Jennaâs head thumped forward onto her textbook with a quiet thud. She twisted her face to the side and blew a frustrated breath through her lips. âI hate studying.â Her feet kicked under the table, knocking Cliffâs ankles with her toes.
He propped his elbow beside his own textbook, tucking his chin in his palm. âThen donât study.â Heâd been idly going over some of the reading material for Professor Jerichoâs class, but heâd already prepared much more for this set of exams than the first round, because of his isolation in his room. The study date had been her idea, a crude replacement for a dinner date in Westholden proper because of team Bâs probation.
With a little moan and a shake in her chair, she pulled herself upright, shooting him a glare. âYou know I canât do that. Unlike some people, I didnât get a convenient isolation to brush up on all the exam materials. If I donât want to fail, I have to study.â
Cliff smirked. âConvenient, is it? Would you like to switch places then?â He hummed as if considering. âYou know, Roose did say it was only a small chance weâd get the boot. Not so bad at all, when you think about it.â
She winced. âOkay, maybe convenient isnât the right word â sorry about that.â
Waving a hand in front of him, Cliff shook his head. âDonât you worry, pretty thing â I was just teasing you a bit.â
âPretty, is it?â she said with a small smile. He winked, and she let out a little peal of laughter. âBut, really, you canât seem to catch a break â though this time, at least, we can actually talk about it.â Her tone had sharpened at the end, and Cliff shrugged apologetically. He hadnât told her about his offer to transfer until the problem had been solved, and when he finally did talk to her about it, sheâd nearly slapped him across the face â if only because she felt bad that she couldnât be there for him.
âThat was different â the threat of transferring, it was because I was proper awful at using my PMT. It wasnât exactly something I wanted to talk about.â Sheâd have offered him sympathy, he knew, but that kind of support would have only served to frustrate him. âHere, though-â He made a vague noise. âHonestly, even if I got kicked out, I wouldnât regret what we did.â He thought Loria and Nym probably had the same opinion as him. In fact, if the three of them did get expelled, Thalos might be the worst off â they would probably slap him into one of the other teams, but Cliff imagined heâd feel damned guilty about the whole affair.
âWhat would you do?â she asked.
âIf I got kicked out?â He hummed for a moment as he thought. âWell â Iâd probably go home for a stretch before I found an engineering job in one of the cities â Crestfall or Minton, probably.â Before coming to the academy, heâd been offered an engineering position in Mintonâs government â he wondered if it would still be open.
Jennaâs eyebrows went up slightly. âOh? Not satisfied with being a farmer anymore?â
âMy poppa told me when I left that you can take the boy from the farm, but you canât take the farm from the boy,â Cliff said with a wistful smile, âTrying to separate Cliff Everheart from the farm is like-â His eyes flicked down to his textbooks, and he smirked. âWell, itâs like trying to explain the rise of the Courier Alliance without taking into account the tyranny and excesses of the Church of Gaeon.â Jenna made a noise of protest at his ham-fisted attempt at dragging in a bit of studying to their conversation, but Cliff continued. âIâll always be a farmer, but after my time here, I think Iâve decided itâs time for me to leave the farm and take on something more suited to my skills.â Engineering, no doubt, though what kind, he couldnât say.
âIâm getting lonely just thinking about it,â Jenna muttered with a frown. She shook her head. âThereâs no point talking like this, though â I mean â you said you donât think youâll be expelled, right?â
âRight,â Cliff said, smiling. Ever the pessimist, Loria was insistent on reminding them that the possibility remained whenever they spoke as a team. He and Nym were a bit more optimistic, and Thalos, as ever, kept his cards close to his chest. A couple of times, Cliff had tried to probe Roose for information, but the Templar was remaining admirably, frustratingly silent.
