âI have to say, this Hands-on is already starting off better,â Nym said, âI mean, this time, we donât have to leave before the sun comes out.â Thalos nodded, recalling how difficult it had been to drag Cliff out of bed that morning.
âYou took the words right out of my mouth,â Cliff said, leaning over the side of the trailer. Theyâd left that afternoon for Clearspring, where theyâd spend the night before setting out on their teamsâ individual missions.
âIt is a bit daunting though, that weâll be spending most of the next week working on this,â Percy said. Teams A and B were riding in a trailer hitched to the second of three trail trolleys. Their big, lumbering caravan was not moving particularly fast, so it would take until early evening to arrive at the nearby city.
âReally?â Jenna said, âI think itâs exciting â well, as exciting as a school assignment can be, anyway.â She was seated between Deb and Penny, and by the way they were acting, it seemed to Thalos like the girls had made up. That was good â with Loria and Cliff, team B had some experience dealing with feuding members. It made the entire atmosphere turn tense, and, considering they were about to set off on a multi-day mission, that would not have been fun.
âExciting is one word for it,â Penny said dourly.
Deb sighed, shaking her head. âWeâve talked about this â if you want to be a Courier, youâll have to get used to sleeping outdoors.â
âThatâs not true!â the other girl protested, âI mean â you heard Roose talk about it, there are Couriers who deal with intelligence and â and other kinds of jobs in cities.â
âNot many,â Loria said, âthe Federation has an extensive intelligence network, and I donât think they hire Couriers unless itâs something extremely specialized.â
Nym shook her head. âThere are more than you think, actually. Itâs true that theyâre specialized, but, well, governments arenât the only ones who pay for intelligence work. Besides,â she continued, âthey wouldnât be doing a particularly good job of covert operations if everyone knew about them.â
âI suppose you would know better than me,â Loria said, inclining her head.
âYour poppaâs a Courier, right?â Cliff asked, looking over at Nym.
She smiled awkwardly, nodding.
âThey call him the Puppetmaster,â Deb added. Nym turned to look at her, surprise in her eyes. âWhat?â team Aâs commander said, âheâs pretty famous in Crestfall, you know.â Thalos had heard the same from his Auntie, but heâd never brought it up
âThe Puppetmaster,â Percy muttered, frowning. âWhatâs that mean?â
âItâs his Gift,â Nym explained, âhe can manipulate objects with it, like puppets, I guess.â Her head tilted to the side. âI think my mother actually came up with the name, though Iâve never heard the story behind it.â
âIs she a Courier too?â Jenna asked.
Nym frowned. âKind of? She works for the Alliance, at least â she used to be an active Courier, but now she does administrative work. She lives in Crestfall and works at the Marifond branch.â
Cliff clicked his tongue. âSo youâre a pure-blood Courier then? Not like us scholarship kids, eh? Weâre veritable mutts.â He glanced around the trailer. Percy nodded, and Thalos shrugged â he wasnât exactly a scholarship kid, but he basically was, considering his auntie was paying for his tuition.
âActually,â Deb said, âMy uncle is a Courier.â Cliff made a noise of shock. âWhat? I never said I had no connection to the Couriers â and besides, Iâve only met the man once. He doesnât even live in the Federation anymore.â The betrayal on Cliffâs face was almost comical, and Thalos couldnât help but chuckle.
âIf you donât mind me asking,â Nym said, looking around the trailer, âWhy did you all want to become Couriers? I mean â my dadâs a courier, but thatâs not true for the rest of you.â The conversation paused as everyone considered the question.
Loria was the first to answer. âAs you know, my father is in the military â well, my whole family is, really.â She frowned. âI suppose I want an identity separate from them, and the Couriers were just the path I chose.â
Jenna nodded. âItâs about the same here â plus some family baggage towards the army. I have to say Iâm loving it so far.â
âFor me, I have that uncle,â Deb started, âplus â my fatherâs a librarian, and I grew up reading all sorts of novels about Couriers. Something about the job inspires me, I guess.â She smiled bashfully. âKind of childish, I know.â
âNot at all!â Percy said, shaking his head emphatically, âor, if it is, my reason is just as childish. On the ranch, itâs always a sigh of relief when the Couriers show up. They come and fix most of our problems without completely emptying our wallets.â He shrugged. âI guess I just want people to have that kind of reaction to me.â
âIâm right there with you,â Cliff said, âGrowing up, we relied on the Couriers to come through and fix the little things up for us â an ornery monster, a damaged road, things like that.â He smiled warmly. âWhen I got the Scholarship offer, my momma wanted me to enroll as a seminarian â sheâs the pious one in the family, you know? But the Church always seemed a little too stuffy for me, and the military, too. So â the Couriers.â He turned towards Thalos. âWhat about you?â
âI-â He frowned, feeling guilty. His reason, when compared with the others, was rather selfish. More than the service or the job, heâd enrolled for the travel permit they issued to all the Academy graduates. Truthfully, he wasnât even really planning to be a Courier once he graduated. His grandfather had left him a good sum of money, and he planned to wander, maybe eventually continuing the manâs research. But he couldnât very well tell them that when everyone else was so earnest.
