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Ycre

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Revision as of 23:00, 16 July 2026 by Henri (talk | contribs) (Early Life)

Name: Ycre (Pronunciation: Ee-kurr)

Age: 23

Race: Half-Elf

Class: Bladesinger (Wizard: Bladesinging)

Background: Scholar of the House of Confluence (Sage)

Early Life

Ycre was born in Korint, the capital of Loveria, to the cartographer Aldren Vaust and the elven translator Lethariel. She was their only child and grew up in a household where scholarship, craftsmanship, and intellectual curiosity were treated not as academic pursuits, but as ordinary parts of daily life.

Aldren’s work frequently brought surveyors, merchants, engineers, and explorers into the family home, while Lethariel translated contracts, journals, and correspondence from across the continent. From an early age, Ycre became accustomed to hearing unfamiliar professions, cultures, and ideas discussed around the family table.

Her parents encouraged her curiosity in different ways. Aldren rarely offered immediate explanations, preferring to ask what she had noticed before telling her what it meant. Lethariel taught her to consider language, context, and perspective, particularly when two people appeared to describe the same thing differently. Together, they taught Ycre to distinguish between what she observed, what she assumed, and what she could reasonably conclude.

Family acquaintances remembered her as an unusually attentive child. She rarely sought attention herself, preferring to listen to conversations, watch craftsmen at work, or study the movement of people through Korint’s streets and marketplaces. Her questions often concerned details others had overlooked, though she seemed less interested in discovering a single correct answer than in understanding why different people reached different conclusions.

As she grew older, Aldren occasionally allowed Ycre to accompany him on surveying commissions and meetings with merchants. She was expected to listen rather than participate, but the experience taught her something that could not be learned merely from conversations at home. A surveyor, an architect, and a merchant could examine the same street or building and regard entirely different details as important. Ycre began to understand that every profession possessed its own way of seeing the world.

She developed a habit of carrying small notebooks wherever she went. Their pages contained sketches, unfamiliar symbols, fragments of overheard conversations, architectural details, and questions about everyday occurrences. They held few personal reflections and rarely recorded events in chronological order. Instead, they served as collections of things she did not yet understand.

During these years, Ycre also formed a close friendship with Clara Voss, a girl from a nearby merchant family. Together they spent countless afternoons exploring Korint’s streets, courtyards, workshops, and markets, often wandering without any particular destination. Clara was drawn to the people they encountered and the stories they told, while Ycre noticed patterns, overlooked details, and questions that seemed to have no immediate answer.

Their friendship gave Ycre a reason to experience the city rather than merely study it. She would later regard those childhood explorations as the beginning of her lifelong belief that meaningful knowledge could be found outside classrooms and libraries as readily as within them.

Around the same period, Ycre began displaying a modest but unmistakable aptitude for arcane magic. The manifestations were subtle and usually instinctive: a movement answered by an unexpected flicker of force, an object shifting before she consciously reached for it, or a momentary response to gestures she did not yet understand. Neither Aldren nor Lethariel possessed the expertise to evaluate her abilities, though both recognized that formal instruction might eventually become necessary.

For the time being, however, magic remained only one curiosity among many. Ycre was equally fascinated by maps, languages, mathematics, craftsmanship, and the workings of Korint’s merchant districts. She did not yet think of these interests as separate fields of study. To her, they were simply different ways of examining the same world.

The First Questions

The event most frequently associated with Ycre’s early years occurred during one of Aldren Vaust’s regular meetings with the merchant Cassian Vellor.

Having accompanied her father to Vellor’s office during a school holiday, Ycre spent much of the meeting quietly examining the room while the two men discussed revisions to a series of commercial surveys. Neither paid her much attention, assuming she was merely entertaining herself.

After nearly an hour, Ycre interrupted them with a simple question.

“Why are there three chairs?”

Neither man immediately understood.

Cassian replied that only two people were present.

Ycre gestured toward the meeting table.

One chair stood slightly farther back than the others and was angled differently from the rest. Beside it sat a half-finished cup of tea. Several maps had been stacked in an unusual order, and a recently broken wax seal lay near a document that neither Aldren nor Cassian remembered opening during their discussion.

Ycre offered no explanation.

“Was someone else here?”

According to later accounts, the room fell silent.

