Sebastien
Month 2, Day 21, Sunday 5:00 p.m.
It took some time for the trio to return to the University, as Nat had been afraid to return home, and Ana took some time getting her settled.
To Sebastienâs surprise, they found Alec sitting on a bench not far from the transport tubes, his head hanging while one knee bounced rapidly. As they drew close, he looked up, his face slackening with relief. He hopped up and hurried over, his eyes searching Anaâs face as he fumbled in his school satchel. He paused in front of them, only then seeming to realize Ana was not alone. âThey know?â he asked.
She nodded silently.
He pulled out an awkward handful of small, half-full jars. âI was worried about you. I canât tell if youâve already seen a healer or if thatâs just a really good glamour, but I wanted to give you some of the stuff I keep on hand.â He thrust the jars at her, which she had to cradle awkwardly in her arms when they were too much to hold in her smaller hands. âI took off the labels, sorry about that. This one helps a lot with bone fractures, but youâll want to use it first because it irritates the skin and itâll show if you use it last. This one is good for healing cuts without leaving any scars. Just leave it on until thereâs no trace. This one is good for the really deep bruises, and this one for the surface level bruises, to remove the traces of blood from underneath the skin and heal up your burst capillaries. Oh, and this one is a burn salve. I donât think you need that one so Iâll just take it back.â
âHeâs used those himself. Often.â The words resounded hollowly in Sebastienâs head.
Ana remained silent for a few moments, staring down at the jars. âThank you. I did already get healed, but I appreciate it.â She put them in her own bag as Alec shuffled awkwardly.
âHow bad was it? I canât believe you finally snapped. I almost had a heart attack when you insulted Father and threw cranberry sauce on him, Ana. Youâre so slender andâI meanâyour bones must be delicate. I had this horrible thought that your eye socket would shatter and your eyeball would fall out, just hanging by a string. I saw that once, on one of Fatherâs hunting dogs. He had to put it down.â
Ana reached out and grabbed Alecâs hand where it had been fiddling with the strap of his satchel. She held it between both of her own. âThank you.â
Alec settled, closing his eyes as he took a single deep breath. âItâs best not to provoke him, Ana.â
âItâs too late to stop now,â she murmured. âSomeone needs to stand up to him for once.â
Damien moved forward, clapping a hand on Alecâs shoulder. âYou should stop visiting home for the next little while, Alec. Heâs probably going to get worse.â
Alecâs shoulders started to hunch for just a moment before he straightened them again. âHe wouldnât like that. He likes me to make a report every other weekend, at the very least. Like I said, itâs best not to provoke him. He can hold a grudge.â
âSo cut ties entirely,â Sebastien said, the words spilling out without her conscious control.
Alecâs caterpillar eyebrows drew together. âBut thatâs impossible. Heâs my father.â
âThat means nothing.â She swallowed hard. âYou have options. Listen to me. You donât have to go see him. You donât have to follow his orders. If he comes after you, you have friends. You never have to be alone with him again. If youâre willing to go scorched-earth, threaten to give an expose on his treatment to one of the local newspapers. Or one of his rivals. Not a bluff. A threat.â
âButâ¦â Alec shook his head.
âWhat do you really have to lose? Does he provide any benefits that you canât afford to be without or find elsewhere? You are not obligated to obey him or to loveââ
Sebastien cut herself off, looking away as she cleared the lump in her throat. She had kept going back to Ennis. Sheâd felt like she should, or that she had to, but why?
Damien was nodding along. âSebastienâs right. Youâre his only legitimate child. For various reasons, heâs unlikely to disinherit you.â
Alec pulled his hand back from Anaâs. âHe might. Just to spite me. If he withdrew his donations, I could lose my place at the University,â he admitted, looking at the ground.
Sebastien shrugged. âEven if he did, as long as you place high enough by the end of term, you wonât be expelled. And after that, you donât need him to pay your way. There are other options.â
He scowled at her. âIâm not interested in leeching off my friends. I donât need charity.â
âYou wouldnât need to. You can get legitimate loans from quite a few different places and pay your own way.â
âAnd then what? Get a job working for one of the other Crown Families?â he scoffed. âTry and run a shop or something?â
âPerhaps. You have time. There is no reason you have to remain incompetent.â
Alec opened his mouth as if to retort angrily, but then slowly closed it again. âIs that what you did? Cut ties with your family?â
Sebastienâs lips tightened. âDoes it matter?â
âIt matters if youâre giving me advice you have no idea about.â
âI have no more family,â she said, not exactly answering the question. âAnd no need of them. You donât, either.â
Damien stepped forward, pulling on Alecâs shoulder to turn him around and walk onwards. âAll of us can relate, I think.â
Ana reached out to give Sebastienâs hand a squeeze, and she looked over at the young woman in surprise.