Jenna stretched in a way that showed off her slim frame, and Cliff admired her from across the table. She caught him looking and smirked, eyes widening as she remembered something. âOh! You know how my parents are visiting for the harvest festival?â Cliff nodded, a suspicion of where this was going snaking into his head. âWell, ah-â she continued, suddenly flustered, âmy dad, heâs â well, I mentioned you in a letter or two back home, and they want to meet you.â
âNaturally,â Cliff said, smiling â honestly, heâd assumed heâd meet just about everyoneâs parents who would be coming to visit. He wasnât exactly looking forward to it, but you could learn a lot about someone by getting to know where they came from â or who, in this case.
She forced an awkward cough. âYes, well â heâs a little bit old fashioned, you understand? In his eyes, the only reason to entertain a romantic relationship is to eventually get married.â Her eyes scanned the outline of his face, but she was studiously avoiding eye contact.
Cliff clicked his tongue. âIf youâre asking me to marry you, Jenna, Iâd reckon itâs a little early for that. I mean, what would my momma think about such a whirlwind romance?â Honestly, sheâd probably be thankful that someone was willing to put of with Cliff â but he wasnât about to say that.
She let out a little shocked squeak, but noticed his smirk quick enough and made another, affronted noise. âI was going to ask you to entertain the idea of a more serious relationship, at least in front of them â I donât think a casual relationship would even register with my dad.â She paused to frown. âIf youâre so keen to joke, though, maybe Iâd be better off ending things here.â
He knew she wasnât serious, but nevertheless he reached out across the table, clasping one of her hands in both of his and putting on his best puppy-dog eyes. âBegging your pardon, my dear â if you want me to play the old-fashioned boyfriend, well, Iâll do it â but only because I like you so much.â
Jenna tugged her hand free from his. âOkay, you donât have to ham it up that much â you can be normal, okay? I just wanted to warn you in case my dad starts asking you questions about your intentions and other things I know neither of us have taken the time to think about.â There was the barest hint of a blush on her cheeks, though, and Cliff basked in it. âNow that thatâs out of the way, we can get back to studying.â She ran a hand through her hair, eyebrows coming down as she dragged a finger along the textbook page, finding her spot again. He watched her for a moment before looking down at his own book. He was pretty sure he would be fine for the exams, but there were worse ways to spend his time than sitting across the table from her.
***
The ratchet slid in a practiced, quick arc, tightening the bolt connecting the two metal bars of the frame. Cliff jerked the tool back and forth until it was secure then let out a contented sigh, rolling out from under the big, skeletal frame and sitting up, working some blood-flow back into his exhausted hands. âIâm done over here, Brother Paolo,â he called across the room.
The cassock-clad magepriest was in front of an engineering station, assembling one of the magetool portions of the machine, half a dozen partially-assembled components around him. Heâd made some progress on the prototype while Cliff was gone with the Hands-on and his house arrest, but it had all been sporadic and disorganized. This wasnât quite how Cliff liked to do things â despite the intuitive nature of his gift, he was actually pretty meticulous in how he organized his work. In simple terms, if the project was a jigsaw puzzle, Paolo was the type to scramble for a single connection and then build out from there, whereas Cliff liked to find the entire border before filling in the inside. Watching him work for a moment, Cliff waited for a response, but when none came, he grabbed a sturdy part of the giant magetoolâs frame, tugging himself to his feet and walking towards his advisor. âBrother Paolo?â
The magepriest twitched, looking over his shoulder towards Cliff, a frown on his face. âWhat? Oh, you finished? Good â help me with this.â There were heavy bags under his eyes, and his hair was all kinds of messy â from the look of him, Cliff thought it had probably been a few days since he;d last showered. âThatâs the last of the frame, right?â
âYes, sir.â Cliff came up beside him, looking over what he was working on â it was part of the magic pulse emitter, the key to the big innovation in their research. Basically, the magetool they were working on had the goal of isolating an area and reducing the magic pressure inside. The reducing part was very basic â essentially you absorb all the magic in the area. It was so simple, theyâd already made small absorbers in his Intro to Magetool Engineering class. The isolation part, though â that was highly theoretical and the meat and bones of what they were doing. In rough terms, they were rigging a magetool to emit rapid pulses of magic to a specified radius, somehow blocking the ambient magic from piercing the âwallâ they were building with these pulses. He wasnât rock solid on all the theory behind it, but he had enough of a grasph to understand the design, and that was good enough for him â especially when he had exams coming up.
