âWeâll meet again, boy,â she says, as she points at the entrance of the tent. âMy time in Clearwater is up, but I suppose I found what I came to look for.â
This is very weird individual
, I think to myself, smiling as I clutch the small chest full of Skill Crystals.
At least she didnât kill me or worse, dissect me alive to try and get to my Skill
.
âSee you,â I say, feeling a pricklish sensation on my skin now that I now how powerful she is.
* * *
Tutor Sevv adjusts his robe and smooths the front while he tries to ignore the chill from the tower roomâs draft as he faces the tall-backed chair. The windows are latticed in gold and shaped like leering birds, because the Clearwaters delight in garish design. He sips spiced wine and keeps his back straight.
The chair turns.
Lady Adrienne Clearwater is the eldest daughter of Lord Sigmund and she regards him with eyes that shine like polished emeralds and feel as cold and sharp as steel; she does not rise.
âWell?â she asks.
Sevv swallows and sets the cup down.
âIâve been dismissed.â
There is a pause. Then Adrienne arches a brow.
âExcuse me?â
âDismissed,â he repeats, a little louder and a little stiffer. âFelisia has chosen to replace me. With a peasant. An unclassed boy who calls himself âBocaj Duolc.â â
She blinks once, slowly.
âThat is not even a real name.â
âNo,â Sevv agrees, his voice tight. âYet the little kid manages to outperform me in front of Greyson, and Felisia.â
Adrienne rises and moves to the window. Her steps remain silent on the marble floor and her shadow stretches across the tapestries that display hunting hawks and slain beasts.
âTell me how.â
Sevvâs jaw tightens.
âHe corrects her stance, her grip, her mana flow. At first the advice is textbook, but then it departs from every text I know. He mentions vein paths that I have seen only in Guild treatises. Somehow he sees every imperfection in her form, and when she tries again under his guidance the Skill jumps five levels in under ten minutes.â
He does not mention how Felisia smiles or how she looks at the boy with the respect he has never earned in three years of servitude.
âDid he use a Skill?â Adrienne asks while she still watches the canals beyond.
âNo,â Sevv says. âOr if he does, he disguises it. I couldn't tell, milady. He is unclassed. He is dirt.â
Adrienne remains silent.
âGood. That means he is no one, and no one can be removed.â
Sevv blinks.
âYou⊠approve?â
Adrienne turns back toward him.
âFelisia is stagnant, useless. I need her to find some hope, a reason to rise so that I can break her again. I want her proud before she falls, proud enough that it hurts.â
Sevvâs skin prickles. âAnd the boy?â
âHe will serve as an example. At the Sky Hunt I plan to cripple her, Sevv, and I will do it publicly. If this peasant tries to interfere, I will have him maimed on the dueling grounds. Without a Class, he is even easier to destroy.â
âWonât that risk angering Lord Clearwater?â
Adrienne smiles in a razor-thin line.
âI will let Father believe it is her fault. She will seem to have pushed herself too hard, and her Tutor will appear to have failed her. The boy will vanish. Accidents happen all the time when mudfolk try to play noble.â
Sevv looks away. He is not a sentimental man, but something in Adrienneâs voice makes even him feel the cold.
âIf the boy is half as clever as he seems, he will not stay long,â he mutters.
âThen let us see if he is clever enough,â Adrienne replies as she lifts her glass in a mock salute. âTo Felisiaâs final lesson.â
Sevv drinks, and this time the wine tastes like blood.
* * *
The coast outside Clearwater is a strip of broken cliffs and narrow sandbars, the kind of place where sea meets stone in a grudging truce. The sky is a bright, cloudless blue, but the air is salted and sharp, and gulls circle overhead like nervous thoughts.
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âHow are the Skills coming, Young Bocaj?â he asks, voice calm but curious. âFound anything else since we parted ways?â
âActually, yeah,â I say. âJust one more to go. Fire Walkâs the last one in the Hellâs Sword set I havenât gotten my hands on.â
Greyson lifts his brows.
âJust one?â
âYep. Iâve got Fire Slash, Fire Armor, and even a weird oneâFire Veins. Found a really helpful merchant who gave me a few clues about its synergy. Iâm going to start refining and absorbing them tonight.â
Greysonâs brow furrows slightly.
âYou plan to take in all of them at once?â
I shrug.
âIâve Mana Pool now.â
Greyson watches me for a moment, nods slowly.
âJust make sure your body can keep up with your mind. Youâll need
a lot
of mana to practice all of your Skills.â
I plan to actually fix the flaws that make them less efficient first so I can reduce the mana drain to the minimum.
âIâll take it slow,â I lie.
He gives me a sideways look that says he knows I wonât, but he lets it go.
A minute passes in companionable silence as he adjusts one of the footwork poles.
Then Felisia arrives, walking down the narrow slope with her rapier at her hip and her braid tight. She doesnât say anything, just nods once and steps into place at the center of the markers.
She raises her hand.
âThis is one of my auxiliary Skills. Water Dash. Gold Rank. Itâs still level seventeen.â
A moment later, she stabs a toe into the dirt, and a thin film of water shimmers beneath her soles. With a flex of her hips and a pulse of mana, she skates forwardâfast.
The water doesnât splashâit bends. It coils under her like a serpent of glass, winding around obstacles, gliding her in a loose curve. Her cloak flares behind her as she skids to a stop near a sea-blown rock.
For a moment I say nothing, because I am starstruck by her beauty. Her turquoise hair shimmer in the sunlight and her eyes are
very
intense.