Ana smiled softly, crookedly. âThat was nice of you,â she murmured as the other two walked ahead.
âI literally did almost nothing, except insult him.â
âI think he needed that. I wasnât being harsh enough. He doesnât like to feel weak. Coming from you, it seemed more legitimate. A challenge rather than a defeat.â
Sebastien raised one dubious eyebrow. âAre you sure?â
Ana shrugged, smiling mysteriously. âWeâll see.â She wrapped her arm through Sebastienâs and they followed Damien and Alec.
After a lingering silence, Alec said, âI could join the army, maybe. They donât require you to be a really great thaumaturge, as long as youâre competent. Iâm not good enough for them to sponsor me, but they would probably pay enough to get by once I got my certification. And itâs respectable enough, serving the country.â He sounded doubtful, but his posture straightened.
The next few days passed uneventfully, and by Wednesday, Sebastien felt she was really beginning to get a grasp on working with light. She had been practicing with Professor Lacerâs exercises, both creating illusions as well as the auxiliary exercise that required her to change the color, brightness, and shape of a candle flame. She had even been playing with a lens-based fire starter and a couple of spells she had learned as a child, such as the glow and light-show spells.
Sheâd also been secretly practicing with her shadow-familiar, repeated castings easing the lingering trauma and trepidation she had felt toward it since the incident with Newton. She played around with shadow-puppet shows and made random objects sparkle with an intensity that she hadnât shown since she was a child with the untiring obsession of learning a new trick.
Some of Sebastienâs deeply depleted well of internal energy was returning, though she had good days and bad days, and had already consumed half of the little vial of beamshell tincture. Soon, she hoped, she wouldnât need it any longer.
As Ana and Damien joined her outside the Natural Science classroom, Sebastien lifted an inquiring eyebrow.
Ana looked around the mostly empty hallway, then murmured, âNat wrote that everything is fine. Father has been grumpy, but mostly everyone is just leaving her alone. Uncle Malcolm visited him this morning and they seem to have gotten over their anger at each other. If Malcolm suspects anything, heâs not making it obvious.â
Ana had been called home to the Gervin manor for a visit on Monday evening, reamed out by her father, and stripped of her allowance and further visitation rights with her little sister for the remainder of the semester. Luckily, Lord Gervin didnât know about the sympathetically connected journals the two girls shared, and he didnât respect Ana enough to be truly wary of her.
âWhen can we move forward with the second phase of the plan?â Damien asked.
âIâm still compiling the blackmail note. Are you finished with the sketch of the ring, Sebastien?â
âI am, but I think we should give it some time before contacting Malcolm. Better to let the incident on Saturday evening fade from his memory a little. It will make him less likely to draw connections. Perhaps you can send the first contact next week. That would also give you a chance to find some corroborating evidence for the other crimes, like embezzlement, before heâs wary enough to try and clean up any crumbs that might still be lying around.â What Sebastien didnât say was that she wanted to postpone the next phase of Operation Defenestration because Oliver had set up a meeting of sorts between the Raven Queen and the University that Friday, and she didnât want to try and split her attention between the two high-stress undertakings.
She was trying not to be too hopeful about the outcome of their meeting, but she couldnât help the anticipation building in her gut. She didnât know what they might be able to offer her, but they were powerful and had political influence. And if they could be reasoned with, perhaps the coppers could be reasoned with, too. âWould the High Crown be willing to meet with the Raven Queen? He has the power to give me a blanket pardon. Working with the coppers might anger the University, since they want the book, but it could be more beneficial for me.â She resolved to keep her eyes and her mind open. Perhaps they could even work out some kind of deal like she had with Ana, where Sebastien got what she needed not directly through the University, but tangentially, cooperation with them giving her another bargaining piece.
The bell to mark the start of class interrupted Sebastienâs thoughts, and the trio hurried in to take a seat.
