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Divine System: Land of the Abominations-Chapter 347: The Creed of Nothing (4).
That had been the end of that conversation.
Nero did not mind. The work suited him in a way that the earlier conditioning had not quite managed — the conditioning under Lyon had been about making the body capable of enduring, which was its own kind of discipline, but this was about making the body capable of applying what it had built, about the translation between raw capacity and actual function, and that distinction mattered enormously to a man who had spent months surviving by finding the gap between what an opponent could do and what it could do to him.
The other candidates were a complication.
Not a serious one, but present nonetheless.
There were eleven of them in the garrison at present — six commoners of varying backgrounds and five noble-born, though the balance of attention they received from the supervising Templars bore no resemblance to those numbers. The nobles trained in a separate rotation for a significant portion of the day, using equipment and techniques that the common candidates did not have access to, and when the two groups were put together in the yard for formation drills or coordinated exercises, the dynamic that resulted was not cruel, exactly, but it carried the precise and comfortable shape of an arrangement that everyone understood and nobody was expected to question.
Nero understood it. He did not question it. He also did not find it particularly relevant to what he was trying to accomplish, which had always been the advantage of caring about a very small and specific thing.
What he had not anticipated was the way the other candidates were looking at him after Edran.
It was not the same as before. Before the sparring match, Nero had occupied roughly the same space in the yard’s social architecture that he occupied everywhere else — present but peripheral, acknowledged when necessary and otherwise set aside. The commoners had been cautiously neutral toward him, neither hostile nor warm, performing the calculation that most people in uncertain circumstances performed: wait and see. The nobles, with the exception of the two or three who had made their indifference an active practice, had been equally uninterested.
That had changed.
It had not changed in the way that Nero might have hoped for — which was to say it had not simply evaporated, replaced by some version of neutral regard — but into something more complicated and considerably less comfortable. The hostile stares were the easiest to read. Edran had friends in the yard, and friends had a tendency to extend their grievances outward even when those grievances had no particular logic supporting them, and so Nero was aware, in the days following the sparring match, of a specific quality of attention from two of the other noble candidates that communicated its intentions without requiring words. He did not particularly mind this. He had been looked at with hostile intent by things considerably more dangerous than aggrieved young nobles, and had found the experience instructive primarily for what it revealed about the person doing it.
More interesting were the others — the ones who looked at him not with hostility or even wariness but with a kind of quiet, careful attention that felt evaluative rather than reactive, as though they were revising an internal calculation and had not yet arrived at a new answer. These looks came from unexpected places. Two of the commoner candidates — a broad-shouldered woman from somewhere in the southern territories who handled her training with the particular quiet efficiency of someone who had done genuine physical labor her entire life, and a thin young man with the specific stillness of a person who had learned young that drawing attention was dangerous — had been watching him with that revised attention since the morning after.
Nero noticed, filed it, and continued working.
Sergeant Vane’s comment about Edran had been the last thing said about the matter from any official direction. The man with the swollen face had reappeared in the yard two days later, moving carefully, and had not looked at Nero once. This, too, Nero considered finished, and did not think about further.
What he did think about, in the small hours between exhaustion and sleep, was the Yin form’s implications — specifically the ones that Sergeant Vane had already noticed and apparently decided to fold into his training methodology without comment or acknowledgment.
Vane was not a fool. Thirty years of service, two stars, the kind of injury that ended promotion trajectories rather than careers — that was a man who had seen a very large number of people in a very large number of conditions, and who had developed through that volume of experience a reading of bodies and capabilities that did not require formal explanation. He had adjusted his approach to Nero without saying so, shifted certain drills toward the type of movement that rewarded the particular distribution of Nero’s attributes — lighter frame, concentrated density, faster response — in a way that spoke to an understanding that nobody had told him about but that he had apparently arrived at independently.
Nero let him. There was nothing else to do, and the adjustments were genuinely useful.
What he held back, carefully and continuously, was the deeper current of what the Yin suppression produced — the reflexes that still exceeded what a body of this apparent weight should generate, the specific quality of endurance that came not from conditioning alone but from what sat underneath the conditioning, from the months of accumulated hell that the alabaster surface gave no indication of. He performed adequately in the yard. He performed consistently and solidly and with a discipline that was legitimate rather than staged, and he did not exceed adequately by enough margin to require explanation.
This was the calculation he had made from the beginning, and he had no reason to revise it.
The trials were eleven days away.
The Days Went By in a Blur (2)
Eleven days became nine, and nine became five, and by the time five became three, the garrison had begun to accumulate a quality of tension that was less like anticipation and more like the particular atmospheric pressure that settled in before storms — invisible but measurable, present in the way that people moved through corridors a fraction more quickly, in the brevity of conversations that would ordinarily have been longer, in the specific quality of silence during meals that was different from the ordinary comfortable quiet.







