Chapter 18

Chapter 18

Song was the first back to the cottage.

She came in, wiped her boots and hung her cloak. Her musket was placed against the wall – until a proper weapons rack could be acquired – and she put away her powder in a bag she had hung from the wall for that very purpose. The sword belt joined the cloak as the last step, but for once putting away her affairs in an orderly matter brought no comfort. She felt… she wasn’t sure, in truth. Empty? Perhaps simply tired. It had been a long day.

The Tianxi made her way to the kitchen, trussed up her sleeves and got started on the evening meal. Chicken, rice and fresh tomatoes. No spices save salt, which was cheap and plentiful in Allazei. Her mother would have disowned her for a meal like this, but though it was simple fare the portions would be plentiful and it was not difficult to cook. It could serve as a placeholder. By the end of the week Song intended to begin a rotation so that responsibility for meals might not be entirely on her shoulders, alternating between the members of her brigade.

She had also been considering a chore sheet, considering the amount of work yet in need of doing. The cottage was still filthy, the library needed to be catalogued, the garden emptied of weeds, furniture needed to be bought and carried… the list went on. And though Song knew that when she was finished with the meal she should change into the work clothes she’d acquired in town and get to cleaning, the thought was frail. As if she were not certain of her own intentions, as if she were…

“I am not buckling,” Song hissed down at the pot of rice.

So there had been a setback. Colonel Cao had marked her a fool before her entire set of peers at Scholomance and her name would remain on that board until she erased her shame. That did not mean she would fail. It had been a lesson she must learn and the sting would only help her remember. The colonel was right, her approach had been lukewarm: she had neither hidden what she deduced to secure an advantage nor revealed it to everyone so she might earn gratitude.

The worst of both worlds: she well deserved the loss of a point.

Song set to preparing the chicken, carefully cutting and sprinkling with salt as she went. It went into an iron pot which was placed over the flame. Her distress, she decided, was only because she needed to purge the curse. She would ask Maryam to have a look tonight. It had not been long since the last purging, but it may be that Tolomontera – a great aether well, she had been told – made matters worse. Yet what she needed even more than that was a plan. A way forward, a way to rise.

Song did not anticipate her brigade would be too difficult to convince to take the trial, but that alone was not enough. She needed a way to redeem her reputation. A way to turn the tide, to catch up to… Her fingers clenched. Always behind, Nianzu had told her, slurring. You can’t fight fate, Song. No matter how we struggle, we’ll always end up behind. But what would he know?

“Should I follow you and disappear down a bottle, gege?” she bit out. “I won’t-”

It smelled burnt. Swallowing thickly, Song looked down and saw that in her fugue she had left the chicken unattended too long. The top was still pink, but when she flipped the cuts she saw they had charred stripes. The Tianxi swallowed. If she cut them out perhaps it wouldn’t show? No, they’ll still see I cut out parts. Perhaps if she sliced every piece in two, then – no, idiot, they would notice the quantity was too small. One of them would ask. They would know.

Hands shaking, tearing up like a fucking child, Song did the only rational thing she could: she put the pot off the fire, went outside with a shovel and dug a hole in a corner of the garden. She emptied the burnt chicken into it – she’d have to buy another to replace it from her own funds – and filled the hole. She had to hurry, they could be back anytime now. Song opened the windows to get rid of the smell and cleaned the iron pot before doing the recipe properly this time.

When her cabal began arriving one after the other, Song was ready. She welcomed them with a smile and a meal and her hand remained on the chisel as they all sat together and ate. Like a proper brigade, led by a proper captain.

“Would you mind if I closed the windows?” Angharad asked, polishing off the last of her rice. “It is getting rather chilly.”

Song’s hand twitched. The windows. Utter fool that she was, she had forgot to close the windows.

“I’ll do it,” she said, hurriedly rising to her feet.

Only she was sloppy in her haste, her knee caught the table and the shake tipped over a cup of water and – Abrascal caught it before it could spill. Her jaw clenched so tightly it hurt.

“Song,” Maryam slowly said, “are you-”

“Fine,” she bit out.

She strode to the windows and closed them abruptly. When she turned back towards the table it was to the sight of two concerned faces and Tristan Abrascal’s mask. And why wouldn’t they be concerned, when she was making a scene like a child throwing a tantrum? She forced herself to breathe out, smoothed out her tunic.

“My first covenant class did not go as I would have preferred,” Song said.

