He woke to the rhythm of distance. Soren lay flat on his cot, the wool blanket drawn over his face and pulled so tight to his chin he could taste the old soap caked into the fringed edge.
He listened: the morning was still, muffled by snow and the sleeping bulk of the barracks.
Every hour Chancery's bell tolled, but the walls here had grown greedy; sound died against the stone, folded in on itself, just another secret waiting to rot.
His chest ached. Not the soreness of drills, though that never really faded, but a heat, right at the point where the blue shard pressed through linen close to the heart.
It had been days since Valenna last intruded on his dreams. Nights bled together, each one a little heavier, a little closer to the old street's logic: keep your head down, watch for the cut, never owe anyone more than you can steal back by dawn.
He rolled onto his side and palmed under the cot for the rag bundle. The shard inside had changed, less a thing, more a presence.
Sometimes, when he touched it, it felt as if something just barely resisted being held, a faint pulse against his skin, as if it wanted to push through the world and into something newer, sharper.
Soren turned the cloth-wrapped weight over in his hands until he couldn't tell if the trembling was from the cold or from anticipation.
He waited for her voice to break the silence. It didn't.
He unwrapped the shard, holding it in the space between thumb and knuckle, letting the dim blue reflect off the wall.
The metal looked less jagged in daylight, more like a half-formed promise. Soren closed his eyes and set it against his sternum, feeling the heat spike; breath gathered behind his teeth, then released. Still, nothing.
He thought of throwing the fragment across the cell, just to see if it would shatter further. Instead, he pressed his thumb along the flat of the blade and whispered, "You awake?"
No answer. Not at first.
Then:
"You're getting predictable, Soren."
He smiled, couldn't help it, even though it came out lopsided. "You were quiet."
The answer came slower, threaded with something he'd have called melancholy in another life. "You didn't need me last night."
He snorted. "Could have fooled me. They paired me with Tavren again. He knows every trick I learned from you, and the rest he just makes up with spite."
And yet you're alive. Valenna's tone hovered, neither praise nor condemnation.
He lay there, palm pressed to the burning spot at his chest, the other hand clenching the shard so tight the geometry of it imprinted along his lifeline.
"What are you really?" he asked, softer. "Not the history. The thing that's in me."
She waited long enough he thought she'd left him again.
"The Remnant is a path, not a thing. You carry it, so now you're on it. That is all."
He tried to swallow that. "So it's not magic? Not even old blood, the way the gutter rats say?"
"No. Just memory that won't rot."
He watched the frost crawl higher on the window pane. What would it be like, if the memory stayed longer than the body? If you were just the echo of something nobody dared to remember except as legend or curse?
He wrapped the shard back in its rag, careful not to let the edge catch skin, and slipped it under the mattress.
He thought of his own hands, the notches and lines, how they were slowly coming to resemble more the memory of another's.
"You ready?" Valenna's voice was lighter now, almost playful. "Or are you content to let Tavren break your nose a second time?"
He dressed, left arm, then right, then the patched coat, the sequence burned in like an oath. He double-knotted the boots and thought of the instructor's warning from two mornings ago: Not all learning is safe. Careful, or you outgrow the patience of those who train you.
Outside, the yard stung with morning. Rhain and Tavren waited by the fence, trading jokes neither seemed to find funny. Soren joined them, careful to keep the limp subtle, he didn't need another spectacle.
They went through drills. The others stumbled more than usual; Tavren's left eye shone a ring of purple, and Rhain nursed the knuckles on his sword hand. The instructor barked at them, but it was softer this time, as if the winter was sapping even cruelty from the world.
Soren moved through the forms, not fast, but exact. Every motion found its mark, every correction landed before the mistake.
Once or twice, he caught Tavren watching him, not with malice, but with a wary curiosity, like he'd taken apart a clock and found something inside that shouldn't be possible.
When the instructor called for pairs, Soren and Tavren met at the center without discussion. They circled, blades at low, Rhain counting the pace from the edge of the sand.
The first few exchanges were nothing, just testing. Tavren liked to make a show of brute force, but Soren, no, Valenna knew the pivot points. After a minute, the match grew quiet, each move slower, more deliberate.
"You're holding back," Tavren hissed, just audible.
Soren shrugged. "You too."
Another pass, and Tavren went for the undercut, the same move he'd landed last week. Soren countered, feeling the old rhythm flood in, Valenna's memory overlayed, but now softer, as if she'd stepped aside to let him own the movement.
He caught Tavren's blade, twisted, and with a flick, sent the practice sword tumbling into the fence post. Tavren looked at his own empty hand, then at Soren, and grinned through a split lip.
