The wind howled through the cracked battlements of Kaer Morhen, but inside the laboratory, the air was unnervingly still, smelling of ozone and the sharp, biting scent of refined spirits. Ciri stood by a narrow arrow slit, her gaze fixed on the valley below. The distant horizon, once a sea of untamed forests, was now dotted with the faint, orange glow of industrial chimneys from the lowlands.
Robin nodded slowly, his hands steady as he filtered a shimmering emerald liquid through a fine silk mesh.
He paused, watching the thick liquid drip into a glass vial.
In the corner, sitting on a cold stone bench, was Tom of Temeria. The young recruit looked small, his eyes darting between the bubbling vats and the heavy iron shackles on the mutation table. To Tom, the grand conflict between Modernists and Traditionalists was a distant noise; his entire universe had shrunk down to his primal fear of the Grass Elixirs.
Robin stepped toward the boy, holding a small, fourth vial that glowed with a soft, constant bioluminescence.
Robin's gaze flickered to the vial with a hint of gravity.
Despite the assurance, Tom's heart hammered against his ribs as he climbed onto the table. He looked at the leather straps and the cold glass tubes. He wanted to believe in Robin's laws of nature, but as the needles were prepared, he couldn't shake the doubt: could a few drops of refined alchemy truly stop the Trial from being a death sentence?
******
The transformation was unnerving in its silence. As the last of the modified elixirs hissed through the glass tubes and into Tom's veins, the boy didn't scream. He didn't convulse or claw at the stone table as generations of Witchers had done before him. Instead, his breathing slowed, his muscles relaxed, and his eyes drifted shut as he fell into a deep, heavy slumber.
He began disconnecting the apparatus with practiced, steady fingers.
Ciri stepped closer, looking down at the sleeping recruit.
The heavy oak doors of the laboratory creaked open, admitting a gust of mountain air and the rhythmic thud of heavy boots. Geralt, Eskel, and Lambert filed into the room, the candlelight catching the silver of their medallions.
Geralt stopped at the edge of the table, his gold eyes scanning the sleeping boy and the strange, refined equipment Robin had built.
Lambert let out a short, sharp bark of a laugh, leaning against a weapon rack with his arms crossed. He looked at Robin with his trademark mix of cynicism and dark humor.
Eskel frowned, placing a steadying hand on Lambert's shoulder.
Robin turned away from the table, his expression somber as he faced his elders.
He looked at his hands, the hands of a scholar and a killer.
Geralt looked from Robin to the sleeping Tom.
******
Two days had passed in the quiet, drafty halls of Kaer Morhen. The sun was just beginning to crest the mountain peaks when Lambert walked into the main hall, tossing a heavy, ink-stained newspaper onto the wooden table in front of Robin. The headlines were bold, printed with the sharp precision of the new Gnomish presses.
He leaned back, crossing his arms.
Robin picked up the paper, his amber eyes scanning the reports of steam-tanks and flintlock divisions breaking alchemical lines.
Before Robin could answer, Ciri appeared at the doorway of the infirmary, a small smile on her face.
The group hurried to the bedside. Tom lay there, his skin now possessing the faint, healthy sheen of a successful mutation. His breathing was deep, but despite the sun hitting his face, he remained motionless, clearly content to stay in the sanctuary of sleep.
Ciri leaned over and shook his shoulder gently.
Tom groaned and pulled the blanket higher, mumbling something incoherent. He had slept like a log for forty-eight hours and seemed determined to make it seventy-two.
Robin stepped forward, a mischievous glint in his eye.
The effect was instantaneous. Tom's eyes snapped open—amber and slit-pupilled, glowing with the new light of a Witcher. He bolted upright, nearly knocking Ciri over.
The room erupted. Geralt offered a rare, dry chuckle, while Lambert and Eskel struggled to hold back their laughter. Even in a world of changing empires and industrial wars, some things—like a boy's appetite—remained gloriously simple.
