The sound of bone hitting stone echoed across the training hall. An announcent of his failure that no one present could rationalize or ignore.
Byron’s breath ca in ragged gasps now, his lungs fighting against pressure that wanted to compress them with inexorable force.
His hands remained splayed against the floor, his fingers scraping at the polished stone as though he could sohow find montum against a force that existed at a fundantal level.
’Get up,’ his mind commanded, frantic and desperate. ’You are Rank #1. You have trained your entire life. You have beaten every opponent. You have...’
The pressure intensified fractionally, as though Rhys had simply allowed his presence to beco slightly more apparent.
Byron’s arms gave out entirely.
His body collapsed forward, his hands sliding across the stone as he tried unsuccessfully to catch himself.
His knees buckled further, his entire fra surrendering to the crushing weight that had manifested around him. His breathing beca ragged, almost panting, the sound of soone experiencing genuine physical distress.
’This is temporary,’ the thought ca from sowhere deep in his consciousness, the last refuge of his fractured pride. ’I will recover. I will train harder. I will find a way to...’
But he knew the truth. No amount of training would close this gap. The distance between Rank #1 and whatever Rhys had beco was not a matter of effort or dedication. It was a fundantal difference in the nature of power itself.
A third pure-blood attempted to step forward, a muscular elf with dark red hair and the bearing of soone accustod to being heard. "Rhys, you overstepped. Byron was simply..."
His voice died in his throat.
Not because Rhys had done anything. Not because any force had actively silenced him. But because his body had recognized that speaking in opposition to that presence was a mistake, his consciousness would regret.
The pure-bloods had ford a loose group near the training circle’s far edge, their posture increasingly defensive and rigid. So of them were gripping the handles of practice weapons they had brought to the training hall that morning.
The weapons weren’t drawn. The psychological weight of Rhys’s presence made even that deliberate action seem likely to result in imdiate, catastrophic consequences.
One of the younger pure-bloods with the eager aggression of soone who hadn’t yet learned the value of caution. He took a half-step forward. "We can’t let him just walk out of here like he’s superior to..."
He stopped mid-sentence.
His physiological response indicated a recognition that his conscious mind, influenced by pride, had not yet acknowledged: approaching Rhys was not a demonstration of bravery. Rather, it represented a self-destructive action veiled in the rhetoric of rectitude.
She comprehended the unfolding events. She had witnessed the top-ranked individual, ostensibly at the pinnacle of the Academy’s structure, rendered breathless and disoriented by a montary surge of mana.
And more importantly, she understood what this ant for her father’s plans.
Duke Asher’s strategy for the Dungeon Trial had been built on the assumption that Rhys was an anomalous Rank #3 student whose actual capability was probably sowhere in the Rank #15-20 range.
Talented, but ultimately manageable through careful positioning.
’This is an intellectual response,’ she told herself firmly, attempting to rationalize the heat in her face. ’Nothing more. The recognition of genuine capability in an unexpected location. The acknowledgnt of a variable that had previously been underestimated.’
But her heart was still beating faster than rational analysis would justify.
He gathered his ditation materials, wrapping up his routine, treating the entire confrontation as a minor interruption rather than the complete restructuring of the Academy hierarchy that everyone else was witnessing.
The purebloods watched him move without any of them being able to generate the will to stop him or challenge him further.
Byron attempted to rise one final ti.
This ti, his effort was pathetic. His arms barely trembled as they pressed against the stone. His legs made no attempt to generate lifting force. He remained where he was. On his knees, gasping, completely defeated.
The realization had settled into his consciousness with the weight of absolute truth: he would never defeat Rhys. Not through training. Not through strategy. Not through any thod that existed within the frawork of Academy competition.
The distance between them wasn’t asured in rank or skill. It was asured in a fundantal power differential that rendered all competition aningless.
Byron remained on his knees, his breathing beginning to normalize slightly as Rhys’s active pressure subsided, though the re weight of his presence in the room still made every breath a conscious effort.
’This isn’t finished,’ Byron’s mind insisted, even as his body scread that this was entirely finished, that he had been beaten so thoroughly that the concept of continuing the confrontation was delusion. ’I will find a way to...’
But there was no way. There was no counter. There was no strategy that would allow soone of his capability to stand against sothing operating at Rhys’s level.
The Academy’s Rank #1 had just discovered that rank ant nothing to absolute power.
Rhys exited the training facility with the sa effortless composure he displayed upon his arrival.
The purebloods shifted position slightly, creating space for him to pass without direct contact, as though so instinctive part of their consciousness recognized that proximity to him was sothing to avoid.
He reached the threshold of the training hall and paused for just a fraction of a mont.
His senses extended outward, touching sothing at the periphery of perception. A presence. Sothing that had been observing the entire exchange with focused attention.
Rhys’s awareness found it, traced its outline, recognized it as...
’Interesting. Looks like you have a crush Rhys.’ Sylph snickered as she covered her mouth.
He didn’t turn to acknowledge whoever had been observing him. He continued toward his dormitory, leaving the training hall in a state of absolute psychological chaos.
And around the corner, pressed against the stone wall where she had positioned herself, Sylvia Asher’s composure slowly reasserted itself.
She forced her breathing to normalize. She pressed her palms against her thighs to still the slight tremor that had manifested in her hands.
She rebuilt the walls of rational analysis that protected her from unnecessary emotional response.
But the heat remained in her cheeks.
And the interest that had sparked when she witnessed genuine power didn’t fade away.
Instead, it deepened.
Because Sylvia understood sothing that Byron and the other purebloods would never grasp: real power didn’t need to announce itself.
She understood the essence of true strength, and its surrounding environnt naturally aligned itself in response.
There were not too many individuals with the innate strength Rhys possessed.
After a few minutes, she finally pushed away from the wall. She began walking toward her own dormitory, her mind already at work on the complex task of deciding how to present these revelations to her father without revealing exactly how much this discovery had affected her.
The heat in her cheeks faded as rational analysis reasserted itself. She tweaked her hair as she walked back, thinking about the best option.
Who should she sabotage? Who could she sabotage? Which was more trouble?
But the interest in Rhys. Genuine, unbidden, impossible to rationalize away remained.
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