Sir Renquellâs voice rings out againâcalm, but edged in iron.
âWell then, Magistrate Orellus.â
He steps to the center of the arena, drawing no blade, making no threat. âIs this trial going forward?â
Orellus, still stiff with disbelief, adjusts his robe. âThe accused has invoked his right to trial by combat. A Champion has been named. According to precedent, the prosecution must confirm if they will still proceed.â
All eyes shift to Calantha.
Her jaw is locked. One gloved hand clenches at her side. Her gaze flickers from Jacobâblood still drying on his chestâto Sir Renquell, standing like a storm behind glass. Then, reluctantly, to the Black Knight.
He doesnât move.
Calantha stares at him. Then again.
Still nothing.
ââŠYou,â she whispers, her voice laced with venom. âWhy are you hesitating?â
The Black Knight tilts his helm a fractionâtoward Sir Renquell.
Thatâs all.
The crowd shifts. Murmurs rise again. This time, no laughter. No sneers. Just uncertainty. Some nobles look between each other, pale-faced. A few glance toward the exits.
Sir Renquell brushes imaginary dust from his shoulder. âYou could always send him in. Iâm curious what noise the helm makes when it crumples.â
That does it.
Calanthaâs breath hitches. She lifts her chin, turns sharply, and throws her voice at the Magistrate.
âThe prosecution withdraws its Champion.â
A stunned silence follows. Thenâ
âLet it be noted,â Orellus says, voice cutting through the tension like a sword through silk, âthat no opponent has stepped forward to challenge the accused in defense of the second charge.â
He pauses. Looks at me.
âJacob Cloud. The trial is concluded. You are hereby absolved of all charges.â
The arena is dead quiet.
Then, slowly, applause.
Scattered at first. Then swelling. A few Guild officials clap. Then a few nobles. Then it spreads. Not out of joyâbut out of necessity. Out of fear.
You donât defy a Wandering Knight and walk away whole.
I breathe out.
Sir Greyson smiles grimly from the platform. Felisia exhales and slumps slightly
Sir Renquell turns and begins walking off the arena floor.
But just before he leaves earshot, he says without looking back.
âA word, Jacob Cloud. In my rooms.â Next time, make your handwriting less cryptic.â
I blink.
âAye, sir.â
* * *
Sir Renquell closed the doors of his tower behind me.
âI spent five decades trying to perfect Eyes of the Fae,â Sir Renquell says, turning slowly. âWhere did you get that information?â
I clear my voice but before I can say anything, he raises his eyebrow.
âI can tell lies, Jacob Cloud. I have a Skill that lets me see through treachery. Do not waste our times with excuses.â
âIâd rather not tell, then,â I smile. âItâs dangerous knowledge. I do know the remaining flaws of the Skill, Sir Renquell. Iâd like to barter.â
Sir Renquell studies me in silence for a long moment.
Then he moves.
Not fast, not aggressiveâjust one slow step that somehow makes the room feel smaller. The windows donât rattle. The walls donât groan. But the pressure shifts, like gravityâs bending.
âBarter?â he repeats.
âYes,â I say. âI give you what you want. You give me something I want.â
He walks to a chair carved from some black-veined wood and lowers himself into it without ceremony. He folds one leg over the other, leans his chin against his knuckles, and gives me a look I canât read.
âI have lived three hundred and seventy years,â he says softly. âIâve outdueled Grandmasters, crippled High Mages, and assassinated two Kings without ever being noticed. Do you know how often I barter?â
I shake my head.
âOnce,â he says. âAnd that was because I owed a favor.â
Thereâs a beat of silence.
Then he breaks.
Not with fury.
With laughter.
He doubles over, one hand braced on a chair, the other clutched at his side as laughter pours out of himâclear, musical, and absolutely unrestrained. His braid slips over his shoulder. He laughs like someone who hasnât in a hundred years.
I blink. âWhat?â
Renquell staggers back upright, wiping a tear from his cheek, still chuckling. He points at me.
âYouâ
you
âabsolute
mad bastard
,â he says between gasps. âI was just messing with you. Testing your balls. Saints above.â
He drops into the nearest chair and leans back, still shaking with mirth.
âYou think I donât
want
to barter?â he says, grinning like a jackal. âYou drop a flaw in a Skill Iâve spent half a century refining and think Iâm too proud to trade? Iâm not that far gone.â
I exhale, tension bleeding from my shoulders. âYou had me going.â
âOh, I
know
,â he says. âYou looked like you were counting your bones ahead of time.â
He straightens, the laughter fading, replaced by something sharperâolder.
âAlright,â he says. âHereâs the deal. Youâre right. I want the rest of those flaws. Diagrams. Explanations. If youâre hiding a Skillâor a Toolâthat lets you see things
Eyes of the Fae
canât? Fine. Keep your secret. I donât need the source. I need the
insight.
â
âFair,â I say. âAnd in return?â
âIn return,â he says, tapping a finger against his temple, âyou get three things. Two small favors. One big. I donât care how stupid. I donât care how dangerous. Name it, and Iâll cash it.â
âFirst, I want to stay alive until Iâm in Clearwater.â
âOne small favor,â Sir Renquell nods. âIâll make sure no one kills you. There
will
be Assassins after you. You killed a noble kid, you absolute madman. Yet, you got your name back.â
He makes a pause.
