Chapter One: Roosters
The worst thing about living in a city were the fucking roosters. Proud little shits, screaming about how safe they were from monsters. Couldn’t just wake up quietly, like everyone else. Or with a massive sigh, like Tom.
Tom made his way from his family’s compound, passing through the high walls and locking the gate after himself. It had been years since they’d had guards there, but he preferred not having someone wait on him every time he came and went anyway. His family was noble, one of the great Houses of Wayrest, and he’d always hated the reminder. The Cutter name was a lot to live up to.
Being an Idealist didn’t automatically make one a Noble, but a Noble House was only Noble so long as it housed Idealists. With Tom looking less and less likely to manifest as each year passed, the other Houses had slowly distanced themselves. Without the support of the peerage, the Cutters had fought a losing battle to maintain their prestige. A Noble House without prestige was even less of one than one without Idealists.
He began making his way to the Academy, a route he’d walked thousands of times before. It wasn’t far, and nearly a straight line down the main boulevard from his family’s manor too. His morning walk to the grounds was the most relaxing part of his day. He savoured every minute of them, but he never dawdled.
This close to the city centre the streets were wide and clean. The houses were large, clad in slate-grey stone, and snug behind walls of mortared river rock. Dawn rose over the roofs, tingeing tiles pink. Smoke trickled from chimneys, tickling his nose with the scents of bread and wood.
Further from the city centre the houses were wooden, and the glass that was a common sight in windows here would become rare. Out in the village-rings, luxuries like glass were a frivolous expense. Far too easy for horn or claw to shatter.
He walked at a good clip past other noble Houses’ compounds, joining the sparse foot traffic. He could hear distant hammers pinging off metal and the throaty grate of saws on wood from the Artisan’s district. Horses whickered, dogs barked, children laughed - all the myriad sounds of Wayrest sighing, stretching, and slowly waking up.
The city bustled even this early in the morning. He passed through Market Square, walking along the edge, tuning out the familiar cry of hawkers plying their wares. Some were city residents, already perched under awnings in-front of their shops in the dawn light. Some were goodwives, in from the village-rings to sell produce or crafts, or traders, come from Safe Harbour or Horizon, or even further beyond. All were a-clamour, their shouts jostling atop one another.
Tom rolled his broad shoulders to limber them. He was taller than average, but not so much that it was the first thing that leapt to mind when meeting him. Just enough so that he could see comfortably over the steadily growing traffic as he moved through the growing throng. He took a deep breath and sighed it out again, letting his eyes range over the growing bustle.
The people were all cut from the same cloth, stocky with their farming roots, even if the majority here in Wayrest proper were too clean for farmers. Most had the same earthy brown hair as Tom, and straw-blonde was not uncommon, but black and ginger stood out like coals in a fireplace.
The citizens of Wayrest loved colour, and it showed in their clothing. Wayrest’s main export was food-crops, but their few luxuries like wine and dye brought in a tremendous amount of coin. The village-rings afforded Wayrest rare security for agriculture, and it paid dividends for its citizens. Dyed coats and jackets in all manner of colours flitted and weaved, buying and selling, creating a tapestry of colour as much as noise. The ever present stone walls, cobbled streets, and tan skin common to Wayrest lent an earthy undertone to the scene.
Wayrest, a fortnight’s journey from the next nearest cities down the trade roads, still drew visitors and merchants on all kinds of business, and Market Square always had interesting sorts to see.
One of his favourite pastimes was to meander round the square. Tom could spend hours marvelling at the foreign wares, loitering near travellers trying to catch news from abroad, and imagining what it would be like to travel.
It was a pipe dream, for him. For anyone who hadn’t manifested. Making the dangerous journey down the trade roads, through the boundless miles of the Deep Green, was exceedingly dangerous even for those who had. For a regular person like him, it would be a death march. Tom had to content himself with admiring the travellers who’d made the journey.
He didn’t have the time though, not this morning. His gut had a churning feeling in it that he’d come to associate with bad news lying in wait. He half wanted to linger, to see if he could catch any hint of what might be causing it in amongst the market gossip, but he couldn’t afford to be late.
Tom stepped faster, heading down the broad promenade leading to the Academy. Away from the hustle of Market Square, things were quieter, if you could call the now steadily moving traffic quiet.
Market Square marked the delineation between the Noble District and the Administrative one. The carefully groomed compounds became dour buildings hunched together as if to help each other shoulder the burden of Wayrest’s bureaucracy. The bureaucrats filtering into them certainly didn’t look as though they were in any state to help.
Sweat began to bead on Tom’s forehead, and he adjusted his collar, trying for a little relief from the hot, still air. Summers in Wayrest were brutal, and he was glad for it ending.
You won’t be so glad when they call the Reaping. He felt a sick anticipation at the thought. There hadn’t been a Reaping called in three years now, and the next must be close.
