The Day of Concord died a slow, muddy death.
The freezing winds that had battered the floating continent of Zenith Academy for the past three months were finally losing their sharp edge. The sky above the white-gold spires was no longer a canvas of brittle, cracked gray. It had softened into a heavy, humid overcast that clung to the stonework like a damp blanket.
The pristine snow that had blanketed the courtyards and training rings was actively rotting, lting into a treacherous, ankle-deep slush. Spring was forcing its way into the ecosystem with violent intent. In Oakhaven, the thaw ant the gutters would overflow with filth and deadly diseases would spread through the lower districts. Here, in the absolute pinnacle of magical society, it simply ant the frozen defensive wards were dropping, and the true brutality of the academic year was about to resu in full force.
Vane walked across the stone pathways leading back to Villa 1. His heavy combat boots crushed the lting ice, leaving deep, muddy footprints in his wake. His left arm, recently healed from the severe fracture sustained in Mourn Hold, ached with a dull, rhythmic throb in the humid evening air. He carried a heavy leather bag slung casually over his right shoulder.
Inside the bag rested the physical evidence of a terrifyingly polite war: the crimson box from Valerica Sol, the silver wrapping from Isole Sylvaris, and the midnight blue silk from the Justiciar, Nyx. They were heavy, burdened with the invisible weight of aristocratic expectations, unspoken alliances, and lethal jealousy that he now had to navigate daily.
He pushed open the heavy oak doors of his residence, stepping smoothly into the quiet, climate-controlled warmth of the grand foyer, grateful to escape the stifling humidity outside. He dropped his bag onto a polished mahogany table and unbuttoned his damp uniform jacket.
The absolute silence of the villa was a necessary armor. He had spent his entire day cataloging threats and navigating the emotional minefield of his squad. The holiday demanded survival built strictly on social maneuvering rather than raw kinetic force.
A sharp, rhythmic chopping sound drifted from the kitchen. Vane walked down the short hallway.
Mara was standing at the marble counter. The young girl wore an oversized grey tunic, her dark hair tied back in a highly practical knot. She was forcefully bringing a heavy steel cleaver down on a block of raw cocoa, her small face set in absolute focus. She did not look like a pampered student partaking in a joyful tradition. She looked like she was dismantling a target.
She stopped chopping, wiping her hands on a damp cloth. Her golden-brown eyes locked onto him. The terrified runaway they had pulled from the industrial ash had been entirely replaced by a pragmatic survivor who understood the exact value of her space.
"You survived the noble heirs," Mara stated. It was not a question. It was a flat, purely clinical observation.
"Barely," Vane replied, his voice losing its usual sharp, guarded edge.
Mara reached under the counter, pulling out a small box folded from plain brown butcher paper. It was devoid of silk ribbons or floral scents. It looked exactly like a rcenary’s field ration package. She walked across the kitchen and shoved the box squarely into his chest. Vane caught it instinctively.
"I had excess supplies," Mara said casually, entirely refusing the day’s sentintality. "Master Marlo ordered too much bitter root and caffeine powder. It would have been a massive tactical waste to simply let it rot in the pantry."
In the slums, giving away calories was the highest form of trust. He opened the paper flap. Inside were four jagged, uneven squares of incredibly dark chocolate, heavily dusted with coarse sea salt.
He took a bite. It was fiercely bitter, aggressively dense, and hit his system with a violent spike of pure caffeine. It tasted exactly like a tool designed to keep a scout awake during a brutal march.
"It is highly functional," Vane noted, chewing the dense square.
"It will keep your heart rate up," Mara replied. "Evaluations start tomorrow. If you get killed because you were sluggish, I will be extrely annoyed with you."
Vane swallowed the bitter chocolate, instantly grounded by its harshness. "I will definitely stay awake. Go to sleep, Mara. The academy gets loud very early."
She gave a sharp nod and marched toward the guest wing. She didn’t look back, and didn’t wait for a thank you. They knew the rules.
Vane tucked the box into his pocket. He needed to finalize tactical formations for the upcoming drills. The instructors would absolutely not hold back now that winter was breaking. He left his villa, stepping back into the humid night to coordinate strategies with the Ice Mage.
As he walked, his mind briefly wandered to the history of the holiday. The Day of Concord was not so petty human tradition. When the grand treaties were finally signed at the end of the Mage Wars, the paranoid warlords spanning both continents needed a way to prove they would not assassinate one another. The ceasefire applied to humans, elves, the beast-tribes of the East, the scaled clans, and a myriad of other species that had bled the earth dry.
Exchanging handmade food and eating it in front of the enemy was a raw, primal demonstration of trust. Over the centuries, that grim survival tactic had evolved into the exchange of sweets, but the foundational logic remained. It was about offering soone your blind spot.
