
Every morning at Skyward Academy started the same way for Ethan Grey — before the bells, before the disciples were even out of bed, he was already halfway up the eastern path with two wooden buckets hanging from his shoulders and the mountain cold settling around him like a second coat.
He had been making that climb since he was eleven. Six years later, the buckets hadn't gotten any lighter, but he had at least stopped counting the steps. There were three hundred and twelve of them, carved into the cliff face between the eastern spring and the outer training hall, and somewhere around year two he had decided that counting them was a habit worth dropping.
The path wound through a stretch of pines where the mist collected thick in the early hours, and on most mornings that part of the climb was the best part of the day. The air smelled of resin and damp stone, the light came through the branches in slow, grey pieces, and the only sounds were his own footsteps and the occasional bird call drifting in from deep in the tree line. It was the one stretch of his day that felt fully unobserved, before the Academy woke up and he became visible again in the particular way that people become visible when there are tasks that need doing.
He was about halfway through the pines when he heard them coming down behind him — three sets of boots moving fast on stone, not especially concerned with what might be in the way. He recognised the pattern without looking back and stepped aside, pressing close to the cliff wall and shifting the buckets to keep them level.
They swept past without slowing. The tallest one — Cole, a third-year outer disciple with a wind meridian alignment and the social awareness of a falling rock — clipped Ethan's shoulder hard enough to knock water over the rim of the left bucket and straight down into his boot.
"Watch it," Cole said, without breaking stride or turning around.
Ethan looked at his soaked boot, then at Cole's back disappearing around the lower bend of the path, and decided, as he had decided many times before, that saying anything would cost more than it was worth. He adjusted his grip and kept walking.
Mia was already on the low wall at the courtyard's eastern edge when he arrived, working through a basket of herbs she'd gathered before sunrise. She did that most mornings — the best plants were easiest to find in the early light, she'd explained once, before the older gatherers got to them. She had a system for everything, which Ethan had always found reassuring, partly because it worked and partly because it meant she was reliably where he expected her to be.
"Cole?" she asked, glancing at his wet boot without looking up from the herbs.
"Who else." He laughed, brushing the whole thing to the back of his mind.
"He does that on purpose. He times it." She held a stem up to the light, examined it, and set it in the left pile. "You should say something to Administrator Fell."
"Fell would send me to clean the meditation chamber drains for a week and tell Cole to watch where he's going," Ethan said, sitting down beside her. "I'd rather stay invisible."
Mia made a sound that was not quite agreement and not quite argument — the sound of someone who thought he was probably right but didn't particularly enjoy saying so. She reached into the bottom of her basket and produced a small paper package. "I made extra rice this morning. You skipped dinner again last night."
He took it without arguing. Inside was a rice ball with a pickled plum pressed into the top, slightly squashed from sitting at the bottom of the basket. They ate together for a while in easy quiet, watching the courtyard fill as the morning bells rang from the upper hall.
The disciples came in groups, falling into warm-up routines with the easy confidence of people whose bodies had long since memorised the movements. Qi moved between their hands in practiced arcs — gold for wind, deep blue for water, the slow warm pulse of earth. Ethan watched without thinking much about it. He knew the forms, had read every cultivation manual left out in the common room, every theory text left unattended in the outer hall's reading corner. He could describe the mechanics of a wind-strike or a fire compression technique well enough to pass a written exam.
None of that meant anything without a root to draw on. Knowing how a river flows doesn't mean you can make it rain.
"What are you thinking about?" Mia asked.
"The second water run," he said, which was not entirely a lie, and stood to go.
Ethan had been tested for a spiritual root at ten, the same as every child who came through Skyward Academy's gates. The examiner, a dry-faced elder called Crowe, had pressed two fingers to Ethan's sternum and held them there for nearly a full minute — longer than he'd held them on anyone else that day, which Ethan had taken for a hopeful sign at the time. Then Crowe had removed his fingers, written one word in his ledger without any expression, and moved on.
Null.
No fire, no wind, no water, no earth, no lightning. A perfect absence. He should have been sent home, but his mother had died that same winter and there was no home to return to, and the groundskeeper Hobb had quietly arranged for him to stay on as a servant. That was six years ago. Since then, the Academy had given him a bunk, two meals a day when he remembered to collect them, and the unofficial designation of hollow — the word the disciples used for someone born without a spiritual root, delivered in the tone of a category rather than a deliberate insult. It wasn't cruelty exactly. Cruelty would have required them to register him as worth the effort.
He had made his peace with it, more or less. There were days when he found the arrangement almost workable: a place to sleep, predictable work, Mia's rice balls when he forgot to eat. It wasn't the life he would have chosen, but he had long since learned that spending energy on what you couldn't change was its own kind of waste.
The second water run finished without incident. He went to find Hobb.
The rest of the day ran in the familiar pattern — drainage channels behind the inner hall had partially blocked after the week's rain and needed clearing, then two hours of general maintenance across the outer grounds, then the midday meal eaten quickly in the servants' annex before he and Hobb started on the afternoon supply deliveries from the outer gate.
