Chapter Nine: Credit Where It's Due

Name:Siege State Author:
Chapter Nine: Credit Where It's Due

More or less in one piece, he added to himself. Ive had worse though. At least Im alive. He was not sure how much value that was to him though; he still hadnt manifested even after putting his body on the line to protect someone he loathed.

I bet Gad didnt even get a scratch, the smug little prick, thought Tom.

Assured that he was mostly hale, Tom tried to stand. His vision wavered a little, though he felt okay. Ish. He could hear talking and moving near him, but he still had a little ringing in his ears and couldnt quite make out what it was exactly. He gave his surroundings a brief scan. There was a woman laying on a bedroll near him, breathing softly, the left side of her face a mass of ugly purple bruises. Theyd been placed under a smaller tree in a relatively open patch of forest.

As his vision slowly became clearer he could make out other forms around the tree in various states of injury. Some were sitting, leaning against the trunk, or their packs, others lying quietly under blankets. Groans and whimpers of pain bounced around the group like flies in a kitchen. Tom counted eleven injured, besides himself.

Clairvine and a young student knelt beside a man whose leg was twisted at an impossible angle. The student gently straightened his leg, and Clairvine grasped both sides of the break. Soft pink light shone around her hands, and pulsed like a heartbeat as she pushed it into his wound. There was a grotesque sound - sucking, crunching - and she released her grip. The man lay still, obviously unconscious. His leg was still a mass of bruises, but it was unbroken.

Clairvine slumped beside the man, exhausted. Hows your mana? Got another one in you? she asked the young student beside her.

His eyes flicked to his right, consulting his Wisp. Good. Uh, half-full that is, sir. Just about off cooldown He stood, straightening, and took a deep breath. A ripple passed through the air around him, then hundreds of motes of green light puffed from him. They drifted all around him, drawn to and settling not just on the man whose leg theyd just healed, but most of the nearby injured too. It was a beautiful skill.

Tom shivered slightly as the motes alighted on him. They felt like peppermint tasted, and where they touched, his pain receded.

Thank Goddess for you, lad, Clairvine said. Were lucky you manifested She trailed off as she noticed Tom watching them.

Oh someones woken up - good, she said. Whats your name, man? How are you feeling? Sure you should be walking just yet?

Tom Cutter, sir. And I feel like butter been through a churn, but sores no excuse for laying about, he said, quoting one of his fathers favourite sayings.

Good man, good man, she replied, grinning wearily. We lost four people to those damn pigs. Were lucky only six people were badly injured, besides yourself. Couldve been a lot worse. she sighed. Wish we had a proper healer along with us. My Hearts good in a pinch, but I'm no Healer. Guess I don't have to tell you that though. Young Mat here manifested Life right after we put the last boar down. Bloody lucky that is. Well, come here lad, let me check you over.

Tom was taken aback by the gregarious Guard. He opted for standing there, nodding along. Hed always had the impression that the Idealist protectors of Wayrest must all be stoic individuals, especially in high-stress situations. He didnt quite know how to fit this impression of Clairvine into his worldview, but he was glad to know they werent all serious like Elensfield.

He braced himself slightly as Clairvine approached him, the pink light gathering around her hands again. She waved them slowly over his body, lingering at his ribs and left arm and head, before eventually nodding to herself.

Nothing broken, seems the healing took fine. Youre a lot sorer than youre letting on though, or Im a dwarf! she chuckled to herself. Sit here a while, Mat will use his regeneration burst as his cooldown allows, and that should wash away most of your aches.

Thank you, sir, said Tom, giving her a small bow. And thank you too, Mat. bowing slightly to him too. I owe you two my life.

Oh fuck off with that, you werent that bad. That piggie did give you a good thump though. Surprised you didnt manifest Flight, with the tumble you took! she chuckled to herself again. Sit, sit, she shooed him with her hands. Mat, hows your cooldown..? and with that she knelt over another of the injured.

Tom realised it mustve been a few hours at most since the fight. The unconsciousness had left him feeling disjointed. He went and sat where hed been lying before, and now noticed the rest of the company milling around not too far off.

They were in a clearing, not far from where theyd fought the boar given the wrecked shrubbery around. Most of them sat around in small groups, tending to small pains or checking and cleaning gear. A group of twenty some soldiers were butchering some of the pigs. Theyd have as much meat as they could carry. Hopefully some valuable essences too. Tom guessed theyd be leaving the rest behind.

