
had lined his face, and a frown of disapproval seemed etched into it. As he approached the Novices, he
made the effort to put a slight smile to his lips. At least this time her Novices would be spared his acid
tongue. The next time would be entirely different, as she knew only too well. They would have to adjust,
even as she was making that adjustment now.
The company of twenty-four novice sorcerers did not even begin to fill the main training arena of
Maknos Hall. The hall was among the first buildings raised by the Mage sorcerers when they started the
training facility over two centuries ago and was named for Delmathia's most famous warrior sorcerer.
Maknos never had to fear attack from non-sorcerers because of his reputation as a master of weaponry,
but few sorcerers had ever achieved his skills. Relying on one's skill with magic alone had proven through
the centuries to result in a short life.
Inhestia's founding Mage sorcerers had made it a requirement that students be proficient with some form
of self-defense before they graduated and left the training lodge. The choice of weapon was left to the
individual. For Aetria, it had been an easy one. Adoptive daughter of a Tierian merchant, from her
earliest memories she had been trained in what the Delmathian people called the “Tierian Thief” skills.
She mused over the hundreds of hours she had practiced those skills here at Inhestia, endless hours
sweating through flexing exercises and throwing countless numbers of daggers into the targets that were
now stored away in the equipment rooms at the back of the hall.
She had chosen the hall for the swearing in ceremony because, of all the training facilities at Inhestia, it
had the closest tie to anything military. The hall's stark interior with weapon racks lining bare walls, a
sand-covered stone floor, and the faint, but noticeable odor of exercised bodies reminded her most of life
in an army camp. She would have liked battle flags adorning the rafters, but the Sorcerer Corps was so
new that the only ones in existence remained within the regiments.
Aetria scanned the faces of her week-old command. The soon-to-be sworn in officers were all well
known to her: some had been students of hers; most had shared housekeeping chores of one sort or the
other with her; a few she had shared sleeping quarters with. While not properly attired in the uniform of
the service they were about to be accepted into, they were dressed alike in the soft white robes worn by
all student sorcerers. Their newly achieved status of Novice sorcerer, awarded only last week after years
of training and study, was proudly worn by each as a pale blue sash running from shoulder to hip.
The twenty-four men and women represented over half of the graduating Novices of the Order's oldest
training lodge. This was double what Aetria's, the first class to enter the army, had put into the service
five years prior. The war had just started then. It had not been expected to last very long, but it still raged
on, calling for even more recruits to swell the ranks of the king's armies.
The Novices had separated into groups by discipline. The Healers were slightly apart from the
Provisioners; the Provisioners apart from the Illusionists, her own field; the Aggressors haughtily off by
themselves. It was not something the Order had taught them, but rather the gathering of like minds and
similar personalities. It was so, even before the students arrived at Inhestia to begin their training. Like all
children of Delmathia, they were tested for magic skills at the age when their bodies had stopped
changing rapidly from child to adult, but their minds were still pliant and innocent. The local sorcerer
culled out those whose minds proved capable of controlling the Power, the magical force that energized
their spells, and offered them the chance to become sorcerers. Only five out of a hundred children passed
the tests. No child had ever turned down the opportunity.
Upon their arrival at Inhestia, the students were quartered with other new students of like minds because
their future fields of sorcerer expertise were very closely matched to their personalities. Aetria smiled at
the adage that flashed into her mind.I am, therefore I spell.