Fatty's fist slams into the scarecrow with a force that shakes the ground beneath us, and an enormous shockwave blasts outward so hard that it knocks a few Squires off their feet while everyone's clothes flap wildly in the sudden gale. For a split second, an overwhelming aura crashes over us all until the world plunges into darkness, but then daylight snaps back just as quickly as if nothing happened.
I can't believe what I just saw, and I doubt anyone else here can wrap their heads around it either because that hit was on another level entirely.
The impact kicks up a massive dust cloud that billows everywhere, and now I'm left wondering what Fatty will look like once it clears since he might have morphed into some legendary warrior who was hiding his true strength all along. That strike was unreal, and I'm bursting with pride while the crowd around us starts whispering in awe.
Everyone assumes Fatty will emerge looking smug and superior, like an expert who had been playing weak the whole time, and the comments don't disappoint as voices pipe up.
âHe was holding back!"
âThat guy's a monster in disguise!"
âNo wonder the Valemont picked himâhe's been sandbagging!â
But when the dust finally settles, I just stare deadpan, and so does the entire crowd, because Fatty is hunched over on his knees with sweat pouring down his temples in rivers while he pukes up his massive lunch all over the square's cobblestones.
This isn't at all what I pictured, and it's clear from the stunned faces around me that nobody else expected a victory hurl either since we all figured on some heroic pose instead of this mess.
Lucen Margrave opens his mouth to mock Fatty with a sneer already forming.
âWell, isnât thatââ
âHey, Margrave, look at that,â I cut him off by pointing straight at the scarecrow where the glowing number 7832 flashes bright and clear.
Murmurs of incredulity rise from the crowd.
âThatâs the top score any Squire has hit this year,â one says.
âIt's the kind of power you'd see from someone gunning for full Knight status,â another, a Squire, mutters.
Lucen Margrave squints hard at me and Kai, his voice sharp as he snarls, "You think this changes anything, Valemont bastards? My little sister, Sabrina Margrave, is in your class, and she's the strongest talent our family's seen in ten generations. She'll crush you both before the yearâs out." He spins on his heel and stalks off.
A single Diamond coin flies in the air and lands between my feet.
Not bad for ten minutes of work
, I smile, picking it up.
* * *
âHeâs really something,â I say, and I keep my eyes on Kai because I still cannot understand how a nineteen-year-old carries that much muscle and yet moves like a dancer.
âThe Margraves are our sworn enemies,â Kai replies, and resignation drags on every syllable although the courtyard shines with morning light.
The giant pats my shoulder, and the jolt rattles three vertebrae, and he adds, âWe will attend classes together, and Royal blood gives us precedence.â
I have never thought about it, but if I actually were to accept the Valemontsâ proposal, Iâd be a Prince.
Prince Jacob Cloud,
I smirk,
it has a nice ring to it.
But then I remember that Iâd have to change my last name.
âJacob,â Thorne says, stroking the back of his giant white tigerâs neck, âyouâll have to make a choice. Margrave will come after you, personally or through others, simply because youâre associated with us. If you donât become a Valemont, I can shout as many threats as I want, but the family wonât come to your rescue. And Margrave knows the rules. He canât kill any Valemont unless he wants a war. But our friends, servants, and allies? Those are free game on both sides. No one goes to war over a lost friend.â
Suddenly, I feel a sweaty hand on my neck and someone, moving in front of me, saying, âI would!â
My older half-brothers look in confusion at Fatty.
âYouâd go to war for a friend?â Thorne asks, skeptical.
âFor Jacob. Iâm his Squire! If anything happens to him, Iâll kill those bastards! Iâll avenge him after they have decapitated him, even if they were to burn him with the heat of a thousand suns and scatter the ashes in the sea! Iâll pick every little speck of Jacobâs dust, bake it into a cupcake, and eat it! That way, our bond would lastââ
I kick the Fattyâs in the buttocks and let him faceplant in the courtyard.
Enjoying this book? Seek out the original to ensure the author gets credit.
âHow did you know he was going to be any good?â Kai asks, ignoring the scrambling Fatty.
âI have my own little secrets,â I wink at them.
âTake this,â Kai says, offering the Diamond coin.
âNo, I couldnât,â I shake my head. âLetâs split it.â
Thorne, who has been observing the exchange from the side, raises an eyebrow. I know because I just ran a little Echo Pulse. He might have been expecting me to try and take advantage of Kaiâs generosity.
âBut youââ Kai tries to protest.
âWeâre both first-year students. You might be a Prince, but didnât you just say you donât just get resources that easily? I mean, not heaps of Diamond Coins, at least.â
Kai nods uneasily, as if heâs not ready to accept that heâs not exactly
filthy
rich. But for someone who grew up on Bronze coins
at best
, Iâm more than happy like this.
In a short ten minutes, I pocketed five hundred Platinum coins.
