A/N: To my new readers and old, thank you for joining me on my journey thus far. When I picked this book up again earlier this year, I didn't expect it to be received half as warmly or enthusiastically as it has been. Your votes, comments, and the fact that so many parts have been favorited have really helped motivate me to keep writing, even when my personal life was at a low point. Thank you so very much.
With that said, future chapters may be farther apart since I recently started a new job, after searching for over 1.5 years. I'm an Indian national trying to make my way in Europe, so it hasn't always been easy. After long last, things seem to be falling into place.
Rest assured that I will see this story due to completion. I'm as invested in hearing the rest of Chris' tale as all of you are, and I want to see it through. I just hope to have all of you there with me when we reach that final punctuation mark.
From the bottom of my heart, thank you again for all your support.
*****
Glossary
Agrayodhin: The Champion of the Indian Academy.
Dvitiya Skandhavara: The Second Division of the Indian Academy's army.
Rishi(ji): A Sanskrit term used to refer to a sage/saint, or someone perceived as being highly knowledgeable. Used here to refer to the Dean of the Indian Academy.
*****
Chapter 23- The Power of Red
13
th
March, 2017
9:00 a.m.
Training Room 1
A week after the Proving began, the Academy had its top two-hundred-and-fifty Wielders. Rayka had been the first from within our group to make it through, which didn't really surprise any of us. What did take us aback, me most of all, was that I was the third, beating Mahala, Sylvia, and Auset, to break through into the next round of battles.
It had been a long week to say the least, but I'd managed to stay in the running, and had actually placed higher than anybody had anticipated.
"Chris, you did it!" Rayka had exclaimed, intercepting me as I hobbled out of my second round of battles in Training Room 7 on Thursday, cradling my broken arm. "You made it through!"
Her words hadn't registered at first, muddled as they were, thanks to both my eardrums being shattered. I wasn't exactly thinking straight either, probably owing to the fact that I definitely had a concussion.
I did manage to recognize her, and once she realized just how beaten up I was as I limped in her direction, she rushed me to the Healers. My ears had been the first to recover, which I instantly regretted, as Rayka all but screamed her congratulations into them. Rather than being thrilled and overjoyed at my victory, I was actually feeling rather hollow at that point.
It had just been four days, but the true nature of combat had started weighing down on me. I would be lying if I didn't say that I'd been having second thoughts about whether or not I was cut out to be a warrior. I'd kept my thoughts to myself, however, just smiling as Rayka as my injuries continued to heal.
An hour later, we had found ourselves sitting with Sneha, watching Mahala defend herself while facing down six different Wielders. Anybody who wanted to could watch certain Wielders as they fought their way through the rounds on small enchanted mirrors that were available in Training Room 2. A Wielder could easily power multiple mirrors by themselves, so more than one person could join in and they could all view events together.
For such a sweet and quiet person, Mahala could be brutal when she wanted to, a fact that was repeatedly hammered home as she used her spiked mace to bash away at people. She had no qualms leaving anybody who crossed her with broken bones, a fate that befell most of her attackers with alarming surety. Honestly, as someone who viewed her as a younger sister, Sneha couldn't have picked a better person to fall in love with.
The results of that battle had pushed Mahala into the next round as well, with the others following within the next two days. Since none of us had matches on Sunday, we'd decided to skip watching the final elimination rounds, and go unwind a bit, instead. Since all of us had been a little wrung out, we'd settled on spending the day on the shore of one of the many lakes within the Academy's pocket dimension.
It had been fun for a while, us lads horsing around and getting in trouble for using Water spells on the ladies, but the fun and games had died down a bit as the day wound down. Eventually, people started leaving, till Sneha and I were the last ones left. Rayka had seemed to pick up on the fact that something was weighing on my mind over the course of the day, and hadn't seemed too surprised when I'd told her to head on home without me.
It'd been a moonless night, but as always, the forest had provided enough illumination for everything to be bathed in a soft glow. Sneha and I had just sat there on the dock in companionable silence, looking out over the water, both of us lost in our own heads.
"You're wrong, you know?" she'd suddenly asked.
I actually had to clear my throat before responding; it'd been a while since I had spoken. "About what?"
"You've been wondering whether you're really the right type of person to be a warrior, haven't you?" she'd clarified, astutely.
"How did you know?"
"I didn't. Rayka figured it out."
"She did?" I'd asked, taken aback. "She hasn't said anything about it."
"She wanted to give you your space to figure things out, Chris. That doesn't mean she isn't worried about you. In fact, that's what we were discussing when you decided to dump ice-cold water all over us!"
"Sorry about that," I'd apologized, with a chuckle.
"It's
grand
," she'd responded, waving it away with a cheeky grin. I could never quite place when it'd begun, but the other had taken to playfully mocking my usage of the word "grand".
I just smiled wearily at her, unable to muster up the energy to wade through the waves of emotions rushing over me.
"Are you thinking about the night of your Emergence?" she'd asked softly, after a while.
"I am," I'd whispered back, unable to push my thoughts away any longer.
For a while before that, I'd been beset by flashes of that night while training, and most recently, in battle. It had led to me dropping my guard and being hit by attacks that I could have blocked or dodged, so I'd been trying to push it all away even harder. Her question brought it all to the forefront, shining a harsh light on the events of that evening.
"I'm a monster," I'd whispered, my voice cracking a little as tears welled up in my eyes.
Sneha punched me hard enough to send me flying into the water.
"What the fuck?!" I'd sputtered and exclaimed as I resurfaced, coughing to get the water out of my lungs.
"You're an idiot!" Sneha had screamed at me, her body stiff with rage, her voice filled with emotion. "You think you're a monster for fighting back against Dark Wielders? The same people who
murdered
your parents right in front of you?"
"Butβ"
"No buts! Were you brutal? Fuck yes! Did they deserve it?
Every fucking second of it
. Even rending Nicolas apart atom by atom was too kind a fate for the likes of him!"