The bell chis woke Soren before dawn, though he’d already been awake for an hour.
Silver-gray light filtered through the narrow window as he fastened the last button on his uniform tunic, movents precise and economical.
The dormitory remained quiet around him, most initiates wouldn’t stir until the second bell, clinging to those final precious monts of sleep.
He preferred these stolen minutes. The quiet. The space to breathe without being observed.
’Five days at Aetherion,’ he thought, running a hand through his short black hair. ’Five days of playing student.’
The mirror caught his reflection as he turned, a stranger looking back at him with familiar eyes.
The Academy uniform fit well enough, its deep blue fabric marking him as a first-year Blade initiate.
Nothing like the dark, close-fitting garnts he’d worn in the Veiled Hand’s sanctuary, yet he wore it with the sa careful attention to detail.
No loose threads. No wrinkled fabric. Nothing to draw unwanted notice.
"Old habits," Valenna murmured, her voice cool and approving in his mind. "They serve you well here."
The shard pulsed once against his chest, hidden beneath layers of clothing. Soren gave no outward response, but he acknowledged the truth in her words.
The disciplines that had kept him alive as an assassin translated surprisingly well to Academy life, vigilance, precision, economy of movent. The contexts differed; the skills remained.
He studied his reflection a mont longer. Coren Vale stared back at him, a na that still felt borrowed, like clothing that hadn’t yet conford to his shape.
Yet he was learning to answer to it without hesitation, to think of it as his own when instructors called upon him in training sessions.
"Coren Vale," he whispered, testing the syllables. "Blade initiate."
The other bed in the dormitory room remained empty, though not unused. Rumpled sheets and discarded clothing suggested its occupant had returned soti during the night.
Books and papers lay scattered across the small desk beside it, notes on blade forms and stance sequences, the handwriting growing increasingly unsteady toward the bottom of each page.
Five days, and he’d yet to properly et his assigned roommate. They passed like ships in darkness, Soren rising before dawn, the other returning long after curfew.
Perhaps deliberate avoidance.
Perhaps simply mismatched schedules.
Either way, the arrangent suited him fine. Fewer questions to answer. Fewer lies to maintain.
The first proper bell rang through the stone corridors, signaling one hour until assembly. Footsteps and voices rose beyond the door as other initiates began stirring.
Soren checked his weapons, practice blade secured at his hip, boot knife concealed against his ankle. Not because he expected trouble, but because going unard felt like walking blindfolded.
He slipped into the corridor, joining the growing stream of blue-uniford students making their way toward the dining hall.
Their conversations washed over him, complaints about instructors, boasts about yesterday’s training, nervous speculation about today’s assignnts. Normal concerns.
Student concerns. Nothing about survival or killing or the weight of necessary violence.
The second bell rang as Soren reached the outer courtyard. Sunlight spilled across the white stone, catching on the polished blades of initiates rushing to their morning drills.
The air humd with energy, the controlled chaos of dozens of young fighters preparing for the day’s training. Instructors called out corrections, their voices carrying across the open space.
tal rang against tal as early practice sessions began along the eastern wall.
Soren moved through the crowd with quiet purpose, maintaining enough distance to avoid casual conversation while not appearing deliberately isolated.
A careful balance, refined through days of observation. Not unfriendly, just focused. Not hostile, just reserved. The perfect cover for soone who didn’t belong.
The third bell signaled assembly. Initiates ford neat lines in the outer courtyard, organized by division and year.
Soren found his place among the first-year Blades, stance relaxed yet ready, gaze fixed on the raised platform where Master Halric Dane would soon appear.
The Swordmaster erged from the eastern archway exactly as the bell’s final tone faded. His massive fra moved with that sa controlled grace that had impressed Soren during their first encounter.
Dane’s presence alone silenced the remaining murmurs, dozens of conversations dying mid-sentence as he took his position at the platform’s center.
Those colorless eyes swept across the assembled students, missing nothing. When he spoke, his voice carried to every corner of the courtyard without apparent effort.
"Skill earns your blade," he said, the words falling into silence like stones into still water. "Discipline earns your life."
The familiar motto settled over the assembly. So initiates straightened their posture unconsciously; others touched the hilts of their practice weapons with sothing approaching reverence.
Soren remained motionless, though he noted how the words affected those around him. Reverence. Purpose. Belief in sothing larger than themselves. Emotions he recognized but didn’t share.
His gaze drifted across the assembly, finding Cassian Dorelle standing in the second row of initiates.
The silver-haired youth’s uniform remained immaculate as always, not a single crease or smudge to mar its perfection.
His posture radiated the sa aristocratic confidence, his chin lifted at precisely the angle that conveyed both attention and superiority.
But sothing had changed since their duel. The open disdain had hardened into sothing colder, more focused.
When Cassian’s eyes briefly t Soren’s across the courtyard, they held none of the previous dismissal, only calculation, assessnt, the patient consideration of a predator studying potential prey.
’He’s learning,’ Soren thought, breaking eye contact without appearing to retreat. ’Dangerous.’
