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CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE: Go Grab Your Knife, Its Killing Season

  The

  Martyr’s Ring, Academy Grounds – 07:10

  The

  Martyr’s Ring rises from the heart of the Astralis Castrum Academy

  like a wound cut deliberately into the stone.

  It is an outdoor arena,

  vast and unforgiving, built from layered rings of stone, timber, and

  blackened metal. Weather has scarred it, and so have decades of blood

  and impact. The floor of the pit is hard-packed earth reinforced with

  metal plates, scored and stained despite countless attempts to clean

  it. The walls bear the marks of blades, bullets, and bodies thrown

  against them.

  Banners hang from iron

  pylons driven deep into the surrounding stone, colors and sigils of

  the Major Houses of the Order, interspersed with the heraldry of the

  most significant Houses of the Central North American region. Some

  banners are pristine. Others are faded, frayed at the edges, darkened

  by age. All of them watch.

  The arena is circular,

  deliberately so. There are no corners to hide in.

  Benches rise around it in

  stacked tiers like stone steps, capable of holding more than five

  hundred spectators. From above, it resembles a coliseum; from within,

  it feels like a grave with seats. Sound carries strangely here, every

  footstep echoes, every shout lingers longer than it should.

  One side of the Ring is

  already occupied by instructors.

  They stand or sit in rigid

  lines, uniforms immaculate, eyes cold and appraising. Clipboards and

  datapads glow faintly in their hands. This is not entertainment to

  them. This is evaluation. Selection. Culling.

  Opposite them, the cadets

  gather.

  Dozens of young bodies in

  Academy gray, weapons secured, armor checked and rechecked. Some talk

  in low voices. Some stare straight ahead. Some pray, to gods, to

  luck, to nothing at all. This is the first phase of the Final Exam,

  and everyone knows what that means.

  Someone will fail here.

  Lucille and Cain file in

  with the others, boots crunching against stone as they follow the

  line toward the cadet benches. The open sky presses down on them,

  pale and indifferent. Lucille feels exposed in the Ring, as if the

  absence of a ceiling has stripped away what little protection the

  Academy ever offered.

  They are halfway to their

  assigned section when a hand closes around Lucille’s elbow.

  “Lucille.”

  The grip is firm but

  careful, pulling her just far enough out of line to break formation.

  Cain reacts instantly, fingers tightening around her hand as he

  pivots with her, body angling subtly between her and the rest of the

  crowd.

  Instructor Varian Korvin

  stands before them.

  Scarred knuckles. Graying

  hair pulled back tight. His uniform is worn at the seams, medals

  dulled by years of service rather than polished for display. His eyes

  flick over both of them, sharp and assessing and then, for the first

  time that morning, something else breaks through.

  Relief.

  “There you are,” Korvin

  mutters, as if confirming they’re real. His hand loosens on

  Lucille’s arm, though he doesn’t fully let go. “I was starting

  to think they’d lost you in the shuffle.”

  Lucille looks up at him,

  surprise softening her guarded expression. “Sir,” she says

  quietly.

  Cain straightens beside

  her, still holding her hand, posture respectful. “Instructor.”

  Korvin huffs out a breath,

  glancing toward the arena floor, then back to them. “This place,”

  he says, low enough that only they can hear, “never stops reminding

  me why I hate first phases.”

  His gaze settles on Lucille

  again, lingering just a second longer than regulation allows. The

  world sees a Domitian cadet. Korvin sees a child he dragged out of

  the wreckage years ago, bloodied and feral and refusing to cry.

  “Are you ready?” he

  asks.

  It is not a test. It is

  concern, stripped bare and hurried.

  Above them, banners stir in

  the breeze. Below, the Martyr’s Ring waits, silent and hungry.

  Lucille answers first.

  “We’re ready, sir.”

  Cain nods beside her. “This

  is our element.”

  For a moment, something

  like pride breaks through Korvin’s weathered exterior. The corner

  of his mouth lifts, a faint, almost private smile meant only for

  them.

  Then it fades.

  The smile dies as quickly

  as it was born, smothered by knowledge he cannot give voice to.