Some of the tension left the room. That was no achievement, when she had been the one to put it there.

“Mine either,” Maryam volunteered. “Our professor effectively washed his hands of me and I’ve been forced to make other arrangements.”

She made her way back to the table, carefully. As if her feet were made of porcelain.

“That is highly improper,” Angharad frowned, and Maryam tensed. “It is a professor’s duty to attend to all students as equally as they can.”

The Izvorica shot her a look and said nothing, which still a stark improvement over the entire last month. Song crossed her legs and sat on the floor again, back straight. She reached for her cup.

“I found a teacher and framed the Forty-Ninth’s patron for arson,” Abrascal casually said.

She choked on her mouthful of water, glaring at the thief since that timing had most definitely been deliberate. He smiled back innocently.

“Is that what Masks do?” Angharad hesitantly asked.

Meaning – is this otherwise dishonorable act permitted because it is your duty, and thus honorable in a different way? The Pereduri was not difficult to understand, once you grasped the tint of the spectacles she looked at the world through.

“You probably don’t want to ask too many questions about that,” Abrascal honestly replied. “Still, I can tell you I’ll be working at the Chimerical two afternoons a week. I’ll let you know the days as soon as I learn them.”

“My own afternoons will be filled four days out of five,” Angharad contributed. “Third day is to be a rest day.”

Maryam cleared her throat, earning glances.

“And how was your class?” she asked, sounding almost challenging.

“Six of us died,” Angharad replied.

Gods. The silence that put into place lasted until the plates and remains were taken away and Song brewed a pot of Someshwari tea. It was cheaper on Regnant Street than the Republican leaves, and with good reason – their tea was inferior in every way. Only Abrascal declined a cup. It was Song who broke the uncomfortable quiet.

“There is a price to the privileges of Stripe students,” she said.

She took out the trial bounty she had taken from the board, carefully folded, and set it down on the table. It made its way around, getting a raised eyebrow from Maryam and an interested look from Angharad. Abrascal was harder to read, but if she must she would peg him as thoughtful.

“It must be complete by next week or I will be sent away,” Song frankly told them. “Every Academy recommended is in the same situation.”

The only man among them snorted.

“Ouch, poor Forty-Ninth,” Abrascal said. “They’ll be stuck doing two.”

A fine argument for why few cabals would want two Stripes, and also for why no Academy recommended would want to command a cabal of leftovers. An incompetent brigade would not bring up your score high enough to pass by the year’s end, however eager they might be to obey you. Besides that, the way the thief had phrased his sentence was promising. It implied he was willing to participate, and Abrascal had been the most likely holdout in her mind.

“This is all we have to go on?” Maryam asked, staring at the paper.

She had been the last to receive it.

“It is.”

The Izvorica sighed, passing the bounty back to Song. She did not fold it again, and made a note to smoothen it out later tonight with weight pressing down on the sides.

“Well, I won’t turn away the coin,” Maryam said. “When did you have in mind?”

“Sixthday afternoon,” Song replied.

After the elective classes, though she would leave a wide margin of time to avoid possible inconveniences. She would have been more comfortable earlier in the week, but it was better to let her brigade settle in properly instead. They confirmed the split of coin and where in the city they would have to journey before they could be escorted to the trial – a place on the outskirts of Scholomance, which had them speculating the trial would be within the school.

The conversation soon trailed off. Maryam volunteered to wash the dishes, Angharad went out into the garden for her evening exercises – most nights she spent half an hour out there doing drills with her blade – but the surprise was when Tristan lingered at the table with her. Song had reason to remain, not being done with her tea, but he himself had none. Unless he wanted to speak with her, that was. The Tianxi cocked an eyebrow and waited.

“I need information,” the gray-eyed man said. “How can you see gods?”

Her heart clenched. She put down her cup of tea before it became visible there was a tremble to her fingers. Her hands went down onto her lap, hidden by the table.

“Pardon?” Song said.

“You can see contracts,” Abrascal elaborated. “But do you know of a way people could see gods?”

Not her, she realized with relief. He did not mean her. She kept her face smooth.

“I expect there are contracts out there that might allow this,” she said, mouth gone dry. “Why?”

He grimaced.

“All right, cards on the table,” he said. “Do you know of a way for devils to see gods?”

“Once annealed, devils become a fixed shape in the aether,” Song mused. “It may be that lets them sense gods, though outright sight seems a stretch.”

“Hage could see my patron god,” the thief flatly said. “Hear them, too.”

