The dismissal was clear. Soren bowed as deeply as his injury allowed, then made his way back to his quarters through the twisting corridors of the Velrane compound. Each step felt like walking through deep water, his body protesting the day’s abuse with every movent.
Alone at last, he sank onto the edge of his narrow bed, staring at the bandaged shoulder that represented his failure. Blood had already begun to seep through the white cloth, a spreading stain that matched the one on his pride.
The shard against his chest pulsed cold, Valenna’s presence sharpening in his mind. Her voice ca like frost forming on glass, clear and cutting.
"Aura," she whispered. "That is the wall. Will you kneel beneath it, or sharpen yourself to break it?"
Soren clenched his bloody hand, feeling the sting of reopened cuts across his palm. "I’ll break it," he promised, the words tasting of blood and determination.
Darkness gathered in the corners of his room as night fell across Northaven, shadows deepening like the challenges that awaited him. But within that darkness, sothing had changed, a purpose crystallizing from defeat, a resolve hardening from humiliation.
The wall stood before him, high and seemingly impenetrable. But walls could be climbed. Walls could be breached.
Walls could fall.
The shard against his chest remained silent as he rose from the bed, testing his injured arm’s range of motion. The pain was constant now, a dull throb that would serve as reminder of what awaited him beyond these walls.
Tomorrow would bring fresh challenges, fresh opponents who had witnessed his limits exposed in the arena’s harsh light.
Soren moved to the small window that looked out over Northaven’s darkening streets. Below, torchlight flickered in windows as the city settled into evening routines.
Sowhere out there, nobles gathered in their private chambers, dissecting his defeat with surgical precision. Sowhere else, commoners raised tankards in taverns, turning his loss into legend.
’They will co for you now,’ Valenna whispered, her voice like ice cracking under pressure. ’Not in the ring, where rules constrain them. In the shadows, where accidents happen to troubleso street rats.’
The thought should have terrified him. Instead, Soren felt sothing cold and sharp settling into his bones, not fear, but anticipation. Let them co. Let them try their knives in the dark. He had survived worse than noble assassins.
A soft knock interrupted his brooding. Not the sharp, precise raps that announced a Velrane, but sothing more hesitant. Uncertain.
"Enter," he called, turning from the window.
The door opened to reveal a young servant girl, her plain brown dress marking her as one of the kitchen staff. She carried a tray bearing a simple al, bread, cheese, and a cup of what slled like mulled wine. Her eyes remained fixed on the floor as she approached, though Soren caught her stealing glances at his bandaged shoulder.
"Lord Veyr sent this," she said, voice barely above a whisper. "Said you’d need your strength."
She set the tray on his small table, movents quick and nervous. As she turned to leave, Soren noticed the way she favored her left foot, a slight limp that spoke of old injury or malford bone.
"Wait," he said, and she froze like a rabbit sensing a predator. "What’s your na?"
"Mira, m’lord." The title sounded awkward in her mouth, as if she wasn’t certain he deserved it.
"I’m not a lord, Mira. Just Soren."
She looked up then, brown eyes wide with sothing between confusion and curiosity. "But you fought in the tournant. You made the noble knights bleed."
The wonder in her voice made him uncomfortable. She saw him as sothing he wasn’t, a champion, a symbol, a hope for people like them. The weight of her expectation pressed against his shoulders like a physical burden.
"I lost," he said simply.
"You made them use their power," she replied, voice gaining strength. "My brother was there, pressed against the barriers with all the others. He said the Trescan knight’s sword glowed like fire. Said you forced him to show what he really was."
She stepped closer, emboldened by his attention. "That’s never happened before. Not to soone like us."
Soone like us. The words hung in the air between them, heavy with implication. She had claid kinship with him, recognized sothing that the nobles never would, shared origins, shared struggles, shared understanding of what it ant to claw upward from nothing.
"The bread’s still warm," she added, gesturing toward the tray with shy pride. "I made sure of that."
After she left, Soren sat before the simple al, considering her words. Mira saw victory where he felt only defeat. The common folk who had chanted his na saw possibility where he saw limitation. Perhaps that was enough. Perhaps that was what mattered.
The bread was indeed warm, soft beneath his teeth. The cheese carried the sharp bite of quality aging. The wine burned pleasantly as it went down, spreading warmth through his chest where the shard rested cold and silent.
As he ate, Soren’s mind turned to the tournant bracket. With his defeat, the semifinals would proceed without him. Trescan would face whichever champion erged from the other preliminary matches. Knights with nas he barely knew, faces he’d glimpsed only in passing.
It didn’t matter. His path lay elsewhere now, beyond the formal structures of tournant combat. Aura was the wall that separated him from them, but walls could be scaled. Walls could be broken.
The shard pulsed once against his chest, faint but present. Valenna’s voice ca like wind through winter branches, soft yet cutting.
’The wolf learns to hunt,’ she whispered. ’No longer content to scavenge scraps.’
Soren finished his al in contemplative silence, feeling strength slowly return to muscles drained by combat and blood loss.
Outside his window, Northaven settled into the rhythm of night, nobles retiring to their private chambers, servants completing their final duties, guards beginning their evening rounds.
Tomorrow would bring new challenges. New opponents who had watched him bleed in the arena. New calculations from House Velrane about his value and expendability.
But tonight, in the quiet of his small chamber, Soren felt sothing fundantal shift within himself. No longer the desperate survivor clawing for purchase in a world that rejected him. Sothing sharper now. Sothing with purpose beyond re survival.
The bandage around his shoulder was already stained with fresh blood, but the wound felt clean. It would heal, given ti. And when it did, he would be ready for whatever ca next.
Reviews
All reviews (0)