âCome on, you guys know Thalos has to remain mysterious,â Jenna said, her tone teasing.
Thalosâs eyes widened. âMysterious?â
âYou hardly say anything at all,â Penny complained, âand when you do, itâs usually just some sarcastic comment to knock Cliff down a peg.â
âA service we all thank you for, I assure you,â Deb said seriously. Cliff made an outraged noise, and a few people laughed.
Thalos turned to his roommate, frowning. âAm I mysterious?â He wasnât trying to be mysterious â quite the opposite, in fact. He often felt like he was putting himself out there, with how much he spoke.
Cliff shrugged, still glaring at Deb. âYouâre quiet,â he explained, âand thatâs most of the way there â add in your tendency to brood and your occasional sarcastic jabs â which do hurt, by the way â and youâre as mysterious as a murder in a room locked from the inside.â Thalos grimaced at the comparison.
âJoking aside, thereâs no need for you to have a good reason to become a Courier,â Nym said, âOr really, any reason at all. My father stumbled into the job, and heâs somehow doing fine.â
âItâs the kind of thing that will come to you eventually, I think,â Jenna said, smiling kindly, âyou shouldnât worry about it.â
âAnd, not to be a wet blanket, but I believe we should be focusing on the Hands-on, right now, not a search for Thalosâs purpose,â Loria said. She turned to Percy. âSpeaking of which, youâre from Clearspring, right Percy? Anything in particular we should know about it? Iâve seen the maps, of course, but a first-hand account might be more informative.â Thalos sighed, mentally thanking Loria for redirecting the conversation. Since his grandfatherâs death, he hadnât really thought about what his purpose was, though, perhaps he should, if everyone else was already convinced of theirs.
Percy shrugged. âIâm not really from Clearspring, exactly, just one of the surrounding villages. Itâs the same as all of north-east Marifond, I guess â hills and forests with the occasional town in between.â
âDid you end up sending word to your family that we were coming through?â Deb asked, âI know you were thinking about it.â
Percy shook his head. âTheyâre busy, and I didnât want to pressure them to try to come into the city to meet me.â He frowned. âItâs a shame our delivery route doesnât cross through Thatchtop, or else I would have.â
âI would have liked to meet them,â Jenna offered with a sympathetic smile. âI take it that means they wonât be visiting campus for the harvest festival?â Percy shook his head, and the mood in the trailer dampened slightly. After the second Hands-on, the next big event coming up was the harvest festival. There was a dance of some kind, plus some demonstrations from the upperclassmen. Also, studentsâ parents were invited to visit and observe classes. Thalos, of course, would have no one visiting, but as he understood it, it was quite common for peopleâs parents to come to observe.
âIâm in the same situation,â Cliff said, âbut the way I see it, it just gives us more time to embarrass everyone in front of their parents.â He leaned towards Percy, smiling conspiratorially. âI say we ham up the bumpkin â really go for the uncultured country-boy angle.â
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âCliff,â Loria said in a warning tone at the same time Jenna leaned forward, swatting him on the leg.
âAh, well,â Cliff said with a smirk, âwe can talk about it after weâve finished the Hands-on.â
***
âCareful with that one, Thalos,â Cliff warned as he heaved the crate off of the trailer, handing it down. âItâs heavy.â With a grunt, Thalos took the box, piling it with the rest beside the trailer. The caravan theyâd ridden was scheduled to make a return trip to Westholden that evening, so they were storing all their provisions and gear in a lot just outside Clearspring. âComing your way,â Cliff called, tossing three smaller boxes, one after another, over the rail to Thalos. He snagged the first one in his left hand, the second in his right, and barely caught the third, bouncing it off his chest and trapping it between the other two.
âTry not to break anything, Cliffâ Roose called from where he was watching them, âItâd be a shame if I had to fail you for breaking something before we even got started.â
âYeah, yeah,â Cliff muttered, taking the last box and hopping off the back of the trailer, landing heavily on the ground. They piled the last few boxes with the rest, joining the others where they were gathered by the entrance to the lot.
âGood work with the unloading there,â Templar Roose said, âThe academy has booked lodging for us for tonight â teams C and D, follow Dr. Harkin, A and B, youâre with me.â As a group they left the lot, walking towards the Clearspring city center before Dr. Harkin and Teams C and D split off, leaving Roose walking with the rest.