Song let out a low whistle. Her own god did not visit enough for this to be a risk, but it was useful to know.

“Thank you for the warning,” she said, inclining her head.

He hummed.

“Well, I suppose it’s not like I got nothing for it,” Abrascal said.

She sipped at her cup.

“No?”

“Hands are expressive,” he said. “Those with training, they often keep them out of sight when trying to hide something.”

As she had at the start of this conversation, damn her. Had she given herself away? The gray-eyed man studied her face, half-frowning.

“Well, there are things we don’t ask,” Tristan Abrascal said. “I’ll leave you to your tea, Song.”

He backed up from the table and rose to his feet even as her fingers clasped the side of the cup so hard her knuckles paled. He was not so smug as to wave her way before heading up the stairs, into that stargazing tower he had claimed as his bedroom, but it still felt like she had just been slapped in the face. Abrascal had no reason to keep her secrets. If he told the others… It could turn their entire year against her, the knowledge she could peer at their deepest secrets with nothing but a glance. Even those who cared nothing for the Dimming would-

“Easy now.”

Song sucked in a breath, finding there was hand on her shoulder. Maryam was half-kneeling at her side, arms wet with a sheen. She smelled like food scraps and wetness.

“Think of the sea,” the other woman said. “Tide comes in, tide goes out. Make yourself see it in your mind.”

She barely felt Maryam take the cup out of her hands and set it on the table, struggling to do ask asked.

“Match your breath to it,” the Izvorica murmured. “It comes in…”

Song breathed in.

“It goes out.”

By the time her heartbeat had settled, she did not dare to meet Maryam’s eyes.

“What did he say, Song?”

The tone was flinty.

“Little,” Song tiredly said. “It is-”

Staring down at the table, she sagged.

“I am, by score, now the last of the Stripe students,” she confessed. “I have failed you all.”

“I doubt that,” Maryam said, sitting down by her side. “What happened?”

The story tripped its way out of her, every word of it sounding like pathetic whining to her ears.

“That colonel sounds like a real bitch,” the Izvorica mused.

Maryam,” Song hissed.

The pale-skinned girl shrugged.

“We agreed we’d be honest with each other, when we started this,” Maryam said. “So I’m being honest: that Cao woman sounds like a real bitch.”

“She’s a highly respected officer,” Song told her.

“Agree to disagree,” Maryam easily replied.

“The last time you used that sentence, you saddled our cabal with Tristan Abrascal,” Song muttered.

“And it’s been lovely having him,” she replied, then frowned. “Though he should have known better to prod you when you’re like this.”

Song straightened.

“I am not like anything,” she said.

Maryam said nothing, then sighed and passed a hand through her dark hair.

“The first I took a ship,” she said, “I wasn’t able to keep down a meal or sleep for three days straight.”

Song’s eyes snapped her way, the surprise plain on her face.

“They had to drug me,” the Izvorica said. “And I wasn’t much better when I woke from that. It took time before I learned I could close my eyes and not wake in chains, but before we docked I had learned. And no sailor on that ship ever mocked me for it.”

Maryam leaned in, squeezed her shoulder.

“Your ship is still out there on the black, Song,” she said. “But you’ll get there, I’m sure of it.”

She stayed there long after the Izvorica had left, until Angharad had returned from her exercises, sitting there along in the lamplight with a lick of cold tea at the bottom of her cup. Staring at the leaves mucking up at the bottom, the silver-eyed Tianxi wondered if this was how it had begun for her brothers.

And if one of her sisters would sit down, one day, and wonder if this was how it had begun for Song.

Their first class had taken place in an impressive lecture hall, but Saga took place in what could only be called a library.

The room was all tall stacks and chandeliers, filled with sets of tables fitting ten each. Only the library was near empty of books, with only a few stacks near the bottom filled with volumes. They were all copies of three books, which the professor insured were to be claimed once each per cabal. Professor Tenoch Sasan, still as disheveled as yesterday, had used much of the empty room to prop up large polished stone slates. After yesterday’s… eventfulness, Song found the professor’s assertion that his class would be more classical a relief.

“As a class, Saga will seem like the odd man out to many of you,” Professor Sasan said. “Compared to Warfare and Teratology, or even Mandate, I will concede that its direct use is less obvious.”

The man was a good speaker, Song thought. Engaging and easily heard.