âWhat else?â
âA recommendation to Ytrial?â I ask. âI want to go to the Academy after the Sky Hunt.â
âYou should gather enough levels by then during the Sky Hunt,â Sir Renquell nods to me. âAnother small one. Whatâs the last?â
âCan I hold onto it?â I ask.
âSure, Jacob Cloud. But now, the Skill.â
* * *
I provided Sir Renquell with all the information that The Grimoire Extraordinaire gave me on Eyes of the Fae.
And it was
complicated
.
All I could do was to transcribe, word for word, into a notebook, which is what my Rainbow Skill told me.
I know that Sir Renquell must now suspect
a lot
about me. The middle-aged, suspicious woman who gave me the Crystal Shards of Fire Shield and Fire Veins had warned me about revealing too much.
Sadly, there was no other way for me to survive a Trial by Combat against the black Knight.
The black-armored warrior was clearly stronger than Sir Greyson, and I didnât want to ask the man such a gigantic favor. Perhaps, if given enough time, I could have helped Sir Greyson level up and revealed the weaknesses of the black Knightâs Skills and equipment. But the truth was that there wasnât simply enough time before my scheduled execution.
Sir Renquell is still grinning when he finally accepts the stack of notes I slide across the polished table. His fingers barely brush the edgeâthen pause. He doesnât open the book. Not right away. He studies me, eyes too old for his face.
âYouâre making waves, Jacob Cloud. You know that, right?â
I nod once. âCouldnât avoid it.â
He laughs againâquiet this time, more knife than song.
âNo. No, you couldnât.â He leans back, thumb drumming on the armrest. âYouâre planning to compete in the Sky Hunt. Even after all this?â
âIf Felisia will have me,â I say.
âThe Clearwater Family bickers among its ranks. Too much for my taste. Elves cannot afford such a lack of respect for blood ties.â
âWhy?â
âWe live much longer than Humans, but fewer Elves are born yearly than Human babies,â Sir Renquell says.
He shrugs, the gesture sharp and old.
âAn Elf clan that turns on itself doesnât last two generations. Here, you lot squander heirs like they grow on trees. You donât nurture. You pit yourself against each other, let the nature of the world shape you. Elves do the opposite. We refine the nature of each and every one of us andââ
âArenât you exiled because you killed a bunch of people or something?â I ask, confused, raising an eyebrow.
Surprised by my interruption, Sir Renquell, in his childish body, first looks stunned at me, then starts cackling.
Sir Renquell wipes his eyes, shakes his head, and finally composes himself enough to talk.
âYouâre dangerous, Jacob Cloud. You donât know when to keep your mouth shut, and you donât let anyone talk smack to you.â He leans forward, face half in shadow from the lamp on the table. âThatâs rare among your kind. Rare among mine too, these days.â
I shrug.
âIf it makes you feel better, I donât know how to talk to anyone. I grew up in Shitâs Creek. We called the foreman âfat bastardâ to his face. If you didnât insult someone at least twice before breakfast, you got accused of being stuck-up.â
Renquell laughsâa short, bright noise that makes him seem even younger for a second.
âIf youâd talked to my father that way, heâd have tried to impale you with a breadknife.â
âYeah, well, heâd fit right in. The miners all tried to stab each other every payday. Was that supposed to be a noble thing?â
He grins, settling deeper into his chair.
âNot exactly. Youâre refreshing, Cloud. Most people I meet bow, scrape, and try to guess what I want. You just say what you mean.â
âI mean, I can try to act all formal,â I offer, sitting up straighter and putting on my best impression, âYour Eminence, I beseech thee, please do not vaporize my peasant skull for speaking in thy presenceââ
He snorts. âIf you call me âyour eminenceâ again, Iâll have to exile myself a second time. Just talk. I havenât had a real conversation in decades.â
âCan I ask, then, what exactly is that you did to be exiled?â
âThatâd be your last favor to ask. And a big one. My crime is not known among Humans. They just have to accept that my King sent me
here,
of all places, and ordered me to be humbled, to serve undeserving Humans.â
âThatâs a non-starter, then,â I say, scratching my chin. âWell, then, another question.â
Sir Renquell gestures for me to go ahead.
âYou saw me fight, right? What do you think?â
âAre you asking for an evaluation?â the Elf smiles.
I nod.
He settles back, still smiling. âYou want a proper Elven critique? Or do you want me to praise you like a doting Human would?â
âIâll take the Elven critique.â
âIâll be honest, Jacob Cloud. By human standards? Youâre not bad. Anyone who knows what theyâre looking at can tell you never had a real Tutorâyour form is full of gaps, and your footwork screams âpeasantââbut you can hold your own among the rubble of Humans.â
I crack a crooked grin.