Cassian examined the table more carefully and discovered that one of the revised survey maps had been exchanged shortly before Aldren’s arrival. The alteration was minor, but it affected several measurements central to their meeting.

When asked how she had noticed, Ycre described each detail in the order she had observed it: the position of the chair, the unfinished tea, the broken seal, and the unfamiliar arrangement of the maps. She was careful to distinguish between what she knew and what she had merely suspected.

Cassian listened without interrupting.

Then he pointed toward the documents and said:

“Show me.”

The incident left a lasting impression on Cassian. What interested him was not simply that Ycre had noticed something both men had missed, but that she had resisted inventing an explanation before gathering enough evidence. Her first instinct had been to ask a question.

Several weeks later, following discussions with Aldren and Lethariel, Cassian put Ycre’s name forward to the House of Confluence. He believed her habits of observation, intellectual curiosity, and willingness to examine her own assumptions reflected the qualities the institution sought to cultivate.

House of Confluence

At the age of twelve, Ycre was invited to undertake the Confluence Examination, the annual admission process of the House of Confluence.

Her modest aptitude for arcane magic played only a minor role in her candidacy. The House sought students who demonstrated curiosity, careful reasoning, and a willingness to approach unfamiliar subjects from more than one perspective.

The examination proved unlike anything she had expected.

Its written assessments tested reasoning and attention rather than memorized knowledge. Many of the questions offered no predetermined answer, requiring applicants to explain not only what they believed, but how they had reached their conclusions. Ycre later recalled finding these questions more enjoyable than intimidating.

The second stage, known as the Observation Exercise, required applicants to spend several hours exploring Korint before returning with “something worth discussing.”

Ycre returned without an object or prepared argument. Instead, she brought a series of questions concerning Plateia Square, which had recently undergone extensive renovation.

She had noticed that architects, merchants, and pedestrians appeared to evaluate the square according to entirely different standards. The architects emphasized proportion and movement through the space, the merchants judged whether customers could easily reach their businesses, and pedestrians created their own routes regardless of the intended design.

Rather than deciding which group was correct, Ycre asked what assumptions the renovation had made about the people who would use it.

The final stage was a private interview with Essa Maylin.

Although the full conversation was never recorded, Maylin later described Ycre as possessing an uncommon willingness to challenge her own assumptions before questioning those of others.

When asked what she hoped to study if accepted into the House, Ycre answered:

“I don’t know yet.”

After considering the question for a moment, she added:

“I haven’t seen enough of the world.”

Maylin would later claim that this answer, rather than any examination score, convinced her that Ycre belonged at the House of Confluence.

She was one of three applicants admitted that year.

Student Years

Ycre remained at the House of Confluence for the next eight years.

Her magical ability was considered above average, though never exceptional. She struggled with extensive memorization and often required more time than her peers to master unfamiliar techniques. What she lacked in speed, she compensated for through patience and persistence.

This made her a diligent student, though not always an efficient one.

Ycre rarely kept the subjects she studied neatly separated. Notes on magical theory might contain comparisons with cartography, architecture, language, mathematics, or the work of craftspeople she had encountered in Korint. She was less interested in mastering isolated fields than in discovering where their principles overlapped.

This habit occasionally frustrated her instructors, particularly when her questions led far beyond the assigned curriculum. Essa Maylin generally permitted such investigations, provided Ycre could explain their relevance and accept that curiosity alone did not excuse unfinished work.

Life at the House did not separate her from the city in which she had grown up. Its students were encouraged to regard Korint as an extension of their education, and Ycre continued exploring it whenever her studies allowed.

She often spent these free days with Clara Voss. Their childhood habit of wandering unfamiliar streets persisted, though their conversations changed as they grew older. Clara remained interested in the people they encountered and the stories behind their choices, while Ycre increasingly examined the systems, structures, and assumptions that shaped their lives.

Clara often noticed when Ycre’s questions had become too abstract. Ycre, in turn, introduced Clara to parts of the city they might otherwise never have visited. Their friendship gave both of them a perspective the other lacked.

Among Ycre’s fellow students, Dorian Hale became one of the few whose reasoning consistently challenged her own.

