Fable - Ask A New Start

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Elbion College
Convocation Hall
OOC/ Open to new students. Staff by request.


Calixtus was surprised to find that there was no order to the ceremony. New students arrived in dribs and drabs along with family members or friends.

He came alone. The Commencement Convocation was held a week before the formal start of the autumn term. All new students were gathered to meet and hear from staff members. Calixtus could see his brother seated at the head table in formal robes. He was a maester now.

Elbion had been through difficult times. The great dragon had landed a curse upon the city, but they had rebuilt.

An entire tower of the college was a reminder. It was mounted on a great fragment of rock that still floated, attached to the cliffside by heavy chains.

His own place - and that of his brother's - was seen as contentious. They were from one of the Eleven. The merchant families that ran Elbion. It was seen by some of the more traditional academics as a direct attempt to influence the institution. By the rest, his attendance was seen as nepotism.

Calixtus didn't care what most people thought. The doors had been opened to a wide range of ages. There were even a few non-humans. Most people, he found, were idiots.

Snacks had been laid out on the tables, but the new students weren't seating yet. He looked around for any more familiar faces.
 
It would show the new students something to look forward to in what they could learn if you were to attend the Commencement Convocation. Your brother Tristain did so on your first year, remember?

When Bliss had first walked through those doors for Commencement four years ago, it had been with a frown. Yes, her brother had been there to welcome new students, but he had ignored her at first because he wanted her to try and make new friends instead of attaching herself at his side. What it had done was made her too aware of herself, and barely spoke to anyone beyond small talk and introductions.

This year, she had been invited to attend so that if any students had questions, particularly on Defensive Magicks, she could be of assistance and share her experiences attending the College.

She tucked her ash blonde hair behind her ears, the top half of her hair pulled back into a braid in an effort to keep her hair out from her face. Only a small section of hair that framed her face seemed a tad too short to tuck away, for it only fell forward again. Her roommate had insisted on braiding ribbons into Bliss' hair to try a new style, only for the ribbon to become so tangled and wrapped around the hair, it needed to be cut free. It was not only ribbon that had been cut that day.

She should have allowed the Professor to use light magic to grow it out back to the original length. She had thought to tough it out, 'It will grow back soon' haunting her with ridicule. Now she was to spend the next hour or so fighting with this one disobedient lock of hair.

"Welcome, students! Please take a seat, help yourself to the spread laid out for you as we will begin Commencement shortly." Called out a Professor by the entrance to the Hall. Bliss was not so eager to take a seat just yet.
 
A small figure lingered on the fringe of the ceremony. Her Jade eyes sharply passing over the assortment of students and professors with a small frown. She of course noticed Calixtus enter. She was deeply aware of both of the brothers in the way that remora are aware of sharks. She was a daughter of a much smaller less influential merchant house. That she had been pulled back to Elbion and suddenly supported in her desire to pursue academic study was merely a ripple in their wake.
It had become transparent to her the moment she heard that one of the brothers was her age and would be entering the college in the same year.
She had no doubt that her father was hoping she would find a way to cozy up to the boy. But she didn't have much intention of going out of her way to do so. Actually if they didn't notice her at all that would be just fine. No impression was much better than a negative one.
It was only in preparation for joining the college that Yue had been welcomed into the main house with open arms. So it was unlikely that either would recognize her.

The benefit was that with someone like Calixtus drawing the ire her own admittance was much less contested. After all the more humble houses were expected to follow trend. She had caught the odd derisive glance of a person deciding she ought not to be here, but nothing like the outright glares he was getting.

A girl standing nearby fussed with her hair. The woman was a bit taller and had a quiet almost valiant quality of features. Her hair was clumsily arranged.....but the colors was nice. It would pair well with pale blue ribbons...or a pearl hair pin...no, polished glass in the shape of small leaves. oh. She had been looking a bit too long. Yue gave a slow blink then turned her nose towards the spread.
Her eyes caught up and sought out whatever seemed the most palatable. Elbion was diverse but she often found the food a bit....disappointing. With a small moment of indecision she hesitantly picked up a small fruit tart of some kind from the table.

Bliss
 
"Welcome, students! Please take a seat, help yourself to the spread laid out for you as we will begin Commencement shortly." Called out a Professor

Calixtus passed his eyes over the staff at the head table. He knew many of the names, but had only seen a few portraits. The robes identified that most were Maesters of the First Order. Even those had been studying for ten years. Not everyone made the Second Order, but that was said to take at least another decade.

