Before the auctioneer can finish announcing the first item, a ripple goes through the VIP lounge. A presence sharp enough to cut the silk-draped room in half enters through the northern balcony.
Sir Renquell steps through without hurry. His boots make no sound on the polished stone. His braid sways behind him, silver and steady, and his expression is carved from glass.
Every noble present stiffens. The auctioneer falters mid-sentence. A few in the room instinctively lower their heads.
The Elf doesn't sit.
He walks to the center of the VIP tier and looks straight at Veyl.
âYouâve disgraced your kin.â
Veylâs eyes flash. He turns slowly, face twisting with restrained fury.
âYou have no authority over me,
Renquell
.â
âYou represent the High Court, whether you like it or not,â Sir Renquell says. âYou disgrace our people by picking fights in a trade city over ego.â
âI represent myself,â Veyl snaps. âNot traitors. Not exiles.â
The room goes silent.
Felisiaâs jaw tenses.
Adrienne, seated not far behind Veyl, says nothingâbut her eyes flick toward Veyl with warning.
I glance between the two Elves, expecting Sir Renquell to unsheathe whatever divine thing he uses as a blade and reduce the brat to a smear across the marble.
But he doesnât.
Sir Renquellâs lips thin. Thatâs all.
He turnsânot away from Veyl, but toward me.
âDo not accept his duel, Jacob Cloud,â he says, voice as flat as a bladeâs edge. âHe trained in our Capital. Heâs far from our best, but only the worthy are allowed to leave and roam the world. Youâre not ready
yet
.â
I frown.
âHeâll never be,â Veyl snickers. âAre you so far gone youâre tutoring miners now? Youâve fallen low, Renquell. Lower than I imagined.â
Renquell doesnât react. His gaze is already moving, distant again, back to the window. âLet him bark.â
Veyl smiles, not at him, but at me.
I tilt my head and I smile at him as I instinctively touch the dark bracelet at my wrist.
âI donât need to duel you now or at the start of the test, Veyl,â I say. âIâll wait until
after
the Sky Hunt. I want an audience. I want to humiliate you first. Then, once everyone sees what you areâsmall, lucky, and unworthyâIâll offer you a clean fight. One duel. Life and death. And when I kill you, nobody will question it.â
âHow dare you?â Veyl says, voice sharp enough to cut glass.
âHow I dare do what?â I say with a frown, getting up from my seat. âYou say youâll gladly kill me, and after I offer the same you act like
Iâm
the one crossing the line? Are you
stupid
?â
The tension coils through the auction house like a drawn bowstring.
Now, hereâs the thing: you might not know it, but the mines were full of shit talk. Every day was a powder keg. Guys got stabbed over drinking too much water or looking at the wrong pickaxe. So, yeahâI picked up a habit or two. Maybe I mouth off. Maybe I donât know when to stop.
But I usually try not to pick fights with people who could crush my spine with a single flick of the wrist. Usually.
This guy thinks heâs hot shit? Fine. Let him come.
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Heâs an Elf, sure.
Probably could kill me right now if he wanted.
But if he knew I was walking around with a Rainbow Skill in my head, heâd probably think twice. Or maybe not. Maybe heâd just skin me alive and auction off the shard. Depends on the type of creep.
Oops.
âYou littleâ!â Veyl starts, stepping forward with murder in his eyes.
But this time, Sir Renquell actually
moves
. He catches Veyl by the collar, one hand, clean grip, and slams him into the ground hard enough to knock the breath from half the room.
The impact cracks through the auction tier like a dropped slab of marble. Even the floor groans.
Every head turns. Nobody expected that. Not from him.
Sir Renquell doesnât look angry. He doesnât even raise his voice. He just plants one boot beside the Elfâs head and says, low and sharp, âI am forbidden from harming another Elf, or Human. But I am permitted to protect, enforce, and restrain. Those are the restrictions.â
Heâs not talking to Veyl. Heâs talking to me.
But the entire room hears it.
Murmurs explode around us. Gasps. A few nobles choke on their wine.
âHe just floored another Elf!â
âThatâs Sir Renquell? Isnât he supposed to be restrained by an oath?â
âWhat does this mean?â
More whispers crawl over the auction VIP room like snakes.
âHeâs going to die. Jacob Cloud is going to get himself killed.â
âVeylâs an Elf. Heâs
much
stronger. He most likely has mastered a Platinum Skill already!â
âThat rat just got lucky with that Dungeon. Maybe the Dungeon wasnât at full-power or something.â
âHonestly, if the Crucible hadnât been dormant for so long, he wouldnât have cleared it. He just slipped through the cracks.â
âThink he bribed the appraisers? Thereâs no way that rat cleared a Shadow Mimic.â
It takes another full minute for the noise to die down. But eventually, it does. The officials finally call for quiet. An attendant enters the VIP tier with a sealed note and passes it to Felisia.
She reads it, then hands it to me.
âThis is the preliminary valuation,â she says. âThe appraisers tallied a conservative estimateâwhat the items would sell for at minimum. Youâve been granted a line of credit matching that number, so you can bid freely.â
The number on the page makes my eyebrows go up.
Twenty platinum coins.
And some spare change.
Not bad.
Felisia leans closer. âAnd if you need more, Iâll cover it. Guildmaster Dorn had to pay out most of his holdings. I made more gold off those bets than some nobles do in a year. I owe you.â
The lights dim. A small magical spotlight casts down from the ceiling.
The first item is wheeled out on a black velvet cart: a longsword, ornate and clearly enchanted, shaped like a fang of lightning caught in a forge.
I blink once.
The Grimoire opens.
[Analyzing Item: Thunderbrand Longsword â Silver Rank â Offensive]
Base Damage Output: 73-98 HP
Mana Conductivity: 36%
Shock Trigger Delay: 0.9s
Flaw Detected: Inconsistent rune binding on outer sheath.
Flaw Detected: Internal core instability â potential for overload.
Flaw Detected: Residual charge misfire when Mana levels exceed 60%.
Verdict: Dangerous to low-skill users. Not suitable for duels or prolonged combat.
Recommended for salvage or refinement only.
I squint at it, confused. The bladeâs channels are beautiful. Almost too beautiful. The finish is clean, but the inner circuit is flickering with unstable current. The Grimoire says if you pump mana through it too fast, itâll arc in the wrong direction and blow your damn fingers off.
âWhat kind of idiot buys this?â I murmur under my breath.
I feel a movement. Thenâ
Clack.
The sound of a bidding paddle being raised.
Veyl.
The Elf raises his marker like heâs claiming something thatâs already his.
I blink.
Oh.
He thinks I want the sword.
Because I was staring at it.
Idiot.
I glance at Felisia. Sheâs biting back a laugh.
I donât miss a beat. I raise my hand.
âFifty more,â I call, voice calm.
Veyl glances at me. Narrows his eyes.
He lifts the paddle again.
I smile and raise mine again. Another twenty.
He hesitates this time, but lifts it once more, probably out of spite. I canât help myself. I toss in another tenâjust enough to make it sting.
The gavel slams down.
âSOLDâto the honored guest from the Elven Capital. For one thousand, two hundred and forty-five gold.â
Veyl looks like he swallowed a wasp.
I lean back in my seat, fold my arms, and grin.
He thinks I lost the bidding war.
He just bought a thunderbomb on a stick.
And the best part?
He canât pawn it off now. Everyone saw him bid.
Felisia nudges me.
âYouâre evil.â
I nod.
âOnly to idiots.â
And the auction continues.