Chapter 130: New Classes [2]
Aaric claimed a spot at one of the less crowded tables and surveyed the breakfast offerings.
Fresh bread, porridge with various toppings, fruits from the academy’s gardens, and what appeared to be several types of preserved meats.
He selected items methodically, assembled a plate that would sustain him through his morning lectures, and began eating with the same unhurried precision he brought to most activities.
Around him, the Hall filled with the sounds of academy life, conversations about upcoming assignments, speculation about professors, the student concerns.
But...
His eyes narrowed as he got a few pairs of eyes, at his back.
What’s wrong with them?
He turned his posture a little, and caught them from the side of his eye.
Elves?
He blinked, and continued eating.
Why are they staring at like me that?
After a few minutes, he finished his breakfast with the same measured pace he’d maintained throughout the meal, wiped his hands on the provided cloth, and rose from the table.
The Great Hall was reaching peak capacity as more students arrived for their morning meal, but he moved against the flow toward the exit.
The corridors leading to the academic wing carried a different energy than the dormitory areas, more purposeful, less casual.
Students walked with the focused stride of those heading to specific destinations, consulting schedules and muttering about assignments and other stuff.
Alaric moved at his unhurried pace, hands inside his pockets.
His first class was "Foundations of Governance" in Lecture Hall Seven, located on the second floor of the academy’s main academic building.
He walked through the corridor for few minutes then took the stairs.
Many students strode past him, conversing with themselves. He just kept moving forward.
Whatever they’re gossiping wasn’t his concern.
Eventually, he reached his destination.
The room turned out to be larger than he’d expected.
Tiered seating arranged in a semicircle around a raised platform where the professor would presumably hold court.
Alaric moved inside and chose a seat roughly halfway up the tiers, positioned where he could observe both the instructor and his fellow students without drawing undue attention to himself.
The location offered good sightlines and easy exit routes, habits from his previous life that translated well to the academic settings.
Tap! Tap! Tap!
His fingers drummed against the table while his cheek rested on his other fist, elbow propped up.
As the lecture hall filled, he studied his classmates with the same analytical attention he brought to most situations.
Near the front sat a cluster of students whose posture and expensive accessories marked them as major nobility, second and third sons of ducal houses, judging by their confident bearing and casual assumption of privilege.
They conversed in the easy tones of those accustomed to being heard and obeyed.
A few rows behind them, another group had formed around what appeared to be scholarship students, young people whose clothes bore the quality of academy uniforms but lacked the subtle modifications that spoke of personal wealth.
Their conversations were more subdued, more careful, as if they were still adjusting to finding themselves in such company.
Scattered throughout the remaining seats were individuals who defied easy categorization.
A young woman with intricate braids and skin dark enough to suggest origins in the southern kingdoms.
A pale boy whose nervous fidgeting marked him as someone uncomfortable with large groups.
Several students whose mixed features spoke of marriages between different noble houses or even different races.
Mixed breeds?
Near the back corner, a lone figure sat with the kind of isolation that seemed deliberate rather than imposed.
His clothes bore no obvious house markers, and his attention remained fixed on a leather-bound notebook rather than the social dynamics playing out around him.
The diversity was notable.
The Phoenix Academy drew students from across the known world, and the mixing of backgrounds, cultures, and political affiliations created a complex social ecosystem.
As the lecture hour approached, conversations began to quiet. Notebooks appeared on desks, quills were tested, and the general rustling of preparation filled the air.
The door at the front of the hall opened.
The professor entered with the kind of measured authority that immediately commanded attention without demanding it.
He was perhaps forty-five, with graying hair at his temples and the bearing of someone who had spent years in positions of responsibility.
His robes bore the crimson and gold of senior faculty, while his pale eyes swept the lecture hall with practiced assessment.
Just as he reached the podium, the hall’s main door creaked open.
A girl slipped inside, her scarlet hair slightly disheveled and her breathing suggesting she’d hurried to arrive.