He took a seat at a nearby table. It was announced so quickly that he didn't get a chance to choose who he sat with. That was unfortunate. He would need to gather some allies around himself.

He tried to make it seem like he didn't take much notice of other people, but he was always watching. He was always weighing up the value others could bring to him.

A small girl with green eyes was watching one of the current students. There was a simple looking boy with mousey brown hair sat opposite him.

The hubub of conversation simmered down before rising again as they realised the ceremony wasn't starting just yet.

"Good evening, I am Calixtus Blodwyn," he announced to everyone at his table. He set one hand on top of his other. He decided to leave the food for now.
 
"Here!" To her left, the familiar shade of chestnut hair was all Bliss could see. The head belonged to her roommate, Bea. She was a small thing, just over five feet in height for her grandfather was a dwarf, never mind that Bea's family were all small, even the non-dwarven side to the family.

"Do not cut anymore of my hair." Bliss blurted as she peered at her first and only friend. Her eyes widened, stared a moment before she sighed and went to take the nearest seat that was not occupied. "My mother will think regrowing one lock of my hair is me abusing my education on beautifying myself when I should be focused on being an excellent mage." The young woman grumbled.

Bea stood behind her, a grin unseen by Bliss. "Fret not, Blissy. I got you in this mess, and I will get you out of it."

It took a lot of composure not to jump the moment she felt the knife slip beneath the braid and began cutting through ribbons. It took even more willpower to not shut her eyes. There were a few faces turned her way, and she wanted to scowl at the show they were putting on for the new starts beginning their College education.


"Alright! That's enough! I'll... do it myself from here..." Bliss insisted the moment her braid was freed from the ribbons that tangled into a mess. She turned to look at her friend, who still smiled as she placed the knife onto the table and climbed over the bench seat to relax at the side of her. "I'm going to teach you to braid so you don't accidentally cause a disaster with your younger sisters."

"Better start sooner. You dropped this." Arsenio came to sat on the other side of Bliss. A year ahead of her, and a good friend of her brothers', Arsenio smiled at her as if he were one of her brothers. "Looking choppy back there."

Bliss looked down, to his fingers pinching another lock of hair that he had picked up from the ground.
"That's it!" She said with a hurry, grasping for her hair and pulling all of her ash blonde hair over her shoulder. "I will have to suffer Mother's complaints and worries." She murmured in a low voice, one that tried to hide her impatience as she began to weave her hair back to regular lengths.
 
"Good evening, I am Calixtus Blodwyn," he announced to everyone at his table. He set one hand on top of his other. He decided to leave the food for now.

We know. Yue quietly thought. She could hear some murmured introductions in response.
She might have made her own if she weren't distracted by the small tragedy unfolding.
Just when she had made up her mind to look away,
A smaller brunette girl had joined the golden haired one and was going at it with a knife. She groaned internally why on Arethil would you bring a knife near hair like that. She couldn't help but watch the scene with a hint of reproach. It was like a tragic carriage crash, terrible and fascinating.
Wasn't she already a student here? Didn't they teach not to be so careless here?
One of the boys held up a bit of hair that had fallen and it made her frown of disapproval deepen. See! Of course that would happen!

It was a decently impressive magic weaving the hair back to form. One that Yue might have admired if she weren't so appalled.
She clicked her tongue and hissed. "You should not leave such things lying around! Don't you have any fear that someone might use it?"
Yue spoke up sharply and set the long forgotten fruit tart back onto the plate.
"If a stray lock of hair were used against you, I imagine your mother would have much more to worry about then a bit of vanity........and it's quite rude to fuss with ones hair around food...."
She knew she was already a bit out of line but now that she had asserted herself she might as well go all the way.
"....and also the ribbons you've chosen are a poor color match....and a simpler half braid style would have suited your features more."
Finished chiding the older students she simmered to less of a reproachful glare and more of a disapproving pout.
Though her own mother would never have objected to glamours. Beauty is also a tool. A truly cunning and practical woman should make use of all charms. Or so was the principal she followed in theory, in practice was another story. There was a boy at this very table she had been bade to charm and she hadn't even smiled in his direction. In fact, she had been purposefully avoiding eye contact.
 


He knew once he stepped inside the carriage, there was no going back.

