The Transgracian Academy for the Magical Arts. Betreyan’s Hall. Local Ti: 2200 Hours.
Vanavan
Few places existed that granted the peace of mind, strength of confidence, and sense of security that should have co naturally to a man of my station and pedigree.
Fewer still did such places exist in public spaces, let alone rooms intended for the audience of many.
Betreyan’s Hall was perhaps the one and only such instance where the particularities of fate aligned precisely enough to fulfil these three sensibilities.
For the Hall was the ultimate expression of my newfound life — an identity forged by my own two hands away from the circumstances of my heritage and upbringing.
Yet all of that changed today.
For today, I found my sanctuary assaulted, assailed, and deconstructed to its core by the arrival of an individual I’d first t through ink and quill from this very room.
The armored woman arrived with the uninvited air of Mal’tory’s intrusiveness, the authoritative aura of the Dean, and the finesse and fiery spirit of Chiska.
Her presence inspired an instinctive fear that burned within the heart of all nobles, especially as one’s eyes landed on the coat of arms present on her armor.
I felt my defenses fall, wall by uneven wall, as she walked down those steps and towards my desk.
“I concur, Professor Vanavan.” Captain Frital announced abruptly, her steely eyes having hooked my gaze into its reel. “Your… blue knight, is most certainly befitting of the first descriptor you assigned her.” The golden-haired elf paused, coming to a stop a single pace from my desk, her figure towering over my seated form. “Exceptional, in more ways than one.”
“I-indeed she is, Captain Frital.” I managed out politely before gesturing to a chair I carefully levitated towards her. “And might I say, what an unexpected yet pleasant visit! Please, allow .”
I quickly set down the chair in front of the desk. However, instead of eliciting a polite smile or a semblance of reciprocal courtesy, I was rebuffed; the armored woman chose instead to stare disinterestedly at the chair before returning her gaze squarely towards .
“She is sharp, and impressively resilient. Indeed, I can imagine her resilience serves her quite well on andoff the training grounds.” The Captain spoke casually… far too casually… especially for the thinly veiled allusions which sent my mind into a frenzy.
She couldn’t have.
We covered all loose ends at the warehouse.
There were no witnesses, and she told no one.
Unless—
“She truly is the perfect candidate for the Quest for the Everblooming Blossom.” The goldthorn promptly continued, studying, inspecting, and dissecting every minor emotive shift in my visage as if each was an article of confession in and of itself.
“Yes. I can imagine the skills she has demonstrated on the field of sport will translate quite well into the rigors of pri adventuring. A rather audacious undertaking for a newrealr, but she’s demonstrated her ambition several tis over now, if I do say so myself.” I offered politely, providing no crumb nor quarter to the goldthorn.
“Indeed. And quite the ambitious spirit she is.” The Captain continued ominously. “Did you know she has quite the interest in flight?”
That question prompted to narrow my eyes, my mind wracking itself to determine exactly where she was going with this.
“I can’t honestly say, Captain. I don’t rember ntioning such a specific interest in my reports.”
“No, you have not.” The captain replied bluntly. “But I’ve had the unexpected pleasure of eting her myself earlier this week.”
My heart clenched once more as I tried everything I could not to show signs of anything other than polite interest.
“Oh? I had thought your affairs would have taken you off the path of most students, Captain.” I countered.
“It just so happens that your Blue Knight was wandering where most students were not expected to be, Professor.” She sniped back, her eyes not once releasing its grip on my gaze. “The Apprentices’ Tower, to be precise.” She just as quickly added, once more testing , prying for a reaction. “She claid to be there for so… extracurricular discussions of sothing or other — a flying club, if I recall.”
“Ah.” Was my only response. That and the thin smile I wore. “Well, I presu she must have had an appointnt with one of our eager apprentices. The flying club does have quite the reputation for attracting newrealrs, after all! Especially given how the dream of flight seems to be quite universal amidst sapients. The Transgracian Academy is, after all, the place where the most flighty of adjacent dreams co to life.”
“It’s in rare instances such as those that I am reminded of exactly why you left the crownlands, Lord Vanavan. For life here is just far, far more accommodating to the pastoral and bucolic mind.” The captain continued on a new trajectory, one that I was nervous to follow. “I perhaps owe you an apology for my presence, as it no doubt disrupts such an idyllic life. Alas, if things continue on their current trajectory, I cannot guarantee that the conclusion of this investigation will mark a definitive end to this unprecedented chapter in the Academy’s history.”
