The heat was instantaneous. Julian felt the hair on his forearms curl. His signature dish, a delicate scallop crudo that required surgical precision, sat half-finished. But his eyes were on the leather roll.
The air in the Grand Hall of the Caelum Culinary Academy didn’t smell like rosemary or roasting garlic today. It smelled of ozone, melting copper, and the sharp, metallic tang of carbon steel.
The Headmaster approached him, looking not at Julian’s face, but at the charred leather roll clutched to his chest. "The dish is lost," Julian wheezed, his voice raw. Cooking Academy Fire and Knives
A line of aged cognac had breached the lip of a copper pan at the station next to Julian’s. Most students would have panicked, but Julian watched the flame leap. It didn't crawl; it hunted. Within seconds, the decorative silk banners hanging from the vaulted ceiling—relics of the academy’s hundred-year history—caught.
Julian stood at Station 14, his hands hovering over his "Century Set"—thirteen hand-forged knives that had been in his family since the Siege of Paris. They weren't just tools; they were extensions of his nervous system. Around him, the final exam was in its third hour. The "Fire and Knives" trial was legendary. It wasn't just about cooking; it was about mastery over the two elements that could build a career or end a life. It started with a whisper of blue. The heat was instantaneous
When Julian stumbled out into the cool evening air of the courtyard, he was soot-streaked and gasping. His coat was ruined, and his eyebrows were gone.
He dove toward the heat. His fingers found the cold, pebbled leather of the knife roll. The metal was already hot enough to blister. He felt the singe against his palms as he yanked the set toward his chest. But his eyes were on the leather roll
The fire was licking the edge of his workstation. In the chaos, a panicked student tripped, sending a heavy rack of cast-iron skillets crashing down. The exit was a wall of orange. To save himself, he had to move now. To save the knives, he had to reach through the veil of flame.