Professor Gnorrishâs assistant was handing out components to every desk, mainly consisting of a ring on a stand, a few petri dishes, and a small, clear glass bead. âToday marks the end of our study of light,â Gnorrish announced. âYou will be using what you have grasped to create your own lens spell, which you will use to observe and sketch a likeness of some cells and microorganisms. I have provided various slides of plant and animal cells, as well as some relatively harmless bacteria. To pass this segment, you must be able to refract light well enough to observe the animal cells, but I have contribution points for anyone who is also able to clearly observe the bacteria, which will require much finer control. I expect developing and refining this spell will take many of you some time, so you had best get started. Also, as a reminder, spells to view microscopic organisms are not new magic, but if any of you develop something particularly innovative and feel that the magic is struggling against you, please err on the side of caution and call me over to review your attempt rather than risking your safety.â
The students immediately got to work, drawing out their spell arrays on their desks, which had a perfect Circle already carved into the surfaces.
Sebastien chose the triangle as her base symbol, because light was a form of energy without mass, and she would be using only transmutation to achieve the effect. She brought her Will to bear, lightly and idly pressing it into the chalk lines as she mused over the best way to get the desired results.
She took longer than many of the other students to complete the spell array, pausing to stare at it silently multiple times as she considered the best placement for glyphs and the best way to clearly explain what she wanted to happen. When it was complete, she moved one of the bacteria petri dishes to the center, below the metal ring she would be using as a viewing range, but she still didnât start casting.
Instead, she mentally reviewed everything she knew about light that could be useful for this particular application, trying to grasp it all at once like her mind was a fist stuffed full of wriggling worms. A wave of dizziness overtook her, sending her swaying in her seat. Concentration broken, she shook her head and took a few deep breaths, squinting against her sudden headache. It was as if the weight of the knowledge had knocked her off balance. Perhaps she was just hungry. Sheâd had little appetite, and might not have eaten enough at breakfast. She rubbed on some minty headache-relieving salve and tried again. She remembered how they had played with light in the crystal tunnel illusion chamber, how it had reacted to their meddling. She imagined her eye and mentally tracked the path of how the human body processed visual input. When she felt that she had meticulously examined all of her relevant knowledge, she finally began to cast.
Her spell created an additional light source beneath the petri dish and used multiple concurrent lenses. The one nearest her, hanging within the metal ring, magnified things a little, perhaps thirty times. But below that she had a second lens effect that was smaller and stronger, and below that, another that hung just above the petri dish, even stronger.
It was a strain to hold all three lenses at once as part of a single spell, but not beyond her capabilities.
At first, the spell showed her only a vague blur when she looked into the ocular lens, but she was able to calibrate the output with a few adjustments of her Will. Soon enough, she was able to focus on the strange little organisms that she had seen before only in drawings. Even her best efforts left things a little blurry and hazy, as it seemed like the light was shining right through the bacteria, their edges and details undefined. Even the slightest jostle of the table or the petri dish sent the field of view wildly off course, and holding the spell was quickly worsening her headache. She had been feeling a little off-kilter lately. âHas something changed? Iâm tired, but Iâm always tired.â
She could spare little attention from the casting, though, and set her thoughts aside to sketch out what she saw as quickly as possible, trying to get through the most difficult part of the assignment before moving on to the cell slides, but before she could do so, a looming presence beside her table, wafting off heat, made her look up from the spell.
âMay I?â Professor Gnorrish asked, gesturing to the ocular lens.
Holding the magic in a vice grip, Sebastien nodded, stepping back.
Gnorrish made some interested, excited humming noises as he looked through the lens, then to the sketches she had made, and finally examined her spell array in greater detail. Finally, he straightened, and Sebastien released the magic with a small wince of mental fatigue.
âFantastic!â he said, his voice less booming than normal in consideration of the other students who were busy casting and who might make a mistake if they were suddenly startled. âYou have a strong understanding, which has led to strong spellcasting, and Will that shows both force, stability, and clarity. This is one of the best attempts of this exercise by a first term student that I have seen in the last ten years. Come by my desk at the end of class to pick up your contribution points.â Gnorrish spun around and lumbered off on a slow round through the classroom, occasionally stopping to give praise or helpful tips to other students.