“In practice, however, you will find that much of our work involved digging up the secrets of the past,” the professor said. “Vesper is riddled with the scars of old wars, with buried horrors and wonders. My charge in this class is not to teach a love of history – though if I can, I will – but to equip you to understand what you will encounter out in the world.”

He cleared his throat.

“You need to be able to tell Antediluvian ruins apart from those of the Second Empire,” Professor Sasan said. “To understand why Cathayan is spoken in some parts of the Someshwar, why realms bordering Izcalli share the same gods and customs while being estranged from the Grasshopper King’s rule.”

The professor grinned.

“You need to understand why Sacromonte remains one of the great powers of Vesper while commanding less than a tenth of the territory of even the smallest of its peer powers,” he said. “And while we can answer all these questions through the realities of the present, those answers will be incomplete – because the end of a trajectory cannot easily be understood without knowing its source.”

He marked the largest slate thrice.

“We look back, students, so that we might better understand what is ahead,” Professor Sasan said. “And despite the best efforts of time and men, there is much that was left behind for us to learn from.”

He opened his arms.

“Our history, as a rule, is divided into three periods. Who might give me the name of the very earliest?”

Tianxi history was divided into eleven periods so for once Song was entirely in the dark. Both Angharad and Abrascal were among those that raised their hand, however, and the latter was called on.

“Antiquity,” he said.

“Indeed,” Professor Sasan enthusiastically said. “As in all things historical naming an era is a contentious issue, but ‘Antiquity’ is the most common term used for the period beginning with the First Empire, the realm of the Antediluvians, and ending with Morn’s Arrival – that is, the wave of desperate refugees arriving in the wake of the First Empire’s destruction who founded Vesper as we know it.”

He filled in a line with the word Antiquity, then lowered his hand to the second.

“The second period is the Imperial Calendar,” the professor told them as he wrote the words, “so named for the way it broadly matches the span of the calendar used by the Lierganen Empire – though that calendar was, as we will cover, largely fantasy. It ends with the Second Empire itself. The most popular date used for this is the Thirteenth Betrayal. and as a scholar I must agree: it effectively ended Liergan as a state and unleashed the Succession Wars.”

The professor opened the question to the class again for the third period, and this time most raised their hand – Song included. It was an easy enough question, which a small Izcalli girl answered quietly enough she was twice asked to repeat.

“That is correct,” Professor Sasan said. “The third and most recent period is that of the Centennial Calendar, which began eight hundred and three years ago. Barring eventfulness, all of you will end your lives in the current century – that is, the Century of Smoke, which has only barely begun.”

After that opening the professor spent the better part of an hour getting the class to fill in the three periods with lesser stretches of times and great events – adding the Old Night, the Tumult, the Iscariot Accords – as he sorted through answers and explained what went on and what stayed off. As answers began to trail off, he eased them to the end of the exercise.

“While I would love to continue talking you ear off,” Professor Sasan said, “all of we general classes teachers are under instructions to give nothing more than a short introductory lecture this week – so that you might better settle into your covenant classes.”

He set down his chalk.

“Before dismissing you, however, I leave you with a thought and an assignment,” he continued. “History is partial, my students. It takes sides, damns and justifies, because we do and it us to who write it. Never confuse it for a cold science squabbling only with facts – and understand that the distinctions we draw within this discipline are not some ultimate truth but very much for our own won convenience.”

He gestured towards the great slate he had filled.

“Consider this,” Professor Sasan said. “These three periods of history, are they the sum whole of all that ever was in Vesper?”

A click of the tongue.

“Of course not,” he said. “This world existed before the Antediluvians came.”

Professor Sasan grinned.

“That is my assignment for you,” he said. “Crack open the books you’ve received and find me the answer to this question: what existed before the First Empire, and how do we call that distant era?”

After Professor Sasan’s jovial lecture, Song was not quite sure what to expect when the following morning saw the Thirteenth dragging themselves through the bowels of Scholomance to the buried crypt where they would be taught Teratology.

It had taken them a mere quarter hour to reach the Saga classroom once they’d entered Scholomance,, but this time it was easily twice as long to follow the spikes in the ground adorned with the yellow ribbons. Song watched the god of this place follow them from the corner of her eye as they passed through halls and hallways, a half-sunken chapel whose deep waters no one dared approach and finally circling stairway surrounded by a darkness that seemed to swallow all light.

“I will dare to hope Scholomance shuffles the journey to here next week,” Abrascal breathed out after they reached the bottom of the stairs. “That last part was unsettling.”

