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Chapter 17 - Iron and Below

Chapter 17

Iron and Below

Fen's story came out in pieces over the first three days, the way

stories did when the person telling them hadn't decided yet how much to

trust you.

She was Bronze-rank on paper. That was what her Runestone result said â€"

a faint, low Bronze, barely registering, the kind that technically

qualified her for provisional admission but wouldn't get her far in

actual mage training. She had no guild sponsor. She had no noble

connection. What she had was a sealed letter, same as Cyan, with no

sender and an address and a deadline.

She'd come because she didn't have a better option. That was what she

said, and the way she said it suggested there was more underneath it,

but she stopped there and he didn't push.

Cyan told her about the Runestone cracking. Not about the Mark â€" not yet

â€" just the crack, the dark stone, the null result. She listened without

interrupting, which he appreciated.

'Mine didn't crack,' she said. 'Mine just went dim. Like it couldn't

decide.'

'What does that mean?'

'I don't know. My family thought it meant I was broken.' A pause. 'Maybe

I am. But broken things still sometimes do what they're supposed to.'

He filed that.

The rest of the provisional cohort filled in around them over the first

week. The guild-sponsored Bronze-ranks were named Torren and Wick â€"

Torren was quiet and competent and would probably pass evaluation

without trouble, Wick was louder and less certain of himself and trying

to cover it. The noble-adjacent group kept mostly to themselves. The two

young students â€" twins, it turned out, from a minor merchant family â€"

were terrified and doing a poor job of hiding it.

The older student, the mid-twenties one, was named Aldous. He'd been a

dungeon runner for seven years, had a Bronze rank and a Silver-level

combat record, and had apparently spent those seven years trying to get

Academy sponsorship and finally gotten it from a guild that owed him a

debt. He was calm in a way that came from having been in genuinely

dangerous situations, and he treated Cyan with the kind of

matter-of-fact acknowledgment you gave someone who'd also been in

genuinely dangerous situations, which Cyan respected.

The first Mana Theory class put provisionals and general cohort together

in a large lecture hall, and that was the first time Cyan understood the

actual shape of the gap.

General cohort students had ranks. Not all of them were high â€" there

were Bronze students in General Cohort who'd gotten in on potential

ratings rather than current ability â€" but they all had something on

their Runestone record. They all generated their own mana. They all had,

at some level, the thing that the Academy existed to develop.

The provisional students sat in the back rows. Most of the general

cohort didn't look at them. The ones who did had expressions that ranged

from indifferent to faintly contemptuous.

Cyan sat in the back row and let the mana of the room move through his

palm in a slow, steady current and looked at the front where the

lecturer was setting up, and thought about the Bronze-rank mage he'd

drained in two seconds in an alley.

He thought about it without any particular feeling attached. Just as

data.

He was below the lowest rung of the system this institution was built to

serve. That was the reality. The question was what he was going to do

inside that reality.

The answer, as it usually was for him, was: pay attention and wait.

After class, Fen fell into step beside him.

'There's one more provisional student,' she said. 'Didn't show up for

orientation. Arrived this morning apparently.'

Cyan hadn't heard this. 'Who?'

'Don't know yet. But the clerk mentioned it.' She paused. 'Also null

result.'

Three null results in one cohort. He thought about that.

'That's unusual,' he said.

'Very,' she agreed.

They walked back to Dormitory B without saying anything else, and Cyan

thought about letters with no senders and Runestones that cracked and

the specific patience of something that had been waiting a long time to

make a move.

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