The inner guardswoman paused, her form tensing as if out of so mixed sense of pity and genuine concern.
“We find ourselves in… interesting tis, Professor Vanavan.”
I shuddered, as that word carried with it far-reaching implications, the likes of which many others would’ve completely disregarded.
For uneventfulness was perhaps the strongest asure of the Academy’s successes, save for those rare few tis where eventful happenings were triggered at the behest of the Crown.
…
My heart skipped a beat as my eyes widened.
This break in my otherwise calm and composed body language prompted the Captain to raise a brow, as if she was finally reeling in her catch by the act of re sight alone.
“Interesting, but not of my choice nor insistence, Captain.” I replied, ensuring I cented my place and stance on this topic before it had a chance to beco twisted and spun at the hands of the web weaver.
A small mont of restrained pause soon lood over us, as the Captain regarded my words with a twinge of darkened interest.
“No, of course not.” She responded soon after. “Though I wonder… if not you, then who?”
I raised a brow at that question and the unexpected trajectory the conversation had taken.
“I’m afraid I don’t follow, Captain. The decision ca from above, as is decreed.” I offered, causing the woman’s piqued interest to soon devolve into one of disappointnt.
“Have your social muscles atrophied at the behest of dusty Academia, or are you simply playing a fool, Lord Vanavan?”
The aggression was palpable, though not imdiately obvious to any who might be listening.
To the untrained ear, there was naught but a slight gap in civility, evidenced by a slight clip of her tone of voice.
However, to those at the highest rungs, this was a warning — a test by any other na.
“No, Captain.” I decided to stand my ground for once. “You should know that the blue-robed offices hold little in the realm of weight of both tangible influence and palpable authority. My place is that of the facilitator of the Academy’s stated aims. Nothing more, and nothing less. I willingly left the court life behind for such a role — embracing Academia for Academia’s sake.” I leveled my eyes at the Captain, calling on every ounce of strength in not to flinch. “The decision and responsibility of this Newrealm induction was never once within my purview.”
“Of course it isn’t.” The Captain responded tersely, letting nary a mont of silence to form between my rebuttal and her remarks. “But I find it difficult to imagine you never once overheard the whispers and echoes, especially when this induction marks the greatest shift against the status quo in the decades of your career. The webway between the Crown and the Academy is a long, long scroll of correspondence after all… an open scroll, for a man of your position.”
“As I have stated, Captain — I am rely a facilitator, not a decision nor policy maker… and most certainly not a would-be court moth or snoop-quill. You would imagine such a thing would be completely antithetical for a man who left the politics of court life behind, no?”
A narrowing of eyes and a questioning gaze was my first response, followed closely in tow by a tapping of the Captain’s fingers against her armor.
“Though I wish to pose a question to you, Captain.” I began, as echoes from my past forced my tongue towards a path long untread — one of control and confrontation. “Are these questions truly pertinent to your investigations over the unfortunate demise of Lord Lartia, or are they questions born of your own unrelated, personal curiosities?”
This ultimatum elicited the expected response as Frital’s features stiffened, her hand gripping her saber tightly in the process. “Are you questioning the integrity of my investigation, Professor Vanavan?”
“If integrity is asured by the pertinence of one’s questions to the topic at hand, then yes.” I responded bluntly, channeling a confidence I thought I’d lost years ago. “My rights afford such questions as points of clarification, no?” I added snappily with a cock of my head.
The goldthorn remained unfazed, her expression unreadable, as we found ourselves locked in a battle of a thousand stares.
However, neither of us yielded. Not even after a full minute of stoic posturing.
As expected, it was Frital who broke the silence. Though the way she did so proved more perplexing than the contents of the entire conversation thus far.
“I see there is so fight in you yet, Lord Vanavan.” She offered with a twisted smile. “Consider my line of questioning… stricken from written record.” She continued as she brought out a notepad, erasing much of the annotated text with a simple wave of her hand.
However, I wasn’t satisfied.
“And off the record?” I urged strongly.
