Fatty looks at me with wide, nervous eyes, his face flushed and sweaty.
âI think I should go,â he says, forcing a smile and waving awkwardly at the crowd. âThis has been a pleasure. I just remembered I have some cabbage at home that needs pickling! Oh my, Iâm so busy! Iâll just become a Squire next year, I suppose!â
He turns to shuffle away, his oversized shirt flapping as he moves.
I grab him by the collar, yanking him back.
âYouâre not going anywhere,â I growl into his ear. The crowd around us snickers, their laughter sharp and mocking. Lucen Margrave, standing with his arms crossed and a dagger glinting at his waist, lets out a high-pitched chuckle that grates on my nerves. His eyes gleam with contempt, and the other nobles join in, their sneers aimed at both Fatty and me.
âYou dumbass, where are you going?!â I hiss, keeping my grip tight.
Fattyâs voice drops to a panicked whisper. âI canât invert my veins during the channeling! My energy will go berserk, and I might die!â His eyes dart to the crowd, then back to me, pleading.
I sigh, rubbing my forehead with my free hand, and nod, trying to keep my patience.
âLancelot,â I say, âyouâre not going to die, alright? You have a condition. Itâs⊠listen. Iâm those guysâ half-brother, right?â I gesture at the Valemonts, who stand nearby, Kai looking curious and Thorne glaring like heâs ready to stab someone. âI promise you, on my blood, on my money, on my Skills, this is the solution to your problems. If it doesnât work, if you get hurt in any way, Iâll still pick you as my Squire. You have my word as Jacob Cloud.â
âCloud?â Lucen Margrave interrupts, his frown cutting through the laughter. âHe hasnât been adopted by your family yet? Thatâs not the name of the Valemontsâ bastards.â
His voice drips with disdain, and the crowd murmurs in agreement.
âWe just have to go over the bureaucracy,â Thorne snaps back, his hand twitching toward his sword. "And he'll be a Valemont, not a bastard."
I ignore them and tap Fattyâs arm.
âWhen you channel the Golden Palm, swap these two veins.â I point to his right arm, then his left. âInvert those here.â
Fattyâs face twists in exasperation.
âBut why? Why would I do that?â
I lean closer, my voice low and sharp.
âYou donât want me to say it in front of everyone. Weâll talk later.â
Iâm not even sure I should tell him about the incredible inheritance in his blood. A Draconic inheritance? This Draconic Fatty might get himself killed with that big mouth of his. Iâm hiding my own Infernal legacy, andâ
A WHAT?!
King Balrekâs voice screams in my head, so loud I wince, drawing a confused glance from Fatty.
âSorry,â I mutter, âmy head hurts from dealing with you. Step up to that scarecrow and do as I said.â
HE HAS A DRACONIC INHERITANCE?!
Balrek roars again, his voice rattling my skull.
CLOUD, DO YOU UNDERSTAND WHAT THAT EVEN IS? YOUâVE BEEN LUCKY TO MEET ME, TO RECEIVE MY MANA. THAT BALL OF PORK CHOPS HAS A DRACONIC INHERITANCE? HOW DO YOU KNOW?!
I have my ways. Heâs got the Heavenly Dragon Constitution.
Silence follows, heavy and stunned.
You⊠how do you even know that name?
Why?
A Squire? No wonder heâs struggling with Skills. Thatâs a paradoxical constitution. It inverts theâHOW DO YOU KNEW HOW TO FIX IT?!
Enough, I canât deal with you right now.
I shove Balrekâs voice to the back of my mind. The Royal Infernal is too much sometimes, especially now, with Fatty stepping up to the scarecrow.
The crowd jeers louder, Lucenâs high-pitched laugh cutting through like a blade. Thorne watches with a worried frown, while Kai grins, his confidence in me bordering on delusional.
Fatty hesitates, glancing back at me as he reaches for the wooden post. His hand trembles, and the nobles in the crowd donât hold back.
âLook at him shake!â one shouts. âHeâll break the post with his weight before his Skill!â another adds, sparking more laughter.
Lucen steps forward, his voice carrying over the noise. â
The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.
Timeâs running out, Valemont bastard. Your piglet better hurry, or heâll be pickling cabbages for the rest of his life.â
Fatty grips the post, his knuckles white.
Lancelotâs hands clamp onto the wooden post, his fingers squeezing so tight the skin over his knuckles stretches white. He channels the Golden Palm, and a faint shimmer, like dying embers, pulses across his palm. Through the Grimoireâs lens, I see his Mana falterâchoked and sputtering, like a stream blocked by jagged rocks, his Heavenly Dragon Constitution twisting the flow backward.
He swings, his arm heavy with effort, muscles quivering under the strain. The strike hits the scarecrow with a dull thud, and glowing runes flicker: 42. A thin line of blood creeps from the corner of his mouth, staining his chin. He lurches back, one hand clutching his chest, his breath ragged as the botched Skill claws at his insides, leaving him swaying like a tree in a storm.
