Chapter 366: Children
The girl beside him looked adorable, though her face was caked in grime. Her blond hair tumbled down her shoulders like dried paddy. She looked gaunt and apparently malnourished. Her sickly white hand was holding onto one of the witchers. It was the one with dark gold eyes.
Monti had to say he was the most handsome and charming witcher of them all. If he was the newcomers, he would be willing to get close to Roy too.
Carl grinned toothily and greeted the newcomers. "What\'s your name? How old are you?"
Monti hid in the corner and watched.
"Acamuthorm." The black-haired boy quickly wiped his hands off his shirt before shaking Carl\'s hand.
"You\'re part-elf, aren\'t you?" Carl looked at his slightly pointy ears.
Acamuthorm started trembling. The fact that he was part-elf earned him a lot of beatings in Novigrad.
"Worry not, child. I\'m a part-elf as well." Roy pointed at his ears and promised, "Nobody will look down on you in this household."
The sheepish Acamuthorm squeaked quietly.
"I-I\'m Vicki…" The girl stuck her head out like a nervous squirrel. She had a pair of beautiful purple eyes. "I\'m seven years old." She stared at the boy hiding in the corner.
Monti stood stiffly and stammered, "I-I\'m Monti…"
***
House of Gawain was starting to gain traction. Every two or three days or so, the teachers would take in new kids. Two weeks later, they had twenty kids in the orphanage, and the numbers stagnated. The witchers had stopped searching for new kids, as they wanted to try out some new things with the children. If their teachings worked, they would continue the search.
Most of the kids were boys, and only seven were girls. All of them were homeless kids in Novigrad and the villages around it. Monti recognized a couple of them too. They were the ones who lost in the fight for a spot at the church\'s orphanage.
***
The kids started to get along after a while and let their guard down around one another. Monti eventually realized that everyone\'s classes were different.
When the clock struck six in the morning, all the children would wake up and train. The boys would go for the obstacle course and one-leg-standing practice, while the girls who slept in the other big room with Stacy the cook only had to run around the compound a few times.
***
Breakfast was at seven-thirty, and when the clock struck eight, all the kids would sit in the same classroom and learn how to read and count. Eskel the lecturer loved to pick one kid at random every day to answer the questions he threw out.
And he would also give every student a square wooden board dubbed \'test papers.\' All the test papers had something called \'questions\' written in charcoal pencil. The kids would be tested on their mastery of everything taught so far, and Eskel would mark every student\'s test paper seriously.
Fortunately, there were no punishments for low scorers, but the high-scorers would get a little reward. If they accumulate ten rewards, they could have one little wish granted. Mostly it was something like singing nursery rhymes in front of the kids or having an extra thirty minutes of break every day.
This system instilled excitement and a little anxiety among the kids.
Classes went on until twelve. Lunch and break took up another hour, and then two kinds of classes would begin after that.
When morning training finally got to the swordplay basic stances and post-standing, most of the boys gave up, and Carl called them peasants. On the other hand, he called himself, Monti, and two other boys who kept going on as reserve witcher apprentices.
The reserve apprentices would take classes on monsters and herbs in the afternoon, while the farmers went to do their toil on the farms around the orphanage. The teachers would take them there after nap time every day and show them how to till the soil and dig up little trenches.
The kids would sow seeds of carrots, radishes, spinach, and garlic just like regular farmers would, but they were working at a much slower speed.
The farmers also had to feed the livestock and reap the crops alongside the girls as well.
Aside from the reserve apprentices, all the orphans received a gift—a little chick. They had to raise them into chickens with their own hands.
The children would often run around the yard happily, while their little chicks followed closely.
The kids were free to do whatever they wanted after dinner every day. The girls would play with jump ropes or make crowns out of mint leaves and see who could make the prettiest crown in the shortest time. Most of the time, Vicki would win.
The boys would either arm-wrestle or run around the yard and have a little tussle. None could win against the reserve apprentices though. The difference in speed and reaction was starting to show just after two weeks.
