After twenty years I was an adult this year. I just needed to complete an exam and I was free. Free to carve my own path in the world.
Torian and I had talked a little and it wasn’t set in stone that I was becoming a member of the Iron Legion, but it was a pretty good chance.
The truth of my birth was hidden once again, and although the booklet hadn’t uncovered itself in years Cecilia remained patient, I don’t think that’ll last much longer though.
Mariel and I had grown more intimate, and Jerek and I had grown to be even more like brothers.
I couldn’t recognize that annoyingly pompous idiot I first met a decade and a half ago. Mariel had grown a lot too, she felt like my glue. I had once been the protector of her, and now she’s protecting me.
Physically I could protect myself, but without a proper anchor to sympathy I’d be someone else entirely.
The Book n’ Blade path often had a unique final exam. It didn’t happen a whole lot even in the capital so there wasn’t a regulated test. It was random.
For me they determined if I held my own against my parents in a mock-battle, I’d pass. I didn’t have to draw blood, I didn’t have to disarm them, just simply hold my own.
I trained to no end for this. I needed to pass with flying colors. After the years of silence from Nythris, I needed another figure to learn from. So Torian was my top choice, which meant I had to impress him with my exam to join him. Even if it’d annoy Veran.
You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version.
Especially if it’d annoy Veran.
I went through the motions of life. It was almost a sense of normal.
School, training with Jerek, dates with Mariel, occasionally going through a dungeon, even a few outings at night to ease my conscience.
I knew something was coming, but I was prepared for it. I knew my very existence was illegal, so I tried making the most of my life before anything happened.
And something was going to happen.
Although I could read intent, that was typically in a fight. However, I was perspicacious enough to predict the future.
The future held a lot of uncertainties though.
No matter how often I just went through the motions I felt a yearning for something larger. I especially felt that with Gravewake.
Gravewake wasn’t heavier, but my grip on it occasionally dragged during training. As if it knew my head wasn’t clear and I needed change for clarity.
It felt impatient.
Every action I made, or every step I took felt like a game of poker.
I was dealt a hand. My choices were check, raise, or fold.
If I checked it was playing things safe, letting the empire simply run its corrupt course and I’d watch what its outcome was.
If I raised it would mean I’d get more involved in the system, potentially even compromising myself if I raised too much on a bad deal.
Folding wasn’t actually an option. I couldn’t turn myself in.
I wouldn’t allow it, there were people who I needed to try to help.
Unfortunately, I could only check and raise for so long.
Eventually the house would reveal their hand.
If I won that probably would mean I went under the radar.
If I lose, I may lose Jerek and his family’s nobility, or end up dead. If I lose, Mariel’s family would likely be hunted and killed. My parents and their friends would be hunted and killed.
Billions vs less than a hundred.
Good odds.