Where Ycre instinctively searched for unexpected connections, Dorian approached scholarship through ethics, responsibility, and practical consequences. He was rarely satisfied by the discovery that something could be done; he wanted to know who might be affected, who should be permitted to do it, and what obligations followed from the knowledge.

Their discussions seldom ended in agreement.

Ycre sometimes regarded his caution as an obstacle to understanding. Dorian believed her desire to investigate first and determine consequences later could itself become dangerous. Yet neither dismissed the other. Over time, Ycre came to regard him as one of the few people whose conclusions she could rarely predict and whose objections she could never comfortably ignore.

Collaborative Study

During their sixth year, Essa Maylin assigned Ycre and Dorian to examine one of the oldest ethical questions in magical scholarship:

Under what circumstances should dangerous knowledge be restricted?

Both students were granted supervised access to the same collection of sensitive manuscripts. They studied identical material but produced markedly different recommendations.

Ycre argued that knowledge must first be understood before meaningful restrictions could be imposed. Without sufficient study, scholars could neither judge its danger accurately nor recognize when suppression created risks of its own.

Dorian agreed that dangerous knowledge should not simply be destroyed, but maintained that discovery inevitably created responsibility. In his view, access to powerful magic required stewardship, oversight, and consideration of those who might suffer from its misuse.

Neither persuaded the other.

Essa did not choose between their reports. Instead, she combined elements from both into the House’s final recommendation: the manuscripts would be preserved and studied, but access would depend upon demonstrated need, competence, and accountability.

The project became a frequently discussed example within the House. Its value lay not in proving one student correct, but in showing that Ycre’s desire to understand and Dorian’s insistence on responsibility addressed different parts of the same problem.

For Ycre, the assignment marked an important development in her education. She did not adopt Dorian’s conclusions, but she became less willing to treat understanding as an end in itself. A question could be intellectually fascinating and still carry consequences for people who had never chosen to become part of it.

Fencing and the Foundations of Bladesinging

Although students of the House of Confluence were encouraged to pursue disciplines beyond arcane study, Ycre’s decision to enroll in fencing instruction surprised both her peers and several members of the faculty.

She had no ambition to become a duelist or soldier. What interested her was that fencing appeared to teach in a manner entirely unlike the subjects she already knew. Books and lectures offered explanations that could be examined at leisure. Fencing demanded that understanding become movement before there was time to think.

Her instructor, Garrick Thorne, had little patience for the distinction.

During her first years under him, Ycre struggled with posture, balance, coordination, and timing. She approached each correction as an intellectual problem, pausing to consider why a movement had failed before attempting it again. Thorne regarded this habit as one of the principal reasons she continued to fail.

Former students later recalled that Ycre frequently interrupted lessons with questions about footwork, weight distribution, and body mechanics. Thorne usually answered by repeating the instruction she had failed to follow.

One exchange became particularly well known.

After spending an entire lesson recording notes on stance and balance, Ycre presented her notebook to Thorne and asked whether she had understood the principles correctly.

He closed the book, returned it to her, and said:

“Stand first.”

For several years, her progress remained modest. She was diligent, but few would have described her as naturally talented. Frustrated, she turned to works on fencing theory, anatomy, and geometry, hoping that a better intellectual understanding would produce better movement.

When Thorne noticed the growing collection of books beside the training court, he remarked:

“You already know enough.”

Ycre insisted that she did not.

“Exactly.”

Only gradually did she understand his meaning. Her difficulty did not come from a lack of information. She had reached the point where further explanation could no longer replace practice.

Ycre began devoting herself to the same fundamental exercises each day. She repeated basic stances, steps, turns, and cuts until they no longer required conscious preparation. The process was slow and often monotonous, but her movements became steadier as she learned to trust what her body had practiced.

One afternoon, after watching her train alone for nearly half an hour, Thorne approached.

“Better.”

It was the first praise Ycre could remember receiving from him.

Though the word was brief, she later regarded it as one of the most meaningful moments of her education. For once, improvement had not come from discovering a new explanation. It had come from repetition.

As her fencing became more instinctive, Ycre noticed an unexpected change in her spellcasting.

Immediately after training, arcane gestures felt smoother. She moved between somatic components with less hesitation, maintained concentration more easily, and recovered her balance more quickly after casting. At first, she assumed these were temporary effects of heightened focus, but the pattern continued to appear.

