Atticus walked through the gates of the Fire Sanctum, trailing behind Dekai, who was wearing a small smile.
'This place hasn't changed at all,' Atticus thought as he took in his surroundings. Everything was just as he rembered. However, unlike his last visit, there was no grand welco. The students strolled about, going about their business—until they spotted Atticus walking across the sanctum. The uproar was imnse.
"Isn't that…?"
"It's him! What's he doing here?"
Whispers and murmurs spread like wildfire as soon as he was recognized. Though it had taken a few days after he left, there was now no one in the sanctum who didn't know who Atticus was or what he had accomplished.
He hadn't just broken the sanctum's records; he had shattered them. Every student there had been shocked when they heard about his feats.
"I've heard from Master Magnus already. You plan to form your domain?" Dekai asked as they walked.
Atticus nodded. He had thought about this extensively. Among all his elents, the space elent was the only one he had yet to focus on.
While he knew it would be an invaluable addition to his abilities, he ultimately decided to put it on hold.
The space elent was important, but a domain was far more significant.
Considering everything he had learned about the elents, he was confident that advancing his space elent wouldn't be as difficult once he found a suitable place to train—a place brimming with space molecules.
'Unfortunately, our family doesn't have a sanctum for space,' Atticus thought. He had already spoken to Magnus about this and had gotten an answer. The man who built the space elental room at the academy had been Oberon Enigmalnk.
'After this, if I still have ti, I'll focus on the space elent,' he resolved.
"And you chose fire as your first?" Dekai asked, his voice unusually light, as if he needed to hear Atticus confirm it directly.
"Yes. Fire is currently my strongest elent. If anything, I should be able to succeed in forming its domain," Atticus replied.
Dekai turned away without another word, the sound of his walking stick echoing with each step, a small smile tugging at his lips.
Their conversation wasn't muted, and since it took place among master-ranked individuals, everyone heard it.
A 16-year-old was about to attempt the formation of a domain. The news spread like wildfire even before Atticus had made it to the burning stairs of the summits.
The crowd gathering around them grew larger, with many trying to confirm if he was really there.
Soon enough, they reached the burning stairs.
"The rules of the sanctum are absolute. You still have to climb and reach the fifth summit by yourself," Dekai reminded him.
Atticus nodded and stepped forward, his focus sharp. The last ti he'd done this was three months ago, back when he had been a complete novice in the art. Now, he was far from being a novice.
Atticus placed his right foot on the first burning step and then vanished. A trail of fire streaked upwards through the stairs at an incredible speed.
Atticus reached the first summit in a second, bursting upwards and landing silently. The gazes of everyone on the first summit turned towards him, and a smile appeared on the face of the aged instructor who had attended to Atticus during his first visit.
The groups were still separated as they had been before, though it seed more people had joined the summit since he had left.
Atticus approached the group he had been with before.
"You've grown stronger…" the aged instructor remarked, and Atticus simply smiled and nodded.
"Well, you know the drill," the instructor said.
Atticus wasted no ti. As soon as the instructor spoke, his thoughts shifted to the fire molecules around him. The air combusted before swirling and molding into the perfect figure of Magnus, majestic in its entirety.
"Amazing work," the aged man comnted, impressed by how effortlessly Atticus had executed the task.
The new arrivals who had just joined the summit couldn't help but wonder who this teenager was and what was happening.
After nodding to the instructor, Atticus turned and made his way to the second summit. He ascended the stairs with the sa blazing speed, and upon reaching the second summit, he received a warr welco than at the previous summit.
These were the people who had heard Atticus's noble speech, and it was still fresh in their minds.
This ti, Atticus spent minimal ti on the second summit, creating a moving fire construct in a second. Moving up to the third summit, Atticus repeated the process, performing the required art with the construct effortlessly.
Soon enough, Atticus reached the fourth summit and saw the sa five individuals he had practiced with before. The gaze of one of them imdiately darkened.