âSo, what can I do to improve it?â
âHuhâshow me again,â I say, clearing my throat. âI was distracted for a moment.â
âWhy were you distracted?!â Felisia stomps on the ground and gets ready to use the Skill again.
Then, suddenly, a figure appears from atop the cliff.
Water bursts from beneath her bootsâstraight out of the sea, twisting into a ribbon.
She skates down the liquid spiral with terrifying grace, twirls once in midair like a dancer, and then rides the arc of water all the way across the bay, skipping over the ocean surface before looping back toward shore on the same conjured path.
Felisiaâs jaw tightens.
The figure slows, twirls once more with theatrical excess, and then slides up the remaining ribbon like gravity doesnât apply. She lands lightly on the sand in front of us, her boots barely touching the ground before the water unravels behind her.
âMilady Calantha Clearwater,â Greyson says, bowing stiffly. His tone could cut stone.
Calantha, Felisiaâs older sister, flips a strand of salt-wet hair over her shoulder.
She has green hair and matching green eyes, unlike Felisiaâs turquoise hair. However, I can tell from her features that theyâre sister. Calantha is almost as beautiful as Felisia.
âSir Greyson,â she says, drawling it like a child saying
bad dog
. Then her gaze slides to Felisia. âStill playing with puddles, little sis?â
Felisia doesnât respond. Her spine goes rod-straight.
âAnd this,â Calantha says, her eyes finally settling on me, âmust be the famous rat-cloak. What was your name again?
Rat
Boy
?â
âBocaj Duolc,â I say, flashing my best smile. âBut for you, Iâll answer to
Your Unpleasantness
.â
Felisia lets out a single cough that might be a laugh. Greyson doesnât move.
âCareful,â Calantha purrs, stepping closer. âIâve been known to drown pets that yap too loud.â
I glance at Greyson, expecting a reaction. His jaw is locked, but he doesnât reach for his sword. Doesnât speak.
What the hell?
Then I notice the air behind Calantha shift.
A shadow ripples.
And then it steps forward.
A manâif you can call him thatâstands a full head taller than anyone Iâve ever seen outside a parade formation. He wears black armor, polished but dull, like it drinks light instead of reflecting it. The helm is featureless. No plume. No insignia. Just a blank mask with no eye slits.
He hasnât walked up. He hasnât
arrived.
Heâs just...
there.
My mouth goes dry.
âWhatâs wrong?â Calantha asks sweetly, turning and running a hand along one of the Knightâs vambraces. âDonât like my shadow? I keep him around for parties.â
âIs he your bodyguard?â I ask, trying not to let my voice crack. I fail.
âHeâs my personal Knight,â she says.
The black Knight doesnât move.
Doesnât breathe.
I can feel the mana rolling off him like heat from a forge.
Calantha leans closer to me.
âBe careful where you point those clever eyes, rat. Some things donât like being looked at.â
She snaps her fingers, and a new ribbon of water shoots from the surf to her heels.
Without another word, she starts gliding back toward the cliffâupward, against gravity, her back to us the entire time.
âHey! Care for a little bet?!â I shout before Calantha can reach the top of the cliff.
She stops midway through and looks down with a catâs smile on her face.
âOh?â She goes.
I see the black Knight slowly turning his helm toward me.
Calantha hasnât even turned around before I speak up, loud enough that my voice carries up the cliffs.
âThree days,â I say. âWeâll race. Water Dash. Full course. You pick the terrain.â
She stops mid-ascent. The ribbon of water sheâs gliding on still holds her, coiled like a wave paused mid-break. Slowly, she rotates and rides it back down until sheâs standing on the sand again, arms crossed.
âA race?â she repeats, amusement curling at the corners of her mouth. âYou want Felisia to race
me
?â
âSheâll win,â I say. âIt wonât be close.â
Felisia glances at me, startled. Greyson shifts slightly, not saying a word.
Calanthaâs laughter is clear and vicious. âMy Water Dash is level fifty. Sheâs not even in the twenties.â
âExactly,â I say, stepping forward. âThatâs why youâre nervous. You know youâre going to lose.â
Calanthaâs smile dies.
âWhatâs there to win?â she asks coldly.
I turn toward Felisia.
âWhat do you want to win?â
Felisia hesitates. Her gaze flicks from me to her sister, then back. For a moment she looks uncertain, caught between pride and hesitation.
But I give her a look.
The same one I gave Orvick when I told him weâd win the contest. The one I gave Greyson when I offered to help. The one that says
I know how this ends. Trust me.
Felisia straightens.
âI want the Great Tide Bracelet,â she says.
Calantha freezes.
Felisia continues. âThe one Mother gave you before she died.â
A muscle twitches in Calanthaâs jaw. âThat bracelet is mine.â
âThen donât lose,â I say.
Her eyes snap toward me. âAnd if she does?â
I donât answer. I look at Felisia.
She swallows, but then she nods and lifts her chin.
âIf I lose⊠Iâll withdraw from the Sky Hunt.â
Greyson stiffens. âFelisiaââ
But she doesnât take it back.
Calanthaâs face turns hard.
For the first time, she looks unsure.
Then she steps back and flares her fingers. A small surge of water lifts the hem of her coat.
âThree days,â she says. âAnd when you lose, donât expect your little rat Tutor to save you from the shame.â
She turns and glides away without another word.
Felisia exhales, quiet but shaky.
Greyson says nothing.
This is a big responsibility
.
âHey, Felisia. Show me again. Letâs start the training.â