She began documenting the circumstances in which it occurred.

Over the following months, Ycre altered individual elements of her practice—stance, breathing, footwork, timing, and spell selection—to determine which influenced her casting. Most combinations produced little of interest. Others disrupted both disciplines. A small number, however, allowed sword movement and spellwork to share the same rhythm.

A step taken to evade an attack could position her body for an arcane gesture. A turn of the sword arm could flow naturally into a spell’s somatic component. Casting no longer required her to halt one action before beginning another.

The transition between them became the subject of her research.

Ycre gradually discarded movements that felt forced and preserved those that allowed her to remain balanced, aware, and in motion. She arranged these fragments into increasingly complex sequences, repeating them until swordplay and spellcasting ceased to feel like separate acts.

Her practice began to resemble a carefully choreographed dance more than conventional fencing.

Some students claimed that the air appeared to shift around her as she moved. Others insisted that her blade occasionally carried traces of arcane light. Ycre dismissed such descriptions as poetic embellishment, though she recorded the practical effects with considerable care.

Thorne never attempted to advise her on the magical aspects of the work. He possessed no arcane training and had little interest in theories he could not test himself. Yet he understood the discipline behind what she was doing.

Their lessons changed subtly. He stopped correcting her for departing from established forms when the movement remained controlled and purposeful. Instead, he began testing whether her unusual sequences held together under pressure.

For the first time, Ycre was no longer merely reproducing what Garrick had taught her. She was applying his lessons to something neither of them fully understood.

Dorian Hale remained unconvinced that the research possessed any immediate practical value, but he encouraged her to continue. Understanding, he argued, often became useful long before anyone could predict how.

Essa Maylin shared that assessment. When Ycre reached the end of her seventh year, Maylin offered her the opportunity to remain at the House for another year and pursue the work beyond the ordinary curriculum.

Ycre accepted.

During that final year, she refined the sequences, tested them alongside increasingly demanding spells, and assembled her observations into a coherent body of research. She still regarded the work as an interdisciplinary experiment rather than the recovery of an older magical tradition.

Neither Ycre nor her instructors yet understood that she had begun independently reconstructing the principles of Bladesinging.

After eight years of study, Ycre concluded her education at the House of Confluence at the age of twenty

Departure from the House

Unlike many academies throughout the Heartlands, the House of Confluence held no public graduation ceremony. There were no speeches, assembled families, or formal presentation of titles. Each departing student instead met privately with Essa Maylin for one final conversation.

By tradition, students arrived carrying a contribution for the House Library: a work they believed might one day inspire another student’s curiosity.

Ycre presented a modest bound volume entitled Observations Without Conclusions. Its pages contained architectural sketches, fragments of conversations, studies of movement, unusual patterns, and questions gathered throughout her eight years at the House. Few were accompanied by explanations, and many had been deliberately left unresolved.

Essa turned through several pages before looking up.

“You resisted the temptation to explain.”

To Ycre, it was among the highest compliments she had ever received.

Only then did Essa ask the final question of her education.

“What question will you take with you?”

Ycre’s answer was never recorded.

Before their meeting ended, Essa presented her with a carefully wrapped bundle. Inside was a travelling outfit unlike anything Ycre had expected. Tailored in the deep blue and ivory traditionally associated with the House, it combined the elegance of scholarly attire with the flexibility and protection of finely crafted light armour. Reinforced leather, articulated shoulder guards, and practical travelling features replaced the robes more commonly worn by learned mages.

Ycre studied the unusual gift in silence.

“When you first arrived,” Essa said, “I believed I was educating a scholar.”

After a brief pause, she added:

“Eventually… you convinced us both otherwise.”

Only later did Ycre learn that the outfit had been commissioned several years earlier, after Essa and Garrick Thorne privately discussed the increasingly unusual direction of her studies. Neither had understood precisely what she was developing, but both had recognised that her path would eventually carry her beyond the traditional role of a scholar.

Garrick met her in the courtyard before she left.

He carried a finely balanced arming sword commissioned from a master smith several years earlier. The weapon bore no enchantment or famous history. Its craftsmanship was understated, its balance precise, and its design free of unnecessary ornament.

“I asked a smith to make it years ago,” Garrick said.

“I didn’t know who it was for.”