So to Suleiman it seemed a time interminable as he stood there, looking. The mansion of Clan Askari lay to his back, the street ran from the breadth of one eye to the other, the busyness of Maraan surrounded him, the unclouded sun shone above, and before him, of course, the carriage, but as well his father Eskandar and his mother Farah. Before him too, unseen by his eyes but present in his mind, the journey to Elbion, and the knowledge that the journey's end would prove a new beginning.

Strange. Wasn't this, or something like this, what he wanted? To travel? Journey afar? Yeah. Of course. But in this he had a weight on his shoulders that the journeys of his dreams lacked; for over a hundred years the Askari Clan went without any son or daughter born with the gift of magic. And now Suleiman had it. He had it, and secretly, he loathed it and feared it. Not for some grand reason, oh no no, nothing like that. He loathed and feared it because his mother and father looked at him differently now, especially father. Pride glimmered in every gaze, gleaming more than any jewel crafted by Askari hands. They wanted so much for him, to see him excel, to witness him use his magic to bring honor and renown untold to Clan Askari.

But if he faltered? But if his gift fell short of their hopes?

In truth Suleiman perhaps stood but a second or two before the carriage. He left those burning questions unanswered as he stepped forward, toward the proud smiles of his father and his mother, and he boarded the carriage. One of the Askari-sworn men shut the door after them, the call went out among the other mounted men escorting the carriage, and away they went.

Farewell, Maraan.

* * * * *

THE DESERT GIVES WAY


North and east they traveled, and the sands calmed to soils, and the ever-watchful eye of the desert sun ceded dominion to rain-bearing clouds here and there.

Somewhere along the way, Suleiman, harboring the thought until he could no more, spoke aloud and asked Eskandar, "Why me? Out of all of us, why...do I have magic? Uncle Fahid would have been better."

Fahid Askari was a swordsinger—a master of the shamshir—a daring adventurer, and had fought in many battles for the Empire. All this Eskandar knew well. But he said nothing of it, and he looked at Suleiman with affection undaunted, saying, "It is known only to the Six what fate holds for each man." And his cheeks rose as his smile grew. "And you are a man now, Suleiman."

"A young man."

"No man starts fully formed. Not even your Uncle Fahid." He reached over and placed a hand on his shoulder. "Worry not, Suleiman. Worry not. The sun will never rise and see Eskandar Askari resent his son for endeavors honestly done. So go to Elbion. Learn all that you can. Harness your gift. In whatever may come, you carry the name of Askari, and you will bring radiance to it."

And the carriage traveled on.

* * * * *

THE COLLEGE GATES


The moment came. With the College of Elbion to his back, Suleiman looked to his father and his mother, and they were as beacons in an otherwise vast and unfamiliar land. But this was it. The place he would come to live for...what? Four years? Five? More, maybe, if he had talents even he didn't yet know?

And as if his father plucked the very thought from his mind, he after embracing him said, "This isn't farewell or goodbye. We will see you again. Ha! Sooner than you might like, or so it will seem."

Suleiman smiled, that heaviness in his chest assuaged somewhat by his father's levity. "Home's not that far. I can always visit for Eid-al-Feija."

"That you can."

And now his mother Farah, no longer able to hold herself or her tears back, came forward and hugged him tightly and said, "My son! My Suleiman...!"

He almost didn't know what to say. "I'll be here." And he added, echoing what he said to his father, "Not that far."

Eskandar let her embrace him for a while, and then with a comforting hand on her shoulder he told her through touch that it was time. And she let Suleiman go, and they retreated back to the still open door of the carriage.

Suleiman turned around, and he looked up at the massive College. With a stark clarity and brutal suddenness the realization hit him. Alright, back in Maraan? That wasn't the threshold of no going back. This was that threshold. The first step toward the College and away from his family, from this there would be no going back. He would be in Elbion, in this College of magic, and this would be his life for the foreseeable future. He could always...just...turn around. Give it up. Right here, right now, before he made the final commitment. This was his last chance.

But he took that step.

And, after all the anticipation and dread...it was easier than he thought. Not so bad at all. And in the motion of his walking all that heaviness in his chest drifted away.

* * * * *

CONVOCATION HALL


Suleiman wasn't off to the best of starts.