Paolo stepped back from the desk, gesturing in front of him. âCan you take over for me? Some of this stuff is pretty finicky, and â ah, my hands have started to shake.â
Cliff nodded, glancing at his advisor with a concerned expression as he picked up the partially-built component, rotating it in his hands to get a feel for its geometry. âWhen was the last time you got a full nightâs sleep?â Setting it down, Cliff plucked a screwdriver in one hand and got to work fastening the neatly stacked pieces together.
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After watching him work for a moment, Paolo shrugged. âA full nightâs sleep? Letâs see â I got the â that is, maybe two days after you left for your Courier college practical training?â
Cliffâs hand stopped moving as he did the mental math â that meant it had been about a week, far too long to be productive without any rest. He paid the magepriest a pitying look. âIâll handle this â take a break, if only for a few a minutes.â
Paoloâs eyes seemed to glaze for a second, then suddenly his hands came up and he scraped his palms downward across his face. âA break? I canât â no, I donât have time for a break.â He pressed his hands into his eyes for a moment before they pulled away. âIâll start wiring the first parts of the absorber onto the frame.
âI really think you should rest,â Cliff protested, âI mean â you havenât even told me why, suddenly, weâre in such a rush.â All he knew was that when he showed up to the workshop after his house arrest ended, Paolo had been in a state of near panic, wanting to compress months of building time into a few days.
His advisor frowned at him as he moved across the room, checking the magetoolâs blueprint and grabbing a few things off of one of the workshopâs desks, arranging them on the floor around the frame. âIâm sorry, Cliff, but I canât tell you â just know itâs important, all right?â
Sighing in resignation, Cliff turned back to his own work. âAll right, but when you inevitably collapse and end up bedridden, Iâm going to need you to explain to Iona that I tried to get you to take it easy.â His engineering club senior was worried about Paolo â he hadnât shown up to the club in more than a week, and they still had the harvest festival coming up, so he was sorely missed.
Paolo started to say something, but before he got a word out, there was the sharp sound of knuckles on wood, and both Cliff and his advisor turned to see a man watching them from the door of the workshop. He was tall, almost as tall as Cliff, with glasses on his round face, thin brown hair cut neatly short, and a small smile that crinkled his eyes. He was dressed in a magepriestâs vestments, but his cassock was, interestingly, trimmed in baby blue. That wasnât a color Cliff was familiar with. He wanted to immediately press the man or Paolo for its meaning, but something about the unfamiliar magepriestâs presence seemed to stifle his urge to speak.
His eyes scanned across the room, settling on Cliffâs advisor. âBrother Paolo?â
Paolo just about yelped, jumping to his feet and brushing dust off the hem of his cassock. âYes, thatâs me.â He still sounded tired, but there was a new emotion there â a frantic nervousness.
âWonderful,â the strange magepriest continued, âthat means Iâm in the right place.â His head spun across the room, and Cliff felt suddenly nailed in place, his spine going stiff as the bespectacled man studied him. âWho might this be? An apprentice Courier, if my guess isnât wrong.â
Cliff was about to introduce himself when Paolo cut in. âHeâs â my research assistant.â He turned towards Cliff, and the two shared a short, severe look that Cliff read to mean âno funny business around the unsettling guyâ. âYouâre done for the day, Cliff â you can head back.â Immediately, Cliff wanted to protest â he had no idea who this guy was but it was pretty clear that he would have some interesting things to say, but then, Paolo was still giving him that no-nonsense look, so he just nodded, wishing the pair a good evening, setting down his interrupted work and hustling out of the workshop. For a moment he considered hanging around and trying to eavesdrop, but then the glasses manâs smile popped into his brain, and he thought better of it. He didnât need his Gift to tell him that getting on that manâs bad side was not a good idea
***
âCheers!â Eight cups came together, clacking together over the table as all the members of teams A and B leaned in. Cliff took a hearty swig of his beer â normally, the dorm didnât serve any, but Percy had brought a keg of the stuff from Westholden proper. Theyâd all chipped in, and even then, it still hurt Cliffâs wallet â the scholarship only provided so much spending money, after all â but it was well worth it, considering the celebration.
