Yukikoâs unit was allowed into the walled-off area that housed the obstacle course, as it was time for her run. The staff at the starting area explained the course to her, and Gregory could see her looking over it while she listened.
âSheâs going to run with them, isnât she?â Ironhand asked him.
Gregory smiled politely but stayed silent. It was a little petty, but he was doing as commanded.
âYou can answer our questions,â Ironhand said.
âGeneral?â Gregory asked.
âGo ahead, but only our questions,â Ruzi said.
âShe will. I would bet that sheâll also break things you donât expect. After all, if this was war, sheâd find every advantage she could.â
Zhu chuckled. âAny of us would. Iâll be interested to see what she thinks will work. None of the other magi have treated this like war.â
âThat is what this is for, isnât it, sir? To get us ready for the conflicts the empire will face?â
âIt is,â Ruzi nodded. âBut very few ever take the stance you have taken.â
The whistle blew, and Yukikoâs unit jogged forward. They carried their entire kit, which Gregory hadnât seen others do. One of her squadsâ clearly her scouting squadâ rushed forward, intent on learning and marking things for the others.
âAll their gear?â Ironhand murmured. âShe does indeed mean for this to be war.â
âScouts,â Zhu murmured. âThatâll make the staff scramble to get things set before they get to them.â
âTheyâre pacing themselves and letting the scouts work,â Ruzi added. âThis isnât a sprint to finish, but a controlled unit ready to adapt. Shrewd of her to do that.â
Gregory just smiled at the compliments for his wife. His gaze didnât waver from her as he waited to see her act. It came after the wall; the course looped to one of the trapdoor platforms that were marked as wounding. Her scouts reached it, then slowly began to cross before Yukiko was suddenly beside them. She made them back off, then ducked into one of their shadows and vanished. A few moments later, she was back and ordered them to run on.
âWhat?â Ironhand sat forward. âThatâs wrong.â
Gregory just grinned, sure he knew whatâd happened.
âNone of the doors triggered⦠what happened to the staff manning it?â Zhu muttered.
âPettit, explain,â Ruzi said, staring at the course.
âShe subdued the staff member, locked the doors closed, then ordered her men on.â
âBut that is⦠beautiful,â Ironhand started to object, then laughed with the last word. âShe defeated it and took a hostage.â
Yukiko had vanished and reappeared again when her men reached the obstacle. A fox eurtik bound in rope was handed to two men, who pulled out a stretcher. They lashed the eurtik to it, then continued after the others.
âOh, she is a devious one,â Zhu chuckled. âYouâll have a rough life, Pettit.â
âNo, sir,â Gregory said softly. âSheâll make my life better in every way.â
The next trapdoor obstacle came up, this one was marked as death. Yukiko was suddenly thereâ she barked orders to her men, who pulled out canvas and held it up as they inched forward. The shadow of the canvas fell on the platform, and Yukiko ordered them on.
Ruzi snorted as he watched the men walking on the shadows created by the magi. âShe canât hold that for long.â
Gregory grinned, as he knew how much aether Yukiko had to work with. They were technically adepts, not the initiates that most were. Add in the rings that held magus-levels of aether and Yukiko could probably do much more than they expected.
Once her men were across, they staked the cloth in place so the shadow covered the platform. With that done, the scouts rushed on while Yukiko waited for her unit to catch up.
âWith what weâve seen so far, Iâm going to push for her unit to get the commendation,â Zhu said.
âAgreed. That kind of resourcefulness and the way her men respond to her gets my approval,â Ironhand nodded.
âLetâs see how they finish,â Ruzi said, but it was clear he was impressed.
Yukikoâs scouts paused short of the footmen, who were the last obstacle for her unit. They pulled off their packs and began to prepare. As they hadnât crossed the line, the footmen couldnât do anything.
âWhat are they doing, Pettit?â Zhu asked.
âIâm not positive, sir, but I would say those men are about to hate life.â
âWhy? Speculate, if you must,â Ruzi ordered.
âPowders likely to blind and cause irritation. Theyâll be thrown just before the unit reaches the area.â
Ironhand nodded. âAny advantage is an advantage. Your men have the same items?â
âUnknown, sir, but we have things to create small bursts of smoke.â
As Yukikoâs squad came jogging up, the scouts launched their improvised grenades. The footmen blocked with their shields, but that just shattered the thin clay jugs, spreading the powder. If theyâd just backed up, the irritants wouldnât have been as bad.
Yukikoâs men tied cloth around their noses, then rushed in. The fight was over quickly. Her men were skilled and werenât the ones whoâd taken deep breaths of the powder. Ruzi grunted as he watched the massacre.
âThe men will be eager to thrash the next set of guards,â Ruzi said tightly. âWeâll need to switch squads, but even then, the backups will likely be angry.â
âAgreed,â Zhu said.
Yukikoâs last two men, the ones carrying the eurtik, crossed the finish line. Ruzi glanced at the sandglass, making a notation on his notes. The others did the same, and Gregory smirked; Yukiko had clearly bested the others heâd seen for time.
Ruzi leaned back as the staff started to get the course back in order. He sent word for the footmen to rotate out, as well. âYour wife will be watched, Pettit. Itâs been decades since a magi did something similar.â
âWait for Jenn, sir,â Gregory chuckled.