Maybe this will be the year I’ll finally manifest. Hope and dismay fought in his chest. And maybe I’ll manifest the Sword today, and not spend this week getting beatings, he finished derisively.
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Tom stepped out of the street as a carriage rolled past, horses snorting. He absently noted the crest on the side, a golden sickle wrapped in vines. The Cutter carriage only got used for the most serious of occasions, these days. Even then, they could barely afford to rent a horse to draw it.
He could see the walls of the Academy now, red against the ubiquitous grey, dragged here at ridiculous expense from the quarries at Horizon. It loomed over the nearby architecture, with clusters of red buildings with clay tiled roofs rising high above the stately walls. The only other buildings in Wayrest that exceeded the grandeur of the Academy were the Council Chambers, and Our Lady of Verity Cathedral. They were on the other side of the city centre, but Tom knew if he walked a scant block towards them the tops of the Chambers would be clearly visible. The steeple of the cathedral was clearly visible anywhere in the city.
The stream of bureaucrats slackened, and were replaced by youths decked in all manner of gaudy clothes. It made Tom glad for his straightforward clothes in Cutter black-and-silver. A bit of sweat was worth not looking like a parrot as far as he was concerned.
The Academy was where all of Wayrest’s noble youth trained. Tom had been attending since he was eight, the earliest age they allowed it, but by now, at twenty-two, there were only a bare handful of his peers that hadn’t manifested at least one Ideal. Certainly not any as old as he was. The bullying he suffered as a result had slowly grown worse and more widespread with each year.
He was an oddity, for a noble, even if many humans never manifested at all. Every other noble that hadn’t manifested by his age had long since stopped attending the Academy. There was no point. For Tom, there was no choice.
Students would generally graduate a year or so after they manifested their first Ideal, to apprentice with any of the professions in the city, as their Ideals dictated. The Guard was always eager for recruits, to say nothing of the Healers, or the Artisans, or the Church.
It was easier for those organisations to recruit from the other Schools around the city. Their students didn’t have the option of merely retiring to a life of largesse after their schooling. Those Schools also didn’t have funds from the noble peerage flowing in, however, and so the different organisations fought fiercely to recruit from the Academy. Their students had access to the best training and resources in the city, and it showed in their graduates.
He cringed at the thought of what his father would do if he didn’t manifest soon.
Focus, he thought. Worry is a worm that eats calm’s crops.
Easier said than done though. He neared the Academy, feeling the weight of his responsibilities settling on to him as his day neared its start.
The carriage that had passed him had pulled to a stop outside, and a man dressed in servants’ livery was helping a young woman down. Her long black hair swayed in silken waves as she descended. The morning sun gleamed on her smooth, tanned skin, just slightly darker than typical of Wayrest natives where her hair definitely was not. She stopped as he approached, turning eyes of liquid black on him.
The Raventos family had made a fortune when they moved to Wayrest a few centuries ago, bringing their knowledge of viticulture with them. They had been quickly accepted into the peerage, and were now one of the most prestigious Houses in Wayrest.
While the rest of his peers ranged from merciless bullies to snide gossips, Rosa Raventos was an anomaly. She was the only one of his peers who ever stuck up for him, but she was just as quick to cut him with words as the rest.
Tom was a stark contrast to her. Where he was patient and methodical, she was sharp and quick. Tom was not stupid, but next to Rosa he felt a fool. He was always slow to build relationships, where his father even allowed it, but she made quick friends, and lost them just as easily. She was friendly and fiery in equal measure, as quick to ruffle someone’s feathers as she was to smooth them. Tom had never known what to make of her. The positions of their respective Houses only made things worse.
The Raventos family was firmly established, and their fortunes continued to rise. Rosa was everything such a family could hope for in a scion, too. She had always been exceptional at everything the Academy taught: combat, strategy, history, sciences and philosophy. While Tom could also say that he was at least not far behind her in these subjects, there was only so much that counted for without an Ideal – and Rosa, of course, had manifested Fire during the last Reaping. Ever since then she had him hopelessly outmatched.
Her aquiline face was impassive. For a long moment she stared at him, her cool eyes making him squirm. As he opened his mouth to greet her, she gave a loud snort, then turned and swept smoothly through the gates of the Academy. It seemed she was in one of her sour moods today. Or maybe not, he could never tell.
Tom sighed to himself. I’ve got more important things to focus on than friends, anyway.
Like not dying in the Reaping. Or worse, embarrassing father and ruining his House’s reputation.
Truth be told, he would love some friends. Even just one. He always thought of himself as a friendly and kind person. But his father ensured he had no chance to build relationships of any kind. “Distractions” he called them, and he had punished Tom for a lot less than being distracted. His failure to manifest made certain that none of his peers wanted to taint themselves by association with him anyway.
Nothing to do but move forward, he thought. Maybe once I manifest people won’t mind knowing me again.
Somehow, he knew it would never be quite that easy though.
Tom sighed inwardly, steeled himself, and started through the grand gates of the Academy.