“I could do without the chimes in a wind that does not exist,” Maryam admitted.

“I am nearly certain I saw something moving under the water, back in that chapel,” Angharad grimaced.

“We are nearly there,” Song assured them.

The Teratology classroom, described to them as a crypt, lived up to the words. It was all arching stone and dim dampness, with lined up writing desks beneath oil lamps and walls covered with lemures stuffed or embalmed. Not only small ones, either, for a winged snake with exquisite rainbow-colored scales hung off the ceiling from one end of the room to another. The four of them claimed desks near the middle, where nothing loomed so close that Song would keeping looking back, and settled in. They were not the only ones unnerved by the journey to the classroom, or uneasily eyeing the jars and silhouettes on the walls. The crypt was more broad than long, and the front was a slightly raised stone dais where a desk had been placed. Their professor sat behind it.

He was a tall, slender man in his forties wearing an elaborate black tunic. Tianxi, his long black hair kept in an elaborate topknot held in place by a phoenix-shaped pin. Thin mustache and goatee were carefully styled, his eyes black as a beetle and almost as shiny. He watched the students enter impassively, sweeping to his feet only when the last had arrived.

“I am Professor Yun Kang, of the Peiling Society,” he announced, his voice smooth as velvet. “I will teach those of you capable the essentials of Teratology.”

Passing by his desk, he snatched a long baton of dark wood. It was polished enough to reflect lantern light.

“You will call me professor or sir,” Professor Kang informed them. “Anything else will see you ordered out of this room.”

He began striding across his low dais, forcing the students to follow him past pillars and the heads of their fellows.

“Teratology is the study of the monstrous,” he said. “That which has been changed by the touch of aether or Gloam, the lares and the lemures. It is the knowledge that will save your lives out in the dark, allow you to tell apart pithy and peril when encountered in service of the Watch.”

He scoffed.

“Scholars have dedicated their entire lives to Teratology and found this time to be all too short,” Professor Kang said. “My sole expectation of you as students is that most will learn the bare necessities and a handful of fortunate souls will rise to understand the sheer breadth of this discipline.”

The dark-haired man came to a stop.

“We have barely begun to plumb the depths of what exists beyond our small islands of Glare in this sea of darkness,” the professor said. “And the little we know shifts decade by decade, as the world does.”

Professor Kang strode across his stage, arms folded behind him.

“Teratology is an ever-changing field,” he lectured. “Not only must we follow the whims of nature and of the Ancients, but the foolishness of men can also change a land and fauna.”

The professor’s dark eyes swept through the desks, almost lazily. Song felt her stomach sink. There was something about that stare…

“Indeed, near the turn of the century an entire region that had been under regular Glare for centuries was condemned,” Professor Kang said. “Besides the colossal amount of death and ruin this caused, it is worth nothing that an entire scheme of fauna and flora was also irrevocably changed. Even should the Glare be returned, many of the changes will remain.”

He paused. Song swallowed.

“Can anyone name the region in question?”

A dozen hands went up, but Professor Kang did not so much as glance at them. Those dark eyes pinned her like a butterfly to a wall, and his lips quirked unpleasantly. A hand left his back and he pointed the baton directly at her.

“Captain Song Ren of the Thirteenth Brigade,” he said. “Answer the question.”

She breathed in.

“It is the Republic of Jigong,” Song replied with forced calm.

“Very good, very good,” he thinly smiled.

He turned away, making as if to stride across the stage again, but she knew better. A heartbeat later he had turned back towards her, tapping his baton against his chin pensively.

“Song, if you would,” Professor Kang idly said. “Would you happen to know what foolish, accursed family was responsible for the worst disaster Vesper has known since the peak of Succession Wars?”

She grit her teeth.

“The Ren family, sir,” she replied.

“Why, Song,” he said. “That happens to be your surname. Surely that is a coincidence.”

The silence in the hall was almost oppressive. Song sucked in a breath.

“Answer me, Ren,” Professor Kang coldly said. “Or walk out of this hall. I will not suffer disruptive students.”

“It is not a coincidence, sir,” she forced out.

“Ah, I do recall hearing something along those lines,” the dark-haired man idly said. “Your grandfather was the one responsible was he not? You are from the direct line of descent of the single worst traitor in the history of the Republics.”

She kept staring ahead.

“Ah,” he silkily said. “I understand. Such a famous girl, you must believe yourself above answering when your teacher addresses you.”

“I do not know what to say,” Song woodenly said.