  Korvin knows what waits beyond the rules written on the boards. He

  knows what has been approved behind sealed doors, what has been

  justified in quiet rooms by people who will never set foot in the

  Ring themselves.

  He steps closer.

  Both hands come down on

  their shoulders, Lucille’s first, then Cain’s, heavy, grounding,

  the grip of a man committing their weight to memory. His eyes search

  their faces, not as an instructor now, but as something far more

  dangerous to be in this place.

  A father.

  “No matter what happens,”

  he says quietly, the words pressed tight as if they cost him

  something to speak, “you worry about yourselves.”

  Lucille’s breath catches.

  Cain stills.

  “Not the crowd. Not the

  banners. Not your squad, not your rivals.” Korvin’s grip

  tightens, just a fraction. “Survival. That is your only objective.”

  He glances toward the

  instructor benches, where eyes already track movement like carrion

  birds. “I don’t know when, or if, I’ll get another chance to

  speak to you like this. Once it starts, I can’t intervene. None of

  us can. Not this time.”

  Lucille studies him, unease

  crawling up her spine.

  She smells it on him,

  sharp, acrid beneath the familiar scent of oil and steel.

  She sees it in the tension around his eyes, hears it in the careful

  way he chooses his words. This is not the man who barks orders

  without flinching, who corrects blade angles while rounds crack

  overhead.

  She has never seen Korvin

  afraid.

  It shakes her more than the

  arena itself.

  “Sir,” she begins,

  instinctively, but he cuts her off with a small shake of his head.

  “I can’t explain,” he

  says. “I won’t.” His voice lowers further. “All I can ask is

  this, don’t hold back. Not for pride. Not for mercy. Do what needs

  to be done, no matter who stands in front of you.”

  His gaze hardens, then

  softens again, painfully so. “And don’t let this place change who

  you are. Stay true. That’s the only thing they can’t

  take from you unless you give it to them.”

  Silence stretches between

  them, thick and heavy.

  Lucille nods first. “I

  promise.”

  Cain follows without

  hesitation. “We both do.”

  Korvin releases a slow

  breath, as if he’s been holding it all morning. He gives each of

  them one last squeeze, then steps back and shoves them, gently, but

  firmly, toward the line.

  “Get moving,” he says

  gruffly. “I’ll be watching. Make me proud.”

  They rejoin the cadets,

  filing upward toward their assigned seats in the stands. Lucille

  doesn’t look back, but she can feel Korvin’s eyes on her all the

  same.

  Below them, the Martyr’s

  Ring waits. Above them, the banners stir. And somewhere in between,

  something terrible prepares to begin.

  Lucille and Cain find their

  assigned places among the cadets and stop, standing shoulder to

  shoulder like the rest. No one sits. The air is too tight for that,

  coiled with nervous energy and restrained violence. The stands hum

  with conversation, low, rapid, edged with laughter that doesn’t

  quite mask the strain beneath it.

  They are somewhere in the

  middle of the cadet section, far enough from the instructors to

  breathe, close enough to the ring to feel it watching them back.

  Behind them, boots scrape

  softly.

  Marcus leans forward from

  the row above, reaching out just enough to tap Cain’s shoulder. The

  contact is brief, respectful. “Good luck,” he says quietly,

  offering a wry smile that carries more sincerity than bravado.

  Lucille glances back,

  meeting his eyes for a moment. She nods once. Cain mirrors it. There

  is no time for more.

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  A sudden hush ripples

  across the stands.

  Across the arena, one of

  the senior instructors steps forward onto a stone platform that juts

  from the base of the instructor seating. He is older, silver threaded

  through his hair, posture rigid with authority earned rather than

  imposed. When he speaks, his voice carries without strain, amplified

  by hidden systems until it fills every corner of the Martyr’s Ring.

  “Cadets.”

  The word alone is enough to

  still them.

  The instructor lifts his

  chin, voice steady and resonant as it rolls across the stone. “Cadets

  of the Astralis Castrum Academy,” he begins, “you stand here

  because you endured.”

  He lets his gaze sweep the

  stands, slow and deliberate.