So far as he understood, there was meant to be a big welcoming ceremony he and other new (and newer, maybe) students were supposed to attend. The gate guard's directions on how to get to this "Convocation Hall" seemed simple enough. But the moment Suleiman set foot inside the actual College building itself, it proved anything but simple. He found himself getting turned around here and there, damn, this corner looks familiar, didn't I already see her face, that window over there I must have passed by three times now. Directions from passersby, be they student (since they looked his age) or Professor helped...marginally.

At last, though, he found the right Hall. And with no time to spare. Actually, he seemed to be a touch late. Tables lined the grand hall and students already had taken their seats, only some still in the motion of doing so as Suleiman walked in.

Knowing no one, whether of notable background or common origin, and looking only to grab a seat before he looked not only late but like an idiot for being left standing, Suleiman with a brisk walk went down the first aisle his feet carried him to.

...am Calixtus Blodwyn.

Ah yes! The tail-end of an introduction! The best "in" he was going to get!

So Suleiman sat down with a speed he hoped looked instead like style and said, "Suleiman. Suleiman Askari. They finally got this thing started, huh? Took long enough."

And he shined a smile at all sitting at the table.

Calixtus Bliss Yuebing Coquelicot
 
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The carriage creaked to a halt, dust settling as hooves clopped restlessly. Alexander opened the door from within and stepped down, one foot landing on the iron rung. He gripped the doorway firmly, surveying the College grounds. His surcoat, travel-worn and plain, fluttered in the breeze. No fanfare awaited him — only the distant toll of a bell and the sighing wind through the trees.

Behind him, the driver muttered and snapped the reins. Alexander exhaled once, then released the doorframe and descended fully to the ground.

-----

Time passed, and the out-of-towner found himself at some sort feasting hall where the others were rumored to be gathering.

Hearing the chitter-chatter of many voices all together at once put him on edge instantaneously, though he had expected as much and would have no difficulty hiding it.

Or such was the plan.

Whatever they saw him as when he first walked into that room would be cast in stone, as ever it always was.

Someone from far away. A drifter. A traveler, perhaps, but when travelers journey without sense of purpose or time you call them drifters instead. Or other more creative names.

An older, wiser gaze would see that he was a man grown and looking right back at you, if they catch you in a certain light.

No wife. No children. Not coming from a road where there was room for one or the other.

Not aimed down a road that would bring him closer to one or the other.

Not aimed down any road that could be guessed just at a glance, except if that led him to a hot meal and possibly even a bath.

Grizzled, seasoned, wearing road-worthy leathers and a peculiarly heavy surcoat... that was how Selzurius strode into the dining hall.

He seemed eager first to inspect the sweet-treats and cold, refreshing juices laid out on the tables. After a brief inspection of a piece of lemon-cake, he acquired it to a small plate.

The small plate with the lemon cake would be joined with a goblet of chilled tea. You don't see ice tea just anywhere, y'know?

Damned if it isn't just the thing after a long carriage ride, though.

---

Selzurius busied himself with snacking and sipping for a time, casting looks across the hall to the others that were assembled and already chitter-chattering.

Talkers. Lots of them. He just took another sip of his tea and tried to settle in for the hard part now.

Not introductions... it was the waiting. You don't wait for anyone when you're out there alone. There isn't anyone to wait for.

Back here inside this little thing called civilization - well, it's back to the old ways. Hurry up and wait.

Who would've guessed?
 
"You are sure?"

The wind blew from inland, carrying the heat and the dry dust from the Savannah and points far west. The height of summer had yet to crush the land in its inevitable grip, but already the hints of a brutal season were easy to see.

"Sven," Mero replied with a touch of annoyance. "You can do nothing here. You always wanted to go and learn, anyway. I ... know its been rough, but I can take care of both myself and our business. You needn't worry so."

The initial speaker shook her head slowly, but did not immediately reply. Short and slight and young, she nevertheless possessed a certain gravity not uncommon among her family. They were - or had been - known for their cut-throat, no-nonsense approach to business. It had sufficed to give them all a very, very good life.

Funny, though. Didn't matter where you started or where you went in life. Everyone ended up in the same place. And some of those harder than others.

"I am sorry, brother," she said in her lilting voice, and looked to the portal stone. The hood of the green shawl lay pooled round her neck, the vines and leaves picked out in copper and silver thread. It had been a gift from Mother when she had turned sixteen. It was one of the few things she still had from before that had any meaning to her. "I do, but... it is a lot to handle by yourself."