“You may hear more of it, willingly or not, in due ti.” The crown chaser spoke ominously, before turning her heels sharply towards the exit.
However, just before leaving the room, she once more glanced in my direction, poised for one final exchange.
“The investigation will soon enter its next phase. I do hope you have your witnesses and oath-bearers ready by then.”
“Of course, Captain. I appreciate the forewarning.”
The Captain dipped her head, signalling the official ‘end’ to this back-and-forth.
Which made her next few words all the more worrying.
“Your ti as a dusty Academician is soon to be tested, Vanavan. Take that as you will.”
The Next Day
The Transgracian Academy for the Magical Arts. The Hall of Champions. Local Ti: 1000 Hours
Auris Ping
“Get. Up.” I spoke slowly, enunciating and allowing each and every word to convey the disparaging contempt I had for the noble that laid at my feet.
The antlered and hoofed Lorsi rely squird at that command, refusing to put in the effort that I otherwise had.
“You haven’t experienced a fraction of what that newrealr has inflicted upon .” I continued, moving to gently push the squirming cervinrealr over, revealing his disgustingly exhausted visage. “Is this all you have to offer ?” I practically spat out, shaking my head as I did so.
“Fine. No more fights, no more training—” I offered through a faux kindness, causing a hopeful twinkle to form in the man’s eyes. A twinkle that was snuffed out as quickly as it’d ford, as I placed a single foot on the man’s chest. “—provided you can escape this simple predicant.”
I could feel the smaller man’s chest heaving against the force of my foot, each inhale feeling like a weak attempt at inflating a soft, squishy balloon.
It reinforced my disgust at the lithe would-be noble’s capabilities.
Moreover, it made sincerely doubt his capacity to truly deliver on the grandiose promises he made on that very first day.
…
“And what do you have to offer this peer group, Lord Lorsi?”
“Aside from mydeeppockets,vastconnections, and stunning looks?” The cervinrealr boasted, twirling his body around so as to flutter the cape, scarf, and frock coat he’d worn to the Academy. “There’s also my inherent abilities and strengths, Lord Ping.”
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“I requiretruestrength, not re competency over magic. Magical acun is a prerequisite, not a distinction nor a rit worth noting in my group.”
“True strength is what ye shall receive, Lord Ping.” The man smiled, carving out the most prideful sneer I’d seen on a fellow adjacent realr thus far. “I have a counter for everything the most brutish of brutes can offer. I am the epito of Cervinrealm exceptionalism. I am, after all, a son of House Lorsi. And we Lorsi do not shy away from challenges.”
…
“Hmmph.” I huffed out. “Is this truly all a Lorsi is capable of?” I chided, montarily increasing the force of my heel, forcing the man’s breath out to a series of strained, wheezing coughs. “Is this really what I have to put up with?”
However, instead of pushing even further, I rescinded my assault, choosing instead to rely rest my foot atop of the man’s chest, as even this was a struggle for the man to counter.
“Answer , Lord Lorsi! Is this truly all you bring to our group?!” I shouted, channeling the frustration, rage, and complete and utter vitriol that perhaps wasn’t entirely the fault of the cervinrealr’s.
That prompting seed to elicit sothing within the noble, as he began squirming harder, kicking, punching, and flailing against the ground and my foot in equal asures.
Though frankly, these reinvigorated efforts ca across less as gallant and far more as pathetic. As Vicini ended up looking less like a hero making his valiant final stand and more like a rabid animal attempting to flee certain death.
I allowed this to continue. First for a few seconds, then for a full minute, until all the man had left was his breath.
It was around that point that I finally removed my foot, releasing the pathetic noble to his devices, as I now turned to the shattered earth around us — the results of an hour’s worth of practice and training.
“Physical… acun… is not my strong suit, Lord Ping.” I finally heard the man speak, his ragged breaths coinciding with several shifts in the manastreams as he used his magic to regain so composure in his now-disheveled state.
“Physical prowess, as disgusting as it is, must be tolerated if only for its practical ends.” I began, refusing to make eye contact as I rely marched forward, grabbing one of the hundreds of vines the cervinrealr had uprooted during our grand spar.
“You are a talented druid, that I will admit.” I acknowledged in a rare display of grace, causing even Lorsi to perk in response at this one and only complint bestowed upon him in the span of days. “But even you must realize that this mastery has its limits.”