The crowd erupts in mockery.
âNice try, piglet!â a noble boy calls.
âMaybe stick to baking!â
A girl with a crooked nose laughs.
âHeâs going to kill himself before he qualifies!â
Lucenâs grin widens.
âIf the Valemonts want to win the war, they should send their kid to teach in our kingdom. Itâd collapse in a week.â
I clench my fists, the Grimoireâs analysis burning in my mind.
[Grimoire Analysis: Heavenly Dragon Constitution (Dormant/Inverted). Domineering potential clashes with userâs timid disposition, creating dissonance in Mana flow. Paradoxical vein inversion causes Skills to misfire, inflicting self-harm.]
I step forward, pointing at the crowd, my voice rising at Lancelot.
âYou think this is a joke? You think youâre nothing? Every one of them standing here, laughing, mockingâdo you even have a dream? Do you even know what it means to want something so bad youâd risk everything for it?â
The crowd quiets, some shifting uncomfortably.
Fatty stares at me, his eyes wide, a spark of something new flickering in them. But the nobles recover quickly, their laughter returning.
âBig words for a bastard!â one shouts. âLetâs see the piglet prove it!â
Fatty clenches his fists, his face set with determination. He steps back to the post, channels the Golden Palm again, and swings.
Blood sprays from his mouth, but he stays upright, staring at his glowing palm.
The scarecrow flashes: 80.
Damn it, heâs not putting his will into it. This stupid constitution of his requires a change in character. What kind of bullshit is that?
The crowd howls with laughter.
âEighty? Thatâs it?â
A Squire yells, âthe thresholdâs five hundred!â
Lucen smirks.
âFive minutes, bastard. Youâre running out of time.â
* * *
Lancelot stands frozen, his chest heaving, blood dripping from his chin onto the dirt. The crowdâs jeers echo in his ears, each insult a knife twisting in his gut. He glances at the scarecrow, its glowing runes mocking him with that pitiful 80.
His shoulders slump, and for a moment, he looks ready to bolt, his eyes darting toward the edge of the training yard where the shadows promise escape.
Iâm nothing. I will forever be nothing.
This guy just lost a Diamond coin over me.
But then his mind drifts, unbidden, to Arthur.
His little brother.
His face flashes before himâpale, thin, with eyes bright despite the pain that keeps him bound to that creaking wheelchair.
Arthur can barely leave the house.
The only way he experiences the outside world is by listening, wide-eyed, as Lancelot spins tales of warriors and dragons, of battles won and kingdoms saved.
Lancelot always told him he was one of the greatest warriors ever, and Arthur believed it, his smile brighter than any victory.
Those stories werenât just lies to make Arthur feel better; they were promises, dreams Lancelot wove because he couldnât bear the thought of his brother having nothing to hold onto.
If it werenât for Arthur, Lancelot wouldnât care about this Squire nonsense.
Heâd be kneading dough in a bakery, flour dusting his hands, living a quiet life where no one laughed or sneered.
But Arthurâs trapped in that chair, in that house, in a body that betrays him.
And Lancelot knows, deep in his bones, that if he could become a great Squire, he might earn enough to change that.
He could find healers, mages, someone to give Arthur a life beyond those four walls.
This Jacob Cloud out here is risking so much on him, on Lancelot, fighting for nothing but pride.
Why canât Lancelot do the same for Arthur?
Thatâs where Lancelot Grafton finally finds the courage.
His fist clenches, knuckles cracking, and he thinks of Arthurâs laugh, rare and precious, when Lancelot described a knight slaying a beast with a single blow.
That laugh is worth more than any nobleâs approval. The fear that held him backâfear of dying, of failing, of his Mana tearing him apartâfeels small now.
Arthurâs life is smaller, more confined, and he still smiles.
Lancelot grits his teeth, resolve burning through him like fire.
The crowdâs taunts grow louder.
âLook at the piglet, standing there daydreaming!â a noble shouts. âHeâs gonna cry before he swings again!â another adds.
Even the Squires join in, one yelling, âGo back to your cabbages, fat boy!â
Lucen Margrave leans forward, his dagger glinting as he smirks.
âTimeâs ticking, piglet. Youâre no Squire. Youâre barely a man.â
Lancelot ignores them, his focus narrowing to the scarecrow. He steps forward, planting his feet, and channels the Golden Palm again.
This time, itâs different. He feels the Mana surge, not stuttering or twisting, but flowing, aligning, like Jacob said it would.
The inverted veins in his arms hum, the Heavenly Dragon Constitution waking, its power no longer choking him but roaring through his blood.
He canât hold back the sound that rips from his throatâa raw, guttural roar that makes the crowd flinch, their laughter faltering.
He unleashes the punch.