Meeting Renquell was a trip.
After that meeting, I asked more about him to Sir Greyson.
The man⊠the child⊠the⊠Elf?
Whatever he was, Sir Greyson said that heâs a monster on a whole other level compared to whatever you can find in Clearwater. Apparently, he has been cursedâas in, physically and magically cursed, bound to Clearwaterâuntil he redeems himself or something like that.
Sir Renquell committed a series of slaughters, but Elves donât kill their own because thereâs so few of them. They have apparently a lifespan that is measured in eons, which makes them ethereal creatures that are hardâbut also very dangerousâto meet.
âThe Five Wandering Knights are legends in the world of Knights. Theyâre all at the Mithril Rank, which means all of them have at least one Orichalcum Skill that they have brought to the Intermediate Grade. There are
few
people stronger than them.
Very few
. At those levels, even a small difference in Grade, from Lower to Intermediate, is a massive jump in power. All the Wandering Knights are considered Intermediate Mithril Ranked.â
âAre there Orichalcum Knights? Or Aethereim ones?â I ask Sir Greyson.
He shrugs.
âSome say that the Ytriaâs Principal is an Orichalcum Knight. As for Aetherium ones, who knows. Itâs basically unheard of. Much less of Rainbow Knights.â
The existence of Aetherum Knightsâor even Rainbow onesâwas a thought that made me smile.
I donât know why exactly.
There was something about imagining someone so powerful, imagining the kind of feats theyâd accomplish, the kind of monsters theyâd fight, that just made me smile like an idiot.
I wonder how big of a monster you fight when youâre that powerful
.
I heard legends of region-endingâor even country-endingâcalamities.
I wondered about it. I wondered about all of that, what it took, whom it took to defeat.
And my dream was that, one day, it would me
me
.
* * *
The three days passed in the blink of an eye and the progress that Felisia made was otherworldly.
I look complacent while, by Sir Greysonâs side, I wait for the arrival of Calantha and her scary black Knight protector.
âHere she comes,â Sir Greyson whispers to me.
I glance up from the stretch of sand where Felisia and I had practiced all morning. Calantha strides into view with the same exaggerated grace she always bringsâhead high, chin tilted just enough to suggest condescension, not arrogance.
Behind her, the black Knight walks. Still featureless, still silent, still terrifying. The armor glints like oiled obsidian in the sun. No sound escapes himâno breath, no step, no weight.
I hate that.
Felisia stands a few paces ahead, expression neutral, posture textbook-perfect.
I can tell sheâs nervous. Only someone whoâs watched her long enough would see itâthe twitch in her left glove, the slight tension in her jaw.
But sheâs standing tall.
Calantha stops twenty paces from us. Her smile is all teeth.
âSo,â she says, drawing out the word like a blade. âYou havenât cried yet. I suppose I should be impressed.â
Felisia doesnât reply.
Calanthaâs eyes slide toward me. âAnd you. The rat-cloaked tutor with delusions of nobility. I expected you'd be gone by now.â
âI hope youâre not too attached to that bracelet, milady,â I shoot back. âBut even then, I think it will fit Felisiaâs wrist better than yours. Youâve got thick bones in your arms.â
â
Excuse me?
â Calantha says, recoiling, clearly not being used to talk like that.
The black Knight takes a step forward by her side.
âI mean, youâre strong. Thatâs it,â I say, feigning ignorance. âWhat do you think I meant?â
Calantha knows very well that thatâs not what I was trying to say but, at the same time, she also knows that Iâm playing mind games and that sheâs just getting distracted. Her real opponent today is Felisia.
Sir Greyson coughsâhardâbut doesnât interrupt.
The black Knight tilts his head a fraction. Just enough to remind me heâs there.
Calanthaâs smile turns brittle. âAre you ready to lose, little sister?â
Felisia breathes in. Slow. Steady.
The narrative has been illicitly obtained; should you discover it on Amazon, report the violation.
âYes.â
That catches Calantha slightly off-guard.
She gestures at the markers carved into the sand, the long flat stretch theyâd raced across for days now.
âI was always ready to lose. You thought I was a joke three days ago. You canât say that now. And, neitiher you or Adrienne are ready to lose.â
Calantha chuckles. âOh, Felisia. I donât care what youâve âcaught upâ to. Youâre still trailing me. Always will be.â
Her eyes lock on mine for just a second.
âAnd you should learn your place before it burns you.â
I shrug. âThatâs kind of what Iâm counting on.â
I see a small gathering of people making it over the sand mound.
Servants. Spectators. Nobles in embroidered coats and flowing silks that are far too delicate for sea wind and salt. They carry parasols, fans, and smirks. Most of them donât even bother hiding their amusement.
âWell, well,â I hear one mutter, loud enough to carry. âThe Clearwater disgrace actually showed up.â
âI heard she staked her Sky Hunt on a street rat.â
âDidnât she hit her head when she was a child?â
âCanât believe sheâs embarrassing herself again. Doesnât she know when to bow out?â
I resist the urge to roll my eyes. Barely.