“I am certain we won’t be entering a situation wherein physical prowess is a point of practical concern, Lord Ping.” Vicini offered sincerely, taking a mont to inspect his antlers as he did so.
“Have you not been following the newrealr’s saga, Lorsi? Have you not seen what sorts of brutish indifference we must actively counter?” I scolded.
“If I may be frank, Lord Ping… I believe she has beco your one-eyed abyssal.”
I cocked my head curiously at the man’s response, prompting Lorsi to let out a dismissive sigh.
“Larnsia Crick and the Hunt for the Great Leviathan? Heresy on the Thousand Seas? The Life and Tales of Tenelan Riroria? Lord Ping… you are currently hunting your own shadow, chasing your own ego, and risking the lives of both crew and livelihood in the process.”
Vicini’s words spurred on the opposite of what he was hoping, as I felt an ember turn into infernal flas within a matter of seconds.
I let out a breath, taking a few steps towards the lithe gentleman and allowing my shadow to envelope him. “You spend too much ti within written fantasies, holed up in your libraries, and too little ti in the real world.” I began with a nacing breath. “Your shortsightedness is at tis endearing, and sotis even entertaining, but at this juncture… I find it to be intolerable. It is honestly ironic how I must direct a druid to, as the saying goes — rekindle one’s contact with the dirt and grass of the world outside the palace walls.”
“Lord Ping… I was rely suggesting that we shift our focus to more fruitful ventures as this newrealr is simply not worth—”
“She is worth it!” I stomped my foot hard, causing the earth around us to shudder and shake. “The newrealr has turned herself into a phenonon. This is no longer about mastery over her or her realm, but the social implications that conquering such a phenonon would incur.” I paused, before letting out a grin. “Or have you not heard of the Lililin Spirit, Lord Lorsi? I’d take it that a man of your bookishness would have co across such a concept?”
“Y-yes, I have.”
“Well then, now you know why I must do what I must. For the social fabric of society is like a spirit, one which we manifest collectively. This spirit can be overco, overrun, or tainted by current affairs. And what better way to take hold of said spirit, than to wrestle control of its greatest novelty currently enrapturing it.”
We stood at an impasse, my form towering over his, as the man ultimately relented with a sullen sigh.
“As you wish, Lord Ping.”
Nexus. The Crown Herald Town of Elaseer. Porter and Porter’s Porter Services. Local Ti: 1200 Hours.
Cynthis na
“Your obsession over that flea-ridden usurper escapes , Princess na.” Talia dismissed tiredly, lazing over a lounge chair as we awaited the arrival of our guides.
“I admit, I had assud this to be about the thrill of the chase. An easyhunt turned difficult… but your perseverance over such an undeserving suitor proves otherwise…” Yartis doubled down, turning over to Talia as the pampering of our toes, shoulders, and feet continued at the hands of adjacents and nexian commoners alike.
“You two need to relax!” Cerla countered with a lackadaisical yawn, moving to sample one of the many delicate small treats laid out beside her. “Let Princess na have her interests, her haunts, her obsessions and personal desires. Academics are as dull as they co… why not spice up life with the excitent of court politics, hmm?”
Eventually, all three eyes turned to , prompting to sigh deeply, before turning to all commoners present, demanding of them that which was typical for the rabble — the removal of hearing by ans of cotton wads, earmuffs, and whatever they had available.
“As always, ladies… each of you wields a fragnt of the truth, but are oh-so woefully incapable of weaving it into a coherent tapestry.” I scolded softly, raising my fingers to my now-earmuffed attendant. “Prince Thalmin Havenbrock has indeed beco a point of great interest, for many of the reasons you each have pointed out.” I smiled teasingly, shuddering at each and every careful scrape of the nail file. “However, there exists another… fascination I have over the prince.”
All eyes were now entirely locked on , their necks craning as far as possible from their relaxed positions. “The lupinor… is a living contradiction. On the one hand, he represents all that is wrong with an Adjacency — the brutish, savage, war-torn barbarity of an unstable and ill-gotten regi. And yet… on the other… he presents himself as a stoic knight, chivalrous, silent, and stunning in his simple regalia. Regalia that seems more suited for a retainer than a prince.” I sighed, placing the back of my hand against my forehead. “He’s such a simple man. So simple that I genuinely believe he represents a purer version of chivalry than is found here in the Nexus. Indeed, his vow of silence remains strong enough that he refuses to acknowledge my presence, despite all of my social ingresses.”