Those weren\'t the only ways the kids could have fun. Sometimes they would get together and play hide-and-seek. Carl would end up winning every time. Monti had a feeling he must have learned some tracking skills from his mentor, since every time he was “it”, he could find everyone in less than half an hour.
Eventually, the kids surrendered whenever Carl was “it”, and they started the next round right away.
The teachers came up with some weird but interesting games as well. They said it was to promote teamwork. The children had never heard of any games that went by the name of \'three-legged race\' or any game that would pick someone at random and make them dance in front of everyone. But the kids all had fun.
Before they went to sleep, everyone would gather in the yard and listen to the teachers\' stories. Every night would be a different teacher telling different stories. Like most boys, Monti liked the stories Roy told the most. He would flip through his notebook and tell the kids fairy tales, though most of them were modified into dark fantasy versions of the ones most people knew.
The girls would close their eyes and ears while screaming their hearts out, while the boys would come to their defense proudly.
***
Every weekend, the kids would have one day off, and they spent it fruitfully. The bald teacher would teach them some woodworking. They had an abundance of wood nearby anyway, and then he would make some little trinkets like windmills or wooden ponies for the kids who wished for it. Or he would make chairs and benches and teach them how to make miniature houses out of wood.
The white-haired teacher would talk about how practice swords were made to the boys who wanted to know and show them some swordplay.
The one who looked like his skin was scorched would lead the children into the woods to forage for herbs and teach them how to dry them up. He would also teach them how to catch beetles and butterflies hiding among the bushes and observe little creatures like rabbits and deers.
Eventually, everyone warmed up to the man with frightening looks but gentle demeanor. They started smiling at him, calling him Mr. Red Eyes.
***
Only those who lost something knew the value of life. The orphans had a dark past that molded them into more mature counterparts of their peers. They were grateful for House of Gawain\'s care, protection, education, food, and joy. And they repaid it by following the rules and never getting into fights with their friends.
But there was an exception to every rule. One little episode happened right after lunch one day. One of the witcher apprentices, Charname, got into a little tussle with one of the farmer kids because of a little argument.
The witchers\' faces fell when the news got to them. There was almost murder in their eyes. A gust of freezing wind howled across the dining room, and the kids fell silent.
Charname and the farmer kid cried from fear. Just when they thought the teachers would beat them up and boot them out of the orphanage, Roy came up with a weird punishment.
That night, Charname and the farmer kid were forced to stand atop a bench in front of everyone and hug like they were long-lost relatives, though they looked like a pair of wriggling catfish when they did that.
Ten minutes later, everyone burst into laughter, including Stacy.
Roy\'s punishment worked, however. Since then, Charname and the farmer kid became great friends, and the other kids felt a little moved.
It was as if something magical was binding the children\'s fates together under the supervision of their witcher teachers. That month felt like a dream for all the children in the orphanage. Monti, Acamuthorm, Vicki, Charname, Lloyd, and many more. If this was a dream, they never wanted to wake up.
This was the most joyous period of their lives. Their teachers were vibrant and distinct. Some were strict, some were nice, some were humorous, while some in particular, had a sailor\'s tongue, but all of them left indelible marks on the children. They were like a family there.
***
A silent night descended, bringing with it a beautiful river of stars, and they shone upon the witchers in the yard. They were standing under the wooden stakes, staring at the sleeping faces of the children in the orphanage.
The brotherhood\'s foundation was a little bit shaky before this, but now they felt confident. In just one month, they managed to find twenty orphans, though only five became reserve apprentices. Still, it was more than any school could manage in the last few decades.
"This isn\'t the right way to train, kid. They need more trials and bloodshed." Serrit frowned. For some reason, only the witchers around him could hear his whisper. "We\'re training witchers here, not royalty. If we keep this up, they\'re going to end up weak. It\'s time to show them what the real world is like. They need to be hunters, not kids living in a secluded orphanage in some woods."
"I smell jealousy, Serrit." Auckes shook his head. "But I have to say they’ve laughed more in a month than we did during our years of training back in Gorthur Gvaed." He sighed. "Why didn\'t our mentor train us like we\'re training the kids?"
