5.06 – Talveron
"It''s so strange seeing a Talveron as good at casting as she is," Camillemented. "Like seeing a fish climb a tree."
Natalie nced sideways, seeing that Camille had wandered up to chat with her. The mage had made a habit of it. Her stomach tightened with nervousness, like always, seeing the tall, skinny woman, and the teasing curl to her lips. Even so many dayster, Camille still hadn''te outright and said she''d been the one to catch Natalie in the restroom. It remained a murky, anxiety-inducing mystery.
Strangely, the two of them had be sort-of friends. She <em>was </em>Natalie''s ssmate, and affable besides, so it wasn''t all that odd. Natalie admitted she would like to know for certain whether it had been Camille, though, however obvious her teasing made it seem. But she also didn''t want to ask outright, on the chance she had witnessed less than Natalie thought—or maybe even that she was just a flirt, and that Natalie was making incorrect assumptions. There wasn''t a zero percent chance of that.
So, she suffered through the interactions. Getting flirted at by a pretty girl was hardly the end of the world, anyway, even if there was an undercurrent of worry whenever she interacted with the girl.
"Talveron?" Natalie asked. "Who''s that? Ana''s opponent?"
Natalie was recovering from her recent spar. They were well into practice; she had worked up a sweat, and her HP was dwindling, like most of her ssmates. Ana''s ss was one of the groups of students present in the sprawling courtyard, today—which meant toughpetition. Not as fierce as Elida''s ss, which seemed to be the top grouping of students for the year, but still not a walk in the park, like some days were. Ana''s ss was easily a match for Natalie''s.
Camille gave her a confused look. "Sorry? Her opponent?"
"What?"
"Ana. Ana Talveron. You don''t know who she is?"
The phrasing made Natalie groan. "You''re not about to tell me she''s some kind of princess, are you?"
Camille blinked several times, her confusion trading for amusement. "No. The Talverons are of middling importance. I just thought you''d know who your <em>teammates</em> are. She <em>is </em>your delving partner, isn''t she? I''m not mixing them up?"
Natalie sighed in relief. Having Elizabeth the <em>Beaumon </em>on her team was enough political entanglement for one lifetime. She didn''t even know who the Talverons even <em>were</em>, which to Natalie, was great news.
"I don''t keep up with that nonsense," Natalie said. "And she never mentioned herst name."
"Family houses and politics aren''t ''nonsense''."
"Yeah, yeah. I''ve been told that like, ten times." And at least once by Camille, Natalie was pretty sure.
Camille rolled her eyes. "The country bumpkin disregard is endearing, Nat, but dangerous in a ce like T. But, whatever. Yes. Ana Talveron."
"Why is it weird that she''s good at casting?"
The mage pursed her lips. "It''s not funny if I have to exin it. The Talverons are just … not mages."
"What does that mean?"
She gave Natalie an exasperated look. "They''re almost all fighters. That their daughter is a mage, much less a <em>good </em>one, is very strange." She nced at Ana. "Though it''s hardly the only strange thing about her."
Natalie pushed away the urge to defend Ana. Camille hadn''t made it sound like an insult, just ament. Ana herself was more than willing to admit, and had done so, that she behaved oddly. It didn''t sound like something she was insecure about. Though maybe that was just a front?
"But, really," Camille said. "How has she never mentioned what house she''s from? Don''t you talk? You''re teammates."
Natalie had, of course, chatted with Ana plenty of times. There was lots of downtime in the dungeon, if not when they needed to catch their breath, then when setting up camp for the night on weekend trips. There''d been plenty of opportunities for the team to talk amongst themselves.
"She''s not the most open person," Natalie said. "Dunno if you''ve met her."
It wasn''t that Ana <em>didn''t </em>talk—just that she didn''t reveal much about herself when she did. Which was kind of odd, now that Natalie thought about it. She knew surprisingly little about the woman, even ounting for only having met her a few weeks ago.
"Fair," Camille said. "Anyway, yeah, she''s basically the opposite of a Talveron. Talverons are all … I don''t know, loud, gung-ho, in-your-face. They have a reputation for being dramatic."
"Really?" In that case, Natalie could easily see why that would be funny. Ana hade from a family known for being in-your-face and dramatic? Natalie couldn''t pick two words that <em>less </em>described the woman. How had that happened?
Her thoughts flickered to the series of challenge rooms. Well. Maybe the description was <em>situationally </em>urate, actually.