“Understandable,” Professor Kang sighed. “I can only praise you for recognizing the utter worthlessness of any words you might utter.”

He tucked his hands behind him again.

“If you must inflict your presence on me, Ren, you will at least have the decency to never speak unless spoken to,” the professor said.

She swallowed.

“Yes, sir.”

He thinly smiled.

“I did not give you leave to speak,” he said. “This is your third and final warning.”

Humiliating as that had been, the stares that came after were worse. It felt like half the class was watching her face, some smirking and others contemptuous. The stares with pity in them burned the harshest.

“The teacher is in front,” Angharad coldly said when the student of her turned to her eye like an animal in a cage.

It shamed those closest to stop staring, but the attention only barely waned. And Professor Kang was watching it all from the front, just waiting for her to speak up and give him reason to cast her out. Once it became clear she would not give him the excuse, he chided her for distracting the class and announced that the entire first month of class would be dedicated to the study of what set apart lares and lemures from animals.

“Teratology is best understood not as a state or a catalogue but as a natural system,” Professor Kang said. “To best allow you to grasp this early in our time together, we will study a well-documented occurrence of such a system shifting.”

And as Song’s stomach sung, the professor went on to explain how for that entire first month they would study how the Dimming had changed the lands of Jigong, their fauna and flora and inhabitants. Every excruciating detail of the consequences of her grandfather’s sin, not only dragged out for everyone to see but studied and tested on. Only a hundred of the four hundred and three students of Scholomance were in this room, but she knew without a doubt that by the end of the day word would have spread through all Tolomontera. The Dimming and her family ties to it might as well been nailed to her forehead.

Captain Wen had warned her that one of the teachers had it out for her, had he not?

Well, Song had found him.

23 thoughts on “Chapter 18

  1. Mirror Night's avatar Mirror Night

    Song is having a horrid first week at school. Sucks cause she was the most gungho about going to this Scholomance. Idol hates her and one professor has an ax to grind. How many siblings does Song have multiple brothers and sisters…well hopefully if she finds a vice its not totally destructive. Very Humanized this chapter.

    Tristan is a Mask so that Godsight is leverage moreso. The Tupoc dagger is going to be more problematic since Song very much is the most likely Isabel killer. However, Tupoc doesn’t have direct Beef with Song really. So it seems weird he pull the trigger so early. I mean he takes out Song but the rest of the gang probably just signs up with Ferranda. Unless he wants to make a direct trade if Maryam and Tristan stick with Song. He can make a direct trade in Blade for Blade.

    Kinda feels like the Blades should have had Teratology before anything else. That might be the one class Angharad takes a strong interest in. Certainly you better master that like a Smogon Pokemon Champion if you are a Blade.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s worth noting that Tristan essentially told Song, and indirectly the rest of his cabal, that his Mask teacher is Hage. The info probably would’ve trickled out with time and it seems like Tristan is ahead of the curve, but he gave tit for tat with time sensitive information.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. shikkarasu's avatar shikkarasu

        He was very upfront about how he felt about it, too. (As upfront as he gets, at least) She was taking all the little tidbits he was offering and almost pointedly giving nothing in return. Not unexpected given the day she had up to that point, and how she has been punished for speaking, but by Rat-standards it must have been positively grating.

        Liked by 2 people

    2. stevenneiman's avatar stevenneiman

      I think it’s an exaggeration to say that her idol hates her. She was maybe slightly annoyed, but regarded it mostly as a teachable moment in avoiding a specific mistake, coupled with the mildest possible penalty of its type. I’m certain that other people will get dinged larger sums soon. Song just takes any criticism the considers justified unreasonably harshly.Tristan does now have a bit of blackmail, but frankly unless he finds a ship to jump to having the inclination to use it would already be game over for Song, and even as blackmail goes seeing gods is honestly the lesser of his two facts about her contract. Worst I see him doing is twisting her arm to treat him as well as he frankly should have been treated from the get-go.I don’t really know what Tupoc’s game is, but I very much doubt it’s trying to trade for anyone on the team. With his known willingness to sacrifice allies for convenience he can’t convincingly offer Tristan safety from his pursuers, and Angharad would refuse on principle unless deprived of other options (and of the four she’s probably the one who could most easily get a new cohort without compromising). Not sure what his game is, but I doubt it’s that.