Of course, she meant that there were distant arms of the family that had come out of the woodwork after that sorrowful night. So many people that had little to do with them before - spurned and cast aside as they had been - were suddenly eager to help out Mero and Svenia in their time of need.

Mostly to fleece them of everything they had.

Mero sneered at her. "Yes, well. It isn't as though Elbion isn't a few days travel by carriage and a jaunt through the Stone away. Maybe after a year or two, you'll even be able to use the Stone yourself."

They both looked to one another in silence. Neither had to speak their thoughts aloud; they had grown close together in Alliria, as had their departed siblings. They shared the same motivation as had their parents before them: spreading their business and influence far and wide. And with it, all the profits that could be had.

After a moment, they both stepped forward to embrace one another. "Do not forget to visit me, Mero," she said in a rough voice. He was gentle with her, but even so the ravaged flesh beneath the linens ached at his touch. "I will see about any opportunities in Elbion while I am there."

"You do that, Sven." He stepped back and gestured toward the stone. "At least write me every once in a while."

"I will," she said, and turned to limp away.

Even though she had always wanted in her heart of hearts to attending the college, she couldn't help feeling just as empty now as she had the year before. Some voids were harder to fill than others, after all.



Today was turning out to be a bit rougher than she was expecting. The damp on the air from the sea made her leg ache terribly. She leaned heavily on her staff walked the corridor in near silence. Her only companion were the echoes from further on down the way, voice raised in conversation as they tried to talk over one another.

It had been a month and a half since she had arrived. The entire time had been spent walking the streets of the city - not to see the sights, but to try and understand the ebb and flow of the city of magic. The College was very much at the center of it all, but the trader in her wanted to know how it all worked even if she wasn't precisely here to do business.

Yet.

She wore the same shawl she had the day she had rode into the city. It went well with the deep green skirts edged in crimson, the bodice of crimson and pale emerald. That shawl was slung across her shoulders; the hood pulled far over her head so that it kept her face in shadows. She moved awkwardly but swiftly enough. Her ornate wooden staff clicking out in time with her steps.

She kept her head down as she moved. Here everyone was a stranger, more or less. Even though she knew she shouldn't be, she was quite self-conscious of the scars that ruined a third of her face; of the sightless eye and the unnerving way it followed nothing.

She paused at the entrance to the Convocation Hall, taken aback for a moment at the number of men and women therein. Up to this point, she had only dealt with handfuls of people - students, the odd instructor. Of course, crowds thronging the streets of the city was one thing. At least there, she could move without feeling so vulnerable and easily spotted.

What was another face in the crowd, after all?

This was different. Most of the people here came from similarly privileged backgrounds as herself. Many of them had power and beauty in abundance. It was an unaccustomed feeling, this sense of insignificance. She might one day have power, but she would never have beauty.

Never again, anyway.

Shaking her head, she made her way to the closest table and seated herself in a rustle of skirts that hid the sigh of relief as she took the weight off her tortured leg. At least - if the College held true to its reputation - she might be able to save someone else the same fate.

Injuries of the flesh could heal, but those of the soul? Ach, a bit more tricksome, they were.
 

Aiko was fast asleep when Togarashi barged into her room. The burst of the door flying brought her to consciousness, not to mention fury.

“Togarashi!”
She screamed as she instinctively pulled her blanket closer. “Why are you here in the night? Do you not know my father will-“

“Your father has demanded you meet him in the next thirty minutes.”
He said flatly. Her anger softened , being replaced with confusion. “You will be leaving shortly. Setsuna will be here shortly to pack your effects.” Aiko noticed now that Togarashi’s hands were firm on his blade’s scabbard and hilt. He always wore the blade, and Aiko knew he held some skill to work for her father, but had never seen him hold it before.

“Tell Father I will be there.”
Aiko said. The Elf bowed, then left. Aiko quickly selected a dress and prepared herself. Her father demanded perfection and beating in all things, and Aiko was no exception. It did not take long for Setsuna to arrive, and the two prepared her as if for a royal ball. The time was swift, but Setsuna was supremely competent and had taught Aiko well. Namely, everything she could everything a handmaiden could with magic, and had taught Aiko similar tricks. The lacing of a dress, sealing of a necklace, wrapping of a sash could all be done with hands or through magic in the air. The net effect was turning a hour process into something to be done inside ten minutes. Blush was applied when Aiko's eyes began to water.

