The first spell erupted from Nox's fingertips before the echo of Beth's words had fully faded—a compressed lance of force aid dead center at the boy's chest. Forty-three years of combat experience distilled into a single, perfect opening strike.
Teodorus Nox had killed his first man at seventeen with that exact spell.
The boy shifted three inches left.
Not a dodge. Not a reaction. A preemptive movent that put him exactly where he needed to be before Nox had even finished casting. Like he'd read the attack from Nox's stance, his breathing, the way mana gathered around his fingers.
...Impressive.
Nox's second attack was already forming—muscle mory from the Valdris Campaign, where hesitation ant death. A binding spell from his off-hand while his dominant prepared a concussion blast. The combination had dropped three rebel mages in four heartbeats during the siege of Northaven.
The disruption hit his binding spell before it was halfway ford.
Not at the spell itself—at its heart, the single point where all the energy converged. The binding collapsed like a cut rope, unraveling instantly.
Nox felt the first cold whisper of sothing that might have been concern.
The boy had killed his spell mid-weave. That required an understanding of combat magic that belonged to masters. But there was no ti to process the implications because Adom was already moving, closing distance with fluid steps.
Where did he learn to fight like that?
Nox abandoned subtlety.
Fire lance, gravity slam, blinding flash—three spells in rapid succession, each designed to force a specific response that would open the boy to the fourth attack already building in his core.
The fire lance t a deflection that sent superheated air past Adom's shoulder without wasting energy on absorption. The gravity slam caught nothing but empty space as the boy used the pull to spin into a counter-attack. And the blinding flash struck closed eyes, targeting vision that had already been cut off.
Nox's fourth attack died as he found himself on the defensive.
A force wave, elegantly simple, tid to catch him between offense and defense. His barrier held, but the impact sent him sliding backward across ancient stone.
The courtyard was dead silent. Two hundred faces watching, but Nox couldn't spare the ntal capacity to register their expressions. The boy was already moving again, not giving him ti to reset, to reassess, to fall back on the thodical approach that had served him through four wars and seven magical insurrections.
This wasn't how it was supposed to go.
Nox had been seventeen when he'd first killed with magic. Twenty-three when he'd earned his commission in the Magisterium's Arcane corps. Thirty-one when he'd been promoted to Battlemage First Class after single-handedly breaking the siege of Fort ridian. He'd faced down orcs in the Shadowlands, rogue mages in the Northern Reaches, and an entire coven of blood mages in the tunnels beneath Greywater.
He was Teodorus Nox, the Iron Fist of the Empire, and by every sacred oath, he did not lose duels to fresh-blooded academy pups!
His fifth spell was a crushing field designed to pin the boy in place—a battlefield favorite that had served him well against faster opponents. It should have caught Adom mid-stride, holding him long enough for Nox to dictate the next exchange.
Instead, the field shifted.
Mid-flight. The spell changed its own nature, adapting to work around a counter that hadn't even been weaved yet. The kind of real-ti modification that should have been impossible.
Nox's sixth attempt was raw desperation disguised as tactical flexibility. He flooded the air with chaotic energy, creating interference that should have disrupted whatever enhanced perception the boy was using.
For half a second, it worked.
Then Adom moved through the magical static like it was clear air, his own spells forming with surgical precision despite the chaos. Energy wrapped around Nox's wrist. Sothing aid at his weaving hand. His own power turned against him.
Nox broke free by burning enough mana to level a city block, and barely managed it.
His seventh exchange ca from pure instinct. A spatial tear, brief but devastating, designed to exist in space rather than target matter directly.
Adom stepped around it before it ford.
The cold whisper in Nox's chest beca a roar.
The boy wasn't reacting to his spells. He was anticipating them. Reading not just the physical tells—the shift of weight, the pattern of breathing, the micro-expressions that preceded casting—but sothing deeper. Sothing that let him see attacks before they existed outside of Nox's mind.
His eighth attempt abandoned magic entirely.
Close quarters combat had been Nox's first love, before he'd ever touched a spell. Street fighting in the Lower District, bare-knuckle matches in underground arenas, and later the brutal hand-to-hand training of the Magisterium. His body was a weapon honed by decades of violence, enhanced by magic but grounded in fundantal truths of physics and anatomy.
