Ficool

Chapter 32 - Aftermath

Chapter 32

Aftermath

The Academy took approximately four hours to finish processing what it

had seen.

He could track the stages of it from the way people looked at him â€" or

stopped looking at him, which was its own kind of statement. In the

first hour after the duel, he was invisible in a new way: not the

invisibility of someone too unimportant to notice, but the invisibility

of something people needed to think about before they could look at

directly.

In the second hour, the looking started. Careful, sideways, the

assessment of people recalibrating.

By the third hour, clusters of students in the common hall went quiet

when he walked in, and he understood that conversations had been

happening about him that would resume once he left.

Fen found him in the library before dinner.

'The duel result hasn't been officially recorded yet,' she said, sitting

across from him and keeping her voice low. 'The faculty witness filed

his report but the committee that processes duel results apparently had

a procedural question about how to categorize the win.'

'What's the question?'

'How to record the ability used.' She looked at him steadily. 'Standard

duel records list the winning technique â€" Pyros burst, Terros

shield-break, Aeros chain, and so on. Your technique doesn't have a

category in the existing record system.'

He'd expected something like this. 'What are the options?'

'They can create a new category, which requires faculty committee

approval and draws attention. They can record it as Umbros â€" which is

officially a suppressed school, which draws a different kind of

attention. Or they can leave the technique field blank, which is

apparently also a procedural issue.'

'What does the faculty witness recommend?'

'Unknown. But Vael is on the committee that processes unusual results. I

noticed that from the administrative board this morning.' A pause. 'She

may have already known this would come up.'

Cyan looked at the books in front of him that he hadn't been reading.

'Orris,' he said. 'How is he?'

'Recovering. Mana depletion at that level takes a day or two.' She

paused. 'He's not filing a grievance, if that's what you're wondering.

He could argue the technique was unregistered and therefore invalid, but

a grievance would require him to explain publicly that he lost to a null

result provisional, and apparently he's decided he'd rather absorb the

loss quietly.'

That was the thing about people like Orris. They understood the cost of

drawing attention to certain kinds of failures.

'The other provisionals?' Cyan asked.

'Varied. Aldous thinks it was well-executed. The noble-adjacent group is

uncomfortable â€" you've disrupted the implicit hierarchy they were

relying on. The twins are apparently telling everyone you're secretly

Gold-rank which is wrong but entertaining.' She folded her hands. 'Dain

is telling anyone who will listen that he knew about you before the duel

and that this is consistent with his prior assessment, which is also

wrong but in a different way.'

Cyan thought about Dain saying that with the particular enthusiasm Dain

brought to most things.

'And General Cohort?'

Fen was quiet for a moment. 'The Gold students have been very deliberate

about not commenting. That's its own statement.' She met his eyes. 'Sera

Voss was in the observation tier. I don't know where she was sitting â€" I

didn't see her until after â€" but she was there.'

He thought about a girl who'd had a dream about him for nine years

looking at the Mark on his palm from across a duel hall.

'All right,' he said.

'All right?' Fen raised an eyebrow.

'I mean that I hear you.' He looked back at his books. 'What I did today

was going to create exactly this kind of attention eventually. I chose

to create it in a controlled context rather than waiting for an

uncontrolled one. The attention is the cost. I paid it.'

Fen looked at him for a moment.

'You planned it,' she said.

'I was standing somewhere,' he said.

She looked at him for another moment.

Then, very faintly, she smiled. It was the first time he'd seen her

smile. It lasted about two seconds.

'Eat dinner,' she said, standing. 'Tomorrow is going to be a longer day

than today.'

She was right about that.

More Chapters