By the time Gnorrish called a halt to the exercise, less than fifteen minutes remained to the class period, but he seemed more enthusiastic than ever. âWhile this has been a quick review of the topic, weâve barely scratched the surface of understanding what light is, how it affects the world around us, and what we can learn from it. With light, as in all aspects of natural science, everything goes deeper. I donât fully understand light, and I suspect even the researchers focused on the study of electromagnetic radiation donât, either. Letâs take these last few minutes of class to discuss some topics on the cutting edge of natural science, currently being unraveled by the best and brightest of us. A group of my former students have recently submitted the results of their experiments for peer review. It seems they have disproved our current model of the atom, and they have reason to believe that the negatively charged electrons orbit a positively charged, much larger nucleus. Like moons orbiting a planet, rather than floating through a âsoup.â The new model shows an âelectron cloudâ with specific orbit rings at different distances, upon which the electrons can step up or down as they gain or lose extremely specific amounts of energy.â
He lowered his head and took a deep breath. âI have reviewed their findings myself, and I believe them to be valid. Some may argue that because we have been wrong in the past, and have accordingly updated our modelsâor âchanged our mindsââthat our theories cannot be trusted. But I say, that is the point of our endeavor! Because we actively work to disprove our theories rather than defend them, our knowledge changes, always moving closer to the truth. We are not dogmatic. Our god is not being right. It is acknowledging how little we know, and freely admitting that there are a thousandâa millionâmore steps upon the path. We have lost nothing to acknowledge we were wrong about how atoms were built. We succeed every time we update our beliefs. That is why natural science is so special, and why it will eventually take us beyond even the farthest horizon we can now imagine.â
Sebastien hurriedly took out her new binder of notes and a fountain pen. More difficult topics that showed deeper understanding were the things Gnorrish loved to use for extra credit questions on his weekly tests.
âLet us combine this with another recent discovery. A âquantumâ is the term coined for the smallest measurement of energy. An indivisible, single tiny packet.â
Sebastien frowned, scribbling quickly to try and get the new definitions down.
âThis is important because, by understanding that energy can only be absorbed or released in these tiny, differential, discrete packets, we can account for certain objects changing color when heated, as the electrons within their atoms gain or lose discrete amounts of energy in the form of light. Just as a blacksmith can judge the temperature of metal by the color of its glow, so can we judge the heat of a star.â
Sebastien knew what electrons were. Their existence had been confirmed and defined by one of Gnorrishâs contemporaries only a few years ago. But she didnât know anything about electronsâ ability to absorb or lose energy within that structure.
For once, Gnorrish wasnât waving his hands around or pacing, his voice loud but measured as he spoke from the front of the classroom. âAll matter can absorb electromagnetic radiation, and all matter at a temperature above absolute zero will emit electromagnetic radiation, even if itâs too little for your eyes to pick up. With a light-sensing artifact thousands of times more sensitive than the human eye, we would be able to distinguish not only temperature, but the exact makeup of other celestial objects. The amount of energy given off by a hydrogen atom, when its electrons lose a very specific amount of discrete energy packets, is different than the amount of energy given off by a helium or calcium atom. These differences in energy correspond to minute differences in the color of light that escapes as they lose energy. We will soon be able to look at Ares, Nibiru, passing asteroids, and even planets from the next solar system, thousands of light-years away, and calculate what they are made of.â
Sebastienâs hand began to cramp as she wrote even faster. Gnorrish was blowing past words and ideas that sheâd never encountered before. âWhat is this about electrons emitting light?
â She needed to stop and think about it to let her mind wrap around the ideas, but Gnorrish wasnât pausing.
He turned back to the blackboard, where he used a quick spell array to create an illusion of a small sphere of white light floating within darkness. âI believe light can tell us more about the universe we live in than even that.â
When he launched into an explanation of how light sometimes acted as a wave, and sometimes like a particle, and the different experiments that gave confusing results, Sebastien gave up taking notes, staring at Professor Gnorrish with dismay as she flexed her aching fingers.
His eyes roved over the students slowly. âAs one researcher said, âIt seems as though we must use sometimes the one theory and sometimes the other, while at times we may use either. We are faced with a new kind of difficulty. We have two contradictory pictures of reality; separately neither of them fully explains the phenomena of light, but together they do.ââ He paused dramatically. âLight is like nothing else that we are accustomed to dealing with. If we could understand this seeming duality, it might be the key to unraveling more of the inner workings of the universe.â
He pointed to the illusion of a sphere of light floating in darkness. âPerhaps, one or more layers of understanding deeper, we could begin to understand the fundamental principles of existence, and even how magic itself works.â
Sebastienâs eyes widened. âIs it really that significant?â
Professor Gnorrish continued trying to explain âwave-particle duality,â âquantums,â and how it all interacted with electrons and stuff, but Sebastien was ratherâ¦lost.
