Around Caius, the world carried weight now—layers of dark crimson and shadow folding into one another, forming a shifting terrain that moved with him, responded to him, obeyed him like an extension of his own body.
Every step he took left sothing behind, not just a mark, but structure, and every motion reinforced the space he occupied, as if the battlefield itself was being rewritten in his favor with each passing second.
I moved again, not rushing or forcing montum where it would only work against .
The mont my foot ca down, the surface beneath gave a subtle ripple, like stepping onto ground that hadn't fully settled, sothing caught between solid and unstable. It held just enough to support , but there was no certainty in it, no firmness I could rely on without question.
Still, I dashed in.
I tightened my stance as I advanced, keeping my center low and my weight controlled, letting [Battle Instinct] guide the flow of my movent instead of forcing speed where it wasn't needed, allowing each step to transition cleanly into the next as I closed the distance.
This ti, I didn't aim to hit him.
I aid to read him.
To understand how his domain functioned, how it adjusted, how it compensated, and where the limits of that control actually lay, because there had to be one.
I just needed to see it.
I believed I could.
Our blades t again, and the instant steel touched steel, a pulse ran through the space around us, not just a visual distortion but sothing that carried weight, as if the clash itself had aning within his domain. Crimson flared outward from his side in a sharp surge, while the space around dimd further, thinning and losing presence, the contrast between us becoming more pronounced with each exchange.
His aura shifted again—darker this ti, heavier, like pressure settling into place—and the ground beneath him responded imdiately, hardening in visible ridged patterns that anchored his footing and gave him cleaner leverage.
Then he swung.
I didn't try to block.
Instead, I adjusted—just a small step to the side, precise and controlled—and the blade passed where I had been a mont before—
Yet still, a shallow cut opened along my shoulder.
I exhaled slowly, letting the breath leave without tension, not reacting beyond that because there was no point in getting frustrated over sothing I didn't yet understand.
My goal was simple.
Understand what was happening.
Two things ca to mind.
First, at the mont before the strike should have connected, [Fractured Existence] had triggered—I felt it—but the effect wasn't as complete as it should have been, the distortion weaker, like sothing was interfering with its ability to fully displace the attack, and that was what allowed the cut to go through.
Second, the attack itself shouldn't have co that close in the first place. My step had been clean, the angle correct, and by all logic the blade should have missed by a wider margin—
But it didn't.
It was as if sothing had adjusted it mid-motion, not abruptly, not forcefully, but just enough to correct the trajectory and bring it back on course.
So his domain wasn't just overriding outcos…
It was adjusting trajectories in real ti.
Okay.
Caius moved again, and I t him again.
This ti, I slowed myself down even further, stripping away unnecessary speed and letting each movent settle into sothing deliberate, sothing asured, because rushing clearly wasn't giving any answers.
STRIKE!
CLANG!
STEP!
SHIFT!
CUT!
Each exchange flowed into the next without pause, the rhythm tightening as we moved, and with every clash, his aura shifted in subtle but consistent patterns—deep crimson when he defended, darker, almost black-red when he committed to a strike—and each shift pulled a response from the environnt around him.
The space at his feet thickened and solidified, forming a surface he could rely on completely, giving him a clean footing and precise angles with every motion, while mine resisted in quieter ways, never outright stopping but dragging just enough to interfere with my balance, my timing, my transitions.
It wasn't enough to halt .
But it was enough to put behind.
His blade ca again.
I moved again.
And once more, I was cut.
I stepped back, this ti choosing not to attack.
I simply stood there.
Watching.
The white beneath my feet had thinned even further, to the point where it was almost translucent now, as though I were standing on sothing that could give way if too much weight was placed on it. In contrast, the crimson behind Caius had begun to rise, slowly but steadily, forming uneven ridges and slight elevations that shifted the terrain in his favor, giving him a higher position without him needing to claim it.
The battlefield wasn't staying static.
It was evolving.
And with every passing second, it favored him more.
"I didn't take you to be a passive fighter, Eli," Caius said calmly, his eyes narrowing slightly as he noticed the change in my approach.
I didn't respond.
Instead, I rolled my shoulder once, testing the movent as the cuts he had left behind continued to close, black ink threading through the wounds as [Cursed Regeneration] pulled the flesh back together. The process wasn't instant, but it was steady, reliable—and the mont he noticed it, his expression tightened into a faint frown.
If I didn't have this…
This fight would have been a lot harder.
I stared at Caius, studying him more carefully now.
It was clear he could push this further—his control over the domain, the way the space responded to him, the precision behind every strike—none of it suggested he was anywhere near his limit. If anything, he was holding back, and not in a careless way, but with intent.
There was caution in his attacks.
He wasn't trying to kill outright.
And I didn't believe for a second that it was because he wanted to surrender and join his clan.
So what was it?
Was he the type to wear his opponent down slowly, breaking them piece by piece until there was nothing left to resist, or was there a reason he couldn't go all out—sothing about his full power that would expose a flaw, sothing that would give an opening?
User Comments
0 comments from readers