He stuck out an arm, wrapping it around Thalosâs shoulder, and brought his cup into his roommateâs for their own private toast. âHowâs it feel to be out of the infirmary?â
âHome sweet home,â Thalos said dryly, taking a little sip from his beer. Theyâd gotten permission from Dr. Harkin for him to have a few drinks, though, much to Cliffâs disappointment, the good doctor had warned Thalos strictly from drinking to excess.
âIâm so glad to see youâre okay,â Penny said from across the table, âWhen I got hurt, I only had to spend one night in there, and even that was miserable â I canât imagine how bored I would have gotten with an extended stay.â
âIt was a complete joy,â Thalos said, and Pennyâs eyes widened.
Cliff shook his head. âHeâs being sarcastic, Penny â I can tell.â He released Thalos, leaning forward to explain. âIt takes a keen ear but â when heâs being serious his tone is accidentally neutral â thatâs just how it is, you know?â He glanced at Thalos. âWhen heâs being sarcastic, itâs intentionally neutral, you understand? A little flatter, a little colder.â
Deb made an exasperated noise. âCliff, that makes no sense â how do you expect us to tell the difference between accidentally and intentionally neutral â thatâs like asking us to tell when youâre being smug on purpose, or just when itâs just your nature coming through.â Penny giggled, and Loria put a hand over her mouth to stifle a laugh. Cliff opened his mouth to protest, but shut it after a moment. It was almost exactly the same thing, when he thought about it. Still, he couldnât let her jab go unpunished.
âWhat did you do to kill the time?â Percy asked, stopping the argument before it started. He was being a little more ambitious with his beer consumption â heâd already gone back for a refill, and Cliff was thinking about joining him shortly.
Thalos shrugged. âHonestly, not much â you guys visited pretty often, which Iâm grateful for, and when you werenât there-â He paused with a frown. âWell, I studied a little, and started out the window, but I was pretty tired.â
âAlmost dying will do that to you, I figure,â Jenna said, swirling her mug in front of her.
Thalos nodded. He frowned, looking over his shoulder. âAny clue when dinner will be done? Ralphâs cooking was something I really missed.â Cliff pressed a breath through his teeth, holding back a giggle, and looked across the table at Nym, sharing a mischievous glance. The prank had been her idea, and Cliff was jealous he hadnât thought of it first.
As if beckoned by Thalosâs question, a moment later Ralph burst out of the kitchen, carrying a tray of food in front of him. âWelcome back, Thalos â we missed you!â the rotund man called, walking over and setting the tray in front of Thalos, âCliff told me it was your favorite, so I had to cook it up for you, but I have to say, Iâm surprised. Not many people love chicken livers and spinach.â
Thalos stared down at the plates in front of him, the same dinner heâd been forced to eat in the infirmary â to Ralphâs credit, heâd done his best to make it look appetizing, and he had mostly succeeded. After a moment, he turned towards Cliff, expression deadly serious. âCliff, Iâm going to kill you.â
From across the table, Deb gasped. âYou know what Cliff, maybe I can tell the difference. This time, heâs dead serious!â
***
Cliff washed the gritty taste of chicken livers from his mouth, polishing off another mug of beer. Of course, he wasnât actually going to make Thalos eat the food he loathed so deeply, but it was there, so someone had to. The table had collectively decided that it was Cliffâs burden to bear, a punishment for the prank â he was about to point out that it was Nymâs idea, but she had given him such a pleading look that heâd decided to take one for the team. Besides, it really wasnât that bad â he didnât particularly like the texture of liver, but Ralph was an ace in the kitchen, so it was good enough for him.
