Ink Turns to Blade
After teaching the sword technique, Leon returned quietly to the training hall of Athyst Summit Division.
The wooden doors slid shut behind him with a soft sound.
Morning light filtered in through the lattice windows, casting long beams across the stone floor. Dust drifted lazily in the air, rising and falling as though even the air was catching its breath after the lesson.
Leon stood still for a mont.
The hall still carried traces of the earlier training—the faint scent of sweat, the lingering tremor of sword qi in the air. His students’ determined faces flashed briefly in his mind. They had improved. Not enough, but enough to take a step forward.
His fingers curled slightly at his side.
Then—
"System."
He didn’t raise his voice. He never needed to.
A familiar chi echoed inside his mind.
[Ding...]
[You have imparted the Athyst Mist Swordsmanship to your student. Critical Hit Return activated.]
A faint pause.
[Activate?]
Leon exhaled through his nose, gaze steady on the far wall. "You’re asking as if I’d ever refuse."
The hall remained silent, unaware of the invisible exchange.
"Activate."
The air seed to tighten, though no one else could sense it. The faintest ripple passed through his ridians, like a string pulled taut inside his chest.
[Ding... Congratulations. 10,000-fold Critical Hit triggered.]
Even Leon’s calm composure cracked at that.
"Ten thousand...?" he muttered under his breath. "You’re generous today."
[Reward obtained: God-Tier Sword Technique — Font Sword Art.]
"Font Sword Art?"
Leon blinked, brows drawing together.
"That na... sounds ordinary."
He tilted his head slightly, almost skeptical. "God-Tier technique, and that’s the title you give it? No ’Heaven-Splitting.’ No ’Immortal Slaughter.’ Not even a ’Divine’ sowhere in there?"
The silence that followed felt deliberate.
[Do you want to learn?]
Leon let out a quiet huff of amusent. "You really don’t waste words, do you?"
He closed his eyes.
"Yes."
The mont he answered, a torrent of golden script flooded his consciousness.
There was no gradual introduction. No gentle unfolding.
It wasn’t simply information.
It was a storm.
Ancient characters ignited across his mind — each stroke sharp, radiant, as though carved by a blade forged from light itself. They didn’t sit still. They moved. They slashed. They rearranged space.
Leon’s breath hitched.
A pulse of pain shot through his temples, but he didn’t resist it.
A single line surfaced first, glowing brighter than the rest.
"Wild winds rise... every tree and bush beco enemies..."
His pupils constricted.
The gentle na shattered instantly.
A terrifying killing intent surged from the scripture. It wasn’t loud. It didn’t roar.
It seeped.
It spread like ink dropped into water — silent, unstoppable.
Leon felt it vividly.
Sothing shifted in the woods. Spears sprouted from broken branches. Blades unfolded where leaves once fluttered. Whispers replaced the gentle sound of moving grass.
A whisper of machines spreads across paper. tal fingers trace silent words.
Leon inhaled sharply.
"So that’s it..."
Quietly he spoke, his tone edged with sothing close to awe.
"The sharpest blades in the world are nothing more than trees and grass."
A shiver ran down his hand when it finally hit him.
Fresh again when rains return, they fade under sumr’s heat.
Unremarkable. Overlooked. Stepped on.
Yet within their cycles lies eternity.
Transcending ti.
Transcending distance.
Becoming slaughter itself.
Cold sweat ford at his temples.
He understood now why the na was so plain.
This was not a sword art that boasted.
It simply existed.
And everything that existed could kill.
The Font Sword Art contained only three moves.
Three.
Leon almost laughed, but the sound never left his throat.
"Only three?" he murmured. "You’re telling this storm is contained in three strokes?"
But as the golden characters settled, he felt the truth of it.
Three.
But each was absolute.
There was no excess. No wasted motion. No ornantal flourish.
Just inevitability.
"First Sword: Bright in Nature."
He murmured it softly.
The words sounded calm. Harmless.
In his mind, he saw grass shimring under warm sunlight. Dew resting gently on leaves. A breeze passing through a quiet field.
Serene.
Almost poetic.
Then the image shifted.
The grass moved.
