Chapter 272: The First Session
Chapter 272: The First Session
The Somatic Mana Synthesis hall smelled exactly the way it had the first time Vane walked into it.
Ozone, old iron, and something underneath both of those that was specific to a space where large amounts of mana had been discharged into stone over a long period of time. The cooling arrays in the vaulted ceiling hummed at their working frequency. The floor was the same etched basalt, geometric patterns running to the walls in precise lines that served the dual purpose of conducting output away from the structure and giving Thorne a surface he could read like a diagnostic report.
Thorne was already there.
He stood at the center of the ring with his hands behind his back and his eyes moving over the students filing in with the quality of a man taking inventory. He looked the same as he had last year, which was to say he looked like a person for whom the concept of change was an administrative inconvenience. The Vanguard tactical vest. The network of scars. The eyes the color of cold flint.
He looked at Vane when Vane came through the door. Not a lingering look. A single second of recalibration, the way you recalibrated when a variable in a known equation had changed value. Then he moved on to the next student.
The class was second-years only. No older students across the ring in their double-silver trim. The faces filing in were faces Vane had spent a year in buildings with, people who had survived the same evaluation structure and carried the same specific quality of people who had been tested and knew what being tested actually cost. He found a position on the ring’s edge and settled his weight.
Ashe came in two minutes after him and found a position two steps to his left without coordinating this with him, which was the compound dynamic carrying over into this room without either of them deciding it should. Valerica arrived shortly after and took a position to his right at the precise distance she maintained in professional contexts, which was close enough to communicate and far enough to operate independently.
And then Lancelot came through the door.
The room did not go quiet dramatically. It went quiet in the way rooms went quiet when a pressure gradient shifted, the specific unconscious response of mana-sensitive bodies registering something in their environment that required immediate recalibration. Students who had been adjusting their grips or speaking quietly simply stopped. Eyes moved without heads moving.
Lancelot walked to a position on the ring with the frictionless momentum of an object traveling toward a predetermined set of coordinates. He reached it. He stopped. He looked at the center of the ring with the flat red eyes and waited with the patience of something that did not experience waiting as a cost.
Vane watched this happen.
He had spent a year in the same buildings as Lancelot. He had spent twelve weeks in the same compound, sparring every morning, sitting on the same eastern wall at night, running forms in parallel. He understood the specific quality of what the room was responding to. He had felt it himself the first time in the evaluation courtyard, the two fingers on the spear shaft, the specific impossibility of a body that had no gap between decision and execution.
The room’s response was correct. The room just did not have the vocabulary for what it was responding to.
He looked at the floor and waited for Thorne to begin.
"Second year," Thorne said. His voice had the same low graveled quality, unhurried and carrying no warmth. "You spent last year establishing that you could reach the Sentinel threshold. This year the question changes. The question is now what you do with it." He walked a slow half circle around the ring’s inner edge. "Somatic Mana Synthesis at the second-year level concerns transmission. Last year you learned to contain your output. This year you learn to direct it without loss. Any mana that does not arrive at the intended point is wasted. In controlled environments waste is inefficient. In field conditions waste kills you."
He stopped.
"Baseline assessment. Each of you will run a single output sequence, weapon or unarmed, full transmission chain. I am reading the loss points. You will not know what I find until I tell you. Do not modify what you are doing to perform better. I want what you actually have, not what you think I want to see."
He looked around the ring.
"Razar."
Ashe stepped into the ring without ceremony. She ran three beats of Asura’s Dance at mid-output, the third form with the heel correction that was now simply the form, simply the way it went. The ring absorbed the output cleanly. Thorne watched her feet, her spine, the point of kinetic transfer at impact.
He nodded once. "Next. Sol."
Valerica stepped in. She ran a gravity compression sequence, the Celestial Heart at controlled output, the compression field tightening around a fixed point with the specific density that came from a core that had been running this Authority for years. Thorne watched the field’s edges, the points where the compression frayed.
He nodded. "Next."
He worked through six more students. Each one competent. Each one carrying the visible marks of a year’s refinement over the people they had been in first year. The ring held the residue of each sequence in its stone, faint impressions of output that settled and faded.
"Next."
Lancelot stepped into the ring.
He ran the instant strike sequence at fifty percent output.
The sound it produced was not the sound of a strike landing. It was the sound of the air reacting to something passing through it faster than it could accommodate, the specific quality that Vane had heard in the evaluation courtyard and in the compound sanctum and that had no proper classification in the Academy’s existing threat vocabulary. At fifty percent, in a controlled hall with cooling arrays running, the stone floor developed a hairline crack along the transmission path from his feet to the point of impact.
Fifty percent.
The room had gone fully quiet this time, not the gradient shift of his entrance but the complete absence of ambient sound, twenty second-year Sentinel students processing a single observation simultaneously. Thorne stood with his hands behind his back and looked at the floor crack and at the dissipated strike and at Lancelot standing at neutral with the flat red eyes and the complete absence of any expenditure visible on his body.
Thorne was quiet for a long moment. It was the same quality of silence he had produced at the end of the Vane and Kaelen exchange the previous year, but longer. Whatever he was writing in his internal ledger required more space.
"Next," he said.
Vane stepped into the ring.
He ran the Quicksilver Thrust. The Silver Fang in its natural direction, the full chain transmitting from the ground up through the ankle and the knee and the hip, the spine contributing now, the shoulders, the force traveling the complete axis and arriving at the spear tip with nothing lost between the earth and the point. At Mid Sentinel output the Silver Fang at the tip had a quality it had not had at Low Sentinel, the conceptual severance carrying the full weight of the core behind it.
He came to neutral.
Thorne looked at the floor. Looked at the spear tip. Looked at Vane.
He made a notation in the ledger he had not been visibly holding a moment before. He moved on.
"Next."
Vane stepped back to the ring’s edge. The session continued around him, the remaining students taking their turns, the basalt recording everything.
He looked at the hairline crack in the floor where Lancelot had been standing. He thought about the compound sanctum and forty minutes of full output that had put those exact lines into stone rated for Grandmaster impact. What stood in this room and ran sequences at fifty percent had spent twelve weeks with Ryuken Razar working on the last remaining seam.
He did not know what the seam had become once Ryuken finished with it. He thought it was probably something that did not have a category yet.
He looked at the floor crack and felt the specific quality of a ceiling that was still visible. He filed this under what it had always been under, which was work to do.
The session ended an hour later. Thorne dismissed them without ceremony, which was the only way Thorne did anything.
In the corridor outside, Ashe fell into step beside Vane. She looked at the floor behind them through the hall’s closing door. She said nothing for a moment.
Then: "Fifty percent."
"Yes," Vane said.
She walked beside him in the specific silence she used when she was thinking about something she had already finished calculating. Then: "Right," she said, and left it there, which was the correct place to leave it.
They went out into the afternoon.
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