The day began with a lie in his bones. Soren pried himself off the cot with the certainty that he'd already missed something, that the waking world had collided headlong and left him behind in the splinters.
At his ribs, the familiar bruise conducted a slow symphony of pain; in his hands, the ache had evolved.
Not the dumb throb of impact or the raw grind from endless drills, but a precision-tuned ache, as if someone had sunk a wire through each tendon and now plucked it for the sound.
Tavren was already out. Soren could trace the path of his bunkmate's scent, sour, alive, thick as tavern drippings, all the way across the barracks, through the space Glen now filled, hunched tight over his boots and muttering an inventory of curses under his breath.
Rhain lingered by the window, eyes lost to the colorless glaze of dawn, either haunted or, more likely, just bored.
Soren dressed without a thought, left sleeve first, then the patchwork coat. He double-knotted the right boot, the one with the split sole; his left thumb twitched at the memory of old frost bite, and for a second he wondered if the nerves had simply never healed right.
He didn't bother with water, whatever they called water here, the stuff poured from last year's rust, and instead swiped the surface of the basin with a cloth, half out of ritual, half out of spite.
No voice in his head. Not yet.
He took the stairs three at a time, skipping the one that chipped every heel that ever tried it, and landed in the yard just as the instructor called the first round.
The chill bit clean, honest, and Soren relished it. Here, at least, the numb was democratic, the pain distributed in perfect equity.
The drills began in silence, then unravelled into chaos. Tavren yammered about his stances, Glen grumbled about the cold, and Rhain, always the outlier, held his tongue, letting the movements do the talking.
Soren waited for the voice, the quick jab of correction or the wry aside, but there was only the sound of sword against sword, the scrape of boots, the wet splat whenever someone failed to stay upright.
At the first command, Advance, Soren's body moved before his mind did: right foot glided out, off-hand snapped to the balance, weight shifted with the exactitude of measured clay.
The sword angled low, just so, and he felt the torque in his waist, the bite in the left shoulder, the exact distribution of mass as if he'd rehearsed it his entire life. He hadn't.
He froze, blade half-raised. Behind him, Rhain's voice: "Keep going."
He obeyed. There was the clatter of the line following suit, but for Soren, every motion felt double.
There was his body, awkward, habit-trained, full of compensations—and there was the other, the overlay, crisp as a diagram in a book, always a step ahead, always exact.
Next drill: feint, then pivot. Soren's hips locked, then unlocked at the last possible instant, the blade flickering through space ahead of the tempo.
He watched Tavren overshoot, watched Glen overcorrect, watched Rhain land each step as if trying to prove the existence of inertia itself.
Tavren called him a show-off, Soren ignored it. Glen tried to trip him, it wasn't even close, Rhain just watched, face blank, but his eyes said: You don't bleed the same as the rest of us.
Still no voice. Not until the third rotation.
"Balance isn't a privilege, it's a weapon. Yours. Don't waste it."
The words arrived beneath the ribs, close and low, ice-cold compared to the usual pulse of Valenna's presence.
Soren let the sentence run, then tried to test it: he shifted his balance mid-drill, heel just barely grazing the sand, felt the entire body recoil and, on the correction, slide back into place, smoother than any day prior. He didn't remember learning this part. He wasn't sure he remembered learning any part.
The instructor noticed. Of course he did.
"Thorne," he barked. The name still surprised Soren, a relic of some census that must have existed before he did. "Explain that last step."
He tried, but the mouth produced nothing. His tongue wanted to say "Because it works," or "Because it's right," but neither of those were answers. He stalled. "I just moved, sir."
The instructor grunted. It was close to approval. "Again."
He did it again. This time the line watched. Tavren's face crumpled into a sneer, Glen's eyes went narrow, and Rhain, Rhain studied him with the analytical distance of cattle in a new field.
Soren moved, if anything, smoother than before. He felt the thing inside him, the other rhythm, the ghost of discipline older than the patchwork of Nordhav. His hands stopped shaking.
The rounds blurred. He forgot the rubric, lost track of who he was fighting. Everything became sensation, pressure, pivot, the geometry of the cage around him.