Ycre drew the blade.

It moved with an ease she had not expected, following the turns of her wrist as though shaped for the sequences she had spent years developing.

Garrick watched her test its balance.

“Now I do.”

No further explanation followed.

Carrying the gifts of the two mentors who had shaped her education in very different ways, Ycre departed the House of Confluence at the age of twenty.

Early Independent Work

Ycre remained in Korint for nearly two years after completing her studies.

Although she no longer belonged to the House as a student, she continued to visit regularly. Her lessons with Garrick gradually became quiet sparring sessions between teacher and former pupil, while conversations with Essa remained as challenging as they had ever been.

Cassian Vellor also continued to take an interest in her progress. Through his recommendations, Ycre began accepting commissions from merchants, guilds, surveyors, and magistrates whose problems resisted conventional expertise.

She approached these assignments without claiming mastery of any single field. Instead, she combined what she knew of languages, history, cartography, architecture, commerce, and arcane theory, consulting specialists when her own knowledge proved insufficient.

The work earned her a modest reputation, but it also produced the first significant failure of her independent career.

A merchant consortium commissioned Ycre to investigate a series of unexplained losses that threatened an important commercial partnership. After several weeks, she identified the source of the irregularities and demonstrated how the goods had disappeared.

Her conclusion was correct.

The partnership collapsed regardless.

Only afterward did Ycre understand that the missing goods had never been the consortium’s greatest problem. Suspicion had been growing between the parties for months, and proving what had happened did little to restore the trust already lost.

When she later described the outcome to Essa, her former mentor listened before replying:

“You answered the question you found.”

Then, after a pause:

“Not the one you were asked.”

Ycre carried the lesson into every commission that followed. Before attempting to solve a problem, she began paying closer attention to who had defined it, why they wanted it resolved, and what they believed a successful outcome would actually look like.

Outside her work, she remained close to Clara Voss. They continued wandering Korint whenever their schedules allowed, though Ycre’s growing professional obligations made those occasions less frequent than before. Clara’s company offered a welcome interruption to the increasingly analytical direction of Ycre’s life, and some of their most useful conversations began with subjects that appeared to have nothing to do with her work.

Aldren and Lethariel watched their daughter gradually establish herself beyond the House but made little attempt to direct her career. They trusted the curiosity that had guided her since childhood, even as it began drawing her beyond the familiar streets of Korint.

By the end of her second year, reports from abroad, correspondence with other scholars, and recommendations from Cassian increasingly pointed towards the western port city of Stjordvik in Sormark.

Ycre had never lived outside Loveria. Leaving Korint meant leaving her family, Clara, and the institution that had shaped most of her life.

It also meant encountering questions she could not find at home.

At the age of twenty-two, she accepted a commission in Stjordvik and departed Loveria for the first time.

Stjordvik

Stjordvik stood on the shores of the Sarodin Sea, its harbour connecting merchants, travellers, and organisations from across the Heartlands. Its scale and international character differed considerably from Korint, and Ycre arrived intending to remain only for the duration of her commission.

Shortly after settling into an inn, she practised a small amount of arcane magic in its courtyard.

The following morning, Warder Heiner Knapp of the Abjura Dolana paid her a courteous visit. Reports of newly arrived spellcasters, he explained, were routinely followed up by the local lodge. He asked whether she possessed a valid licence.

Ycre confidently produced the document she had obtained after leaving the House.

Knapp examined it and informed her that it was valid only within Loveria.

During the ensuing discussion, Dorian Hale learned that a visiting scholar from the House of Confluence required assistance with a licensing inquiry. Recognising Ycre’s name, he joined them and studied the document for a moment.

“You did read the back?”

Ycre had not.

The matter was resolved through a brief administrative review, allowing her to continue her work without further difficulty.

The encounter proved more instructive than embarrassing. Through Dorian and the local lodge, Ycre gained a clearer understanding of the Abjura Dolana’s practical responsibilities. Regulation in a city such as Stjordvik was not concerned solely with restricting magic. It also supported commerce, established accountability, and allowed spellcraft to function safely within one of the busiest ports in the Heartlands.

Ycre still questioned parts of the system, but she no longer regarded regulation as merely an obstacle imposed upon scholarship.