He cast about for his gear and found his pack leaning against the nearby tree, his shield leant against it. He spent a moment deciding whether he had the energy to move the few feet to retrieve them. Eventually he won the battle against himself and stood to grab them, grumbling to himself internally.

He retrieved some jerky from a pocket and chewed it while he checked his equipment. Hed need a new spear, but he didnt foresee much trouble rustling one up. The soldiers in a unit always carried two on Reapings, for occasions such as these, and soldiers being soldiers there were always plenty looking to get rid of the extra weight. His shield was a little scuffed and battered, but otherwise no worse for wear. His armour had a deep groove, almost a tear, in the chestpiece. If the boars tusk had penetrated instead of being rebuffed, he would have had a lot worse than broken ribs. He suddenly felt very lucky.

Tom sat for a while, trying to steady his mind. Hed had a solid opportunity to manifest, and although it hadnt proved to be his moment, it would hopefully be just the first of many. Overall, he was happy with how the fight went. Hed acted with discipline, trying his utmost to create a circumstance in which he could manifest, but more than that, hed acted in accordance with his principles, putting his safety at risk to protect someone that he disliked, because it was the right thing to do. He couldnt ask more from himself.

"No." she said firmly, her voice strained. "I" she looked up, noting the non-Idealists who were still trying very hard to seem like they werent there. She gestured for him to follow her to a nearby tree some yards away.

Once they had some measure of privacy Tom opened his mouth to speak, but Ella cut him off again.

I apologise for my behaviour. Acting like that in public is shameful. I will not apologise for Gad though. Hes smart enough to know he shouldnt act like that, not with the familys reputation on his shoulders, she said, sighing.

Tom was hesitant. It was the longest Ella had ever spoken to him, and hed known her for well over a decade.

Thats okay. Im used to it. I apologise for acting in anger too. I just cant believe he- Tom said, before Ella interrupted.

Why do you always do this, Tom? Ella asked. You killed that boar single handedly and saved Gads life. You had every right to lose your cool.

Tom was completely lost at this point. What do you mean? he said lamely.

Youre always so reserved. So sullen. You never talk with anyone, like youre better than everyone cause youre a Cutter. You act like The Worlds out to get you, and maybe it is, but fuck, man, its pathetic, she said, breathing a little hard. Gad should know better, but its no wonder all the spiteful little shits are drawn to you with the wounded puppy routine.

Tom reeled. He had no idea people thought of him this way. He knew they didnt think of him kindly, but hed always thought it was because they thought him a freak because he hadnt manifested. That his own behaviour might have caused his torment turned his perspective completely upside down.

I uh, I don't know what to say, Tom managed. I hadnt thought about it like that before. Sorry, I guess?

Ella stared at him for a long moment. Her eyebrows slowly climbed towards the canopy.

Youre fucking unbelievable. Goddess give me strength I try my best not to hate people lest I end up like Gad, but you make it fucking hard Tom. Get over yourself, you sop. Her tirade finished, she stormed off after Gad. She stopped abruptly, spun on her heel, and jabbed a finger at him.

Thank you for saving his life, you sulky fuck, she spat at him, before stalking off again.

Tom gaped, his emotions feeling like his body had after the boar hit him. The non-Idealists had gone back to their usual rough and ready behaviour. Tom went and sat with them. They quietened a moment, but sensed his mood and let him be.

People think I act like Im better than them? Thats why they hate me?Fuck, all this time

It was a perspective-shattering realisation, and it carried the sudden, unexpected clarity of truth. He knew that it was harsh, and that they didn't know of the trials that made him like that, but his trials had twisted him into this shape all the same.

There was a disparity, between why his peers disliked him and why his father tortured him, one that Tom had never realised before, and that disparity was now an open window, admitting a fresh breeze and a shaft of sunlight.

His father took out his own failings, the slow failing of their House, and Tom's own failure to manifest on him. Tom had always assumed, without thinking, that his peers hated him because he was not an Idealist too.

Instead, they hated the symptoms, and not the cause.

For all intents and purposes, the Cutter House was still one of the oldest and most well respected in Wayrest. His father made damn sure no one new how close they were to the brink, how desperate they were.

Tom hadn't a clue how to stop being so withdrawn when the root of the issue hadn't been dealt with, except to double down on trying to manifest, but he had a way forward now. Perhaps he could even make some friends, even if he didn't manifest.

Tom sank into a deep reverie, silent, surrounded by laughing, joking soldiers, and numbly, almost idly, began to pick away at his preconceptions.