“Well… when you put it that way, the prince does seem markedly more remarkable.” Talia admitted reluctantly. “But still, why the rush? Why the enthusiasm? There has to be sothing practical here, Cynthis.” Her eyes narrowed. “What aren’t you telling us?”
“Oh Talia, ever the pragmatist.” I chided with a flick of my hand. “But alas, you once more see right through . There is, indeed, a practical aspect to this chase.” I paused for dramatic effect, as a fangy grin ford along my lips. “I believe, for all of the prince’s faults, that I will be capable of fixing him. And by extension, Havenbrock too.”
The gazes of all three ladies darted back and forth at this point, attempting to form words but finding all efforts at this futile.
“He may be the youngest. Indeed, he may be the furthest within the imdiate family from the throne. But I believe that through him, I will be able to finally fix the Havenbrock dilemma, by providing an anchor with a favored realm.”
Silence dawned on all three, until suddenly a series of giggly laughter spawned from the stunning speech.
“Leave it to a pardusrealr to have political marriages constantly on the mind.” Talia broke away from the communal laughter first.
“Oh no, this is more than a political marriage. It’s a paradigm-shifting arrangent if done right.” Yartis offered up soon after.
“My majesties and ladies… you vastly underestimate just how ambitious yet expected this is.” Cerla began. “It is one thing for a pardusrealr to be considering a political marriage, another to be this ambitious, but completely unprecedented to be willing to beco what I assu she’s implying.” Cerla’s eyes landed on my own, her gaze filled with excitent. “You wish to be the civilized anchor to Havenbrock’s savagery — the de facto Nexian representative, without sacrificing Elven dignity, or being seen as a throne-chaser.”
I nodded deeply, garnering smiles, and then all out giggles.
“Yes. And I have years to make this work, ladies…”
Nexus. The Crown Herald Town of Elaseer. Silksong’s Silken Shop. Local Ti: 1400 Hours.
Auris Ping
Hours. Hours upon hours of unsolicited, nigh-omnipresent chatter.
Whilst the words of commoners rarely registered as anything but atmospherics, today’s drivel was anything but relevant to my noble aspirations.
As it would seem that every other conversation had sohow found its way into the unwarranted obsession over a topic that threatened to drive manic.
From the front of the guild hall where we were poised to visit next—
“Have you heard about the blue knight?”
“Oh yes! Yes! Her charity knows no bounds!”
“What do you an?”
“Her acts of charity in the adventurer’s guild hall, of course! Haven’t you heard? She fed those poor aspirants. The trainee apprentices, I believe she called them!”
“Aww, how sweet!”
—to the streets and squares that dotted the road towards our first destination—
“And you know what else?”
“What?”
“I heard that she even left the Ambassadorial District.”
“A noble? A Newrealm noble at that?”
“Yeah! It’s almost like she’s got the heart of a commoner!”
“Shh! Don’t let them hear you say that—”
—the conversations were ceaseless. But at the very least, we would hear none of it here in this fine establishnt.
DING DING DING!
The front doorbell rang, eliciting the arrival of a well-to-do Nexian that bowed deeply in my direction.
“Welco, welco! Welco to Silksong’s Silken Shop! The best clothing emporium in town! I am Morfi Silksong, the Hundred-Twentieth of my line, and Guild-Certified Seamstress!”
“A pleasure, my dear fellow, a pleasure!” Vicini responded first in his flighty, vapid persona, prompting to promptly push him aside in order to expedite my demands.
“I wish for a noble’s traveling cloak, of the Nexian variety. Along with perhaps a similar cloak for use with armor.” I announced bluntly.
“Ah! You’ve co to the right place, my lord! For my son is both an apprentice and a prodigy at such armored adornnts! Why, he just very recently completed several commissions for a certain blue knight!”
I felt my eye twitch, and a twinge of pulsing pain to form behind it.
“A. Blue. Knight? You say?”
“Yes! I believe she was—”
“Lord Lorsi, we’re leaving.”
