No applause followed. The nobles remained frozen, the implications of what they’d witnessed still unfolding in their calculating minds. Then, from the common folk pressed against the outer barriers, a cheer erupted, tentative at first, then swelling into a roar that echoed between the stone buildings surrounding the tournant grounds.
"The street rat won!" soone shouted, voice carrying above the growing din. "Showed the noble what real fighting looks like!"
Soren stood motionless as healers rushed forward to attend to Aric. The shard against his chest had gone cold again, Valenna’s presence receding like a tide pulling back from shore. His arms felt leaden, muscles trembling with the aftermath of combat and adrenaline.
From the Lanther gallery ca shouts of protest. "Dishonorable conduct!" Lord Lanther bellowed, face contorted with fresh grief and rage. "The street rat probably employed forbidden techniques! He should be disqualified!"
His supporters took up the cry, demanding intervention from the tournant judges. But their objections faltered against the unmistakable fact that Aric had been the first to violate the rules with his killing strike.
The crowd’s cheering grew louder, drowning out the nobles’ protests. Common folk who had never been permitted inside the tournant grounds proper pressed harder against the barriers, their faces alight with vicarious triumph.
A street-born nobody had humiliated a noble heir in public combat, the story would spread through Northaven’s lower quarters before nightfall.
Soren looked up at the galleries, taking in the nobles’ reactions. Lord Lanther’s face had gone from rage to sothing colder, more dangerous, the look of a man calculating vengeance beyond the tournant’s boundaries.
The Dravien contingent whispered urgently among themselves, reassessing House Velrane’s position in light of their champion’s unexpected prowess.
Lord Callen remained seated, unmoved by either the victory or the controversy it sparked. Those pale, rciless eyes revealed nothing of his thoughts, though one finger tapped against the railing in a rhythm that might have indicated satisfaction.
Beside him, Ayren’s smile had widened, perfect white teeth gleaming in the midday sun. He leaned toward a Trescan noble, whispering sothing that made the man’s eyes widen with alarm. Everything about his posture suggested a man watching plans unfold exactly as anticipated.
As servants moved forward to prepare the ring for the next match, Soren made his way toward the exit. Blood trickled down his cheek from the cut Aric had landed early in their exchange. His muscles ached. His lungs burned with each breath.
Yet he walked with his spine straight, aware of how every eye followed his movent.
’You see?’ Valenna whispered as he passed through the gate that separated combatants from spectators. ’They will fear you now.’
Soren didn’t answer. He could feel the weight of what had just occurred settling across his shoulders, the political significance, the shifting alliances, the enemies made and calculations altered.
He had entered the ring as Veyr’s questionable choice, a survivor marked by suspicion. He left it as sothing else entirely.
A weapon. A liability. A piece on the ga board that had just revealed unexpected value.
Kaelor waited at the preparation area, his scarred face unreadable as Soren approached. The Swordmaster said nothing, rely inclining his head in acknowledgnt of what had been accomplished. No praise, no criticism, just the silent recognition that sothing had changed irrevocably.
Behind him, Soren could hear the herald announcing the next match, the tournant grinding forward as if nothing extraordinary had occurred. But the whispers followed him, sharper now, more urgent.
"—moves like a soldier, not a squire—"
"—dangerous to all houses now—"
"—Velrane’s new blade cuts deep—"
He cleaned his sword thodically, wiping Aric’s blood from the steel with practiced movents. The shard against his chest pulsed once more, a final acknowledgnt before going silent.
Bloodied but unbroken, Soren prepared to face whatever consequences his victory had set in motion. The real battle, he knew he knew, was only beginning.
The preparation area felt like a tomb compared to the roaring crowd beyond. Soren sat on a rough wooden bench, thodically cleaning his blade while his hands refused to stop trembling.
The steel glead as he wiped away the last traces of Aric’s blood, each stroke of the cloth a ditation against the chaos churning in his mind.
’You fought well,’ Valenna whispered, her presence a cold whisper against his thoughts. ’They saw strength where they expected weakness.’
Kaelor approached, his scarred face bearing the sa impassive expression he wore during training. The Swordmaster’s single eye assessed Soren with clinical detachnt, taking in the cut on his cheek, the tension in his shoulders, the way his breathing hadn’t quite returned to normal.
"Clean hit," Kaelor said finally. "Though you telegraphed the counter-thrust. A better opponent would have caught it."
Soren looked up, surprised by the criticism. "I won."
"You survived," Kaelor corrected. "Different thing entirely." The Swordmaster’s gaze flicked toward the arena, where servants scraped sand over the bloodstains left by their match.
"Lanther’s boy fought like a man possessed. Made him predictable. Next ti, you might face soone who keeps his head."
The weight of those words settled into Soren’s bones. Next ti. Because there would be a next ti, wouldn’t there? The tournant continued, and with it, the political machinations that had orchestrated this entire spectacle.
A shadow fell across the entrance to the preparation area. Soren looked up to find Veyr standing there, his pale features unreadable in the dim light. The heir moved with his usual careful grace, though sothing in his posture suggested satisfaction.
"My father wishes to speak with you," Veyr said, his voice carrying that familiar note of detached authority. "Imdiately."
Soren’s stomach tightened. He sheathed his cleaned blade and rose, muscles protesting after the extended combat. The cut on his cheek had stopped bleeding, though it still stung when he moved his jaw.
Kaelor’s hand fell on his shoulder as he passed. "Rember what I taught you about reading the room," the Swordmaster murmured. "Applies to more than just combat."
The corridors leading to Lord Callen’s private chambers felt longer than usual, each step echoing with ominous finality. Servants pressed themselves against the walls as they passed, eyes downcast but clearly straining to catch glimpses of the champion who had just bloodied a noble heir in public combat.
Veyr said nothing during their walk, though Soren caught him glancing sideways with what might have been approval. The silence stretched between them, heavy with unspoken calculations.
They reached the familiar doors of polished oak and black iron.
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