Letho blinked. Gorthur Gvaed wasn\'t the best place on this land. Pain and agony were the Vipers\' friends, and joy was just some kind of distant relative who came to visit once in a while.
Lambert cleared his throat. "Our clairvoyant did come up with some special training. Are you sure we can whip them up into passable wichers? Gawain\'s representative came for a few visits, and he looked at you like you were some kind of saint. We spent more than five hundred crowns this month on the children. Not a single orphanage is as generous as we are, though Gawain did sponsor most of the money. And I\'ve watched the kids closely. Their hands shake whenever they\'re laughing. Not good for sword training. If this keeps up, they\'re going to be more vulnerable and weak-willed in the future. Worry and pain are the ingredients for growth, but an excess of fun shreds willpower."
Felix had his arms crossed. He was reminded of his own apprentice and how happy he had been lately, and that was worrying. He wondered if Carl could hold on until the Trial. The agony he has to suffer might make him give up.
"You\'re a fool, Lambert." Geralt shook his head. Unlike his peers, he wasn\'t worried at all. "And since when are you a philosopher? There\'s no rule that apprentices must suffer before they take the Trial. I think Roy\'s right. At least now the kids see this place as home and their friends as family. Family, friendship, and joy are deep bonds. They\'ll help with the pain of the Trial. And I\'ve talked to Dandelion. Oxenfurt Academy\'s child psychology professor told him happy children are strong children. They can take more pain than children who suffer for most of their lives."
Serrit scoffed at that theory. "Joy is poison. Once the Trial hits its peak, they\'ll die."
Kiyan and Eskel said nothing, but they were deep in thought.
"Alright, just listen to me," Roy stopped them and circled the stakes, and then he looked at Serrit. "You guys overlooked one thing. The kids were vagrants before they came here. They\'ve suffered enough. Society has punished them enough, and you suggest we do it again? If nobody gives them love and sympathy when they need it the most, they\'re going to become sociopaths when they grow up."
Roy\'s statement pushed everyone into silence. The witchers joined their schools due to the Law of Surprise, but none of them led a life of suffering like these kids. Vilgefortz, the infamous mage, had a twisted personality thanks to his lonely childhood.
Roy said, "We want comrades who can watch our backs when we need it. They need to feel happy and loved. They need to feel at home with us. With the orphanage. At least for now they have to. Training is a process. We can\'t rush it or inflict more punishment onto the children, lest they become maniacs who’ll end up killing innocents on a whim. And you know the kids are smart, Serrit. They\'re more mature than their peers, which means they have a higher chance of passing the Trial."
***
"Alright, fine. I\'m convinced," Felix blurted. "Don\'t let me down."
"So we\'re going ahead with the same training?" Serrit asked.
"Yes." Everyone nodded.
A moment of silence later, Kiyan asked, "Should we train girls too? Our recipe works on girls as well, but we\'re only training boys at the moment."
"We\'re putting that on hold." Lambert shook his head. "Your school\'s recipe comes with a severe drawback."
"So which recipe should they choose?" Geralt asked. It was an important question.
For obvious reasons, all the witchers were biased toward their own school\'s recipe.
"Third rule of the brotherhood: equality and fairness," Roy said. "We\'ll have to get a mage and have her analyze every factor for the aspirant before we decide on the recipe that suits them most."
Everyone nodded.
"The orphanage is now up and running." Roy took a deep breath. "I should be going to Kerack and convincing Coral to join us."
"I\'ll be traveling to Tretogor tomorrow and waiting for Aiden," Lambert said. "I\'ll try to return with him in a month."
"Kiyan and I will be going to Est Tayiar to find the remaining Cat School diagram and get some mutagens for the Trials," Geralt said.
The remaining witchers would run the orphanage and the search in Novigrad.
"Come back soon." Eskel and Letho grabbed their companions\' shoulders. "Don\'t leave the kids hanging, or they might cry if their favorite teachers go missing."
***
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