âOh, I am,â Ironhand said. âShe was going to join my clan until she suddenly joined yours. Did you marry her to bring her with you?â
âNo, sir. She followed because we were friends. We didnât marry for a half-year after, and that only happened because Yukiko asked me to consider Jenn as more than a friend.â
âA strong woman. Not only devious, but secure enough to share you with your friend?â Zhu asked, rubbing his chin. âIf you ever get into an argument, Iâd run.â
âI would ask for mercy, not run, sir,â Gregory rebuffed him gently. âYuki will forgive, though she doesnât forget. Running would only make it much worse.â
Yukiko untied the fox eurtik, clearly having a conversation before the pair began to walk toward the judges.
Ruzi sat forward when they came close enough to talk. âWhat are your terms, Magi?â
âI doubt a single eurtik rates highly enough for the requests Iâd make, General, so Iâll ask for nothing but goodwill later,â Yukiko replied. âI do feel bad for doing what I did to him. Do not fault him; he had no chance to stop me.â
âI do not blame a slave for not fighting a magi. It would have meant his death,â Ruzi said. âGo back to your station,â he addressed those words to the slave before turning his gaze back to Yukiko. âYou broke our course.â
âWar is like that, sir,â Yukiko replied, her eyes flickering to Gregory. âMy husband told me on our first day that this was war, not a simple test. I took him at his word.â
âHmm⦠You broke no rules, so itâll stand. You may go.â
Yukiko bowed formally, her left hand cupping her right fist. âThank you, sir.â
As she left, Zhu watched her go with a pensive gaze. âShe wouldnât consider making an obscene amount of money, would she?â
âNo, sir. Aetherâs Guard is our home,â Gregory replied.
âEven with your elder gone?â Ironhand asked.
âHe passed his legacy on to us, sir.â
âYou wait for Aether to return?â Ruzi asked.
âShouldnât all magi, sir? Even the emperor is likely waiting for the day Aether comes back.â Gregory said it as if he never thought it could be taken badly.
âIâm sure he doesâ¦â Ruzi said slowly.
âIf youâll excuse me, Iâll be back,â Zhu sighed as he stood up. âBodily needs.â
âHmm, a solid point,â Ironhand grunted. âIt has been hours.â
~*~*~
Gregory barely managed to refrain from laughing when Jennâs turn came. Her first obstacle was the wall; she broke it. Instead of having her men climb it, she cut into it with her sword, then snapped it so it fell over. While the judges sat in shocked silence, she ordered her men to pick the wall up and carry it with them as they marched on.
The broken wall was used to cover every trap obstacleâ her men could walk easily over them, then retrieve the wall and carry on. It was abandoned when it came to the balance obstacles. Finally, her men fought the footmen. Gregory winced as Jenn led them into that fight, her body blazing with aether. The footmen didnât want to engage her, causing their ranks to disrupt enough that her men had the advantage.
Picking up the wounded to carry them out, Jenn also roped the footmen whoâd surrendered, leading them out. She wasnât as fast as Yukiko and had literally broken parts of the course, but sheâd also captured half of the three squads who stood to oppose her.
The judges were shocked, but Zhu had chortled the entire time. He was impressed with how aggressive the short, slightly-built magi was. Once again, he warned Gregory to be careful about upsetting his wives.
When Jenn led the captured men to the general, she looked proud. âSir, I have men to ransom back to you,â she addressed him first.
âYes. What did you want in ransom, Magi?â
âIâd ask for my husband to be released to his men,â Jenn said.
âNo,â Ironhand said flatly. âHe is worth much more than nine footmen. I do not value their lives lowly, either, but weâve seen what he can do and cannot allow him on the course.â
Jennâs eyes went to Gregory, who gave a small shrug. âVery well. Deduction of time for each man released.â
Zhu leaned over to whisper his agreement with that. Ironhand nodded slowly, but looked at Ruzi.
âYou and your wife were unorthodox, Magi,â Ruzi said. âI will allow for less time from your run for my men back. I have a question, though: if we let Pettit run with his men, what would happen?â
âHeâd shatter every record in place, sir,â Jenn replied confidently.
âWithout knowing how you and your wife did?â Zhu asked.
âYes, sir. Our husband has only lost a single fight that mattered. That was to me, when I had to beat him to get my deepest wish. Even then, I had to use tactics I wasnât proud of to pull it off.â
âWhat if he went in without foresight?â Ironhand asked.
Jenn paused, considering for a few long seconds while the staff unbound the footmen. âHeâd do better than many, sir. He might not match Yuki and I, but thatâs only because we had our aether and youâd deprive him of his. Even then, Iâd put him no lower than fifth, but think heâd still place third.â
âLoyalty is valuable,â Ruzi said. âJoin your men. Your run is at an end.â
âYes, sir.â Jenn bowed formally, then turned on her heel and marched away.
âI almost want to let him,â Zhu chuckled. âWe do have a set of the Kroggian cuffs.â
Ironhand grimaced. âIâd not willingly put a magi in those unless he was a traitor to the empire.â
âTheyâre here only to stop problems. Gladly, they havenât been needed.â
âOnly because Shunâs brat was pulled from troop training,â Zhu snorted. âAlmost started a war with his actions.â
Ruziâs hand made a chopping motion, and Zhu cut off. âThis is not the place for that discussion again.â
âYes, sir,â Zhu shrugged. âNot like Pettit has any love for Shun.â
âEven more so, then,â Ruzi sighed. âPettit, go take a small break. When you come back, itâll be about time for your men to show us what you taught them.â
âYes, sir,â Gregory said. Standing, he bowed to the trio before he left.