His first enhanced strike caught Adom in the ribs—a satisfying impact that sent the boy stumbling. His second landed on the shoulder, spinning him around. For three glorious heartbeats, Nox felt like himself again. This was where experience mattered. Where the difference between academy training and real combat would finally show.
Then Adom adapted.
The boy's defensive patterns shifted like water, becoming fluid and predictive. Where before he'd been matching Nox spell for spell, now he was reading the micro-tells that preceded each enhanced strike. The tightening of muscle. The shift in weight that signaled target selection. The barely perceptible change in stance.
Nox's ninth strike never landed.
Neither did his tenth.
By his eleventh, he realized with crystalline, terrifying clarity that sothing fundantal had shifted in the fight's dynamic.
He was no longer trying to win.
He was... he was trying to survive.
Sweat ran down his spine despite the cool air. His breathing was elevated, not from exertion but from sothing approaching panic. When had that happened? When had the confident veteran been replaced by a man fighting for his life against a nineteen-year-old academy graduate?
His twelfth attempt was the most dangerous spell in his arsenal—a cascading explosion that drew everything his mana core could provide, trading years for raw destructive potential. The kind of magic that experienced battle mages only used when facing certain death.
The duel didn’t warrant such savagery. But his father’s lesson burned in him still: better to die than to be shad.
The boy's counter was already in motion before the first movents of the spell left Nox's fingers.
A precise disruption, aid not at the spell but at his concentration. The cascade collapsed catastrophically, and the backlash sent agony racing through his body. Nox dropped to one knee, tasting blood, his vision blurring.
Through the haze of pain, he saw Adom standing over him.
The boy's expression was perfectly calm. No triumph, no satisfaction, no emotion at all.
One hand rose, fingers positioned for a killing strike.
And in that mont, Teodorus Nox—veteran of four wars, slayer of demons, the man they called the Iron Fist of the Empire—felt the cold certainty of his own death.
When... when did things go wrong? He couldn't find it.
The only feeling, at that mont, was shock.
This book was originally published on . Check it out there for the real experience.
He'd never been outclassed. Not once. Outmaneuvered, sotis. Overwheld by numbers, certainly. But never made to feel small.
Never made to feel stupid.
The boy's hand descended and Nox's mind went blank with terror. Not the clean fear of battle—he knew that feeling, had made peace with it decades ago. This was different. This was the animal panic of realizing he'd walked into an execution thinking it was a sparring match.
When had he beco so blind? The casual suggestion of a duel. The complete lack of preparation. The calm acceptance of terms. He'd read it all wrong, catastrophically wrong, and now—
Ah.
From the start, Nox thought. It was from the start.
The binding spell. Collapsed instantly. Like the boy had known exactly how he'd weave it before Nox had even started the weave.
The thermal lance. Deflected with surgical precision, no wasted energy.
The gravity slam. Turned into advantage.
Every attack. Every defense. Every tactical shift.
All of it anticipated. All of it useless.
Nox had spent four decades learning to read opponents, to judge threats, to never take fights he couldn't win. His survival had depended on that judgnt. His reputation had been built on it.
And he'd been completely, utterly wrong.
The hand was almost at his throat now, and Nox realized that he was about to die because he'd forgotten how to be afraid of the right things.
Then sothing struck Adom from the side—not an attack, but a wall of force that sent him skidding backward across the courtyard stones. He landed in a perfect crouch, instantly alert, already scanning for the new threat.
The silence was absolute.
Even the wind had stopped.
In the center of the dueling circle, Sir Gaius stepped forward, his hand still raised from the intervention spell.
"That will be sufficient," the archmage said quietly.
The courtyard remained frozen in absolute silence.
Nox knelt on the ancient stones, chest heaving, each breath a struggle that burned his throat. Sweat had soaked through his robes despite the cool air, and his hands trembled. They trembled.
Across the circle, Adom was getting to his feet with casual efficiency. He brushed dust from his robes, checked his sleeves for tears, and straightened his collar like he'd simply stumbled during a walk.