Hobb was a quiet man in his sixties who had been at Skyward Academy longer than most of the elders had been cultivating. He asked few questions, offered few opinions, and ran his supply routes with a steady efficiency that Ethan had come to appreciate. They worked through the afternoon without talking much, shifting crates and logging inventory while the light went copper and long across the mountain.
By the time the lower bells rang for the evening meal, they were down to the last load.
"Last run's yours," Hobb said, marking his ledger. "Outer gate to the inner hall annex — four crates by the western post, two herb supplies, one equipment, one general. Main corridor has a wax floor drying, so take the second-tier path around the back."
Ethan nodded and went to collect the crates.
Latest Chapter
Chapter 22
Vera waited until after breakfast to begin, which Ethan appreciated because it suggested she intended to take her time rather than get through it quickly, and a conversation that was going to change how he understood everything probably warranted being properly fed first.She had him read the second section aloud again, slowly, pausing where the archaic terminology was densest so she could work through it before he continued. She did not take notes. She listened with her eyes half-closed and her tail wrapped around her feet in the composed posture that meant she was paying close attention rather than resting.When he finished, she was quiet for a moment."The section uses a term that translates roughly as the prior state," she said. "In the context of cultivation theory, this refers to the condition of spiritual energy before it takes on elemental character — before it becomes fire or water or wind. The Sutra's claim is that this prior state is not a theoretical starting point. It is
Chapter 21
The new camp was harder to live in than the first one and considerably safer, which Ethan had decided was the correct trade-off even on the days when the correct trade-off was also the uncomfortable one.The section of the Wastes Vera had led him to was six kilometres deeper than his original position, in a shallow valley where the qi discharge activity ran at roughly twice the frequency of the outer perimeter. The discharges were not dangerous if you knew where to stand and when to move, and he had learned both of those things within the first week through the straightforward method of paying close attention and making a few mistakes that were instructive rather than serious. The ambient environment was noisier and more unpredictable than he was used to, but the void frequency at the valley's base was correspondingly clearer — the erratic elemental qi that surrounded it acted almost like contrast, making the deeper layer easier to locate and hold.Vera had been right that it would no
Chapter 20
There were four of them, moving along the perimeter road from the north in a loose formation that was relaxed enough to suggest they were not expecting trouble but organised enough to suggest they had been trained to move that way regardless of expectation.Skyward Academy outer hall colours — grey robes with silver piping at the collar. Ethan recognised the colours from fifty metres away and stepped off the track into the scrubland without thinking about it, moving low and smooth between the sparse bushes until he had the bulk of a large rock formation between himself and the road. He settled in behind it and stayed still and watched them pass through a gap in the rock.He recognised two of the four. The taller one at the front was a third-year outer disciple named Wei who had been a year ahead of Cole and had always treated the servant staff with the particular absence of acknowledgment that was the outer hall's default. The one walking second was someone whose name Ethan had never
Chapter 19
The spirit stone Mia had given him was down to about a third of its original value. Ethan had stretched it carefully — one meal per day from the town market at the Wastes border, the rest supplemented by what he could find in the terrain — but careful only delays the problem, it does not solve it. He needed income, and income, in a region with no sect presence and no institutional employment, meant working for the people who had money to spend on capable hands.The mercenary group had a semi-permanent base at the northern edge of Callow Town, the closest settlement to the Wastes' eastern perimeter. Ethan had heard about them from a supply trader who came through the area once a fortnight, a practical man named Gordon who traded in materials salvaged from the Wastes' outer zones and who had, over three brief transactions, become the nearest thing Ethan had to a local contact. Gordon had described the group as reliable, modestly sized, and run by a woman who did not put up with unnecess
Chapter 18
Vera declared him ready on a Tuesday, eight days after he had freed her from the ruin, in the same matter-of-fact tone she used for most things.She had spent those eight days following their first conversation with the occasional observation but mostly with watchful silence, monitoring his practice sessions from a distance that felt respectful rather than disengaged. She corrected him twice: once when he was allowing his awareness to drift slightly during the return motion, which she identified from watching the pattern of the ambient void frequency rather than anything externally visible, and once when he started developing a compensatory habit in his breathing that would have eventually undermined the whole practice if it had been allowed to continue. Both corrections were brief and specific, and both times she returned to her position and let him work without further comment.He had come to understand that this was her teaching method. She did not explain things before he needed t
Chapter 17
When Ethan woke the next morning, Vera was sitting outside the rock hollow on a flat stone he had been using as a cutting surface, watching the direction the wind was coming from with the focused, professional attention of someone assessing whether a location met their standards.He built the fire and put water on without saying anything. She did not acknowledge him until the water was ready, at which point she turned and looked at the camp with the same evaluating quality she had applied to the wind."Your sight lines to the southwest are blocked by that formation of rocks," she said. "Anyone approaching from that direction would be within fifteen metres before you saw them.""I know," Ethan said. "It's the trade-off for the shelter the formation gives on the other three sides. I decided the southwest was the less likely approach direction."Vera considered this. "That's a reasonable assessment given the terrain. I would still clear the lower rocks if you intend to stay here another
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