  “You endured the breaking

  years. The hunger. The drills meant to strip you of weakness and the

  nights meant to test whether you would rise again in the morning.

  Many stood where you stand now. Fewer still remain.” A pause. “That

  alone is worthy of recognition.”

  His voice warms, just

  enough to feel earned.

  “I see promise before me.

  The future blades, sentinels, and champions of the Order. You are not

  children now. You are not initiates. You are the edge upon which

  tomorrow will be decided.”

  He places a fist over his

  chest in the formal gesture.

  “By the sight of Caelum

  Prime, Celestarch and First Flame, who orders the

  stars and weighs the right of rulers, may your actions today reflect

  the harmony he demands.”

  A murmur ripples through

  the stands.

  “By Valkarion,

  Red Comet and Spear of Dawn, may your valor be disciplined, your fury

  guided, and your strikes honorable.”

  He inclines his head

  slightly, reverent.

  “By Oris

  Talmarin, Star-Sage and Watching Owl, may your minds

  remain sharp when your bodies tire, and may wisdom guide your hand

  more surely than instinct.”

  Another breath.

  “By Astraea

  Veridion, She-Who-Weighs-the-World, may you be judged

  fairly today, and may you judge yourselves more harshly still.”

  He hesitates. Just long

  enough.

  “And by Valroth

  Kyr,” he says at last.

  The name falls like a blade

  dropped on stone.

  A visible shudder moves

  through the instructor benches. Several cadets stiffen. A few bow

  their heads without realizing they’ve done so.

  “The Ash-Bearer. The

  Binding Flame,” the instructor continues, his voice now stripped of

  ceremony, weighed down by reverence. “Bearer of oaths and witness

  to duty freely given. He who demands not part of you, but

  all.”

  His gaze hardens, sweeping

  the cadets.

  “May you never be called

  to offer what he asks in full,” he says quietly. “But should the

  flame close around you… may you have the resolve to give everything

  without hesitation.”

  Silence seals the arena.

  Even the banners seem to

  still.

  Silence grips the arena.

  He straightens, the

  ceremonial weight hardening into steel.

  “You have been thanked.

  You have been honored. Now hear the truth.”

  His eyes burn as they lock

  onto the cadets.

  “You were not brought

  here for words.”

  And the Ring seems to lean

  closer, listening.

  Then his tone shifts.

  “You have not been

  brought here for ceremony alone.”

  Silence tightens, sharp as

  wire.

  “Today, you will fight.”

  The announcement lands

  heavy.

  “Full contact,” he

  continues. “Sharpened weaponry. No simulated constraints.” He

  pauses, letting that sink in. “There are no formal restrictions on

  tactics, skills, or methods employed.”

  A murmur stirs and dies

  quickly.

  “Your evaluation will not

  be determined by victory or defeat,” the instructor says. “It

  will be determined by what you demonstrate. Adaptability.

  Precision. Resolve. Control under pressure.”

  He lowers his datapad

  slightly, eyes sweeping the cadets. “The ring will decide the

  rest.”

  Without another word, he

  taps the screen.

  Two sharp tones cut through

  the stands.

  Lucille’s wristband stays

  dark.

  Cain’s too.

  But nearby, two distinct

  bands begin to flash, the sound echoing louder than it should in the

  sudden quiet.

  Called.

  The cadets part

  instinctively.

  Below Lucille and Cain,

  Tiber Tiber steps forward, his expression tight, wristband pulsing

  insistently as he moves toward the stairs leading beneath the stands.

  Above them, Gallus Lartius, taller, broader, from a different track

  of classes, does the same.

  Neither speaks.

  They disappear down

  opposite stairwells into the preparation corridors below, swallowed

  by shadow and anticipation.

  Lucille watches until

  they’re gone, her jaw set, pulse steady but heavy in her ears.

  The tournament has begun.

  And soon enough, the ring will call again.

  Heat blooms along Lucille’s

  left forearm.

  Not pain, nothing so

  dramatic, but a slow, crawling burn beneath the skin, like embers

  stirred back to life. Her breath catches before she can stop it.

  Instinctively, she brings her hand to her sleeve, fingers pressing

  lightly over the old scar hidden beneath the fabric.

