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Authors: Alex Lidell

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BOOK: The Cadet of Tildor
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“I assure you he hasn’t.” Savoy slung his bag over a shoulder. “Now that we have pacified your concern, I expect you will find no further need to grace my class with your presence?”

Lord Palan’s mouth tightened at the dismissal, but he offered a slight bow and did not press the issue.

* * *

Renee followed the narrow trail that snaked from the barracks, down the hill, and into the adjacent woods. It ran for about half a league, stopping at the edge of Rock Lake, so named for the boulders lining its circumference. The water’s vast, calm surface belied the danger of the lake’s uneven bottom, but reflected the surrounding world with looking-glass accuracy. A bird perched on one of the boulders cried to its mate, and the call echoed from the stony outcroppings. There were no people.

At the lake’s sole beach, a small sandy clearing to the left of the trail’s mouth, Renee settled into a fighting stance. Practice sword in hand, she watched her reflection while coaxing the weapon through five basic parries. Her movements were hideous. Just holding the sword made her arm throb. A lighter, junior blade lay inside her bag. In the solitude of Rock Lake, she considered reaching for it to soothe the strain on her arm.
No.
The boys put away such childish things two years ago, and the enemy seldom waited until injuries healed before attacking. She swallowed and forced her shaking hand to keep trying.

“Looks awful,” said a voice behind her.

She startled but managed to conceal the surprise behind a bow. “The arm or the parry, Master Seaborn?”

“Both.” Connor Seaborn, a magistrate instructor who taught Renee’s law and history course, cleared the trail’s mouth and leaned his tall frame against a boulder. He set down his bag and cocked his head to the side, awaiting an explanation.

“It was deserved, sir.” Renee sighed, lowering her sword tip to the ground. “I didn’t parry Commander Savoy’s attack very well.”

He nodded. “Most people don’t parry his attacks very well. That’s why the Crown sends him and the Seventh where it does.” He frowned and leaned forward. “Renee, had you expected to win against him?”

“No.” She shook her head. “No, of course not. But . . . ” A chuckle tickled her chest, easing shame’s weight. “It would have been nice, no?” She cleared her throat. “Are those practice swords in your bag, sir?”

“They are. An old classmate of mine is here. Speaking of missing parries . . . ” He grinned toward the rustling leaves that signaled an impending arrival.

A moment later, Savoy stepped out onto the beach. He glanced her way but offered no greeting. It was a request to dismiss herself, but it wasn’t an order.

She moved away to give the men as much space as the small beach allowed, the resultant twinge of guilt unable to compete with the chance to watch a hostile species in their natural habitat. Plus, perhaps Savoy’d be pleased to see her practicing.

He sat on the sand and folded himself over an outstretched leg. The back of his shirt outlined shifting muscles. “Why is my lord Palan still puffing around the Academy?” Savoy’s hair fell to cover his face and he shook it off with a practiced motion. Renee blinked. If not for the unregulation length of the blond mane, he could have been a cadet savoring a free afternoon.

Seaborn reached back to plait his own red curls into a short, thick braid. “Largely on account of being the uncle of one of your students. And, he is petitioning the Crown to take the offensive against the Vipers, suggesting an assault on their stronghold in Catar City.” Seaborn winced at a bird’s shrill call, then jerked his thumb in the direction of the noise. “Remember him?”

Savoy snorted. “I remember you missing a shot by three paces. At least.”

Seaborn cleared his throat. “Because the bow you made broke, and I landed on the back of my skull.”

“Yes, well, there was that.” A smile touched Savoy’s face. He uncoiled and came to his feet with a smoothness that his friend could not match. “Most anyone with a decent mind and ties to Atham knows Palan runs the Family. Since when does the Crown entertain criminals’ petitions?”

Seaborn chuckled. “I challenge you to find one shred of evidence implicating Palan in a crime. Any crime. Until that happens—and it won’t; he’s careful—he’s just another conniving noble and can petition all he wishes. Officially speaking.”

Savoy sighed. “I suppose I could kill him. Wring some good from this posting.”

Seaborn tensed and picked up his practice blade. “Renee, could you give us the beach?” A forced smile tried to soften the demand.

There was nothing to do but bow and trot to the trail. She had been lucky to keep her ground as long as she had. Several paces into the woods, she paused, drew a breath, and ducked behind the foliage. The pounding of her heart threatened to give her away. Seaborn spoke again once she was hidden from view.

“Some good from this posting? You’re teaching cadets!”

“A waste of my time and theirs.”

“Give them a chance. Speaking of which, the girl’s forearm is blue, and double its size. What was her crime?”

“Attempted suicide.” There was a pause and a rustle of equipment before Savoy spoke again. He sounded annoyed. “Stop scowling, Connor. It works.”

“Yes, I remember Verin doing it to you. Made you a golden child.”

“Made me a living child,” said Savoy, then raised his voice. “De Winter! Either don’t eavesdrop or hide better.”

Swallowing, she sprinted away.

CHAPTER 5

A
cademic Quarter. Palace Court. Mage District. Southwest.