"And very much not mages," Camille continued. She eyed Ana as a massive ck shadow-tendril ripped from the ground and shed at her opponent. A retaliatory orb of blue light zipped toward her, but it met a ck curtain of shadow, dispelling both spells. Ana''s face didn''t move. Not concentrated, worried, or even bored. Complete passivity. Honestly, it was a bit intimidating. "And she''s not even <em>kinda </em>good, either," Camille said with a begrudging sort of appreciation. "She''s <em>really </em>good. It''s a shame she turned down Gylver sponsorship."
Natalie blinked at that. "Sorry? And—wait, aren''t <em>you</em> a Gylver?"
Camille turned toward her with an incredulous look.
Natalie flushed. "I don''t mean literally," she protested. She knew Camille wasn''t a member of one of the five major houses. She was actually somewhat in Natalie''s position—mostly a nobody who had found her way into T through talent alone. "But you''re sponsored by them. Adopted, kind of?"
"S<em>ponsored</em>," she said firmly. "Not adopted. I''m not remotely a Gylver." Camille shook her head, still finding the idea ridiculous. "Maybe if I ever make it to level ten, they''d let me marry into the main house. That''s the only way that happens, though. I''m a lowborn."
Natalie''s nose wrinkled. ''Let her'' marry into their house?
"And they offered Ana a sponsorship?" Natalie asked.
"Recently. I don''t know how. They didn''t ask me to do it." Camille seemed mildly annoyed at that.
"When?"
"Last week."
"Really?"
"She didn''t mention it? Well, it''s her business. I assume she turned it down because of Liz."
"Liz?"
"She <em>did </em>group up with you four. The Beaumons aren''tying any kind of im? On your team as a whole?"
"Not that I''ve heard." Natalie considered it. "Besides, Liz made that decision herself. I don''t think her family is happy about it." Johanna and her team would have been Liz''s group, but Liz had wanted to strike it out on her own. "What''s sponsorship even mean, anyway? It''s not like they can do much for us. T has everything locked down." Being sponsored by an important House didn''t mean amazing items and infinite tokens—or even extra opportunities. T took fairness seriously.
"We <em>will </em>be graduating into the real world," Camille said. "And besides, it''s only so strict for freshmen. They make a fair ying ground to see who the talent is—but it''s not like anyone is average for two years, then suddenly bes a prodigy." She paused. "It''s very rare," she conceded. "Regardless, T''s ws loosen as time goes on. They make sure everyone starts at the same point, but in the end, they want to see who can reach the highest level before graduating. So rules get a little looser."
"Huh," Natalie said. She couldn''t say she was surprised.
"Though still strict," Camille said. "It''s not supposed to be about who has the most money. And anyway, being sponsored by someone importantes with plenty of benefits <em>within</em> the confines of their rules. The obvious being training, connections, and knowledge. A one-on-one with, for example, Edward Valeria. That''d make a sponsorship worth having just by itself, don''t you think? And something like that is what having the Beaumons as patrons could get you."
Edward Valeria. Johanna''s dad—a staunch ally of House Beaumon. The patriarch of the Valeria family, the head general of the Valhaurian military, and one of the strongest men in the world. Likely above level fifteen, though that was a guess, since those ranks were so sparse there might only be a dozen per continent. Natalie admitted even a few hours being trained by him <em>would </em>probably be an invaluable experience, and it wouldn''t break any T rules.
But worth entangling into politics? In her opinion, no. Especially with all her current ss shenanigans going on. Contrary to most people at T, Natalie had teamed up with Liz <em>in spite </em>of her name, rather than because of it. That might have been <em>why </em>the royal had chosen them.
Natalie grunted. Camille had a point; she wasn''t so stupid as to not see that. Even so, she hated the idea of wading into House politics.
The mage rolled her eyes. "Fine, whatever," Camille said. "Like I said, you do you. And I get it—sort of. Even if I disagree." She sniffed. "Anyway, more fun topics." She took a step closer to Natalie, leaning so her shoulder pressed into hers. "I took your advice, you know."
"My advice?" Natalie asked. Her heartbeat quickened, and only half at having a cute girl suddenly press herself into her; Natalie knew Camille well enough to recognize that teasing tone of voice.
"About my nt magic. My vines." She wiggled her eyebrows, and it took a second for Natalie to understand. "Like you told me to. Great advice, seriously. It was … a lot of fun."
Natalie''s eyes widened. She was joking, right?
She hadn''t—with her own nts?