And in that movent, countless strokes erged — subtle lines overlapping, interweaving, converging—
—until they collapsed into a single dazzling slash.
Not wild.
Not loud.
Precise.
A blade hidden in elegance.
Leon’s lips curved faintly. "Deceptive."
He imagined an opponent lowering their guard, lulled by the softness of the stance.
And then—
Finished.
"Second Sword: Sky Split Strike."
The mont the na ford, his expression hardened.
Leon felt the sky crack in his mind.
Ink scattered wildly across parchnt — violent strokes tearing through order. Structure dissolved. Lines shattered.
This wasn’t gentle.
This wasn’t hidden.
This was defiance.
He saw a blade rising against the heavens themselves, carving a black fracture across the firmant.
Disorder. Violence.
A rebellion against anything that stood above.
Leon’s jaw tightened.
"This one doesn’t conceal itself," he muttered. "It announces war."
The pressure in his nervous system surged instinctively, reacting to the sheer audacity of the move.
This wasn’t a technique.
It was rebellion carved into steel.
"Third Sword..."
His voice lowered unconsciously.
The golden characters shifted again — slower this ti. He felt a weight descend, heavier than the first two combined.
Not sharp.
Not chaotic.
Heavy.
Inevitable.
"Judgntal Strike."
The hall seed colder.
Leon’s breathing slowed.
Unlike the previous two, this move did not display imagery of forests or skies. There were no fields of grass, no cracked heavens.
There was only stillness.
And within that stillness—
A single descending line.
No flourish.
No explosion.
Just the quiet certainty of an ending.
Leon’s heart thudded once against his ribs.
He understood.
The first sword deceives.
The second rebels.
The third decides.
A judgnt passed without argunt.
A sentence carried out without appeal.
He opened his eyes slowly.
Silence fell in his consciousness.
This sword art was different.
It wasn’t flashy.
It wasn’t chaotic.
It was inevitable.
Like the turning of the seasons—
like the silent, endless rhythm of death and rebirth.
It ignored distance. It ignored ti. It ignored disparity in strength.
In extre circumstances, it could exchange life for life.
Even immortals would hesitate before such a blade.
Leon swallowed slowly.
"So, this... is my final card."
If soone forced him to draw the third sword—
That battle would end in blood.
No retreat. No negotiation.
Life and death decided in a single stroke.
A slow grin spread across his face.
"What the hell... this is insane."
Excitent flickered in his purple eyes.
Three god-tier techniques at once.
The third he would never use lightly.
But the first two alone were enough to shake the foundations of the Celestis Academy — even the entire Eastern region.
He had truly struck gold this ti.
-------
The following days returned to quiet.
Wind passed through the bamboo forest of Athyst Summit Division like soft whispers.
Selena trained tirelessly.
The Athyst Mist Sword glided in her hands more fluidly each day. Her movents beca sharper, more refined. Her aura deepened.
Soon—
She stepped into two-star Onyx Realm.
Leon was mildly stunned by her speed.
But after a mont’s thought, it made sense.
Divine Ice Bones.
Ten years of cultivation.
Relentless discipline.
It would be strange if she didn’t advance quickly.
As for Leon—
He secluded himself in the training hall, fully imrsed in the Font Sword Art.
Again and again, he dismantled each movent in his mind.
He deconstructed every stroke, every rhythm.
With the assistance of the Purple Lotus of Great Principal, his comprehension accelerated terrifyingly fast.
Days blurred.
Ink turned into steel.
Steel turned into silence.
Soon—
He reached Greater Mastery.
When he opened his eyes, the world felt lighter.
As if the air itself could be cut.
With the First Mist Immortal Sword and the Font Sword Art—
There were very few in the academy who could match him now.
He could feel it clearly.
And yet—
He forced himself to remain calm.
Strength without restraint was the seed of downfall.
On the seventh morning, mist rolled low over the academy premises.
Leon stepped out early.
Midnight robes flowed behind him. His long black hair brushed against his shoulders as he walked down the mountain path.
His destination—
Erald Crest Division.
The calm before the storm had lasted long enough.
Now...
It was ti to stir the waters.
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