"Now now Aiko. You mustn't show any such worry to your father."
Setsuna chided. It was little comfort, but Aiko knew she was right. The girl hugged her caretaker, then took a deep breath and steeled herself before heading to her father.

The elder Yamaguchi was surrounded by advisors when Aiko arrived. Some were clean as a newly minted coin, and just as well dressed, while others wore simple robes that accentuated the tattoos that covered every inch of their bodies. Some were a mix of both. Aiko had seen several of them, but never for more than a moment, and never this many at once. They were discussing something urgent, and the debate seemed heated. Aiko purposefully kept far enough away that their conversation was intelligible, but that she could be seen by the crowd. It took a moment before she was noticed, at which point the conversation quieted, and one of the advisors pointed her out to her father. The elf dismissed them to another room before waving Aiko over.

"Aiko, I'm glad you've been so quick to come. Your life is about to change drastically."
His words were rushed, in a way she'd never heard from him before. His speech was measured, but not with the exactness she'd come to expect.

"Then you have found a suitor?"
She asked. For a moment she saw his face change, then return to the steely eyes she knew.

"No, I am changing plans."
Her father said. "You will travel immediately to the Allir portal Stone and take it to the Elbion portal stone. You are enrolled to be a student at the College of Elbion next semester. It will start in a few weeks. Everything has been arranged."

"I see."
Aiko responded when in fact she did not. Her magic ability was present, but largely undeveloped. "Do I have . . . any further assignment when I get there?"

"Integrate. Become a student. You have good instincts, do not worry."
He said, then paused for a moment. "Any additional assignments will come from one of your brothers, in person."

"I see."
Aiko responded, when in fact she still did not. Her eyes gazed into her father's, looking for something to provide certainty. She found her father's iron will. Surely he had a plan that she would understand later.

"It is time for you to go. Setsuna will be your aid, and Togarashi will escort you with a small guard. You are not to speak to anyone except Setsuna and Togarashi until you arrive at Elbion." Her father looked at Aiko, and the girl bowed her head. She did not know where he was before, but Togarashi appeared at her side and bowed at her father, before taking Aiko's arm and escorting her to a carriage.




Convocation Hall

Elbion was a strange place. It was a place Aiko could roam without any escorts. A place where no one knew her name, save for the odd member of admissions staff. She had heard conversation about her, those ears were not for show after all, questioning who she was. What noble house did she come from to where those clothes? Did elves even have noble houses? Why weren't people informed of her arrival before she came? It was the kind of distinct information advantage that her father was always looking for.

And yet here Aiko was, with no true way to capitalize on it. The girl felt a failure, unable to discover how to pick a lump of gold off the ground. Still, if her father had taught her anything, it was how to distance her emotional state from her physical state. She was perfectly reserved, graceful, and above all silent. Even the passing of tea from her cup was without noise, and unseen by most. She had still not heard from her family, though it had only been a couple weeks since she left. The time was good, as she was now past the time of tears. There was work to do here, even if Aiko didn't know exactly what it was. Her eyes scanned the table as Calixtus made his declaration. There was some reaction at the table. His name was obviously known. Perhaps the Blodwyns had dealings with the Yamaguchi's and that's why she was here.

No, if that was the case one of her brother's would have been sent.

Back to square one. Aiko continued to listen as the fly on the wall as conversation went through the table. She'd figure it out soon enough. She just had to.
 
"Suleiman. Suleiman Askari. They finally got this thing started, huh? Took long enough."

"Askari, where does that name hail from?" Calixtus asked.

He glanced upwards at Aiko before muttering under his breath.

"My, we are letting elves in now."

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At the end of the hall, one of the Maesters stood up. The school was run by the foard and had no headmaster.

It was Maester Caliora who stood up. She wasn't the eldest, nor of the highest order. According to his brother, she was the best public speaker.


"I welcome you, students, to Elbion College. Please be seated."

She waited patiently for the last of the conversations to simmer down and for the very last screech of a chair being shuffled towards.


"Welcome all. You’ve arrived at a place older than many kingdoms. We have rebuilt. Some departments have enitely new buildings. Our walls are new, but the stones remember.

"Competition for entry has been higher than ever. You are here because you are the most curious, the most talented. The College chooses its own, but we expect a lot from you.

