Weâre the last ones to arrive and a lone medical team meets us. Kai is passed out and without addressing us, the nurses with horns peeking out from their white caps load my friend on a stretcher with a firefox leading the way. Nina and I follow them. I have a million questions, but keep my mouth shut. That would only delay things for Kai.
âHeâs a mortal man! Get the appropriate medicines ready!â the doctor gives the orders.
I linger like a lost puppy, a pathetic pet thatâs left behind in the waiting room. Feeling useless, I sit on one of the lined-up chairs and pray for a doctor to come back with hopeful news. The weight shifted in a chair next to me.
âHey, heâs going to be alright,â Nina sits down.
âFor how long was he unconscious?â
âPretty much most of the way. He passed out a few minutes after take-off,â her lip cringes with regret.
I let out my frustration with a growl. My hands rub my face as if trying to erase what happened to Kai.
âThank you for all your help,â I look up from the depths of my palms.
âNoir Jakins,â she says.
âWhat?â
âIt was Noir Jakins. He hit your friend.â
âWhy?â itâs the biggest âwhyâ Iâve ever asked about anything.
âYou two were one of the first ones in the air. He saw you as a threat.â
âYou know him?â
She signs, âYes, I do. We went to the same school. Heâs competitive. He tried to knock me out of the sky first but failed. He went looking for someone close who wouldnât see him coming. I followed him, but I was too late.â
âIâm going to kill him,â the thought slips out effortlessly.
âDonât kill him. Report him. Those drill knights will do much worse.â
âIt will be our word against his. I donât know how we are going to prove that this was his fault.â
âWeâll think of a way,â Nina seems to have much more faith in justice.
âEither way, I just hope that Kai will come out of this.â
âAgree. Thatâs the most important part.â
All of a sudden, a scream comes out of those doors.
My cold hands squeeze the chairâs hand rests. What are they doing to him?
At last, the swing doors move and produce a doctor. As he walks towards us, his orange pointy ears switch and his wet black nose sniffs the air. He is studying us. Nina and I spring from our seats. Iâm about to say something, but the doctor is much quicker than me.
âYou must be Kaiâs friends. Iâm Doctor Orlov. Iâm in charge of his case. Kai suffered a concussion and that would take some time. Also, a dislocated shoulder. As you might have heard we already fixed that. Heâs conscious now, but I must insist that he gets to rest and no excitement. Weâll be keeping him here for a couple of days and if the tests are good weâll discharge him by the end of the week. You can come to see him tomorrow morning.â
âThank you, doctor,â I say.
âNow excuse me, please. I must write his parents and Iâll have a nurse retrieve his placement ribbon for him. I think it will be a good idea if you go down to the West Lobby and get yours,â he nods at us to leave.
âOf course, Sir. Thank you.â
âVery good. Good night then, Iâll send word for you if anything changes,â the doctor put his hands in his pockets and turns away to leave.
I watch his fluffy fox tail trailing behind him and disappear behind the same doors he came from.
âCome on, letâs go,â Nina takes me by the shoulder.
At last, itâs midnight, the time for the ceremony to start. The time to make it here by a dragon has run out. I wonder if anyone has been left behind and is still at the station. But, it doesnât matter. Now, where is that son of a bitch, Noir Jakens?
I canât start my investigations just yet. Like all hundreds of cadets, Iâm to fall into formation with my assigned class number 9 at the West lobby. Nina is too, assigned to the same class as mine and Kaiâs and is already lined up next to our brethren' flights. I stand still, but my eyes canât help but wonder. For all I know, Noir Jakens could be standing right next to me. But as Iâm looking at everyone around, I begin to admire the great hall.
The ceiling is adorned with gilded angels and other celestial creatures. By some kind of enchantment, the painted clouds slide across the stone above us. The entire ceiling moves like the sky. And maybe itâs my mind playing tricks on me, but for a moment it looked like a Scorpioâs tail flexed its sting. I look away, only to make eye contact with a smiling angel. She wasnât smiling before.
I escape her gaze between the column rows. The tall structuresâ resemblance honors the wheat stocks of an excellent harvest. This reminds me of a time when kids from my neighborhood and I would fly our kites in the fields of golden grain.
My eyes work their way down to the floor under my freshly polished boots. The tiles are lined like a chessboard. The truth about my future is right under my feet. Weâre the pieces for the queens and kings to move and the knights are the last line of their defense. Life is a game. A complex game and Iâve been placed in it. I hope Iâll be playing well.
Somewhere in mid-ceremony, my name is called, and just like that, I am moved from my place. This is my fateâs first strategic move and Iâm pleased to see that the color bestowed on my ribbon is purple. Same as my motherâs. She was a knight of The Violet Domain but then asked to be honorably discharged when she became pregnant with me.
On the next name call, a nurse accepts Kaiâs ribbon and his colors match mine. Well played, fate. Nina gets hers next and oh boy, does she glow with pride to wear the color of The Blue Domain.
The only name that doesnât get called is the name Iâve been dying to connect a face to. There is no ribbon for Noir Jakens. Did I miss it? Damn it! I want to see whose limbs Iâm supposed to tear apart. But my ears are not wrong. I didnât hear his name being called, because it hasnât been. Noir Jakens definitely doesnât question it.
After the council announces their congratulations and dismissal, thatâs when itâs made perfectly clear that his name will not be called at all. Everyone begins to head on over to the dormitories.
âCouncil! Council! Council!!â I hear someone yell in the back.
âYes?â One of the knights raises his head from the scrolls he was wrapping up.
âCouncil! I must point out that a mistake was made.â
âThatâs quite unusual. The Academy takes the placement ceremony real seriously.â
âCouncil. Itâs just that my name wasnât called!â
Finally, the crowd clears enough for me to see the face and I wait for my suspicions to be confirmed.
âReally? Whatâs the name?â
âNoir Jakins!â
âOh. Noir Jakins. No, no mistake was made. Your name was crossed out from the scrolls.â
âAre you sure, sir? Can you please check?â
âNo need. I was there when your name was crossed out.â
âI donât understand!â
With pleasure I watch this Jakins grow frustrated.
âYou didnât pass the test. In fact, you failed miserably.â
âI got on that dragon just fi..â
âThe dragon? Is that what you think this was all about, sir? Excellence. Valor. Honor. This is what this establishment stands for. Do you really think that the fog was coincidental? Just when you thought no one was watching, you went after your own fellow cadets who trusted you. You donât care who lives or dies as long as you come out on top. You're a coward and have no honor. Your excellence lies in being a self-serving backstabber. We have no place for the likes of you, so your name was not called. It will never be called. Now, get your bags and get the hell off these sacred grounds and back to the wormhole that you came from!â
Noir clenches his teeth. He knows better and holds his tongue.
âWhat are you looking at?â so, he snaps at me instead.
âJust watching you fall on your ass this time. By the way, Kaiâs doctor says heâll recover just fine.â
He knows what Iâm talking about. Our stares are fixed, but break when one of the guards pushes him to get going.
The pawns are always the first to go and the ways of the test spotted one. But I know that the search for the cream of the crop is far from over.