  It’s awake.

  Cain notices immediately.

  He shifts closer, shoulder

  brushing hers as he leans in, his voice barely audible over the

  murmur of the stands. “Lucy,” he whispers, using the name only he

  ever dares. “You okay?”

  She nods once, then shakes

  her head, torn. “The scar,” she murmurs back. “It’s burning

  again.”

  Cain’s jaw tightens.

  He knows that scar. Knows

  where it came from. Knows what it means.

  The mark of Valroth Kyr,

  Ash-Bearer, Binding Flame. A god who does not choose lightly, and

  never without cost. Fifteen years old, blood and ash and an oath she

  never fully understood, pressed into her skin and soul alike. Chosen

  is the word the Instructor Alera Voss used.

  Cursed is the word Cain

  never says out loud.

  Lucille swallows, eyes

  still fixed on the arena floor. “Why would they even say his name?”

  she whispers. “They act like it’s forbidden. Like it’s… bad

  luck.”

  Her fingers curl against

  her arm. “Even Korvin looked scared.”

  Cain hesitates, just long

  enough to choose his lie carefully.

  “They’re trying to get

  in our heads,” he says softly. “That’s all. Final Exam

  theatrics. Bigger stakes, bigger fear.” He forces a small,

  reassuring smile she can’t quite see. “Instructors love that

  stuff.”

  Lucille doesn’t look

  convinced. The burn pulses once more, then settles, dull and

  watchful.

  “I guess,” she

  whispers.

  She lets her hand fall back

  to her side, accepting the explanation because she wants to, not

  because it feels right.

  Movement ripples through

  the stands. Tiber Tiber and Gallus Lartius emerge from beneath the

  arena, ascending opposite stairways that spill them out onto the

  churned dirt of the Martyr’s Ring. The crowd quiets as they walk,

  boots heavy, deliberate, toward the wooden fencing that marks the

  boundary of the pit.

  Neither looks up.

  They vault the waist-high

  barrier with practiced ease and land inside the ring, armor plating

  clanking softly as servos hum to life. The Order’s standard

  exoskeleton encases them fully now: reinforced chest and back plates

  rising into high collars that guard the throat, layered pauldrons,

  vambraces, greaves, armored boots biting into the dirt. Their helmets

  seal with a hiss, full-faced visors turning their expressions into

  mirrored anonymity.

  Soldiers, not cadets.

  Tiber Tiber rolls his

  shoulder once and brings his longsword down into a ready grip. The

  blade is clean, narrow, elegant, balanced for precision.

  Across from him, Gallus

  Lartius shifts his stance and settles his greatsword across his

  shoulder. The weapon is massive, brutal in its simplicity, its edge

  catching the light as he lowers it with both hands. He is taller,

  broader, a looming presence even in armor.

  They stop an arm’s length

  apart.

  Above them, the senior

  instructor raises both hands.

  “Tiber Tiber,”

  he calls, voice ringing across the arena. The House name is given

  weight, spoken like a verdict.

  A pause.

  “Gallius Lartius.”

  Another beat of silence.

  Then the bell tolls.

  Once.

  Metal on metal. Final.

  They move.

  Tiber strikes first, not

  wildly, not eagerly. Clean footwork. A textbook opening cut meant to

  test range and reaction. Gallus answers in kind, greatsword sweeping

  up to intercept, the impact shuddering through both of them as steel

  kisses steel.

  The exchange tightens

  immediately.

  They circle. Dirt churns

  beneath armored boots. Tiber stays light, controlled, blade darting

  in precise arcs. Gallus presses with power, wide swings meant to

  dominate space and force mistakes.

  There is no warning. No

  easing into it.

  A glancing cut slips past

  Gallus’s guard and opens his upper arm. Blood beads, then spills,

  dark against the silver-gray of his armor where plating doesn’t

  quite cover the joint. The crowd inhales sharply.

  Tiber does not hesitate.

  He steps in, driving a

  second strike, forcing Gallus back. The greatsword comes around too

  slow this time, heavy, overcommitted, and Gallus shifts to recover.

  His foot slips.

  Just a fraction.