Behind her came another young woman, dark-haired with the kind of precise features that spoke of careful breeding.
"My apologies, Professor," Elina said, her voice carrying across the quiet hall. "I became lost in the corridors."
The professor nodded once. "Take your seats. Quickly."
Elina’s eyes swept the available options, pausing briefly when she spotted Alaric roughly halfway up the tiers.
She chose seats several rows below him, settling beside her companion with movements that suggested familiarity rather than chance acquaintance.
"I am Professor Magnus Korwell," the instructor began once the latecomers had settled.
"For the next four years, I will be guiding you through the fundamental principles that govern civilized society."
He moved away from the podium, hands clasped behind his back as he addressed the assembled students directly.
"The Phoenix Academy was founded on a simple premise, that leadership requires more than birthright or raw power. It demands understanding. Of history, of human nature, of the delicate balance between authority and responsibility."
His gaze swept across the tiers.
"Some of you are here because your families have always sent their children to this institution. Others have earned your place through merit alone. By the time you graduate, such distinctions will matter far less than what you’ve learned to do with the knowledge we provide."
He paused, allowing the weight of those words to settle.
"Governance is not about ruling over others. It is about creating the conditions in which civilization can flourish. Trade routes that connect distant kingdoms, legal frameworks that resolve disputes without bloodshed, diplomatic protocols that prevent wars before they begin."
Professor Korwell moved to a large map mounted on the wall behind the podium.
"These are the tools of true power."
The map showed the known world in intricate detail, kingdoms marked in different colors, trade routes traced in gold lines, mountain ranges and river systems that defined natural borders.
"Consider the Merchant Wars of 782," he continued, pointing to a region marked in red.
"Two kingdoms went to war over trading rights in the Gilded Straits. Three years of conflict, thousands dead, entire cities reduced to ash. And in the end?"
He turned back to face the class.
"The straits became impassable due to the wrecked ships littering the seafloor. Both kingdoms lost access to the very routes they’d fought to control."
A few students shifted uncomfortably. The lesson was clear enough.
"Who can tell me what alternative approaches might have prevented this outcome?"
Hands rose across the lecture hall. Professor Korwell pointed to a young woman in the front row.
"Diplomatic negotiation? Shared access agreements?"
"Possible. What else?"
Another student spoke up. "Economic incentives. Make cooperation more profitable than conflict."
"Better. And?"
Alaric found himself studying his classmates’ responses rather than participating directly.
The answers revealed much about their backgrounds and thinking, some focused on military solutions, others on legal frameworks, a few suggesting approaches that would require decades of careful planning to implement.
Elina raised her hand. When called upon, her voice carried clear across the hall.
"Geographic analysis. The straits were the primary bottleneck for eastern trade, giving them disproportionate strategic value. Alternative routes should have been developed before the crisis reached the point of conflict."
Professor Korwell nodded approvingly.
"Long-term thinking. Essential for sustainable governance."
He returned to the map.
"The kingdoms involved were reacting to immediate pressures rather than addressing underlying structural problems."
The lecture continued for another hour, covering historical examples of both successful and disastrous approaches to governance.
Professor Korwell proved to be an engaging instructor, using specific case studies to illustrate broader principles while encouraging student participation through carefully crafted questions.
As the session drew to a close, he assigned their first reading, three Chapters from a text on diplomatic theory, due by the next class meeting.
"Remember," he said as students began gathering their materials, "governance shapes the lives of thousands or millions of people. The decisions you make as leaders will echo through generations. That responsibility should humble you, not intimidate you."
With that thought, the class was dismissed. Students filed out in groups, already discussing the lecture’s content and comparing notes on Professor Korwell’s teaching style.
Alaric remained seated for a moment, watching as his classmates departed.
Then just as he was about to stand up.
"Well. Well. Isn’t that our dear cousin?"
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Chapter Ended.
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{A/N}
YO guys, welcome back again.
And first of all, sorry. I tried to write 2 Chapters today but I couldn’t.
Though I’ll try to write 2 a day soon.