The lone figure stood silhouetted against the moonlit sky, his boots balanced precariously on the academy's rooftop ledge. Below him, chaos rippled through the campus - scattered fires painting the courtyard in flickering orange, the distant shouts of rebellion carrying on the wind. His gloved fingers flexed around the railing, the leather creaking in ti with his tightening grip.
Then - a voice like chilled silk cut through the night air.
"You're making quite the ss, huh."
No warning. No footsteps. Just sudden presence where there had been empty space.
Haeren didn't startle. His turn was slow, deliberate, the moonlight catching the faint purple sheen in his eyes as he faced the intruder. The wind whipped at his coat, revealing glimpses of the strange, pulsating markings along his arms.
"If this is what it takes for the Academy to listen..." His voice was calamity given sound, each word weighted with terrible conviction. The markings flared brighter as he spoke, casting eerie shadows across his face.
"Then so be it."
The rebel’s axe was heavier than Alira expected, its chipped edge dragging awkwardly against her back as she jogged down the hallway with the others. She kept her flas banked low—just enough to mimic the torchlight’s glow on her skin, nothing that would betray the unnatural heat.
"—fuckin’ First-Class pricks," she chid in, pitching her voice gruffer. The rebel beside her—a hulking guy with a split lip—grunted in agreent.
"Damn right," he spat, kicking open a classroom door. "Think they’re better’n us just ‘cause they got shiny little badges."
Alira forced a laugh, leaning against the wall as the others fanned out to ransack the room. "Yeah, like this’ll show ‘em." She jerked her chin at the overturned desks, the shattered glass.
The leader—a wiry girl with twin daggers—paused, squinting at her. "Hey. You new? Ain’t seen you before."
Alira shrugged, thumbing the axe’s handle. "Transferred from the east barracks. Haeren’s idea."
A beat. Then—
"Huh." The girl nodded, turning away. "Cool."
Alira exhaled. So far, so good.
Then the big guy frowned. "Wait. Your boots—"
She glanced down. Charred footprints.
Shit.
Alira stood poised in the blood-slick hallway, her entire body wreathed in flickering blue flas that licked up her legs and coiled around her clenched fists. The air shimred with heat around her, distorting the carnage strewn across the corridor.
A quick glance right: Two rebels - one hefting a warhamr still dripping with soone else's blood, the other spinning twin shortswords with practiced ease.
A sharp look left: Three more - an axe-wielder with a broken nose, and two swordsn standing shoulder-to-shoulder, their blades forming a deadly silver X in the dim light.
For five perfect minutes, she'd blended into their ranks, the stolen axe on her back selling the disguise. She'd even joked with them about "those damn First-Class brats" as they ransacked rooms.
Then the axe-wielder had noticed - really noticed - how her flas never burned the straps of her stolen weapon. How her boots left charred footprints no normal fire could make.
The mont stretched - a heartbeat of perfect silence before chaos erupted.
Now the flas burned brighter.
Alira cracked her neck. "Guess the party's starting."
The mories flashed like sparks behind her eyes.
The sting of Sylra’s windblade slicing a hair’s breadth from her throat. The crushing weight of Towan’s fist slamming into her ribs during their first spar. That suffocating feeling of being too weak, too slow, too small.
Not this ti.
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Not anymore.
The axe-wielder—broken nose still crooked from so past brawl—charged first, his weapon carving a brutal horizontal arc toward her ribs. The steel glinted, hungry.
(Here we go.)
Alira dropped low, feeling the blade’s wind ripple through her hair. Her hand shot up, fingers clamping around his wrist like a vice, and—
SNAP.
The rebel’s scream split the air, raw and guttural, as bone gave way. The axe clattered to the ground, but Alira wasn’t done.
Her knee cannoned into his gut, folding him in half. Then—her fist, wreathed in blue fire, slamd into his already shattered nose.
CRACK.
The man hurtled backward, crashing into the wall with a thud that shook dust from the ceiling. He slid down, limp, blood streaking the stone behind him.
Alira straightened.
Her flas burned hotter.
Her gaze turned colder.
A visible shiver raced through the remaining rebels—not from fear of fire, but of the girl who wielded it.