The Stjordvik Trade Mediation

The commission that had brought Ycre to Stjordvik involved an increasingly complex dispute between Hythe Maritime Services, several merchant houses, the Harbour Authority, and the Abjura Dolana.

Every organisation claimed to be pursuing the same objective, yet months of negotiations had produced little progress.

Cassian had learned of the deadlock while corresponding with representatives of Hythe Maritime Services. When asked whether he knew an expert capable of resolving the dispute, he reportedly replied:

“You don’t need another expert.”

“You need someone who understands experts.”

Ycre was therefore invited as an independent scholar rather than as the representative of any organisation.

Her earlier failure in Korint shaped how she approached the assignment. She did not begin by examining the proposed agreements or determining which party possessed the strongest argument. Instead, she met each group separately and asked:

“Before we discuss solutions, what outcome are you hoping to achieve?”

Their answers revealed that the participants had never been attempting to solve the same problem.

The merchant houses wanted predictable conditions for trade. The Harbour Authority prioritised the efficient movement of ships. The Abjura Dolana required accountability wherever magic had been used in commercial transactions. Hythe Maritime Services needed an agreement its clients would consider dependable.

The interests overlapped, but they were not identical.

Ycre reorganised the negotiations around the objectives shared by every participant. Only after establishing that common ground did she address the remaining disagreements individually.

The process produced no single ingenious solution. It simply allowed the parties to understand what each of them had been trying to achieve.

Dorian participated on behalf of the Abjura Dolana and remained responsible for the legal implications of any proposed agreement. He and Ycre frequently approached the discussions from different directions, but their earlier disagreements had taught them how to use those differences productively.

Ycre recognised that uncovering the truth did not necessarily resolve a dispute. Dorian, in turn, accepted that interpreting the law was of little use until the participants had agreed upon the question it was meant to answer.

The mediation eventually concluded successfully.

It attracted little public attention, but quietly established Ycre’s reputation among merchants, scholars, and officials outside Loveria. She was remembered less for providing an extraordinary answer than for recognising why the existing answers had failed.

The Road

After the mediation, Ycre found herself without another commission waiting for her.

For the first time since leaving the House of Confluence, she was free to choose her direction without obligation to a client, institution, or teacher.

She considered returning to Korint. Instead, she remained along the shores of the Sarodin Sea and began travelling between its ports.

Years earlier, during her admission interview, she had told Essa that she did not know what she wished to study because she had not seen enough of the world. Now she finally had the opportunity to address that absence.

The classroom had changed, but her habits had not.

Ycre spoke with navigators, merchants, craftspeople, priests, dockworkers, and travellers. She visited libraries when they were available, wandered through unfamiliar marketplaces, and learned to remain in conversation even when her original questions had already been answered.

Her latest notebook gradually filled with routes, local customs, unfamiliar practices, and accounts offered by people whose experiences differed sharply from her own. Some entries contradicted one another. Others made sense only after she reached another town and heard the same subject described from a different direction.

Whenever possible, she travelled with merchant caravans or aboard coastal vessels. On several occasions, those caravans were escorted by members of the Companions of Elric.

Their expertise fascinated her.

They noticed approaching weather in the movement of clouds, recognised worn tracks at the edge of a road, and detected danger in silences Ycre might otherwise have ignored. Their knowledge had not been arranged into academic disciplines, but it was no less exacting for that.

Ycre had spent much of her life comparing different ways of interpreting the world. On the road, she began learning something more difficult: how to rely upon knowledge she did not personally possess.

She did not wish to become a mercenary or caravan guard. What interested her was the practical judgement produced by years of experience—an understanding that could rarely be separated from the circumstances in which it had been learned.

Whenever she expected to remain in one place for more than a few weeks, Ycre wrote to Clara and to her parents. Their replies became a constant throughout her travels, reminding her that Korint continued to change in her absence.

As the months passed, one city appeared repeatedly in conversations.

Merchants spoke of its opportunities. Scholars praised its exchange of knowledge. Sailors described its importance to trade, while travellers remembered its remarkable diversity.

No single recommendation persuaded Ycre to go there.

She simply recognised the pattern.

In one of her notebooks she wrote:

“Every interesting conversation eventually reaches Avale.”

Beneath it, she added:

“Perhaps I should too.”