      Like

  2. CantankerousBellerophan's avatar CantankerousBellerophan

    Ah. So we’ve found the actual worst teacher in this human sacrifice ritual masquerading as a school. Colonel Cao, if her targeting of Song was for bigoted reasons rather than out of fundamentally flawed pedagogy, at least waited for her to do something which could be twisted into a mistake before striking. Balthazar’s primary sin in my eyes is incuriosity, rather than incompetence. The Marshal let six of his charges outright die in the first class, it is true, but dying in droves is almost the point of the Blades. Teaching them that lesson first, that there is no such thing as good enough against the things they will be fighting, does serve a purpose. And, of course, the Krypteia will brook no incompetence in its mentors or apprentices. By comparison to the rest, the Mandate and Saga teachers seem wholly inoffensive and uninteresting. Which naturally implies they may be anything but, but that is a digression.

    The thing calling itself “Professor” Kang, though, is arguably a worse monster than any of the dead things in his classroom. At least whatever behavior saw them become objects of study for the people fighting the ‘dark’ and divine things of the world wasn’t a choice. Lares and Lemures eat people because they are predators, or because people encroached upon them first. They, too, are the victims of imperial expansion in this world, as there would be no humans for them to eat if the humans were content to stay on their islands of Glare without trying to consume the other 2/3 of the world.

    No. Kang made a choice. The same one all bigots make: to accept a trite, just-so explanation which justifies blind hatred and malice towards total strangers. The Dimming happened because all Rens are a treacherous lot worthy of contempt. American Indians hadn’t independently developed ships and cannons by the time empires reached their shores because they are fundamentally inferior to white people. These lies are equally absurd on their face, and so the people who believe them must either be exposed only to the lies (which cannot be the case here, as this is a professor for the most multinational organization in Vesper), or be intellectually vacuous, calcified husks worthy only to be crumbled to dust.

    The fact the Watch chose this waste of air to teach one of their most complicated fields of necessary knowledge solidifies in my mind the certainty that Scholomance is not a school. We know of the people in ultimate control of it and one of them is literally immortal. Lord Asher doubtlessly knows how useless bigots are as teachers just by osmosis from potentially thousands of years of existence, and still allowed this. That could not be the case, were this intended primarily to teach. All the other professors cited their credentials to teach, the life experiences which make them worth listening to, or outright demonstrated their strength, before teaching a single thing. Kang opened on a petty attack upon one of his own students.

    There is a kind of institution this is reminiscent of. Ones which even had the gall to call themselves schools. British boarding “schools.” Some of the style still exist, though their abuses must now be more carefully controlled, but those were not schools either. They were a means of shattering children through pain, humiliation, and the cruelties only children can visit upon other children. To break their empathy, twist their philosophy, and turn them into good little imperial middle managers, able to witness and cause untold suffering their entire lives without ever wondering whether anything could be different. To turn them into people who would forever blame the poor for poverty, the sick for dying, the enslaved for their chains. That’s the kind of place which chooses a bigot as professor, knowing he would have a target for his wrath among his charges.

    Everyone is speculating about what crisis the Watch might be responding to. What if they’ve just…run out of the right kind of damaged person? What if their empire needs more racist middle managers?

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    1. Some Smartass's avatar Some Smartass

      >Everyone is speculating about what crisis the Watch might be responding to. What if they’ve just…run out of the right kind of damaged person? What if their empire needs more racist middle managers?

      That would be such a boring reason, though. Additionally, I don’t think it would move our protagonists to the titular treason of the volume.

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    2. john's avatar john

      > They, too, are the victims of imperial expansion in this world, as there would be no humans for them to eat if the humans were content to stay on their islands of Glare without trying to consume the other 2/3 of the world.

      That only holds if those other 2/3 of the world lack credible imperial ambitions of their own. Given that both of the major non-Glare-affiliated power centers we’ve seen onscreen (the Red Maw, and the city whose ruins Scholomance was built on) did appear to have such, that theory is not well supported by the text.

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  3. arcanavitae15's avatar arcanavitae15

    Song is not having a good time right now, respect to her for admitting that she didn’t have a good time in class. Mayram admitting the same as well was good. Tristian timing telling people about framing someone with arson with Song drinking was great. Angharad’s comment about six people dying in her class shows that for all that their classes are stressful hers is the most deadly.

    Tristan’s question almost gave Song a heart attack. Tristan could read from her body language that she can see gods along with knowing her contract, she was right that it could piss off a lot of people if it was know that she can do that.