Of the four sections in Tildor’s capital city, only one was unworthy of a real name.

Alec blended into southwest Atham, where narrow streets of torn-up cobblestone rarely saw parades of uniformed guard. Here, pickpockets, workmen, children, all went about their business not with the forbidding glamour of the Mage District, or the philosophical wonderings of the Academic Quarter, but with the sharp eyes and skeptical ears of the slums.

He rounded a corner and walked down Orchard Street, a dirt field on the left and a mesh of shops and drab dwellings on the right. It was evening, but still light, and a gang of barefoot boys chased a ball around the field, sending up clouds of earth and cheer. There were fewer children than usual, but enthusiasm balanced the numbers. One boy leaped into the air flipping head over heels. When he landed on his feet and proclaimed himself the master of a jumping-tumble-of-doom, Alec clapped along with the others.

Southwest lacked money, not life—just like the small cottage his grandmother raised him in. He doubted his mother ever saw that. When he became a Servant, he’d find her and ask.

A few yards ahead, a boy stepped out of a shop whose sign proclaimed it a meat market. “Greg says to tell you he’s got fresh pies,” he informed Alec. “You want pies?”

Alec sighed. Greg must have changed his boys again. “I want corn.”

The boy shoved his hands into his pockets. “Pies be better. You want pies.”

Shaking his head, Alec ignored the boy’s dirty look and went inside. Here, several trays of ground meat slop lay on a shelf beyond the customers’ reach. A potbellied butcher in a smeared white apron stood behind the counter. He scrutinized Alec as if they’d never met. Carelessness killed people around here. “Yes?”

Alec pulled a gold crown from his pocket, twisted it in his fingers, and let the coin disappear. “Need to talk, Greg.”

Nodding, he let Alec behind the counter and guided him through a side door, whose oiled hinges slid in silence. They entered a crossbreed of a bedroom, storeroom, and office, so common for this part of town. A narrow bed tucked into the corner, and shelves, burdened with clothing, foodstuffs, and other items, crowded the space. The reek of garlic made Alec’s eyes water, but he did his best to ignore it and took one of the two wooden chairs guarding a bare table. Greg settled into the other.

“Don’t have much corn, lad—an ear, maybe two, of anything decent. Expand your horizons. Try the pies.” Greg drummed his fingers against the tabletop.

“Why the deficit?” Alec hid his concern behind a mask of professional curiosity.

“Spent the summer away, cadet?” Greg snorted, not bothering to conceal his contempt. “The babe we’ve got on the throne threw a tantrum and nabbed the wrong Vipers. Now the Madam is taking a personal interest, and it’s trouble for everyone.” He shook his head. “Two of my lads vanished last month. I’ll wager you a gold crown the Madam’s got them in some Predator lair, being fattened to fight in the arena for the Vipers’ gambling pleasure. We’ll have trouble with the mages next. You heed my words, boy, Vipers always stir up the mages, registered and dark ones both. It’s a dangerous thing, overactive mages.”

Alec slumped back in his chair and turned his coin between his fingers. Mages trying to avoid registration had to hide
somewhere,
and Vipers offered a place to go and paid good coin for mage skills too. “Doesn’t answer my question.”

“Think I’m cheating you?” Greg licked his tooth. “Wish I was. Our Viper guests took a Family’s veesi shipment down just recently—a major one. Killed the merchant, and killed my supply. Most leaf on the street now will make you sick. Wouldn’t sell that to you. Greg saves the good bit for you, boy, you remember that.”

Alec nodded his thanks—the Academy Healer would notice veesi poisoning in a moment—although he doubted the dealer’s concern came from anything but self-preservation.

The news worried him, though. The Vipers did not belong in the capital. Their clashes with the Crown and the Family would spill on to bystanders. Already had, if Greg spoke the truth about lads disappearing. Accepting an ear of corn, Alec edged back the leaves and twisted at the tip. It snapped off, revealing crumbled orange leaves packed into the hollowed stem. The fashion of concealing veesi in corn was gaining popularity. He sniffed the goods, feeling a familiar nausea grip at his throat.

After paying for the leaf and ignoring Greg’s attempts to saddle him with other wares, Alec headed back toward the Academy. One would think that after four years of buying nothing but veesi the man would get the point, but no one was immune to coin.

He was almost back to the Academic Quarter, two ears of corn secured between the lining and outer fabric of his jacket—evenings chilly enough to get away with wearing it were precious few in the summer—when shouts turned his head back toward lower Atham. He gasped despite himself. Rising above the rooftops, a tower of black smoke spiraled to soil the dimming sky. Bodies, small as ants from so far away, scurried from the flame. A barefoot boy with the savvy look of a street rat and soot around his ears trotted past. Alec called to him and tossed a copper. “What burns?”

The boy caught the coin with one hand and crammed it into his pocket. “The registration post in the Mage District.”

Alec sighed. It seemed Greg had been right.

The boy cocked his head. “You be needing a message ran?”

“No.” Alec waved the boy away. The message was quite clear. Only the Madam would dare burn a mage registration post in the capital city itself. The desecration was the Vipers’ calling card to Atham.
We are here,
it said.
And we have demands.