Clearspring was not particularly large â the city itself had around fifty thousand residents, but if you added the villages that surrounded it, that number rose closer to seventy-five thousand. It was a long, flat sprawl of short, squat buildings. Most of them were three or fewer floors, though there was the occasional taller building, apartment complexes and larger businesses.
âYou ever been to Clearspring?â Cliff asked as they walked along. Unlike the trails between cities, the roads of Clearsping were paved with smooth cobbles. Most on the streets seemed to be walking, like them, but there was the occasional Magetool car that drove by. Cliff had his hands tucked in his pockets, and by the way he was looking around, Thalos guessed this was his first time to the city.
âYeah,â Thalos said, âI didnât stay long, but I came through with my grandfather a few years back.â
Cliff nodded, glancing over at him. âWould you believe me if I said I havenât?â
Thalos frowned. âWhy wouldnât I?â
âWell you know, I thought I might seem worldly,â Cliff replied with a grin. Thalos laughed â worldly was about the last word he would use to describe his roommate. âTruth be told,â he continued, âgoing to Westholden was the first time I ever went further from home than Minton.â Cliffâs home was in the countryside of Minton, so that meant heâd never really traveled, ever, before coming to the Academy.
Cliff clicked his tongue. âWell, thatâs not true I guess. When I was in the womb, I took a trip to Crestfall when my parents went to a funeral â âcourse I donât remember it, but I suppose that meanâs Iâve been there, too.â
âThatâs dangerous,â Thalos said. About the worst thing you could do when you were pregnant was travel through areas of high magic pressure. Theyâd talked about it extensively in their Early Magic History class â when the Great Rise happened and magic came into the world, the rate of stillbirths skyrocketed because of magic exposure. Honestly, it was a miracle Cliff had survived at all.
âItâs the Goddessâs own luck that I lived through it,â Cliff said, echoing Thalosâs thoughts. âMy momma didnât even know she was pregnant until they got back.â He grinned. âThey always called me their miracle baby.â Thalos nodded understanding. That was probably why Cliff, the son of a pair of mundane farmers, had been born with such a high Magic Rating. It was another topic of their Early Magic History class, and a subject of his Grandfatherâs research â if you were lucky, children exposed to magic in the womb would survive. If you were very lucky, they would be born with Gifts. Of course, with subsequent generations, there was more inborn magic, and the next generation could handle more exposure in the womb â and so on, until some natural limit was reached, somewhere around a Magical Rating of 5000. He thumbed at his ring. His grandfather was an expert in such matters, studying the heritability of Gifts and magic.
âThalos,â Cliff said, shaking him from his thoughts, âyou hear my question?â
Thalos blinked. âNo, sorry,â he said, âI was â thinking about something.â
âNot a problem,â Cliff said, âI just asked whether you traveled a lot, before coming to the Academy â I always got the impression that you did, though you donât talk about it much.â
âHere I am, being mysterious again,â Thalos mumbled. He shook his head. âYeah, I traveled a lot â my grandfather went all over for his research, and since I didnât have parents, he always dragged me with him.â Itâd be more accurate to say he was always traveling. Heâd probably spent most of his time in Marifond, but heâd been all over.
âYou enjoy it? The traveling, I mean,â Cliff said.
Thalos shrugged, looking at his roommate. âIt was my life. Did you enjoy life on the farm?â
âIt was my life,â Cliff replied, and both of them laughed.
***
âHey Roose,â Cliff whined, âhow much longer till we get to the hotel?â
Roose turned an amused smile towards him. âShouldnât be much longer, I think â Percy, you might know the place. The Wontin Plaza?â
Percy blinked. âThe Wontin â yeah, I know it. My family stays there whenever we come into the city.â He looked around for a moment before his eyes widened. âOh! I know where we are â itâs just a couple minutes from here.â
âLead the way,â Roose said, gesturing in front of him.
Next to Thalos, Cliff breathed a little chuckle. âOh, you sly devil.â
Thalos gave him a confused look. âWhat?â
âYouâll see,â Cliff replied. He nodded to himself. âI was wondering why they sent C and D to another hotel â has to be that theres somewhere in Clearspring that could fit all of us, right?â
âIâve got no idea what youâre talking about,â Thalos said dryly.
âYouâll see,â Cliff said again.
A few minutes later, they came to the hotel. It was three floors, with no more than thirty rooms altogether. It wasnât exactly an upscale place, but it had a certain rustic charm to it. They walked into the building. The inside of the lobby matched the outside, with overstuffed chairs and carpeting in warm colors. Roose gestured for them to wait before walking over to the woman behind the counter.
