Plot
Getting struck by bolt of lightning as you're being shot, it certainly is one way to find out you're immortal.
Sure, immortality was not unheard of, but that I never thought it would happen to me. The existing immortals are the leaders of our race. They lived long enough to know how to keep humanity alive and prospering. I could join them or as few have done live my own life.
Worth the Price
"WHACK!"... Jane fell into the sand. Her head was throbbing. "I'll get you for that!" she yelled as she got up and charged at her adversary. She lunged at him, grabbed him by his neck and slammed him into the ground. "Whoa sis, where did that come from?", Theron said. "I swear, you're getting stronger every time we practice."
"Maybe you just need to keep up!" she shot back, laughing. But the laugh come out shakier than she had hoped. She really *was* getting stronger at a rate that did not feel normal. Already she was having to pull her punches, and going through an alarming number of practice swords. Her ever-more touchy temper also was a source of growing worry. The throbbing in her temples these days would lead to something or someone getting damaged, luckily nothing too obvious so far, but her hard-fought position here at the Gladiatorial School was clearly in danger.
The Gladiatorial School of Verath was one of twelve sanctioned schools across the Allied Provinces, each one funded and governed by the Council of Immortals. The schools served a dual purpose: they trained the province's defenders, and they supplied the Grand Tournament with its participants. The tournament was held every five years, a spectacle broadcast across every province, attended by the Immortals themselves. It was supposed to be an honor. Jane had never seen it that way.
The Immortals had ruled for as long as anyone could remember. History books credited them with ending the Collapse, the century of war and famine that had nearly wiped humanity from the earth. They had rebuilt civilization, established the provinces, created the laws. And they had never let go. Every major decision flowed through the Council. The provinces had their own governors, their own traditions, but everyone knew where the real authority sat. Most people accepted this. The Immortals had earned it, they said. They had the wisdom of centuries. Jane thought centuries of power just meant centuries of practice at keeping it.
The lottery drums had been brought out that morning, heavy brass cylinders older than anyone in the school. Every student's name went in. Two names came out. It was, like everything the Immortals touched, neatly dressed up as fairness, random, impartial, everyone given equal odds. But refusal wasn't an option, and the chosen fighters would represent Verath whether they wanted to or not. Jane had watched the drawing with her arms crossed and her jaw tight, telling herself the odds were in her favor.
They weren't. When her name was read aloud, the hall erupted. Theron whooped. Her sparring partners stamped their feet. Master Aldric nodded from the platform with something that might have been pride. Jane stood very still in the middle of all of it, the throbbing in her temples building to a sharp, steady pulse, and said nothing.
The dorm room felt smaller than usual. Kael had already draped a strip of scarlet cloth above her bunk, Verath's tournament color, and was grinning like she'd won something. Mira sat cross-legged on her own bed, watching Jane the way you'd watch a fire that might spread, saying nothing. They'd shared this room for two years. She knew better than to lead with congratulations.
"Take it down," Jane said, nodding at the cloth.
Kael blinked. "It's tradition."
"I know what it is." She dropped onto her bunk and pressed her fingers against her temples. The throbbing hadn't stopped. Outside, down the corridor, she could hear the rest of the school celebrating. The second name drawn had been Petyr, a third-year she barely knew. He'd probably already written home.
"Nobody asks for it," Mira said quietly. "That's kind of the design."
"That's exactly the problem." Jane stared at the ceiling. The Immortals had been running their version of this story for so long it had become load-bearing. A lottery meant fairness. Fairness meant you couldn't complain. You just put the decorations up and called it an honor, because that was the word that had been placed there, and no one had ever successfully replaced it.