“W-what? Lord Ping, we just—”
“There are more establishnts along this road. We shall patronize other, more respectable tailoring businesses.”
Dragon’s Heart Tower, Level 23, Residence 30, Emma and Thacea’s Room. Local Ti: 1545 Hours.
Emma
Most of the day had been committed to a mad dash of last-minute checks, fixes, and corrections on both the chassis and wheels of the motorcycle.
Indeed, both Ilunor and Thalmin had given up about halfway through the day, seeing as the forr found chanical maintenance to be, quote, “a mind-numbing exercise in overcomplicated puzzle-solving.”
However, by mid-afternoon, most of the issues had been ironed out as both the printer and assembler continued on their scheduled progress, leaving only the external fra and body at the hands of Sorecar.
I’d visited the man soon after… only to be shooed away. Though not in the way that I’d imagined.
“Trust , Cadet Emma Booker, I would rather present you with a complete surprise than see that surprise spoiled by virtue of a half-finished tour!”
I tentatively accepted the armorer’s offer, but only because of the guarantee he made.
“Yes, yes. I will be able to make aboringiteration if you so wish. It will take nary an hour to do so, so ti is most certainly not a concern should last-minute revisions be necessary!”
Finally, I found myself arriving back in the dorms, finding Thalmin missing for our supply run into town. Ilunor assured he’d be back in ti for said supply run, though, which prompted to finally plop down on the bedroom couch to just rest.
So, with nothing else to do… other than howork, of course… I turned to Thacea.
Conversation ca naturally to the both of us as we began running through the motions yet again, montum gradually arriving to a brief rundown of yesterday’s antics.
“And then I was like, ‘OH GOD, I’M SO SORRY!’ Because, y’know, I thought I’d literally shattered and broke his pet in half. The guilt I felt literally sent my soul into the abyss where the most evil of evil-doers are destined for.”
“But of course, I assu Thalmin corrected you on that fallacy.” Thacea offered patiently.
“Oh yeah, he did. He was an excellent sport about it too. But still, no animal lover or pet owner ever wants to go through that horror, even if it was short lived and turned out to be a non-issue.” I responded with so emotive gesturing, eliciting the sa calm and receptive nods that ca naturally to the princess.
“Soulstitching is a rather unique art, even amongst adjacent realms where the knowledge and practice of soul-based magic is plentiful. So I can only imagine how truly alien it was for you, given your realm’s lack of insight into the nature of souls.” Thacea smiled softly, gesturing towards the WAID on my back. “However, such blind spots are clearly capable of being bridged, or at least, nded with sufficient enough analogues.”
“Yeah, the WAID interface is still compiling, but hopefully I’ll have sothing workable soon.” I responded with a smile of my own. “I really gotta thank you for yesterday’s pointers, princess. Artistic interpretations are one thing, but actual practical considerations are much appreciated.”
“It was my pleasure, Emma.” Thacea nodded. “Having seen the… bluntness that seems to co naturally to your people’s innovative spirit, I imagined the sa could be applied to manasight — as sacrilegious as that may be to most.”
“Again, that’s incredibly considerate of you, Thacea.” I dipped my head down out of respect. “Though speaking of bluntness and objectivity, there was one thing I was aning to ask about yesterday’s demonstrations, if that’s alright?”
“Go on?”
“Ilunor and Thalmin’s presentations included sothing yours didn’t. This… weird sort of aura around their physical bodies. When I first saw Ilunor’s draconic outline, I’d assud it was quite literally his ego painting the scene. But when Thalmin’s demonstration also included an aura of his own, it casted doubt into whether or not Ilunor was just exaggerating for his own sakes.” I rattled on, garnering increasingly wary looks from the princess. “However, when it ca to your demo, I noticed how you didn’t seem to project an aura, so—”
“Now you’re curious as to my own aura.” Thacea uttered out somberly, her expressions growing darker and darker by the mont.
“Y-yeah. But we don’t have to get into that if you don’t want to, Thacea. It’s just—”
“No, no.” The princess interjected, turning her gaze away if only for a mont. “If your… sight is to be improved, then we must discuss and demonstrate all aspects of the world. Whether that is the beautiful, the pragmatic…” Thacea paused, taking in a deep breath as she closed her eyes tightly, uttering the next few words with a pained contempt. “... and the ugly.”
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