"Today we begin rhythm and response drills," Dane announced, drawing Soren’s attention back to the platform. "The foundation of paired combat. You will learn to read intent before movent, to feel the shift before the strike."
The Swordmaster gestured toward a row of instructors standing at the courtyard’s edge. "You will be assigned partners based on complentary strengths. Learn from your differences. Grow stronger through adaptation."
The assembly broke into controlled movent as initiates ford up before the instructors for assignnts.
Soren waited, watching as pairs were ford and directed toward different training areas. Cassian was matched with a stocky youth who specialized in axe work, an interesting combination that would force the silver-haired duelist to adapt his elegant style to a more brutish opponent.
"Vale," called one of the junior instructors. "You’re with Avelle. Eastern quadrant."
Soren moved toward the indicated area, where a slender figure waited beside a rack of practice weapons. Seren Avelle turned as he approached, her honey-colored hair caught back in a practical braid that emphasized the clean lines of her face.
She carried herself with a dancer’s poise, her movents fluid and economical as she selected a practice spear from the rack.
"Coren Vale," she said, her voice carrying neither warmth nor coldness, just calm assessnt. "I watched your duel with Dorelle." A slight nod followed, the closest thing to approval he’d received from a fellow initiate. "Clean work."
"Thank you," Soren replied, choosing a practice sword of appropriate weight. He tested its balance with a subtle adjustnt of his grip, noting how Seren’s eyes tracked the movent with professional interest.
"I favor spear," she said, gesturing with the wooden practice weapon she held. "Mid-range, precision work. You’ll need to adapt."
Soren nodded, moving to the center of their assigned practice area. "I’m familiar with the challenges."
A faint smile touched her lips, not amusent, but recognition. "I imagine you are."
They began with basic forms, establishing rhythm before complexity.
Seren moved like flowing water, each stance transitioning seamlessly into the next. Her spear work showed years of formal training, yet lacked the rigid adherence to tradition that characterized many noble-born initiates.
She adapted her technique mont by mont, responding to subtle changes in Soren’s positioning with intuitive adjustnts of her own.
From the corner of his eye, Soren noted Master Dane watching their exchange with particular attention.
The Swordmaster stood at the quadrant’s edge, those colorless eyes missing nothing as Soren and Seren established their training rhythm.
Sothing in his expression suggested more than casual interest, perhaps curiosity about how the newcor would handle a partner after demonstrating such dominance in single combat.
The morning progressed through increasingly complex drills. What began as simple exchanges evolved into intricate patterns of advance and retreat, thrust and parry.
Sweat darkened the back of Soren’s tunic as he adapted to Seren’s reach advantage, learning to read the subtle shifts in her weight that telegraphed each attack.
The courtyard transford around them, dozens of paired initiates creating a controlled storm of movent and sound. Wood struck wood in rhythmic patterns. Instructors called corrections across the stone floor. Grunts of effort and occasional curses punctuated the controlled chaos as students pushed their limits.
"Break stance," the head instructor called eventually. "Water and rest. Resu in fifteen minutes."
Soren lowered his practice blade, breathing controlled despite the exertion. Seren did the sa, her movents mirroring his own disciplined recovery.
They moved toward the water barrels at the courtyard’s edge, maintaining comfortable silence where most pairs had imdiately fallen into conversation or critique.
"You don’t fight like the rest," Seren observed quietly as they reached the shade of an overhanging balcony. She handed him a water cup, her eyes studying his face with calm intensity.
Soren accepted the cup, considering his response. "I wasn’t taught like the rest," he said finally, offering truth without detail.
She nodded, seemingly satisfied with the partial answer. "It shows. You read movent differently." She demonstrated with a subtle shift of her wrist. "Most see the blade. You see the intent before it forms."
The observation was uncomfortably accurate. Soren sipped his water, neither confirming nor denying her assessnt. The shard pulsed once against his chest, Valenna’s silent warning to tread carefully.
"It’s not a criticism," Seren added, misinterpreting his silence. "It’s a strength. Unusual, but valuable."
Sothing in her tone suggested genuine respect rather than the calculated interest most initiates showed when probing for information. Her eyes held no suspicion, no agenda, just professional appreciation for skill recognized.
"Your spear work is exceptional," Soren offered, changing the subject slightly. "Traditional Eastmark form, but adapted."
Surprise flickered across her face, quickly replaced by that sa calm assessnt. "My mother was from the Eastern Provinces. Good eye." She finished her water, setting the cup aside. "We should return. Dane is watching us particularly."
As they moved back toward their practice area, Soren caught sight of Cassian observing them from across the courtyard. The silver-haired youth stood in conversation with another initiate, but his attention was clearly divided.
His eyes tracked Soren’s movents with the sa cold calculation he’d shown during morning assembly.
The rivalry had shifted, Soren realized. No longer the open disdain of a privileged youth toward an unknown commoner, but sothing more dangerous, the focused attention of a skilled opponent reassessing a threat. Cassian was studying him now, looking for weaknesses, patterns, anything that might explain his defeat and prevent its recurrence.
"Dorelle doesn’t forget easily," Seren murmured as they reached their position, having followed his gaze. "
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