Felisia arrives at the beach just after dawn, boots crunching softly on the sand. The wind is sharp, the tide low, and the smell of scorched salt lingers faintly in the air. She spots Sir Greyson immediatelyâstanding still atop a dune, his arms crossed, his expression unreadable.
She approaches quietly, brushing windblown hair from her face.
âWhatâs happening?â she asks.
Greyson doesnât answer right away. He just nods toward the lower flats.
Felisia follows his gaze.
Down by the waterline, Jacobâ
Bocaj
âmoves like a man possessed. Half his clothes are in tatters, his shirt completely gone, and his cloak discarded in the sand beside him, probably so it wouldn't catch fire. Hellâs Sword is in his hand, but itâs... brighter than before. Much brighter. The gold-red flame is no longer a shimmerâitâs a torrent, controlled and focused, laced with glowing runes that werenât there yesterday.
All around him, the sand is warped and gleaming.
Felisia blinks, then crouches to run her fingers over a patch beside her foot. Glass.
Not slag. Not melt.
True glassâstretched smooth and curved from heat and pressure.
âHeâs been at it for almost an hour,â Greyson says at last. His voice is quiet, almost reverent. âNonstop.â
Felisia watches another strike. Flame whips out in a tight arc, carving a line of heat through the air. The ground flashes briefly, and another thread of sand curls and hardens.
âHeâs refining?â she murmurs.
Greyson nods. âIâve seen him level different Skills at least five times. He doesnât have a Class, which means his Mana is limited, but his utilization of those Skills, at least in terms of efficiency, is beyond impressive. Also, he doesnât stop after improvementâhe just goes right into the next iteration. No hesitation. No rest.â
Felisia swallows. Her own training had been brutalâbut this was something else. This was
obsession
.
âHe really wants to become a Knight for some reason,â Sir Greyson says, looking at her. âMaybe you should as well, milady. At least until your father is the one presiding over Clearbay.â
Felisia had considered that, but she had been afraid that she wouldnât have made the cut. She was a noble from a backwater city compared to the kind of monsters and prodigies that inhabited Ytrial, the Knightsâ Academy.
âHeâs going to burn himself out.â
âNo,â Greyson replies. âHeâs not casting blindly. Heâs measuring everything. Watching for the flaw before it happens.â
Felisia looks back down at Jacob, the streaks of fire, the webs of glass, the sweat pouring down his back.
âHeâs really dedicated,â she mutters.
âHe really is,â Sir Greyson nods. âBut letâs go, milady. He knows itâs time for your training.â
By the time they reach the shore, Jacob finishes a sequence with a final swing. A crisp line of flame whips through the air, carving a shallow trench in the glass-laced sand. He pants once, then lowers Hellâs Sword, sweat plastering his hair to his brow.
Felisia waits until he sheathes the flame.
Then she says, âWant to spar?â
Jacob blinks up at her, still catching his breath. âNow?â
âIâve recovered my mana,â she says, tone casual. âAnd youâve been training for hours. I figured itâs only fair to give you a real fight.â
Jacob doesnât hesitate. He grins and picks up his discarded robe.
âSure. Let me just... not wear this. Itâs gone. I need new clothes.â
Sir Greyson clears his throat but Jacob doesnât get the hint.
Felisia, instead, blushes slightly seeing the body that years in the mine sculpted.
Then, they start circling each other, barefoot in the sand, and Greyson steps back to observe.
Felisia doesnât activate any Skillsâat least not visibly. She doesnât draw her rapier either. She simply moves.
Fast.
Jacob ducks the first sweep and parries with Hellâs Sword, the heat flaring at the contact point. But itâs clear sheâs holding back. Her movements are lighter than usual, her mana restraint subtle. Sheâs trying to meet him where he is.
He knows it.
Heâs slower, less trained. His movements still feel clumsy compared to her graceâbut that doesnât stop the grin from spreading across his face.
Because sheâs fighting with him, not against him.
He dodges another flick of her wrist and a blade of water, then slides under a water-boosted dash. Glass crunches underfoot. His counter-swing misses by inches, but he hears her breath catchânot out of fear, but amusement.
Theyâre both enjoying this.
Another exchange.
He presses forwardâpredictable, a textbook feintâand she rolls her eyes, sweeping his leg with enough force to knock him off balance but not off his feet.
âSloppy,â she says.
âMerciful,â he replies, laughing.
Another clash.
Hellâs Sword catches her palmânot dangerously, but enough for a spark to jump. Her eyes widen.
âYour controlâs improving.â
âSoâs your pretending,â he shoots back.
She doesnât answer.
Instead, she accelerates just slightly. Not enough to overwhelm himâbut enough to make him sweat again. His footwork tightens. He starts spotting her tells.
They go back and forth for almost a minute in silence.
Finally, they break apart.
Felisia exhales through her nose, amused and flushed. âYouâre not terrible.â
Jacob places a hand on his knee, grinning through the burn in his lungs. âHigh praise.â
âDonât let it go to your head,â she mutters.
