The bells of Varrowhold rang at dawn, their deep bronze voices shaking dust from the shutters of every crooked house in the city. From the scribe's quarters, Kaelen sat up at the sound, clutching the wool blanket to his chest. The bells meant only one thing today. It was the Day of Marking. His stomach twisted. He should have felt excited, like the others. Every sixteen years old in the city dreamed of this day, when the hidden Sigil etched by fate revealed itself upon their skin. Some gained the mark of fire, and flames bent to their will. Others awakened to wind, steel, or shadow. A rare few received crowns or swords, marks of leadership and war. Kaelen was not so eager. He had copied too many scrolls, transcribed too many records of those whose marks betrayed them. He had read about the boy who gained the Sigil of Beastcall, only for wolves to devour his family before he could control it. He remembered the tale of the girl marked with frost who froze her own hands to ice. The Sigil was power, yes, but it was also burden he didn't want. "Kaelen," came a soft knock at the door. His master's voice, patient as always. "Are you ready? "Kaelen swallowed the dryness in his throat. "Yes, Master."
He dressed in his plain tunic, the ink stains on the cuffs refusing to wash away no matter how hard he scrubbed. He tied his belt with shaking hands, then stepped into the narrow hallway lined with shelves of parchment. Master Rhovan waited near the door, his tall frame stooped by years bent over manuscripts. His silver beard caught the first light of morning. He looked Kaelen over with calm eyes that seemed to read more than any book.
"Today is only the beginning," Rhovan said. "Whatever mark you bear, it is not the whole of who you are." Kaelen nodded, though the words did little to ease his nerves. They stepped into the street, joining the stream of families all moving toward the high square. Children walked at their parents' sides, their faces lit with excitement. Vendors had already set up stalls, selling ribbons of every color so that families could tie them to their doorways in honor of their child's awakening. Kaelen felt alone among the joy. His parents were long gone, taken by fever when he was five. Rhovan had raised him with books instead of lullabies, ink instead of toys. He should have been grateful, yet as he watched other boys laugh with their fathers and sisters, the empty place inside him ached. The high square loomed ahead, dominated by the Marking Pillar. It was a monolith of pale stone said to have been carved from the bones of a slain god. Symbols shimmered faintly across its surface, shifting patterns only the truly gifted could read. Around the pillar, priests of the Sigil Circle waited in flowing robes, chanting the old hymns . Kaelen's name was near the end of the list. He had to stand and watch as one after another stepped forward. A girl named Alira pressed her palm to the pillar. Light flared, and a golden crown appeared above her brow before sinking into her skin. The crowd roared with approval. A mark of command. Her family wept with pride. Another boy gained the Sigil of the Blades, shimmering steel forming around his arms before vanishing. He held his head high as though already a knight. One by one, the youths awakened, their lives forever changed. Kaelen's heartbeat drummed louder with each one. He felt sweat prick at the back of his neck though the morning air was cool. At last, the priest called his name. "Kaelen, son of no house. Step forward." A hush spread across the crowd. Orphan apprentices rarely drew notice. Kaelen walked stiffly, his sandals scraping the stone. Every eye felt heavy on him. He reached the pillar. The stone pulsed faintly as though alive. "Place your hand," the priest instructed. Kaelen pressed his palm against the cool surface. For a heartbeat nothing happened. Then the pillar burned with light. Symbols whirled like stars, twisting, clashing, shattering. A crack split the stone beneath his hand. Pain lanced up his arm, sharp and searing. He gasped and stumbled back. The crowd cried out in alarm. Where others had received marks of glory, Kaelen's Sigil writhed on his skin, a jagged black scar that flickered and broke apart as though it refused to settled. The priests recoiled. One whispered, "A broken Sigil. "The words struck Kaelen harder than the pain. The pillar's light died. Silence pressed down on the square. The crowd shifted uneasily, their earlier joy smothered. Kaelen cradled his arm, staring at the fractured mark etched into his flesh. It throbbed with cold fire, every beat of his heart feeding it. His legs trembled. "What does it mean?" he asked, voice barely a whisper. The priests gave no answer. One could see the fear in his eyes. And in that silence, Kaelen knew his life had changed not with the promise of power, but with the weight of something far darker.
The silence did not last. A murmur rippled through the crowd, growing into voices sharp with unease.
"Cursed."
"An omen."
"Seal the boy away before he brings ruin." Kaelen flinched at their words. His broken Sigil pulsed in rhythm with their fear, the jagged lines across his arm glowing faintly like embers buried in ash. The head priest, a tall man with a crimson sash, raised his hands to quiet the crowd. "Do not leap to judgment. The Circle will examine this mark. Perhaps it is only an error of the pillar." But even his voice wavered. He, too, had seen the fracture that no record spoke of. Master Rhovan stepped forward, placing a steadying hand on Kaelen's shoulder. His grip was firm, unyielding. "He is under my charge. I will see him home." The priest hesitated before nodding. "Very well. Take him. But he must remain under watch until the Circle decides." Kaelen's chest tightened. Watch? Decide? He was no criminal, yet he felt chains settle invisibly around his wrists. Rhovan guided him away from the pillar. The crowd parted reluctantly, eyes fixed on him as if he carried plague. Children who had laughed minutes earlier now clutched their mothers, shrinking from his touch. They left the square. Kaelen's steps were heavy. Each stride seemed to drag him further into shadow.
"Master," he whispered, "what happened to me?" Rhovan's face was grim, more lined than Kaelen had ever seen. "I do not know." "You always know." Kaelen's voice cracked. "You taught me every mark in the scrolls. Every legend but not this. Rhovan stopped in the alleyway, turning Kaelen to face him. His eyes opened widely "Because this is new. Or perhaps it is older than all records.