âThat supposed to be a compliment?â
He snorts. âDonât get smug. Youâre far from the top, even for Humans. If you showed up at Ytrialâyour so-called Knight Academyâtheyâd see through you in a heartbeat. Maybe youâd keep up with the worst of them, but against their real talents? Youâd get broken in half.â
I lean in.
âAnd what about Elves? What about your kind, or the ones you send to the Academies, or back in your cities?â
He laughs, but itâs a hollow sound this time, brittle around the edges.
âYou want the truth? Among all the races, Humans are the most plentiful, but theyâre also the weakest. Even the average Dwarven adventurer could break a Humanâs back if it came to a real fight. As for the Elvesâour bloodlines are tighter, our numbers are few, but every child raised for the sword gets years of training before their tenth birthday. Even the weakest Elf who just joined Ytrial, who barely scrapes by, could kill you in a breath.â
That stings. He can see it, and his eyes donât soften.
âYou need to understand, Jacob,â he continues, âClearwater is a puddle. Itâs a fishing pond. The real world is an ocean, and youâre just now paddling out past the reeds.â
I nod, jaw tight.
âSo, whatâyouâre saying Elves are the top of the heap?â
He shakes his head, staring up at the ceiling as if the names are carved there.
âNot even close. Elves are refined, but not the strongest among the human-shaped races. There are three lineagesâthree bloodlines that still hold the original power of the first world. InfernalsâDevilkin, born from the old fires, hard as obsidian, cruel as winter. Dragonkinâdescendants of the true dragons who bothered to breed with mortals. They donât show up often, but when they do, whole armies move out of their way. And, maybe the worst, the Highbloods. The ones whose veins still run thick with Titanâs bloodâtheir ancestors killed
gods
before your kind learned to speak.â
I open my mouth. I hadnât even heard of these races before today.
âAre they really that strong?â
He gives me a look that makes me wish I hadnât asked.
âTake my advice, Jacob Cloud. Thereâs always something bigger. And thereâs always a bigger ocean waiting past the one you think you know.â
I tighten my fists and, almost unexpectedly, a smiles blossoms on my face.
âWhy are you smiling?â Sir Renquell asks, curious.
I grin wider, barely able to keep my voice steady.
âBecause thatâs exactly what I want. I always wanted to be a real Knight, you know? When I was a kid, I thought beating a few monsters and winning a swordfight would make me strong. But the more I seeâhell, the more you talkâthe more I realize how much bigger the world is. Thereâs all these monsters out there, people stronger than anything I ever imagined.â
I look down at my scarred knuckles, then back at him.
âIf there are races out there who can squash me like a bug, if there are monsters so strong whole armies run away⊠I want to meet them. I want to fight them. I want to see how far I can go. I want to get strong enough that one day, when someone like you tells me thereâs another ocean, I get to jump right in and see if I can swim.â
Sir Renquell blinks, surprised, then barks a laugh, but this time thereâs a new edge to itâa little respect, a little disbelief.
âYou Humans really are insane.â
I shrug, but the excitement wonât leave my face. âI mean, you can call it crazy. But whatâs the point of all this if Iâm not trying to see just how far I can go? I want to fight the monsters, Renquell. All of them. Even the ones that can kill me just by looking my way.â
He shakes his head, but heâs smiling.
âYou know, most people hear about monsters that could wipe out a city and start digging a hole to hide in. You hear about them and you want to start climbing. I suppose thatâs why I feel youâll go farther than most of your kind.â
âOr die trying,â I say, shrugging.
âProbably both,â he answers, finally opening my notebook, grinning at the first page. âBut at least youâll make it interesting.â
He flips through the first few pages and skims the diagrams and annotated flaws. For a second, thereâs nothing but the sound of turning parchment. Then he grunts in approval.
âYou really did it. The vein-mapping, the harmonic overlays, the pivot channelsâthis isâŠâ He doesnât finish. He closes the book, sets it aside, and steeples his fingers under his chin.
âI havenât been surprised by anyone in over a century,â he admits. âNot like this. Youâve got a power in you, Jacob. I donât just mean the Skill.â His gaze pins me to the spot. âPeople with power always draw knives from others. The sharper the tool, the hungrier the wolves. Be careful how you shine.â
* * *
The door clicks shut behind me. I move down the empty corridor, the sounds of the city a distant hum, not even reaching this high up the tower.
Halfway to the stairwell, I find Felisia waiting for me, arms folded, back against a marble column. She doesnât try to hide her suspicion.
âDid he threaten you?â she asks quietly.
âNo. He just reminded me how easy it would be to get killed here,â I say. âOr worse.â
Felisia frowns. âYouâre still going to stand by me for the Sky Hunt?â
âI promised,â I say, keeping my voice level. âAnd Iâm still your Tutor. Unless you want me gone.â
For a moment, she says nothing. Then she shakes her head.
She sighs, letting her shoulders drop a little.
âNo, I donât want you gone. Just⊠donât lie to me anymore, ok?â
âI promise,â I say with a smile and then I notice that Felisia was wearing a very low-cut dress. My eyes wander at her chest.
âWhat are you looking at?!â Felisia says, bringing her hands at her chest.
âMe? Nothing!â
âLiar!â
âOh, come on!â