    Professor Sasan gave a really good explanation on why the Saga Class is important. Antiquity, Imperial Calendar and Centennial Calendar are neat ways to break up the Eras of the world. His assignment about what the world’s era was called before the Antediluvians came is a really interesting assignment.

    Professor Kang is an asshole and that’s all I’ll say about him. Teratology does seem like a very important discipline to learn though.

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    1. Mirror Night's avatar Mirror Night

      I mean I argue that Angharad has the most stressful class.
      The fail condition for Masks and Navigators don’t seem bad. Masks you gotta do some tasks and learn from enough teachers not to fail. Navs probably have it in the best in that they are more protected then usual from dangerous screwups and just have to master a certain number of schools.
      Song’s I guess does have a level of danger as well since you have missions but presumably not all of them are dangerous combat ones. And you just get shipped out if you fail.
      Blades is really the only class that has a very high chance of death.

      Teratology seems like the most important general class for Blades. Maybe Warfare is close but the best ways to take out other humans is fairly standardized.

      I assume Kang’s family comes from the Republic of Jigong given his severe reaction to her. Other Republics types have made snide comments at worst.

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      1. arcanavitae15's avatar arcanavitae15

        I’d personally assume it’s because of skill rarity and it’s easier to find someone to kill stuff than doing the things other Covenants do. But they also need to train their students to a high level and the best way for the Blades to do that is training from Hell.

        Kang is likely associated with the Republic of Jigong and probably does have personal reasons to hate Song’s family.

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    2. Mirror Night's avatar Mirror Night

      Honestly what the Blades need is the training tool Hanno had with the Gigantes. That or much better being healing.

      Really sucks to be a Martial Compared to PGTE. Worse Heals, No Rez, No Free Physical Buffs, 1 Aspect instead of 3, No Narrative Bonuses, and no Light Access.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. morroian's avatar morroian

    Best Song chapter so far. The first section was masterful in the way that it showed Song’s discombobulation whether it was because of the curse or just her emotions.

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  5. greycat70's avatar greycat70

    Song’s near breakdown because she burned the chicken and felt she had to hide this from her friends was heartbreaking. They would all support her, but she can’t see this — ironic, for one whose Contract allows her to see the physical and metaphysical worlds as they are.

    (If it turns out that she killed Isabel, and Angharad finds out, then this might change — but for now, they have her back.)

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Rynjin's avatar Rynjin

    What does Kang plan to do if someone just…doesn’t leave? Seethe? He, as far as I can tell, has no authority to actually remove a student from Scholomance, and has a duty to teach his class so he can’t just refuse to teach until abstudent leaves and stays gone.

    There’s no grade or score here to hold over student’s heads outside their Covenant classes, the “figure out a petty reason to kick somebody out of my class” gambit serves no purpose. Hopefully Song is able to pull herself together enough to realize Kang has no real authority over her besides the authority she gives him.

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  7. trashdragon's avatar trashdragon

    The top was still pink, but when she flipped the cuts she saw they had charred stripes. 

    That just sounds like a normal char you’d get on any grill, if a bit rough. Not necessarily burnt, and it’s better for chicken to be overcooked than undercooked anyway, just flip it over and…

    Hands shaking, tearing up like a fucking child, Song did the only rational thing she could: she put the pot off the fire, went outside with a shovel and dug a hole in a corner of the garden. She emptied the burnt chicken into it – she’d have to buy another to replace it from her own funds – and filled the hole.

    Well okay then.

    I feel like this either Song being overly tilted in this specific instance, or an indicator of her being a perfectionist to a self-sabotaging fault as well as prone to violent overreactions towards perceived obstacles. Either way I don’t actually think those are good traits for an officer? Like she herself could be the disaster waiting to happen that she thinks Tristan is.

    Actually, this makes me wonder if having multiple stripes to a brigade is actually a benefit? If Song had an XO she could offload a lot of the stuff she’s less equipped to deal with. Sure it means double the contracts, but that itself means double the rewards, right?

    Also oh my god Peiling must have some sick-ass tenure if a professor can devote an entire lecture series to shitting on one student in particular. Remember that Song is connected to a high ranking member of the Ren, so this is him picking fights within the ranks, not just bullying a student who can’t do anything about it.

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    1. aurikdomi's avatar aurikdomi

      Yeah Song is tilted hard from the literal curse god forming in her blood.

      Double contracts but in the same already thin amount of time is real rough.

      We don’t know that he is being monitored or if there is punishment incoming, the Krypteia might not be perfect.

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