âI wonât if you donât,â he replies, and for a moment, their eyes meet.
âOh my, could I try that Hellâs Sword?â A childish voice comes from behind Jacob.
Iâm still catching my breath from the spar when I feel itâsomething off in the air. A shift in pressure. Like the world holding its breath.
I straighten and glance around.
A figure walks across the beach, barefoot, like the wind put them there. Small. Shorter than me. Pale skin, white hair tied back with a ribbon that doesn't flutter in the breeze. The face looks like that of a childâbut thereâs something about it that makes my stomach knot up.
Too still. Too perfect.
âHi, there,â I say, frowning. âYou lost, kid?â
But the child observes the Hellâs Sword in my hand, tilting his head and smiling at it.
âThe major flaws have been fixed,â he says with a child-like wonder.
The figure stops a few paces from me and smiles.
âHuh?â I ask, confused.
What does he know about the Skill? Isnât this a kid?
âWhatâs your name?â
I raise an eyebrow. âBocaj.â
The figure tilts their head. âThatâs not your name.â
I blink. Then laugh, scratching the back of my neck. âWow, alright.â
I glance over at Felisia and Sir Greyson to share the moment.
Theyâre both pale.
Not just surprisedâashen. Felisiaâs eyes are wide, her jaw locked tight. Sir Greyson⊠Iâve never seen him look afraid before. But his hand is halfway to his blade, and itâs not moving.
The wind dies.
âSir Renquell,â Greyson says quietly. Too quietly.
The figure gives a soft, knowing smile. âStill using titles?â
My mouth suddenly feels dry. âYouâre a⊠Knight?â
The figure shrugs. âAmong other things.â
âBut⊠youâre, what, twelve?â
Felisia inhales sharply behind me.
The figureâno,
he
âsteps closer, looking up at me with a gaze that somehow weighs more than Sir Greysonâs full armor.
âDo I look like a human to you?â
I squint.
And then I see it.
The earsâslightly pointed. Not exaggerated. Just enough.
An Elf.
A real Elf.
Iâve read about them. Everyoneâs read about them. But seeing oneâespecially one this young-lookingâthis calm, this composedâitâs another thing entirely.
âSir Renquell of the Crownless Thorn,â Greyson says, voice tight. âOne of the Five Wandering Knights.â
I blink again.
I may not know what that means, exactlyâbut Felisia clearly does. She takes a step back.
Sir Renquell holds my gaze a moment longer before tilting his head, almost amused. âYouâre not very reverent, are you?â
I shrug. âI just thought Elves were supposed to be⊠taller.â
That gets a twitch of the lips. Almost a smile.
âYouâre not the first to say that,â he says. âNor the last. But itâs funny. You speak like someone who doesnât know what I am.â
âAn Elf?â I say, folding my arms. âA Knight? A terrifyingly well-preserved child?â
Felisia lets out a strangled cough behind me, but I keep going.
âI donât know. You just showed up and started acting mysterious. Classic highborn behavior.â
Renquellâs eyes narrow slightly, but not with anger. Curiosity.
âI suppose it must look strange from your vantage,â he says, voice softer now. âTo see someone like me⊠here.â
âI really donât know what you mean, my friend, but sure. Whatever,â I say, confused.
He turns away dramatically, looks out over the sea, wind playing with the loose ribbon at the end of his braid.
âThis isnât where I was meant to be,â he says. âI wasnât born for salt and sand. I was born to rule. To fight. To rise through the Thorned Court and die in a war worth remembering.â
Thereâs longing in his voice but it just makes me cringe.
âBut instead?â He glances over his shoulder. âI was sent here. Relegated. Punished. Exiled by my kin to serve a human child.â
A silence stretches. Even the waves seem to pause.
Itâs me who breaks the silence. âHuman child?â
Thatâs when Greyson finally says it. âAdrienne. Felisiaâs older sister.â
My mouth opens slightly. âHuh.â
Renquellâs mouth twists. âShe has potential. But sheâs⊠petty. She wanted a trophy Knight. Something her sisters couldnât have. The court made it so.â
Thereâs bitterness there, buried but burning.
I nod slowly, take a step forward, and pat his shoulder. âI mean, couldâve been worse.â
His eyes flick to mine.
I grin. âThey couldâve killed you, no?â
Thereâs a beat.
Then Renquell bursts out laughing.
Not politelyânot the way Elves are always described in stories. He
howls
, tipping forward, clutching his stomach, laughing so hard I think I see tears. His boots skid in the glassed-over sand.
Even Felisia takes a step back.
Greyson just exhales and mutters, âSaints above.â
Renquell finally straightens, brushing his braid back, still grinning wide. âYou,â he says between the last chuckles, âare either the most foolish boy Iâve ever metâor the only honest one in this cesspool of a peninsula.â
He claps me on the shoulder, harder than expected, making my bones creak.
Oh fuck, what theâ
âI think Iâll enjoy watching you,â he comes closer to my ear and whispers in it, â
Jacob Cloud
.â
I open my mouth but no words come from it.
The next moment I blink, heâs gone.