* * *

Renee awoke to a thud. She had stayed up strength-training well past the midnight bell the previous night, and now opened her eyes to see the chalkboard a few paces away. Seaborn stood by her desk, which vibrated from a large book that had just landed on it. Her cheeks heated.

“See me after class,” he said quietly and then pitched his voice over the classroom of fighter cadets. “Three centuries ago, before the rebellion wars, we were slaves to mages. What’s stopping a repeat performance? Alec?”

Despite a liking for history, Alec looked at the floor. He always did when required to speak in class. “The mages used to be stronger,” he said finally. “In addition to higher Control ability ratings, they also knew more, and, being the ruling class, they already had a government infrastructure in place.”

“For example?” Seaborn prompted when Alec fell silent.

“For example”—Alec’s words forced themselves out in a semi-mumble—“mages imposed a
vitalis
tax, forcing non-mages to submit to a draining of a measure of their life energy. The mages then used non-mages’ energy for their own projects and power.”

“Very good.” Seaborn rubbed his arms, then straightened, folding them across his chest. “There is little to dispute here: Centuries ago, mages did bad things. So bad, it took a war to put an end to their domination. After the bloodshed, the new Crown destroyed many mage instructional texts to prevent a repeat of history. Even much of Keraldi’s own work was burned. Later, mandatory mage registration was established as both a safety measure and as a means of reconciliation and coexistence.” He lifted his brows. “In short, today’s laws address a three-hundred-year-old problem. Are they still relevant?”

Renee crossed her feet while the rest of the class fidgeted in silence.

Seaborn sighed. “Let’s consider this scene: It’s next year. You, now seventeen, have finished the Academy’s classwork segment and are on your field trial, stationed, say, on the western border near our less than friendly—which neighbors? Tanil?”

“Devmani Empire.”

Seaborn nodded. “Near our Devmani neighbors. The invaluable asset that you are, you find yourself dumped off in a small, isolated town. Your commander orders you to keep out of trouble until he gets back from a mission. Sound about right thus far?”

The cadets laughed.

“One of the soldiers in your company falls ill. The helpful townspeople fetch the medicine woman, who you realize is an unregistered mage. Issues, my friends?” He didn’t wait for hands. “Renee, please.”

She rubbed her eyes, hoping the grogginess of her head wouldn’t seep into her voice. “The woman avoided registration, thus committing a high crime against the Crown. I would arrest her.”

Seaborn put his hands into his pockets. “Depriving the town of its Healer will cost many lives, including that sick soldier of yours. Still want to do it?”

Renee frowned. “That’s the law, sir. Mages must register and submit to education and regulation. I’d have no choice.”

“Yes, that’s the law. But what does this law mean for us
today
?” Seaborn eyed each student in turn. “Does it matter?” He crossed his arms. “Healer Grovener has a young apprentice this year. The boy is interested in Healing and hopes the experience with Grovener will sway the Mage Council to keep him in that vocation once he turns thirteen and registers. It may work. Or, the Council may find the boy’s aptitude or Tildor’s needs better served by training him as a thermal mage. Or a battle mage. Whether the boy is allowed to Heal others and stay safe or forced to kill and risk his life, is not up to him. That is Tildor’s law.” Seaborn rocked back on his heels. “Yes, you are fighter cadets, not magistrate cadets. But, you will kill more people with the law than you will with the edge of your sword. Understand it, my friends. Know its reasons. In fact”—he smiled—“write about it. Five pages before week’s end. Dismissed.”

That last did not apply to her. Renee stayed seated until the last of her classmates cleared the room, shook her head at Alec, who waited by the door, then rose to strike attention before Seaborn. Her stomach clenched.

He sighed and rubbed his chin. “Up late with your sword, cadet?”

“Yes, sir. I’m—”

“On probation in combat arts. I know.” He sat on the edge of his desk. “I am not down-rating you this time, Renee, but this is your warning. No late assignments, no missed classes.” His voice was gentle. “A cadet will be cut at midyear and a down-rate in academics will affect your class standing. I don’t believe such would help your predicament and do not wish to do such things. But I will. You understand?”

Only Seaborn could issue an ultimatum that left
you
feeling guilty. She nodded.

He patted her shoulder. “Dismissed.”

Renee started to leave, but a thought scratched at her mind. “Sir, Vipers want to end mage registration. They even burned down an official post three days ago. But . . . Why do they care?”

Seaborn smiled and held the door open for her. “A group that enslaves fighters into Predator pits demands freedom for mages. Ironic.” He paused. “But can you think of a better way to recruit mage support? The Vipers’ Madam is ruthless and blood-lusting, but unfortunately not stupid.” His face grew serious. “There are now more unregistered mages allied with the Vipers than there are unregistered mages in all the rest of Tildor.”

Renee swallowed. The Family caused enough heartache on their own, without Vipers and their illegal mages dragged into the melee.
A disease of crime.
King Lysian was right.

BOOK: The Cadet of Tildor
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