"Nice," was all Tavren said, and Soren caught the flash of respect before Tavren rolled his shoulders and stomped off.
The yard emptied in short order, boys scattering to the mess or the dormer's warmth. Soren lingered, staring at the gouges in the sand. He found himself looking at his own arms, the way the tendons flexed beneath the skin, almost as if they were waiting for permission to do something new.
She spoke, low and cordial: "You ready to know the cost?"
He cocked his head, forcing a laugh. "There's always a cost."
"Not always yours to pay."
He bent and gathered the scattered blades, feeling the weight of each, balancing them in his palm the way a baker weighed loaves, by hand, by history.
"Tell me," he said, more a dare than a plea.
"Tonight, then. When we're alone."
–
He survived mess. The stew was more bran than broth, but his hands didn't shake as much now, and Rhain sat next to him without flinching. "You're not like them," Rhain murmured, not quite friendly, but as close as he got.
Soren kept his eyes on the bowl. "Nobody is. Not really."
That earned a twitch of a smile, and Rhain nudged him in the ribs. "Tomorrow, they start the blood tests. Instructor says anyone with old magic in them gets marched to the cathedral for the high priest's brand."
Soren wanted to laugh. "They'd be lucky to find anything in me."
"You're the luckiest one here," Rhain said, matter of fact, then turned his attention to a thick heel of bread.
Soren felt the tickle of Valenna's amusement, but she didn't speak again.
He went to the barracks after, unremarked. The others huddled near the stove, trading stories about the old city and the kind of girls, real or no, they hoped to leave behind. Soren lay on his cot, pulling the blanket up so none could see his lips move when he whispered beneath his breath:
"Now?"
"Yes."
He waited.
A hush fell. The air changed, not cold, or not only cold, but a kind of pressure, like storm weather crowding below skin.
"What do you want to know?"
He almost laughed, so many answers that none felt true. Instead: "What is this? What am I turning into?"
Valenna's reply was clinical, the tone she used for lessons she didn't surface until the student was already drowning. "Remnants are not artifacts, Soren. They are scars on the world. A memory that survived the death of everything that mattered."
She let it hang, then: "The Remnant Path is not a trick. It is a bond, not designed but inherited. You carry me. I carry you. So long as neither lets go, the Pattern continues."
Soren processed this, then asked, "How does it end?"
Silence, then: "Most don't. They are buried, or burned, or ground under until neither host nor Remnant can distinguish which piece belonged to which. If you're lucky, lucky in a coward's way, you die before the memory erases what you wanted to save."
He swallowed, feeling the knot form in the soft of his throat. "Is this how you started?"
"Oh, no. There was a sadness there, the kind that only came from stories told too often. I started with glory, Soren. I started with a city, a weapon, and an oath that lasted until the world forgot its own words. You start with hunger. That's better."
He lay there, eyes wide in the dim. "What if I want to stop?"
"Easy. Break the bond. Throw the shard down a well, never touch it again. Let the next idiot make your mistakes."
He gripped the fragment harder, unsure why the thought of letting go made his stomach turn. "What comes next?"
Valenna's voice was, for the first time, gentle:
"Next, you say yes."
He unwrapped the rag. The shard glimmered, steady and blue. Soren put the blade to his breastbone, feeling the heat pulse even through the layers of skin and shirt. He pictured it sinking inside, burning old scars to ash, hollowing him for what came next.
"Do it," he whispered.
The world blurred, lost color. The pain was sharp, a spike driven into the web of his being, but it was over in a flicker. The shard vanished, and in its place a cold, heavy certainty spread through his ribs.
He waited for Valenna to laugh, to tell him he'd failed her or himself. Instead, her words came close, almost within the bones of his ear:
"Well done, little knife."
He slept, and for the first time, dreamed in a color that was not blue.
–
He woke knowing that the world had shifted, if only by a fraction. He stood, stretched. His arms obeyed him, but the overlay, the memory, the ghost, was quieter now. Not so much absence as companion.
There would be tests, drills, more days identical to the last. But Soren would meet them on his own terms, with his own hands, even if half of the impulse belonged to someone else.
For now, that was enough. He joined the others in the yard, blade low, eyes forward, and waited for the next cut, the next lesson, the next hour lived. He felt the memory brewing in his marrow, and wondered, idly, what would happen when the boy he had been finally caught up with the man he was becoming.
He resolved to find out. For now, there was only time, and the pattern, and the slow, secret burn of a path only he could walk.