The Summons

BANG! BANG! BANG!

Collin jolted upright, nearly knocking the chair over. His knees slammed the table hard enough to scatter its contents—books, utensils, a teacup. The sliver of green glass he’d been examining slipped from his fingers and sliced deep into his forefinger.

He hissed in pain, instinctively pressing the finger to his mouth. His other hand shot out, slapping the tabletop to keep the teacup from toppling over.

BANG! BANG! BANG!

“I’m coming! Just—hold on,” he shouted, voice sharp. Snatching a dishtowel from the chair back, he wrapped it hastily around his bleeding finger as he stormed toward the front door.

He yanked it open with a glare—then froze. “Oh. Sorry,” he muttered, quickly adjusting both tone and posture. “What can I do for you, sir?”

The man standing there wore the dark green uniform of the guard. His face was expressionless, eyes cold. “Are you Collin of Chroma?”

“Uh... yes.” Collin fumbled to twist the towel tighter around his hand.

He was keenly aware of how disheveled he looked: hair uncombed, shirt misbuttoned, still groggy from sleeping in.

He hadn’t left the house in two days. He’d needed the break—just a few days to breathe—but now he wondered if that choice had consequences.

The guard produced an envelope and held it out. “This is a summons.”

Collin stared at it, blinking. He reached for the sealed missive with reluctant fingers, already imagining fines or disciplinary hearings. “A summons? For me?”

The guard ignored the question. “Where is Aries of Chroma? Records show he resides here, in the former home of Jiah, now deeded to you. Is that correct?”

“Yes. But Aries is working at the forge today.” Collin’s brows drew together. Aries hadn’t missed a shift in weeks. “Is he being summoned too?”

Wordlessly, the guard extended a second envelope. “Give this to him,” he said curtly, and turned on his heel without another word.

The guard strolled across the yard. He didn’t so much as glance down when he trampled a blooming patch of love-in-idleness near the fence—and didn’t bother to close the gate behind him.

Collin returned to the table and stared at the envelope as if it might bite. His eyes lingered on the golden seal—Lord Montigo’s crest glinting in the lamplight—then noted the inscription beneath it: Collin of Chroma, penned in an elegant, deliberate script.

As if the paper might uncoil and strike if handled too hastily, he drew the missive out with measured care. Unfolding it, he read:

27th of April, Year 501

Recipient: Collin of Chroma

You are hereby summoned by decree of Lord Montigo’s Royal Guard. All individuals residing in the territories of Crimisa, of age in the last three years, are required to answer this summons.

You are to present yourself in Chroma’s main square at noon on April 30th, Year 501. Bring this letter, your primary weapon of choice, and any additional arms in your possession.

Attendance is mandatory. Any individual who is late or fails to appear will face imprisonment or a fine at the discretion of the chief steward.

—Lord Montigo’s Royal Guard

The flickering candlelight on the table did little to warm the mood as Collin and Aries sat down to dinner.

“Why do you think we’ve been summoned?” Collin asked, voice low. The tightness in his chest had lingered for hours and still refused to budge.

Aries didn’t answer right away. He was staring at his summons again—creased and soft at the edges from being handled too much. “I wish I knew,” he said finally, eyes scanning the paper as if a hidden message might suddenly reveal itself.

Collin picked at his bread without appetite. “Very generous of them,” he muttered. “Two days’ notice. Makes you feel real special.”

Aries dunked his bread into the thick gravy with a frustrated sigh.

“They could’ve warned us a week ahead. Or, you know, at all.

” He tossed the missive to the side and reached for another heap of beans smothered in melted goat cheese.

“Maybe they’re short on guards. Though I haven’t heard anything. ”

“That’s not how they’ve done it before. They usually just assign roles after graduation, right? Quietly. No summons. No spectacle.”

“They assigned Nic and me once. We said no. Got shuffled somewhere else instead.” Aries sounded too nonchalant. It wasn’t reassuring.

The tightness in Collin’s chest spread to his stomach. The whole thing felt... off. His spoon stilled in his bowl of creamy soup. He wasn’t sure if the queasiness creeping up his throat was nerves or just another round of over rich goat’s milk.

Arion had returned from White Wood with two nanny goats and their kids in tow.

Too much milk, too little use. Permits and taxes were a hassle, so instead he gave the stuff away—buckets of it.

Collin and Aries were doing their best to not let it go to waste, but every meal now reeked of sour cheese and goat’s cream. The novelty had curdled.