The boy looked at him and smiled.
Nox felt sothing cold settle in his stomach. Well, that put things in perspective.
Young Adom hadn't been selected as a magus for nothing. Not politics, not nepotism, not Gaius playing favorites with promising students.
Power.
Raw, terrifying, absolute power.
It was clear now. Clear as day.
Awareness crept back slowly, like blood returning to a numbed limb. Two hundred faces staring down at him. Students who'd watched their professors discuss his legendary reputation. Professors who'd built careers on stories of his battlefield accomplishnts. Academy staff who'd grown up hearing tales of the Iron Fist of the Empire.
All of them had just watched him get systematically dismantled by a nineteen-year-old.
His chest burned with sothing worse than magical exhaustion.
The other magi were silent on their platform, but he could feel their stares like physical weight. Xerion's calculating assessnt. Kyrian's wide-eyed shock. Corvus's amusent. Beth's smile.
They'd all known.
They'd sat there and watched him walk into this humiliation with full knowledge of what was coming.
Nox forced himself to stand.
His legs shook, but they held. His breathing was still labored, but it was coming under control. His robes were disheveled, his hair was a ss, and there was blood on his lip from the backlash of his own failed spell.
He straightened what could be straightened and accepted what couldn't.
"My defeat," he said clearly, his voice carrying across the silent courtyard. "The agreent will be respected."
The words tasted like ash, but they were necessary. A debt was a debt, and Teodorus Nox had never broken his word.
"We have a eting to attend," he continued, glancing toward the platform where Gaius stood. "Now that the archmage is here, we should proceed."
He turned without waiting for a response and began walking toward the academy's exit, his pace steady despite the exhaustion weighing on every step.
Behind him, the silence finally broke.
Voices rose in excited chatter. Students comparing what they'd just witnessed to everything they'd been taught about magical combat. Professors debating the spells they'd observed. Academy staff already composing the stories they'd tell for years to co.
Nox didn't look back.
He didn't acknowledge the other magi as he passed their platform. He didn't respond to the scattered calls from colleagues who might have offered congratulations or condolences. He didn't stop when soone—probably one of the younger professors—started to approach with what was undoubtedly going to be an awkward attempt at conversation.
There would be ti later to process what had happened. Ti to analyze where his tactics had failed, where his judgnt had been flawed, where years of experience had proven insufficient.
But not here.
Not in front of an audience that had watched him discover the difference between reputation and reality.
The academy gates couldn't co fast enough.
*****
The grandfather clock in the corner of the chamber had been marking ti with the sa thodical precision since before Adom was born. Maybe since before his grandfather was born. The thing was old enough that it probably rembered when this room had been built.
Tick. Tock. Tick. Tock.
But this ti, the stares felt different.
Adom could still sense them—the sideways glances, the occasional lingering look—but the quality had changed entirely. Where before there had been dismissive assessnt or barely concealed hostility, now there was sothing closer to curiosity.
When Xerion caught his eye across the table, the battle mage didn't imdiately look away with that expression of barely tolerated annoyance. Instead, he offered a small nod that might have been acknowledgnt.
Beth was still tracing her patterns on the table, but now when she glanced up at him, there was sothing almost approving in those unsettling pale eyes.
Even Corvus, who had perfected the art of looking at people like they were particularly uninteresting specins, seed to be paying actual attention when Adom shifted in his chair.
Hah, for all their celebrated intellectual prowess, mages operated on remarkably straightforward principles: demonstrate superior magical violence, receive professional respect.
The academic elite, it turned out, had the social complexity of particularly scholarly schoolyard bullies.
The great doors at the far end of the chamber swung open with their grinding of ancient hinges.
Gaius entered without any explanation for his lateness, moving with that unhurried pace that sohow managed to convey complete authority. He settled into his chair at the head of the table, adjusting his robes, and there was sothing in his slight smile that suggested he was perfectly aware of how the room's dynamic had shifted.
"Now then," the archmage continued, reaching for the stack of docunts that had been waiting for him, "let's proceed with this month's assignnts. I trust everyone has reviewed their previous mission reports?"