"Magic is not a pet, nor a trick, nor a toy. It is a wild and ancient thing. It does not care if your parents are nobility or if you lived in a barrel behind a bakery. Understand that you will never master it. Not if you leave here after your first studies. Not if you stay here until your dying days. We study, we learn, our Maesters commit our knowledge to writing such that the students of the future can further our collective knowledge.

"You will falter. You may fail. Some of you will get burned or hurt. The conjuration small hall is currently off limits for that reason."

She glanced at another maester who raised an apologetic hand.


"Magic is not safe here. Nor should it be.

"You did not come here to be safe. You came to be changed.

"Now. There are rules. Break them, and we will know.

" There are corridors sealed with magic. Do not test them. Do not attempt to use magic creatively to cheat on tests. We say this every year. And every year someone tries and is expelled.

"I to your dormitories by eight every night."

Calixtus had heard that one of the main jobs of the monitor students was removing boys from the girls dormitories and vice versa. It sounded to Calixtus like a good way to gain influence, or even take bribes to look away - not that he needed the coin.

"Some of you have families in Elbion. Remember that there is only one entrance to the college and you require written permission to leave and enter. Returning home for a night is be exception only.

"Let the feast begin! Try not to be sick—it’s a long climb to the infirmary."
 
Bliss had to hit both Bea and Arsenio after their peals of laughter almost interrupted Maestor Caliora's speech, still reeling from the barely first year chastising Bliss and her hair mishap. The blonde had only lifted a brow, surprised such an outburst happened at all, but with the arrivals of more students taking a seat, she decided against reciting rules the first year students will no doubt learn in due time.

Instead, she lifted her chin and put all her attentions to the Maester.

At least, she pretended to. This was the same speech from her first day of commencement, and the same one told every year.

This allowed her to eye up the other students that came here bright eyed and new. They seemed so innocent and hailed from all over judging by the accents she overheard, but she noted the Blodwyn. In fact, a surprise to Bliss was that her favourite class in fact was the older brother to whoever that student was.

"What's the bet Caliora will find out about the hazing party again?" Arsenio murmured.

"Well it will be over before it even starts if it is in the same place as last year." Bliss whispered back.

"Oh, I heard it will definitely be happening." Bea turned her head to grin back at the both of them. "There is trickery afoot as we speak."
 
Through the hubbub of the hall it might be difficult to see the far corners of the Convocation Hall. It could be easily missed that at the edge of the far tables, those set up for the staff and faculty, there were some place settings. One could be forgiven for overlooking the small gathering of feathers that sat behind one such setting. The tawny tufts blended softly against the wooden chair backs, though the two large yellow eyes stood out quite notably when the light hit them right.

The true Maesters had their places at the center of the main table, with diminishingly grand candlelight and cutlery as one moved outward. Kikwi, far to the side, had more meager settings, though this was primarily because they had been custom-hewn for his tiny clawed hands. Seated atop a formidable stack of older tomes, he looked out from behind a plate of similarly bespoke rations (mostly insects and other small creatures, nicely seasoned and pleasantly dried for a good crunch).

The diminutive kenku was very excited. He enjoyed this ceremony quite a lot, though he had only been to two of them previously. It had taken a few years for the college to officially recognize his rather unique position, but a half-dozen novel discoveries on the magical properties of fauna had been convincing.

The little owl had no magical prowess, nor was he of an age to officially enroll (a technicality, for his species matured much more quickly than most others). Perhaps someday he could be called Maester, but for now Kikwi was more than content to be within the college in any capacity. He was not the school’s only adjunct instructor, though he was certainly the tiniest.

Kikwi clapped his scaly hands together as the headmaster finished her speech and swiveled his massive globes over the throng of students again. The existing students were familiar. Kikwi had a very good memory, if he did say so, and did not forget a face once seeing it.

Bliss, Bae, and Arsenio were together (of course), though Bliss had changed her hair. It looked nice. They were talking to a new student, how welcoming! And the new student had advice for them, too, it seemed.

Several new faces stood out. Calixtus looked very familiar to another face Kikwi knew, and Aiko’s ears were lovely. Kikwi tried not to get too excited about it, but he was very eager to speak to an elf.

As much as he wished to mingle, he stayed seated. With this many people he was likely to be trampled underfoot. That was alright, he could listen well enough. The feathers of his face subtly turned and twitched, focusing the conversations from around the room. Kikwi’s eyes were good, but his ears were even better.

He heard everything.
 
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