“Maybe no one wants to be a guard anymore,” Aries said, chewing loudly through a slice of roast pheasant. “They’re running out of volunteers.”

Collin forced a laugh. It came out thin. “Hope I’m not what they’re looking for.”

Aries groaned and dropped his fork. “They already tried sticking me once. Doubt I’ll get out of it again.”

Collin lifted the bowl in a mock toast. “To boots that leak and roofs that don’t—” And then drained the soup in a single gulp like it was medicine. Or a shield.

He thumped the empty bowl onto the table. God... He shouldn’t have finished it. His stomach lurched. “Remind me to tell Arion—no more goat’s milk,” he said, voice muffled by the napkin he pressed to his mouth.

Collin and Aries reached the square twenty minutes early, boots crunching over gravel. The crowd had already begun to form, a nervous thrumming of bodies and whispers. They stood in line until a weary-looking steward took their letters and checked off their names with a charcoal-smeared thumb.

Collin tucked Lumen under his arm and glanced around, as if the crowd knew something he didn’t—and no one planned to tell him.

Dragonfly sat alone on a stone bench, her posture rigid, weapons resting across her lap. She looked like a statue posed for judgment—still, silent, bracing for a sentence.

Helen stood not far from her, immaculate in a gold-trimmed bodice and skirts pressed so sharply they could cut. Her hair was pinned too neatly for a day like this. The girls clustered around her—the dancers—giggled as though they hadn’t noticed the dread hanging in the air.

Nic was amongst them, a weathered figure in dusty work boots and rolled shirtsleeves, his hand resting protectively at the small of Helen’s back, like a reluctant extra who'd wandered onto the wrong stage and refused to leave the play.

Most of the faces in the square were familiar, even if not by name. Only a few stood out as strangers, likely from distant villages—White Wood, Nereid.

One person was conspicuously absent. Hadria had never received a summons—not that anyone expected she would.

She’d walked away from the White Villa and had vanished from the civic rolls with it.

She couldn’t hunt, work for wages, own land, or even file taxes.

Yet she hunted anyway, worked when she wanted, and lived where she pleased—quietly ignored by a society that had tried and failed to exile her into invisibility.

Her freedom was real, but it came hollowed out, stripped of rights and protections. A silent bargain no one dared question.

Collin and Aries staked out a spot near the edge of the square. Soon River arrived, followed by Clive and Niall. Niall bore a curved dagger and short sword, ever practical. Clive had brought Gaudium, his rich green longbow that always smelled faintly of sap and varnish.

“Where’s Arion?” Niall asked, scanning the crowd.

“Dodged the cutoff by a month,” River muttered, eyes on the ground. “Lucky dog.”

River, of course, was unarmed. He’d left his father’s house with nothing but two hounds and a conviction. It showed now, in the way he fidgeted.

Nic’s voice broke the tension, “Good afternoon, gents. You look ready for a parade—or an execution.”

He strode up with Uriah, both of them bristling with weaponry. Nic’s sword, Amare, glinted at his hip. Collin had admired its craftsmanship for years.

“Still think it’s just a recruitment?” Collin asked, glancing toward the dancers. “What would they want with the Daughters of Venus?”

Aries frowned. “Helen’s father—has he said anything?”

Nic shook his head. “He tried to get her excused. Denied. She’s as confused as the rest of us. And as for swords... Helen can butcher a chicken with surgical precision, but put a blade in her hand for battle?” He raised his brows. “We might be relying on poultry diplomacy.”

“That’s a valuable skill,” Collin muttered, but the corner of his mouth twitched. “Maybe they need skilled butchers and dancers. For morale.”

Nic gave a hollow laugh. “Nothing boosts morale like interpretive knife work.”

River glanced at the brothers. “Do you have something I could borrow? Didn’t think to bring...”

Uriah tossed him a sheathed sword without hesitation. “See how that sits. If it growls at you, I’m sure Nic has something shinier.”

River caught it with both hands, his grip uncertain. “Thanks... but it’s less about me fancying the sword, more the sword fancying me.”

“Compliment it,” Nic said, waggling his eyebrows. “Rub the hilt. Whisper sweet nothings. Works for Amare, every time!”

The brief laughter stuttered out as Dragonfly approached.

She was talking to Uriah and Clive, but her jaw was clenched and her knuckles white around her weapons.

Collin offered a gentle “hello.” She returned it, polite, distant.

Her gaze lingered on him for a second—too fleeting, and she turned away before he could name it.

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