  Blood has slicked the dirt

  beneath him, turning packed earth into treachery. His balance

  falters. His stance opens.

  Tiber reacts before thought

  can intervene.

  He lunges.

  The longsword punches

  forward, sliding beneath the edge of Gallus’s armor, inside the

  thigh, high and deep, the blade angling upward where protection

  thins. There is a wet, awful sound as steel parts flesh.

  Then the spray.

  Bright arterial blood

  erupts, fanning across Tiber’s armor, spattering the dirt in

  violent arcs. Gallus gasps, a sharp, strangled sound, and collapses

  to his knees, both hands clawing uselessly at Tiber’s blade still

  buried inside him.

  The arena freezes.

  Tiber stands there, sword

  locked in place, his breathing suddenly loud in his helmet. He does

  not pull the blade free. He does not step back. He simply stares as

  Gallus pitches forward, choking.

  By the time medics vault

  the fence and rush the body, it is already too late.

  They work anyway. Frantic.

  Futile.

  The instructor raises a

  hand.

  “The match is concluded,”

  he says flatly.

  Tiber Tiber doesn’t move.

  He stands where the blow

  ended, shoulders rigid, hands still raised as if his sword should be

  there, as if his body hasn’t caught up with what it’s done.

  His breathing turns ragged, sharp bursts fogging the inside of his

  visor. Blood runs down his gauntlet, warm, slick, dripping from the

  knuckles of his armored hand to darken the dirt at his feet.

  It isn’t triumph that

  freezes him.

  It’s recognition.

  He looks down at Gallus

  Lartius, at the way his body lies twisted wrong, at the blood pooling

  beneath him, and something in Tiber fractures. His head jerks

  slightly, like he expects Gallus to get up. To curse. To laugh it

  off. To keep fighting.

  Instinct had carried him

  forward. Training. Muscle memory. The drilled response to an opening.

  And now Gallus is dead.

  Tiber stumbles back a step,

  boots skidding, nearly losing his balance. He raises his hands,

  staring at them as if they belong to someone else.

  “I—” His voice cracks

  inside the helmet, unheard by most, but Cain sees it in the way his

  shoulders shake. “I didn’t—”

  He lowers his head.

  This wasn’t an enemy.

  This wasn’t a foe of the Order.

  This was a cadet. A peer. A

  brother who trained beside him, ate the same rations, bled the same

  simulated blood in the same drills.

  The medics’ movements are

  brisk, practiced, mercilessly efficient. One checks for signs of life

  and stops almost immediately. A subtle shake of the head passes

  between them.

  Another team rushes in with

  a stretcher.

  They cover Gallus’ body

  quickly, not out of respect, but to remove it from sight. Blood still

  drips from the canvas as they lift him, his weight sagging

  unnaturally as they carry him away toward the far gate.

  Tiber flinches when a medic

  takes his arm.

  He doesn’t resist. He

  doesn’t speak.

  He walks like a man

  half-asleep, guided back toward the preparation stairs, head bowed,

  blood still staining his armor. He never looks back.

  The shock ripples outward.

  Cadets whisper. Then

  murmur. Then breathe too fast.

  Some stare at the ring,

  pale and rigid. Others look down at their hands as if seeing weapons

  there already. A few begin to panic quietly, eyes darting,

  calculating exits that don’t exist.

  Death was never supposed to

  be real.

  Not here. Not for them.

  Lucille’s eyes are wide,

  unblinking. Her mouth is dry. She watches as Gallus’ body vanishes

  beneath the stands, as if removed, he might somehow cease to have

  existed at all.

  But the stain remains.

  Cain feels her go still

  beside him.

  Behind them, Marcus exhales

  under his breath. “That was fast,” he mutters, disbelief and awe

  tangled together. “Gallus didn’t even have a chance.”

  Before the words can

  settle, sharp tones ring out again.

  Wristbands ping.

  Another pair of cadets

  stiffen as their bands light up, the sound cutting through the

  aftermath like a blade.

  The Final Exam does not

  pause. The Martyr’s Ring does not care.

  And now they all

  understand, this isn’t a test. It’s a warning.

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