She looked around. Some of the other students were also showing expressions of confusion, a few were staring blankly, having obviously given up, but some were diligently taking notes without concern. âIâm lacking some sort of fundamental understanding. Iâm not grasping these definitions, the underlying mechanics and properties of discrete quanta, or what electrons really are, or maybe even what radiation really is. Without that, I certainly canât understand how these things fit together into a greater explanation of the mechanics of the universe. I know keywords and Iâve memorized where to insert those keywords into patterns and sentences, like âlight is neither a particle nor a wave, but some combination of both,â but I actually donât understand what that means.â
She was surprised by the sudden surge of keening distress that rose up in her chest like sour wine, and she tried to tamp it down. âI donât understand,â she admitted to herself. She was normally quite confident in her own intelligence, but she felt so out of her depth she might as well have been a floundering child who had never before even seen the ocean.
âAre some of my classmates actually understanding this? Perhaps they have a much better educational background than me.â
At the desk to her right, Damien was frowning, and a quick peek at his notes showed that heâd written several question marks in the margins. Surely, Damien Westbay, second in line to become the Family head, would have had the best possible education.
âOr perhaps those who seem unconcerned have fallen into the trap of memorizing keywords and answer-patterns, and donât realize that they, too, donât understand.â
But Ana was one of those taking nonchalant notes, her chin resting on her hand and her elbow on her desk as she listened to Gnorrish.
When the bell clanged to signify the end of class, Sebastien packed her things in a daze. âDid you understand what Professor Gnorrish was talking about, at the end? About the waves and particles and quantum?â
Ana shrugged. âI understood well enough.â
Damien and Sebastien shared a look of dismay.
âNot in the way that Gnorrish talks about understanding!â Ana added quickly. âI donât grasp it so completely I could recreate it from nothing, but is that really necessary? He said it was on the cutting edge of natural science, and, what, a primordial particle?â
âElementary particle,â Sebastien corrected automatically.
Ana rolled her eyes, ignoring Sebastienâs interjection. âIf I actually understood that, Iâd be an Archmage already. I have no ambition to start casting spells that unravel the universe or whatever. Grasping the general concept is enough for me.â
Damien nodded, his shoulders falling. âI suppose we are only first term students.â
Sebastien couldnât relate to Anaâs sentiment at all. The idea that someone could know something was wrong, deficient, in their understanding, and know that there was a way to at least somewhat fix that deficiency, but deliberately decide not to⦠It was alien to her. Especiallyâspecificallyâwhen that knowledge would affect her facility with casting an entire branch of spells.
As the other students filtered out, Sebastien stayed behind to pick up her contribution points. Ten of them, which was a rather large amount for someone like Gnorrish, who often gave out fractions of points so as to be able to give them more often. âThank you. Are there any references that could explain what light is and how it works on a fundamental level moreâ¦simply?â she asked. âMaybe with illustrations to help me imagine how it works? I couldnât really grasp much from the last bit of class, and I feel like Iâm missing something foundational.â
Gnorrish laughed. âI commend your curiosity, Mr. Siverling. The true secrets of light are a bit beyond the purview of this class. If you wish deeper understanding, self-study is indeed your best option.â He gave her a small list of books, as well as a larger list of specific research articles that would help with the more recent theoretical advancements. âThe articles can be quite dry andâ¦impenetrable. And generally, there are no illustrations, except for a few graphs and tables, perhaps. I hope you donât get too discouraged, nevertheless. Even I wouldnât confidently state that I fully understand how light works, and Iâve been at this for far longer than you. Light is only energy, after all, and energy is one of, if not the elementary building block of the universe.â
Thanking him again, Sebastien took Professor Gnorrishâs list to the library. The articles were indeed âimpenetrable,â written using long, convoluted sentences filled with jargon. She couldnât even check them out because many did not have duplicate copies yet, and thus the research and knowledge contained in them was rather valuable.
âPerhaps I wonât come to understand the mechanics underpinning the universe, but this should at least help me make my end of term exhibition more likely to impressâ¦and maybe give me the edge I need to beat Nunchkin in Practical Casting.â