âListen,â I say to Kai, who towers over me and makes me keep wondering what sort of food they fed this guy, âletâs be friends, right?â
âFriends?â Kai smiles. âWeâre brothers!â
âYeahâbut, letâs also be friends.â
Iâm a little uncomfortable saying this because, to be honest, growing up, I didnât really have friends. I had colleagues, acquaintances, but never people who quite understood my dream of becoming a Knight.
So, itâs my first time trying to⊠just make friends.
But I like Kai and Thorne so far, so maybe we can start there.
âAnd Thorne, Iâll consider your offer. I feel honored that your family has offered me the opportunity to become part of your family. But I must tell you, I love my father. He raised me on his own and taught me everything he couldâlittle, allegedly, since he was a common miner. But he tried. Mother isâŠâ
I see Thorne sighing.
âA Princessâor a Princeâhas duties to the Kingdom. When she met your father, after our own fatherâs passing, she could never have agreed to recognizing you. Not because she didnât want you, believe me. Our Royal Grandmother, however, would have decapitated her. At court, your father would have been Motherâs greatest weakness. And you, being born out of wedlock, are the same. You two would have been targets. You donât know it, but Mother did both of you a favor.â
I bite my lower lip.
I know the guyâs coming from a good place, I understand what heâs trying to say, and I donât really blame him for it.
Prince Thorne Valemontâthatâs who he is.
But Iâm Jacob Cloudâson of a miner and lucky son of a bitch who found a Rainbow Skill.
Without the powers coming from that, they would have never recognized me as part of the family. And I get it.
âRoyals have duties,â I smile tiredly, âmaybe thatâs not something Iâd likeâsomething Iâd want, too. Maybe itâs good to be a bastard son who spent most of his life in shitholes. I could have a son and still see him every day, no matter what, until the day someone takes my eyes from me.â
Both Kai and Thorne seem to perceive my bitterness and say nothing, they just nod, and soon we say goodbye.
We set off along the colonnade, and our steps echo beneath stone arches that display reliefs of past champions. Fatty recounts every rumor about the first-year trials even though nobody asked, and he waves his arms until he nearly smacks an old professor who carries scrolls.
The professor mutters about reckless youth, and Fatty bows so low that his forehead thumps a column. I laugh, and the sound feels strange, because laughter rarely visited the mines.
I gesture for Fatty to stand, and he scrambles upright although dust cakes his cheeks. I want to register at the Academy before sunset, and bureaucracy waits for no one.
* * *
Now that I have a Squire, I head for the main registration hall, walking beneath a colonnade that opens into a vast vaulted chamber carved from obsidian-veined stone. The crowd inside is no joke. Lines of first-years coil like serpents across the floor, each recruit clutching a folder, scroll, or letter of recommendation like itâs their last meal. The air smells of mana ink, old parchment, and nervous sweat.
Fatty stays half a step behind me as we move through the mess.
An older Squire waves us toward an open registration desk. Behind it sits a clerk with a bowl haircut and a mole on his cheek that pulses faintly with embedded runes. I hand over my folder.
âName,â he drones.
âJacob Cloud,â I say. âKnight-candidate. I have two letters of recommendation.â
He raises an eyebrow and leans forward with a little more interest. âTwo?â
I nod and slide both across the deskâfirst Sir Greysonâs, then the one from Sir Renquell. He snatches the first, opens it, and reads. The manâs eyes flick from line to line, and I watch his expression shift from disinterest to mild approval.
He nods once. âGreysonâs endorsement is solid,â he mutters. âHeâs not royal, but heâs respected.â Then he sets the first scroll down and opens the second one.
The moment he sees the seal on Renquellâs letter, he straightens in his chair. The faint buzz of idle chatter around us fades. Even a few of the other clerks look over.
âWait here,â he says.
He lifts both letters and walks them down a long aisle toward the raised platform at the end of the hall. Sitting at a wide desk inscribed with mana channels and bound by dozens of warding spells is a tall, bony man dressed in robes marked with the triple tower of the Academy. His white hair falls straight to his shoulders, and thin glasses rest on the bridge of his nose.
âThatâs Elder Liorenâhead of first-year intake and,â Fatty says, âif I remember correctly, a total stickler for protocol.â
Is that an Elf?
I think to myself, squinting to look at his ears.
The clerk hands over the letters and steps back.
Elder Lioren examines the first, makes a small note in a glowing ledger, then lifts Renquellâs scroll with a pair of silver tongs.
He doesnât even touch it. The crowd has quieted further now.
I can feel the tension ratcheting up behind my ribs.
The Elder pulls out a crystalline lens bound in three iron rings. He sets it above the scroll, and a thin beam of mana arcs from the lens into the wax seal. The color flickers red for an instant.
My heart stutters.
Then it shifts to green.
Elder Liorenâs face wrinkles into a frown as he reads. His lips press together like heâs just bitten into something sour.
He reads the letter again.
This time more slowly. Then he lifts his eyes and motions to me directly.
âKnight-candidate Cloud,â he says, his voice carrying over the chamber. âApproach.â