The last ti he had been here, he had battled Cerron and thoroughly beaten him. It was an experience Cerron would never forget. He had wanted to take revenge for his brother William but had instead been humiliated.
Atticus nodded to Isolde and the others, saying nothing. Fortunately, Dekai hadn't appeared, so Atticus approached a random instructor and challenged him instead.
The fight was different from his previous one with Dekai. The instructor was strong, but Atticus, with his quick thinking, managed to land a decisive hit within minutes.
Afterward, Atticus reached the fifth summit. The burning stairs had the sa conditions to climb, though they were noticeably more scorching.
Soon enough, Atticus arrived at the fifth summit and saw Dekai already waiting at the edge of the sea of fire.
"Do you rember everything I told you before you left the Fire Sanctum?" Dekai asked.
Atticus nodded.
"Good. Then get to it," Dekai responded.
Atticus took a deep breath and stepped into the sea of fire.
Going deep enough, Atticus sat cross-legged on the platform of the fifth summit, surrounded by a vast, flowing river of fire.
The heat was intense, pressing against his skin like a heavy weight, but his expression remained calm. He closed his eyes, and his breathing beca steady and asured as he focused on what he had to do.
The river of fire wasn't just a body of flas; it was filled to the brim with fire molecules. Atticus could feel the fire molecules dancing around him.
He took a deep breath, inhaling the heat, and slowly exhaled, allowing his body to relax further into the flow of the fire.
This was crucial. He wasn't rely sitting in the fire—he needed to be in sync with it if he wanted to form his domain. The connection he had with the fire molecules wasn't enough; he had to deepen it, allowing his body to beco completely in sync with them.
Atticus reached out with his mind, feeling the fire molecules around him. Forming a domain required more than just control—it demanded a relationship.
Soon enough, Atticus noticed sothing and attempted a thod.
His hands rested on his knees, fingers lightly tapping in a slow, rhythmic pattern, trying to sync with the flow of the fire molecules.
The tapping wasn't random; it matched the pulse he felt in the fire, the rhythm at which the molecules resonated. Every tap was an attempt to communicate and connect—to trick the fire into believing he was one of them.
Ti passed, though Atticus wasn't sure how much. He had lost track of ti entirely. It could have been minutes, hours, or days; the fire didn't care about ti.
His breathing remained steady, his chest rising and falling in sync with the flicker of the flas. His body, though still and composed, was covered in a sheen of sweat, the heat working its way through his resistance.
The river of fire was searing.
The real challenge lay deeper. Atticus had to align his emotions with the nature of fire. Fire was wild, unpredictable, yet it could also be controlled and directed.
He needed to find that balance within himself. He searched his feelings, letting go of his usual control, allowing the fire to sense his anger, his passion, and his drive. Atticus replayed the faces of his enemies in his mind, syncing them with the fire's energy.
As his emotions flowed freely, he noticed a change.
The fire molecules around him began to respond, their chaotic movent slowing just slightly, aligning with the rhythm of his heart.
His fingers, which had been tapping instinctively, now rested still on his knees. The physical action was no longer necessary; the connection was starting to form on a deeper, more profound level.
Atticus's mind dove into the fire, not trying to control it, but to understand it, to be in sync with it. He let his thoughts rge with the fire's essence, feeling its intensity, warmth, destructive power, and life-giving light.
The deeper he went, the more he lost himself in the flow, until there was no distinction between where he ended and the fire began.
It was exhausting—more ntally than physically. He felt his consciousness stretching thin, but he held on, refusing to let go.
He knew he was close; the fire was no longer just around him—it was part of him, and he was part of it. The connection was still fragile, like a thread, coming and going, but it was there.
Ti passed, though Atticus didn't keep track. Weeks turned into months until a significant amount of ti had passed.
Then, he felt it—a slight shift, a mont of perfect alignnt. The fire molecules slowed their chaotic dance even further, their rhythm perfectly matching his heartbeat.
Atticus's eyes snapped open, glowing with an inner light. The fire around him responded, swirling closer, not with hostility, but in harmony.
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