A chorus of affirmative murmurs went around the table.
Adom found himself genuinely listening as Gaius began distributing tasks. Xerion was being sent to investigate magical disturbances along the northern border—sothing about unauthorized enchantnts appearing on military equipnt. Beth received a divination request from the Treasury Council, trying to predict the economic impact of new trade agreents.
The assignnts continued around the table with the usual mix of research projects, investigative work, and diplomatic consultations. Nothing particularly exciting, but all of it important to the empire's continued functioning.
When Gaius's attention finally turned to him, Adom straightened slightly.
"Magus Sylla," the archmage said, consulting his notes, "I have a research assignnt that will require considerable travel. Ancient runic systems, specifically those found in pre-imperial settlents beyond our current borders. There have been reports of unusual magical signatures associated with certain archaeological sites, and we need soone with your particular expertise to investigate."
Adom kept his expression neutral. This was his cover. His official reason for leaving the empire and searching for Morgana.
"The tiline?" he asked.
"Flexible, but I'd prefer you depart as soon as possible. Within the week, if you can manage it. These foreign archaeological sites have a tendency to disappear if we wait too long—either claid by local authorities or picked clean by treasure hunters." Gaius set down his papers and fixed Adom with that familiar, asuring look. "This will count as a major research project toward your candidacy advancent. Substantial credit value, assuming you produce useful results."
Around the table, the other magi were listening with interest. Thorne leaned forward slightly, his massive fra creaking in the ornate chair.
"Pre-imperial runes," the elentalist rumbled. "Hadn't realized there were significant sites still unexplored."
"There are always discoveries to be made," Gaius replied smoothly. "Particularly in regions that have been... politically inaccessible until recently."
"Will you be working alone?" Kyrian asked, and there was none of the dismissive undertone that would have colored such a question an hour ago. Just curiosity.
Adom glanced at her, noting the change in her deanor. "I'll assess the situation once I reach the first site. If the scope requires additional expertise, I'll request support."
Draven nodded thoughtfully. "Wise approach. Foreign research can be unpredictable."
The casual acceptance of his judgnt felt strange.
"Any particular regions of focus?" Nox asked.
The question ca without any trace of the hostility that had characterized their previous interactions. If anything, the battle mage sounded genuinely interested in the academic aspects of the assignnt.
"I'll start with the coastal settlents," Adom replied. "Work inland from there depending on what I find."
"Sound thodology," Corvus observed. "Coastal sites tend to have better preservation due to the salt air."
Gaius nodded approvingly. "Excellent. I'll have the travel authorizations and funding prepared by tomorrow. You'll have access to Imperial diplomatic channels if needed, though I suspect most of your work will be in regions where such formalities are less... structured."
The archmage moved on to the final few assignnts.
"That concludes our business for this month," Gaius announced, gathering his papers. "Unless there are urgent matters requiring imdiate attention?"
The silence that followed was comfortable rather than tense.
"Very well. Thank you all for your continued service to the empire. May your endeavors prove fruitful."
Chairs scraped against stone as the magi began to rise. But instead of the usual rapid exodus that characterized the end of these etings, several of them lingered.
"Interesting research opportunity," rlin comnted quietly as he passed Adom's chair. "I'd be curious to hear what you discover about those runic systems."
"I'll include detailed notes in my reports," Adom replied.
Beth paused beside his chair, eyes studying him with that unsettling intensity. "Safe travels," she said simply. "The paths ahead are... complex."
Which could have ant anything, coming from a diviner.
Even Nox offered a brief nod as he made his way toward the exit. "Good hunting, Magus Sylla."
The casual use of his title, spoken without irony or condescension, felt like a small victory.
Within minutes, the chamber had emptied and Adom rose from his chair and made his way toward the exit, already ntally preparing for the journey ahead. He had a week to arrange his affairs, gather supplies, and begin the most important mission of his career.
Ti to find a lost princess and potentially change the course of an empire.
The grandfather clock continued its steady rhythm behind him.
Tick. Tock. Tick. Tock.
User Comments
0 comments from readers