For a moment, I thought she wouldnât listen. Thatâs exactly why Iâd used Warlordâs Command to reinforce the order. I couldnât take chancesânot with this one.
Just as I barked the order, her hand froze midswing. Immediately, I dispelled her, returning her to my soulâs spirit plane. I exhaled hard. My shoulders slumped, knees buckling. I collapsed to the ground. That single moment pressed down harder than the entire battle combined.
Tristan stood, dispelling Stormwhite and brushing sand from his clothes.
"Whew, that was close."
His casual tone despite nearly dying? It almost pissed me off. Did he not realize how close that was?
He just seemed so laid-back about everything. It was like looking in a mirrorâexcept Tristan was nothing like me. He was twisted. Broken. Iâm not twisted, and Iâm perfectly fine. If my life were on the line, Iâd be pointing fingers and cursing up a storm.
He held out a hand to me.
I stared at his hand, then shifted my gaze to his face. He was smilingâwarm and careless, like he hadnât just nearly died. I took his hand and let him pull me up.
He clapped my shoulder.
"Youâre way better than that clueless kid from two weeks ago."
I looked at him with doubt. "Really?"
"Hish!" He smacked his teeth, then smiled a second later. "Why would I lie? Youâve made serious progress. You went from not knowing how to block or throw a punch to reading my attacks, using your attributes to complement your strikes. Youâre building a combat style that actually works for you and your summon."
His words lifted my spirits. Iâd spent hours figuring out how to win solo fights as a commander class. Having Tristan acknowledge that effort? It meant something.
âIf only I could fight better.â
Tristan caught my fallen expression and scoffed.
"Donât sulk. Even with a combat attribute, youâd still lose to me. Iâve been doing this for twenty years. Youâve had two weeks, bozo. Give yourself some grace."
I gave him a small frown.
"You should see how fast my classmates are getting stronger."
Tristan scoffed again, jerking his head slightly.
"Theyâll fold. All of them. Practice and theory are ten worlds apart. They spar without their lives on the line. Half of them will die in real situations. But you?" He flashed me a genuine smile. "I havenât taught you a damn thing. Just fought you. Gave you punches that ached for days. Itâs nothing compared to what youâll face in a spirit gate, but youâve learned the cost of bad timing. Youâve got more practical sense than your classmates. Youâll do well tomorrow."
I looked down, muttering under my breath. "Tomorrow."
"Ag, thatâs right." Tristan opened his hand. Sparks sprayed, and something materializedâa pair of curved black daggers.
I stared at them, confused.
"Ah, I guess they havenât told you guys yet. Those pagans!"
He exhaled, scratching his head.
"This is Spirit Gear."
"Spirit Gear?" I repeated.
"Yeah. Basically, a Spirit Gear can be a weapon, armor, anything. The point is, both you and your summon can use it. The Blood Conqueror... have you tried lifting her sword?"
I stared at him, confused and surprised.
"I can use her sword?"
He chuckled. "Of course. Thatâs the whole point of spirit gear. Heroic Spirits always come with spirit gear, but some Summoners can craft them. For us Regular Summoners? We rely on these Summoners." He handed me the daggers. "I got these for you. Been thinking about your fighting style. These should fit better and complement The Blood Conqueror."
I looked at the curved black daggersâred lines trimming the sharp edges, cross guards wrapping around my knuckles as I gripped them tight. Nothing decorative. It seemed crafted for pure function. Or it was just really cheap.
âIâve always loved daggers.â
A smile spread across my face. I met Tristanâs eyes.
"Thank you, Tristan. This is perfect."
He smiled back. "Just come back alive."
"Yes! The worm speaks truth, Cade. We must see each other again. Donât you dare die out there." Clara approached with Lira beside her.
I looked at the daggers in my hands and commanded them back to my spirit plane like I would with Kassie. They vanished instantly.
A reassuring smile settled on my face as I looked at Clara and Lira.
"Donât worry. Iâll make it back."
Liraâs lips curved. "Donât take Spirit Gates lightly. Even an A-rank Heroic Summoner can die in an F-rank gate if theyâre careless. So be careful."
I smiled again. "I will."
I turned to Tristan.
"This Spirit Gearâwhy havenât we been told about it? What does the Church of Eternal Light gain by keeping this from us?"
Tristan pocketed his hands. "Hell if I know. Theyâre possessive. They do what benefits them, damn the cost to everyone else. Whatever you do, donât make an enemy of them. Stay low until youâre strong enough to protect yourself. The Church of Eternal Light in our kingdom is just a branch. The church itself rules the Solaris Empire. They have Heroic Spirit Summoners thereâPaladins who could squash you without trying."
I frowned. "They have Heroic Spirit Summoners? But they made it sound like weâre the only ones."
Clara exhaled, glancing at Lira before responding.
"Heroic Spirit Summoners are rare. That puts you otherworlders in the top five percent, but noâyouâre not the only ones. Donât believe everything they teach at the academy. The academyâs a tool. The church is using it to indoctrinate you before releasing you into the world."
Lira added, "They donât care about you because youâre F-rank. Theyâre convinced you have a low-tier summon."
I folded my arms, thinking back to the first day I summoned Kassie. I looked at them thoughtfully.
"To be honest... that man, the old bishopâit looked like he recognized Kassie. I mean, you all do."
"Only because you told us," Lira said. "No oneâs lived eight thousand years to know what the Blood Conqueror looked like. Iâm sure the Bishop judged on appearanceâher horned helmet, the color and feel of her aura. For religious folks, itâs more apparent."
I nodded, absorbing the information.
"Youâre good." Tristan tapped my back. "Just remember: donât cause trouble until youâre strong enough to protect yourself."
He exhaled sharply.
"Well then, Iâve got somewhere to be."
Clara looked at him with a tight frown.
Tristan returned it. "What? Donât look at me like that."
"Whoâs the pretty prey this time?"
He sighed.
"Trouble in Greystone. Iâd be thrilled if it happens to be a maiden who knows how to throw a blade."
Claraâs frown deepened immediately.
"Brutus contacted you?"
I glanced between the three of them, totally lost. But the name Brutus shifted the airâbrought something serious with it.
"Not him. Levi did. You know I owe him. Heâs been investigating Greystone for a while. His partner disappeared after discovering something. He called me in to help, so Iâll probably be gone a week."
Tristan looked at me.
"If the gateâs easy, youâll be done in three days. If not, expect a week." He turned to Lira and Clara. "In the meantime, you two stay out of trouble and take care of the guild."
Clara nodded, quickly using her side eye to look at Lira who gave Tristan a smile and complied.
"Yes, yes, bossu. Weâve got you."
Tristan scratched his forehead in frustration. "Damnation. I canât believe Iâll be in a forest for a week with no sex. I hate you two." He walked past us, heading into the building.