Then, Calantha raises her hand to the crowd. âI invited a few friends,â she says sweetly. âAfter all, a public collapse deserves a public audience.â
Felisia doesnât flinch. She just lifts her chin a little higher.
âBesides,â Calantha goes on, âI thought Father might want to see this himself.â
My gaze snaps back to the sand ridgeâbecause sure enough, parting the nobles like a tide is a tall man with shoulders like a wall and a cloak that trails behind him like a banner. His expression is carved from marble, unreadable, and his beard is touched with the barest hint of gray.
Lord Clearwater.
Felisiaâs father.
He doesnât speak. Doesnât so much as glance at Calantha.
He just looks at Felisiaâand gives a single nod.
Thatâs it.
But Felisiaâs back straightens just slightly. Her hand, which had been tight at her side, relaxes. She breathes out.
* * *
Felisia walks toward the starting line.
The sand is firm. Damp. Wind presses in from the cliffs. Ten markers stretch across the flat, each spaced with precision. The circuit loops toward the sea in a wide arc, curves inland near a rock outcropping, then cuts back along a narrower coastal ridge. Itâs a clean race path that both sisters agreed on.
Calantha stands beside her, already casting Water Dash beneath her boots. Her cloak flutters with sea mist.
"Ready to embarrass yourself?" she says, voice light and cruel.
Felisia doesnât answer.
Greyson raises his arm. "Begin on my signal."
The crowd murmurs.
"Sheâs going to get flattened."
"Level fifty versus what, thirty? Maybe thirty-five? Thisâll be over in a breath."
"Watch her crash halfway."
Felisia breathes in.
Greyson drops his hand.
Water erupts.
Calantha moves first. Her arc is elegant, precise. She coils around the first curve like a tide sculpted by wind.
But Felisiaâ
She doesnât just move.
She
vanishes
.
A sonic rush slams into the crowd as a ribbon of vapor explodes behind her. The path she cuts glitters blue-white, the water under her compressed to such pressure it hums. Ten meters in half a breath.
The people snap.
"Whatâ?"
"Is thatâ"
"How is she
that
fast?"
Calantha jerks her head forward, eyes narrowing. Her lips part as if to protestâbut no sound comes. Her next step stumbles. She casts again, but itâs off. Too much mana. Her form wavers.
Felisia skims the second arc, cutting so close her heel grazes foam. Her posture is perfect. Her momentum seamless. She hits the fourth marker when Calantha is still pushing past the second.
I grin.
Calantha's composure frays. She flares her mana, overcasts. Her next dash whips highâbut the angleâs wrong. Her water arc stutters.
Felisia leans.
Her body shifts like a blade guided by instinct. She threads through her own ribbon, riding the wake, looping past the seventh, eighth, ninthâ
She stops at the tenth with a spray of mist and a hiss of heat.
Perfect form. Perfect control.
Silence.
Calantha hits the final curve four seconds later. Her boots screech against the wet sand. Her last ribbon stutters. She lands crooked, slips, and barely catches herself. Her expression is thunderstruck. Her lips are drawn tight, like she canât decide whether to scream or deny what just happened. The crowd stares.
Lord Clearwaterâs brow twitches.
Then he nods again.
One of the nobles drops his parasol.
Someone gasps.
Someone else whispers, "She beat her by
that
much?"
âWhatâs her Water Dash at?â
âLevel seventy at minimum!â Someone comments.
âLevel seventy?! Thatâs level eighty right there! Are you blind?!â
Lord Clearwater takes a single step forward, the wind catching the hem of his cloak.
âLevel one hundred,â he says.
The words arenât shouted. They donât need to be.
They land with the force of a hammer.
The murmurs stop. Faces turn.
Lord Clearwater walks through the silence, step by measured step, until he stands before Felisia.
He looks at her.
âYour progress since we last met,â he says slowly, âis staggering. What allowed such a leap?â
Felisia bows slightly.
She turns and gestures to me.
âBocaj Duolc, Father,â she says. âHe saw what no one else could.â
Lord Clearwaterâs eyes rest on me next with curiosity painted over his face.
âShe cheated,â Calantha blurts, her voice higher than intended. âThereâs no way she gained that much speed legitimately!â
Lord Clearwater stops.
The nobles hold their breath.
He walks toward Calantha.
When he reaches her, he takes her wrist gently in one hand. Calantha doesnât resist, but her eyes are wide now.
He removes the Great Tide Bracelet from her arm.
Then he turns, walks back to Felisia, and places the bracelet into her outstretched hand.
âCome to dinner, Bocaj Duolc, I'd like to speak to you,â he says toward me.
Just that.
Then he turns back toward the rest of the nobles, and leaves Felisia standing there with the bracelet in her hand and every eye on her.