The walk to Villa 2 was short. Isaac Glacium’s residence usually projected a zone of pristine, mathematically perfect frost. Tonight, the periter was a chaotic, disorganized ss of trampled mud and discarded affection.
Vane stopped near the manicured hedges. The survival instincts hamred into him by the streets flared instantly. The area was entirely too quiet, but the ambient mana humd violently with recent kinetic activity.
Thirty yards away, a second-year student erged from the shadows. The boy attempted to mask his footsteps with a minor wind-muffling spell. Holding a velvet-wrapped box, his eyes fixed greedily on Isaac’s front doors. He took three steps forward.
A sharp, high-pitched whistle tore through the humid air.
The student gasped, stumbling backward as a blunt-tipped wooden arrow slamd directly into the velvet box. The perfectly calculated kinetic force shattered the gift into a cloud of pulverized sugar and fabric without breaking a single bone.
The student froze, his eyes wide with absolute, unadulterated terror.
From the canopy of a towering oak tree, Lyra dropped to the ground without making a sound. She stood in the slush, blue hair plastered to her forehead. She did not issue a warning. She did not boast about her periter. She simply raised her recurve bow again, smoothly knocking a second arrow onto the string, aiming flawlessly at the older boy’s chest.
The lethal ssage required no translation. The second-year turned and sprinted away, abandoning his ruined gift.
Lyra lowered her bow. She walked forward, her wire-rimd glasses reflecting the dim mana lamps. She yanked her arrow free, wiped the sticky residue off the shaft, and slid it back into her quiver. She stepped backward, lting completely back into the heavy, protective shadows.
Vane stepped onto the pathway. Lyra shifted, locking onto him imdiately. Recognizing his gait, she gave a silent, curt nod, granting passage through the blockade. Vane pushed open the double doors.
The grand foyer was a sprawling monunt to the academy’s complete lack of restraint. The polished marble floors and expensive leather couches were covered in mountains of expensive gifts. Silk boxes, enchanted ether-roses, and perfud letters ford precarious towers that threatened to topple at any mont. The room slled sickeningly sweet, a cloying, overwhelming mixture of processed sugar, rich cocoa, and aristocratic desperation.
Sitting at a mahogany desk in the center of the chaos was Isaac Glacium. The heir to the Ice Palace was reviewing a textbook on advanced atmospheric thermodynamics, a floating glass ledger displaying complex mana consumption charts.
Sprawled completely across the adjacent leather sofa was Ashe Razar.
The Warlord of the East had her heavy, mud-caked boots resting carelessly on a pile of pink, scented envelopes. She held a premium, gold-leaf truffle between her fingers, inspecting it for exactly one second before tossing it into her mouth like a piece of cheap popcorn.
Isaac turned a page with a sharp flick of his wrist. The ambient temperature dropped by ten degrees, a subconscious manifestation of his deep irritation.
"The structural integrity of this room is compromised," Isaac stated, entirely focused on his work. "I have identified fourteen localized warming charms attached to these boxes. The conflicting ambient mana is actively disrupting my concentration algorithms. It is a logistical nightmare."
"You chose to stop acting like a living statue," Vane said, stepping over a glowing heart-shaped box. "When you act like a human, people respond. This is the tactical consequence of approachability."
"It’s free calories," Ashe grunted, chewing loudly. She reached over and cracked open a silver tin, pulling out a handful of candied ether-berries. "If the soft Imperial nobility wants to feed before a combat evaluation, I am not going to complain. Sugar burns fast."
Isaac finally looked up. His uniform was pressed, but dark circles betrayed his sheer exhaustion. He looked at Ashe, then at the massive pile of chocolate resting on his favorite armchair, with analytical disdain.
"It is a highly inefficient tradition," Isaac replied coldly. "If they wish to demonstrate affection, they should provide tactical battlefield data. Sugar provides a montary tabolic spike followed by a cognitive crash. It is a terrible investnt for a combat mage."
"I will inform the academy population to gift you military intelligence next year," Vane said dryly, taking a wooden seat across from the desk.
"That would be optimal," Isaac agreed perfectly seriously, ignoring Ashe as she loudly cracked a hardened caral shell between her teeth.
Vane pulled out the butcher paper box. He tossed another piece of Mara’s bitter chocolate into his mouth, letting the harsh caffeine burn through his lingering physical fatigue.
The Day of Concord was completely over. The polite smiles and quiet cold wars were finished. They sat in a room filled with luxury confections from a dozen different species and high houses, but their minds were focused entirely on the brutal, unapologetic violence waiting for them in the mud.
Vane looked out the window, where the strategist silently guarded the periter. He thought of the fierce gravity of the Sun and the lethal shadows of the Moon waiting in their dormitories.
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