The twin swordsn struck as one—a lethal symphony of flashing steel.
Left blade: A viper’s lunge, aid to pierce her thigh, cripple her movent.
Right blade: A guillotine’s arc, slicing for her neck—clean and rciless.
A textbook pincer attack. Almost beautiful in its coordination.
Almost.
Alira’s Essentia roared to life, blue fire surging down her limbs as she arched backward, her body bending like a drawn bow. The blades passed beneath her—one grazing her boot, the other severing a lock of her hair—as she flipped clean over them.
She landed in a low crouch, fingers already curling into a fist. Then—
BOOM.
Her fla-wreathed knuckles smashed into the stone floor, and a tidal wave of blue fire erupted outward, rippling across the hallway in a searing crescent. The swordsn leapt back, but not fast enough—the inferno licked at their clothes, their skin, forcing them into frantic, stumbling retreat.
(Okay—now—)
Her focus snapped to the next threat.
Too late.
The warhamr rebel was already upon her, his weapon hurtling down in an overhead smash that would’ve shattered her spine.
(Shoot!)
Alira twisted aside, the hamr’s wind buffeting her face as it crashed into the ground, splintering tile. Before he could recover, she dug her fingers into his forearm, her grip scalding through his sleeve.
"Thanks for the montum," she muttered—then yanked him forward, using his own weight to hurl him like a ragdoll into the stumbling swordsn.
Bodies collided. A tangle of limbs and curses.
(Only one left.)
Her gaze lifted.
The leader stood alone, daggers raised.
And Alira smiled.
The leader’s dagger left her fingers like a silver streak—aid straight for Alira’s blind spot.
(Too slow!)
Alira smirked, already pivoting to catch it mid-air—when suddenly—
The blade accelerated.
Her eyes flared wide. Impossible. The dagger doubled its speed, morphing from a throw into a lethal blur.
Instinct scread.
She wrenched her body aside—but not fast enough. The edge raked across her ribs, splitting fabric and skin. Blood welled—a hot, slick line of crimson—before her flas roared to life in defense, lting the steel into molten droplets that hissed against the floor.
(That was dangerous.)
No more playing.
Alira exploded forward, closing the distance in three strides. The leader reacted fast—a high kick snapped toward Alira’s temple, but she blocked with a forearm, the impact shuddering up her bones. A straight punch followed, but the leader weaved back, just out of reach.
Then—their fists collided.
CRACK.
A burst of blue fire engulfed their locked knuckles—but Alira’s flas burned hotter. The leader staggered back, her hand smoking, knuckles blackened and blistered. The stench of seared flesh curled in the air.
Alira stood tall, flas dripping from her fingertips like liquid wrath.
"Give up," she commanded, voice a low ember-growl."You can’t win."
"Bastard!" the leader spat, clutching her burnt arm. "Ambushing us like this! And you dare call yourself First-Class?!"
Alira let out a short, sharp laugh, the sound like embers cracking in a dying fire."Ambush?" She gestured to the unconscious bodies strewn around them. "Co on now. I just took four of you alone—you really think I needed an advantage?"
The leader’s gaze dropped—a flicker of sha, then resignation."Aight…" She exhaled, shoulders slumping. "I’ll give up."
Alira’s smile returned, all teeth and no warmth."That’s what I wanted to hear." Her flas dimd, posture loosening as she turned away—
—Then the snick of steel.
The leader lunged, a hidden dagger flashing toward Alira’s neck.
But she was slower now. Weakened. The strike that once ca like lightning now moved through molasses.
Alira whirled, her hand snapping up to crush the leader’s wrist mid-thrust.
"I warned you."
Her voice was dead cold. No playfulness. No rcy. If there was one thing Alira hated more than evil, it was betrayal.
Blue fire erupted down the leader’s arm, flesh blistering instantly. A scream tore through the hallway—raw, guttural, unbearable.
"I SURRENDER! I SURRENDER!"
Alira released her. The leader collapsed to her knees, cradling her ruined arm, whimpers escaping through clenched teeth.
"Don’t you dare pull any more tricks like that."
With that, Alira turned, scooping up the discarded hamr—her makeshift disguise—and walked away.
Behind her, the sobs of a broken fighter echoed.
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