At some point, the chairs had shifted around â he found himself between Jenna and Loria, and now Thalos was flanked by Percy and Deb, both of whom had drunk so much that they were starting to forget that Thalos wasnât supposed to overindulge. Thankfully, Cliffâs roommate had a good poker face and enough of a backbone to shoot them down each time they offered to refill his cup. They didnât seem to take it too personally, though, leaning in front of him to continue some argument from the Hands-on.
âThalos!â Penny cried suddenly, standing up from her seat, leaning over the table towards him and puffing out her cheeks. Sheâd been mostly quiet for the dinner, sipping contentedly at the beer, but now that sheâd had a few, sheâd started to occasionally have these loud outbursts. âAre you going to be okay for exams? Thereâs only two days until they start, and â I know you you said you were studying, but â do you need our help to prepare?â
Nym stood up, dragging her roommate back to her seat with an amused expression. âWe helped him study, Penny â he should be fine.â She looked over at Thalos. âYouâll be fine, right?â
âShould be,â Thalos said with a level expression, âfailing half the exams is fine, right?â
Penny tried to jerk up from her seat again, but Nym held her in place firmly. âSarcasm, Penny, sarcasm.â
Cliff chuckled, and a finger poked itself into his cheek. He turned to see Loria, staring at him with narrow eyes. There was a light flush to her face, and he glanced at her cup â it was empty. Again. Sheâd been unexpectantly insistent in her beer consumption, and when heâd made a comment about his surprise, sheâd seemed to take it as a challenge. Now, sheâd probably had nearly as many beers as him and Percy, and both of them were a good bit bigger than her. âCliff,â she said, âyouâre not going to fail any exams this time, are you? I donât want you to.â Her words had the slightest slur to them, and there was a little pout to her tone.
Jenna leaned towards him. âThis is the best thing Iâve ever seen,â she whispered.
He shushed her with a swat to the thigh and smiled at Loria. âIâll be fine. I only failed my PMT class because of my Gift, right? This time, though, I donât have to worry about that â honestly, Iâm probably going to do pretty well, if I do say so myself.â
âGood,â she said, slapping her fingers on the table with a loud smack. She stared at him for a moment, frowning slightly before speaking again. âIâm scared of you meeting my father.â
Cliff blinked, wondering if that was an insult or not. âIâll â uh â try not to embarrass you?â he offered
Her head seemed to wobble on her neck as she shook it. âItâs not that,â she said, âI just â I think youâll hate him.â Cliff blinked. âJust like you hated me, right? Heâs â heâs a good man, butâ¦â She trailed off, turning to look around the table. âYou guys are my team, right? And I donât want â I donât know-â She cut off with a hiccup, and she leaned forward. âIâm dizzy.â She muttered into the table.
âOkay,â Jenna said, standing up and squeezing Cliffâs shoulder. She walked around him, leaning down to whisper something in Loriaâs ear. The other girl moaned a quiet protest, and Jenna turned to Cliff. âI think itâs time for bed.â Her glare sharpened towards him. âDo not tease her about this in the morning â sheâll probably be feeling bad enough as it is.â
Cliff laughed, shaking his head. âHonestly? Iâm not even sure what I would tease her for. This is the most earnest Iâve ever seen her.â That last drunken ramble had been the closest thing to a sign of affection heâd ever gotten from Loria, and he wasnât about to mock her back into her shell. He was a little worried about that comment that sheâd made about her father, though. Jenna grabbed Loria under the arm, and she shakily stood up. âOh, Loria,â Cliff called after his teamâs commander. She turned back to him, concerned expression on his face. âI never hated you,â he said with a smile. He waved a hand. âGood night.â