At the center of it all, Dravok stood completely still, the faint line across his neck bleeding steadily, the crimson stark against the scarred surface of his skin, yet he made no move to wipe it away, as though the sensation itself held his attention more than the wound. His breathing had shifted, not dramatically but enough to reveal that sothing within him had changed, sothing that had not been present before this mont, sothing colder and far more unsettling.
A slow, creeping chill ran along his spine, sharp and undeniable, settling deep within him in a way that refused to be ignored, because for the first ti in a very long ti, he had felt it not as an abstract concept but as a reality that had brushed against him.
Death.
But real and imdiate, close enough that he could still feel the echo of it lingering in his body.
His hand rose slowly, touching the wound at his neck as his fingers ca away stained with blood, and for a brief mont his gaze dropped to it, studying it not with fear but with a quiet acknowledgnt of what it represented. Then he lifted his head again, and when his eyes t Lucas, everything about them had changed completely.
The earlier confidence was gone.
The calm dominance had vanished.
What remained was sothing far colder and far more focused, sothing that carried a weight that pressed against the air itself.
"You," he said slowly, his voice quieter now but far more dangerous than before.
Lucas stood across from him, his body marked with cuts, his breathing heavier, his strength visibly strained, yet his gaze remained steady, unwavering despite everything that had just transpired.
Dravok took a step forward, and the air tightened instantly.
"I underestimated you," he continued, his tone devoid of emotion, carrying only a cold clarity that made his words heavier.
Another step followed, and with it the wind began to stir again, not wildly but with a controlled density that felt far more threatening than before.
"You’re not just reckless," he said, his gaze narrowing as it locked onto Lucas. "You’re unpredictable."
A brief pause followed as the pressure around him continued to rise, the space itself beginning to distort slightly under the force of his presence.
"And that makes you dangerous."
His voice dropped lower, quieter, but far more intense.
"Too dangerous to leave alive."
The wind gathered around him once more, sharper now, more refined, the earlier chaos replaced by sothing far more precise and lethal, as though every fragnt of his power had been drawn inward and focused into a single purpose. There was no longer any trace of hesitation in him, no room for testing or underestimation, because he had already seen what would happen if he allowed even the smallest opening.
He had felt death once.
And he would not allow it to co that close again.
Which ant only one thing.
Lucas had to die.
Lucas steadied himself where he stood, the rising wind pressing against his body like an invisible tide, sharp and unrelenting, yet his focus had already shifted inward, away from the battlefield for just a mont, toward the growing instability within him that he could no longer ignore. The Dragon’s Inferno was no longer a distant threat simring beneath control, it was active now, feeding on every strain he placed on himself, expanding subtly but dangerously through his dantian and ridians, claiming more space with every surge of fire he had forced out earlier.
He could feel it clearly.
The heat was no longer just power.
It was pressure.
A creeping, invasive force that threatened to spiral out of control if he pushed it any further, and Lucas understood the risk better than anyone. If he continued to rely on his fire elent, if he kept forcing it out in large quantities, he would not just exhaust himself, he would lose control entirely, and that would be the end of everything.
Not just the fight.
Everything.
His jaw tightened slightly as he exhaled, forcing the rising heat within him to settle, to remain contained no matter how much it resisted. He could not afford to use it again, not in the way he had before, not while the Inferno was this unstable.
That left him with one option.
Space.
His eyes lifted, locking back onto Dravok as the wind around the Celestial grew sharper, more refined, every movent now carrying a lethal intent that left no room for error.
Lucas shifted his stance.
Then moved.
A distortion flickered around him as he vanished from his position, reappearing a few ters to the side just as a series of wind blades carved through the space he had occupied monts before. The attacks were faster now, more precise, and far more difficult to track, but Lucas no longer attempted to counter them directly.
He adapted.
Every movent beca calculated, every shift through space deliberate, his body no longer relying on bursts of elental force but instead on positioning, timing, and control. He twisted through narrow openings, slipping between attacks with careful precision, his spatial ability bending the battlefield just enough to keep him alive.
Then he struck.
Not with fire.
But with space itself.
A sharp distortion ford in front of him, compact and unstable, the air folding inward as he forced a localized collapse, sending a warped surge toward Dravok. It wasn’t explosive in the traditional sense, nor did it carry the sa overwhelming force as his flas, but it was unpredictable, bending the trajectory of movent and forcing Dravok to react.
The Celestial raised his arm, dispersing it with a controlled burst of wind, his expression unchanged.
Lucas did not stop.
He shifted again, appearing above this ti, his hand cutting downward as a thin spatial tear ford along the path of his strike, slicing through the air with a faint ripple that distorted everything it passed.
Dravok moved.
The wind redirected, deflecting the attack just enough to prevent it from landing cleanly.
Lucas landed, already moving again, his body weaving through another incoming barrage, his focus tightening as he adjusted to the new rhythm of the fight.
But the difference was clear.
His attacks lacked weight.
They disrupted.
They pressured.
But they did not threaten in the sa way his fire had.
And Dravok saw it.
"You’ve slowed down," he said calmly, his voice cutting through the storm as his attacks continued without pause.
Another wave of wind blades surged forward, sharper than before, forcing Lucas to shift twice in rapid succession just to avoid being cut down.
"You’re not using that fire anymore," Dravok continued, his gaze narrowing slightly. "Afraid of sothing?"
Lucas said nothing.
He couldn’t.
Because the truth was already evident in his movents.
He was holding back.
Not by choice.
But by necessity.
He reappeared again, this ti closer, attempting another spatial strike, compressing the air into a focused distortion aid at Dravok’s side, but the Celestial barely needed to move, the wind around him adjusting instantly to deflect the attack.
The gap between them widened again.
Not in distance.
But in impact.
Lucas could still evade.
Still survive.
But his ability to push back had diminished.
And Dravok was not the kind of opponent who would ignore that.
"You’re running out of options," he said quietly, his voice steady as the wind around him intensified once more.
Another barrage ca.
Lucas moved, slipping through space again, narrowly avoiding a blade that cut close enough to draw another thin line across his shoulder, his breathing tightening further as the strain continued to build.
He could feel it now more than ever.
The limitation.
The restriction.
His strongest offensive elent was off the table.
And what remained...Was not sothing he had fully mastered for battle.
Space had always been his shield.
His escape.
His advantage in movent.
Not his weapon.
And now, forced to rely on it alone against a Celestial who had fully committed to ending him, Lucas found himself in a position where survival was still within reach, but victory had grown far more distant.
The battlefield continued to rage around him, wind slicing through the air with deadly precision, space distorting under his control as he struggled to maintain ground, and between the two forces, one thing beca increasingly clear with every passing mont.
Lucas was still standing.
But he was no longer dictating the fight.
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