arguing boys – took up the rest of the path that he'd been walking down. Oliver paused, resting his hand on his sword, rely observing. He still had plenty of ti until his next class, and he was curious about what they were up to.
Behind them, he saw a wooden A fra, with hamrs and discarded nails near it. It looked like the beginnings of a wall to a house. Maybe that's exactly what it was.
"Hey! Gras!" One of the yellow-shirted boys noticed Oliver, and pointed at the larger boy – the one who seed to be winning their little grappling match – in sothing that approached dismay.
With a swift final pull, the larger boy - he wasn't particularly large, just large enough to be larger than the boy that he was fighting with – pulled swiftly on his opponents hands, dragging him towards him, then swiftly stepped out of his way, standing to attention, as he bowed to Oliver.
The other boy landed with a pained cry on the cold paving stones, with their sprinklings of light snow. Stay tuned for updates on empire
Oliver continued to stare, despite the bow. The collection of yellow shirts beyond this lot were bowing as well. It seed to finally alarm Gras that Oliver remained there.
Oliver continued to watch calmly, as the boy dragged himself up off the floor, cursing, before noticing Oliver, and forcing himself into a strict bow. "S-sorry, ser!"
Ignoring him, Oliver asked a question of the larger – and likely older – Gras. "What are you doing?"
Gras shot a glance at the boy he'd been wrestling, noticing the scrape on his head with alarm.
"Oh… apologies, ser. It was just a minor disagreent."
"Not that," Oliver said, pointing with a finger towards the building. "What're you building?"
The question washed away Gras' growing panic, and replaced it with puzzlent. "We're setting up our store… We've already received permission from the professors, ser."
"A store?" Oliver repeated thoughtfully. It really was like a town. Though he didn't expect mbers of the Serving Class to be the type to run shops. "I wasn't aware that the Academy had shops."
That confused the boy even more. "Of course it does, ser… Most of them are concentrated around the Green Castle, but as long as we have permission we can put them up wherever."
"And what type of things do these stores sell?" Oliver asked. He didn't expect the students to be capable of making anything, not beyond baking, and the like. His experience of chanisms was entirely through Greeves. Greeves bought things, and he resold them.
The king of raw production – like gathering at, and monster parts – that he had Nila had engaged in should have been impossible on Academy grounds.
"at, monster parts…"
And then those first words ca out of Gras' mouth, as though he was reading Oliver's mind.
"…gathered from the Academy's forest. But then there's also the armour and weaponry crafted by those in the smithing classes, and then potions by the alchemists, clothes by girls in fabrics classes... but surely you have heard such things before?"
"I have not," Oliver said. "I have been here for a day and a half now, so I know entirely too little about everything. Your information has been useful, thank you, Gras."
The boy stiffened when Oliver ntioned his na. Oliver smiled knowingly. There was more than one way to get a na, after all – one had rely need listen. "What type of shop are you and your friends constructing?"
"We've a commission from Lord Gargon for a tea house, ser… Though it was said to be a bookshop just a week ago, so it's possible that he'll change his mind once again."
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