Only when the instructor called a halt did he realize how much time had passed, how many times he'd repeated the movement, how little it hurt.
He expected to feel proud, or at least less abject. Instead, Soren felt hollowed, emptied out and replaced with someone else's hands, someone else's posture. He realized, with a start, that this was not teaching at all. This was memory, grafted into muscle.
He retreated to the back of the pack, only then noticing the sudden absence of Tavren. The yard was emptier than before.
Boys funneled in and out of the drill, and the instructor had begun to call new names, strange ones, Kelton, Overyk, the kinds of stock bred in midlands nowhere.
Soren caught Glen eyeing him a few times, the look growing less derisive, more calculating. He didn't care to interpret it.
The instructor paired him with Rhain for a round of close work. The two faced off, swords at low guard.
Rhain was slower, but not dumb; he watched Soren's feet, mirrored them, waited for a tell. Soren tried to do it wrong, to bungle the sequence, but the overlay refused, his body corrected at every slip, the memory of the drill snatching his weight back to center.
He tripped anyway, forced it, barely catching himself so Rhain could tag in and make it look even. The instructor shook his head.
"Again."
Soren's arm twitched at the command, and for a split second he felt the brush of Valenna's laugh, softer this time, almost forgiving.
"You don't have to fake it, little knife. They will catch up, or they won't."
He was tempted to answer, and in the moment of temptation, Rhain drove in and landed a light touch at the elbow. Point for him.
Soren blinked, stunned by the breach, then laughed, quiet, barely a sound, but it felt more honest than anything since the morning.
They cycled through three more rounds. Glen swapped in at one point, and when Soren tried to trip him, Glen anticipated, dodged, and for a moment the entire drill teetered on the edge of real violence.
Glen's eyes met his, hard, uncompromising, and Soren decided to let the other boy win one, just to see what would happen. He lost gracefully.
After the session, the instructor waved him over. Soren expected to be chewed out for arrogance, or maybe for lack of it, but the man just stood there, weight canted forward as though daring gravity to betray him.
"You're learning," he said, not quite a question.
Soren hesitated, then nodded.
The instructor's face was unreadable. "Not all learning is safe. Careful, or you outgrow the patience of those who train you."
Soren considered the words, then tucked them away, another graft. The cold had finally gotten to his inside; it numbed even the voice, which now hovered like the taste of salt on old bread.
He walked the long corridor to the dormitory, shaking out each leg to loosen the flexors.
At the foot of his bunk, the mattress had shifted, the mark of Tavren, who, it turned out, was back and stripping off his sodden shirt with an air of triumph.
"Word is, you're the new darling of the yard," Tavren said, eyes daring Soren to contradict.
Soren shrugged. "Only if you let them see."
Tavren grinned. "That's the trick, isn't it?"
Glen slumped in, saw them, and paused. "You make a habit of showing off, Soren?"
"I make a habit of not getting hit," Soren replied, surprised by the ease of it.
Glen's eyes measured him, but he said nothing, just flopped onto his bunk.
Rhain appeared last, moving with that strange, diffident care, as if he expected every wooden slat to disapprove his existence. He nodded at Soren, not quite smiling, but as close to it as he ever seemed to come.
The evening meal was bread and something approximating stew. Soren ate quickly, then excused himself, walking the perimeter of the barracks until the air bit through his coat and reached his skin.
He found a quiet patch by the shed, braced against the wall, unwrapped the ragged sword hilt from its bundle, and waited. Soundless, the overlay returned; he let it, and ran the sequences again, slower, precise, each movement bleeding into the next, no voice needed.
He thought of the instructor's warning, then set it aside.
If this was memory, it was better than most of his own.
He ran the sequence again, then again, and by the third time, the ache in his hand felt less like borrowed skill and more like, almost, belonging.
When he closed his eyes, the world rotated with him, and the overlay did not disappear, only grew more natural by increments.
He stood there, breathing the icy air, wondering how long it would take before the drill and the body and the memory could be convinced they were all the same thing.
By the midnight bell, he still hadn't found the answer. But when he crawled into the bunk and closed his eyes, the voice returned, just once, warm and tired:
"Now you're learning."
He didn't bother to answer. He slept.