While their teacher was arranging their lodging, a finger tapped his shoulder. He turned, and Cliff made a gesture for quiet. Thalos nodded, confused, and Cliff pointed off to the side, where Percy and Deb were involved in some conversation. From behind them, a trio of people approached silently â a man, a woman, and girl just a few years younger than him. Thalos blinked, his eyes widening as he immediately recognized them to be Percyâs family â the man was basically an older version of his son. He looked back at Cliff, and his roommate smirked, tapping the side of his head twice.
âSurprise!â the trio yelled. Percy whirled around, looking like heâd just seen a ghost. A moment later, he was crying and hugging his family. Thalos grinned, only feeling the mildest pang of jealousy.
***
âWell, we got Rooseâs letter, and we knew we had to make the trip,â Percyâs mom explained. She swatted her son on the arm. âYou should have told us you were coming to town, Percival!â After checking in, theyâd found their way to a dining room. They were all gathered around a table, waiting for their food.
Percy was all red-faced and giddy as he scratched, embarrassed at his head. âI didnât want you to make the trip, Ma.â
She waved a hand in front of her. âOh, you know we have Uncle Rob to handle things for a night â I know you were just embarrassed for your dear old ma to meet all your friends.â She narrowed her eyes at him. âWhats wrong, afraid Iâll embarrass you?â
âNo, Ma, nothing like that,â Percy said, eyes wide, âitâs just-â
âWell then, what are you waiting for? Introduce me!â
âOf course,â Percy said hesitantly. He pointed a finger across the table. âThis is-â
âTemplar Roose,â His mom said, cutting him off, âI know dear, we exchanged letters.â Her eyes narrowed as she scanned the table. âAnd thatâs Jenna â And Deb and Penny-â She frowned at Percy. âYou didnât say they were all so pretty in your letters.â
âWell, I didnât want to-â
âThe two other pretty ones must be Nym and Loria then. The young strapping boys are Thalos and Cliff then â by the smirk, Iâd guess the tall one is Cliff.â She looked back at her son. âAm I right?â
âWhat kind of letters are you writing, Percy?â Cliff called, snickering.
âMa,â Percy hissed.
âOh grow up, Dear â nothing to be ashamed of in writing your Ma and Pa a letter every week. Now introduce us to them!â
Percy took a deep breath, gesturing to the side towards his family. âThis is my Ma â she does most of the talking â and my Pa and my younger sister Sylvie.â
âItâs a pleasure to meet you,â Cliffâs Pa said softly.
âThanks for taking care of Percy!â Sylvie added.
âYou know Percy, now that Iâve met them, even Iâm a little upset you didnât tell them we were coming through,â Cliff said, grinning.
Percyâs mom nodded emphatically. âI knew from my boyâs letters that Iâd like you, Cliff. When they finally bring our drinks out, lets show them how good old fashioned farm folk make fun.â
Thalos sighed. Already, he could tell this was going to be a long night.
***
âLoria, slow down,â Cliff moaned from where he was sprawled out in the back of the trailer. Their trail trolley, a smaller version of the one theyâd ridden to Clearspring in the day before, was far less forgiving than the bigger model, and every dip in the road sent the entire thing shaking.
âNo,â Loria said levelly. âTemplar Roose warned us not to drink too much last night â if youâre going to ignore his warnings, Iâm going to ignore your complaints.â Another rough bump, and Cliff whined a complaint, clutching at his stomach.
âWater, Thalos, please,â Cliff said, stretching towards a canteen that was just out of reach. Thalos looked at his roommate with a mixture of amusement and disgust, sighing as he reached over, knocking the bottle of water towards his open hand. Cliff made a grateful noise as he pulled out the stopper, sipping and spilling some on his shirt.
Heâd been fine enough when Thalos pulled him out of bed, and, thankfully, the hangover had not reared its ugly head until after they were on the road.
âCliff,â Nym said, turning around and looking at Thalosâs roommate with concern, âLoriaâs wondering if you set the timer to take the magic exposure readings.â
âDonât worry, I did,â Thalos said. Nym smiled appreciatively, sparing Cliff one more pitied look before she turned back towards the front.
âI think Iâm going to die,â Cliff said after another particularly rough patch of trail.
âTwo hours,â Loria barked, âIâm giving you two hours to pull yourself together â after that, we need to start foraging trail-side. If youâre not recovered enough to move by then, Iâm going to get mad. You understand?â
Cliff made an indecipherable noise. âI think that means yes,â Thalos called back.
âIt had very well better,â Loria replied. Thalos sighed, hoping this wasnât a sign of how things would go for the rest of the Hands-on.