The air in the secluded courtyard grew thick and heavy, humming with a silent, potent energy that made the dust particles dance between them. Rheon and Voidwalker moved in a slow, deliberate circle, two predators sizing up a mirror reflection. Their footsteps were eerily synchronized, their gazes locked in a wordless conversation that scread of past battles and unspoken respect.
(Let’s see what you’ve really got…) Rheon’s thought was a sharp, clear spark in the tense quiet.
Almost before the thought finished, his hand twitched—a minuscule, almost imperceptible gesture.
The earth beneath Voidwalker’s feet didn’t just soften; it liquefied, transforming in an instant into a grasping, sucking quagmire designed to trap and swallow. The strategy was flawless: force the opponent to leap into the air, turning them into a helpless, static target for a follow-up strike only a Master of Elents could deliver.
But Voidwalker didn’t leap.
He walked.
A faint, knowing smile touched his lips—not of arrogance, but of recognition. As his foot descended into the mire, it didn’t sink. It landed with a soft click on a single, fist-sized stone that had remained inexplicably solid and dry amidst the magical swamp.
It was the anchor point. The flaw.
In every elental technique, there is a core—a point from which the essentia surges to shape the world. Rheon, in his mastery, had made his core the epicenter of the effect itself, believing it untouchable. But that tiny, unaltered stone was the one place the transformation hadn't reached, the silent heart of the storm.
It was a flaw so minuscule, so deeply buried in the execution of a perfect technique, that no one had ever seen it. No one but a being who had spent a lifeti dissecting failure in a world that had already ended.
The air itself seed to hold its breath. A brilliant, fierce grin spread across Rheon's face—a look of pure, unadulterated intrigue and enthusiasm. This was no longer a test; it was a conversation between masters, a language spoken in movent and intent. Across from him, a mirroring intensity burned in Voidwalker's silvered eyes. No words were needed. Finally—a worthy opponent was etched into the very space between them.
Then, Rheon flicked his wrist.
It was a motion so casual it was almost dismissive. Yet from it, a whip of hyper-condensed air tore across the courtyard. It moved in absolute silence, a distortion in the light more than a visible thing, its edge honed to a monomolecular sharpness that could indeed sunder stone and steel. It was less a spell and more a fundantal reassignnt of the air's purpose: from emptiness to annihilation.
Voidwalker's eyes narrowed, not in alarm, but in focus. He didn't flinch, didn't duck, didn't conjure a shield. His head tilted—a bare, calculated milliter. It was a movent so slight it was almost imperceptible, the minimal viable adjustnt.
He understood the geotry of mastery. A fighter of Rheon's supre caliber didn't waste energy on wide, sweeping attacks. His strikes were visions of perfection: impossibly precise, unimaginably potent. But that precision ca with a trade-off—a razor-thin margin of error. The window to connect was infinitesimally small, but the force within it was absolute.
Voidwalker didn't evade the attack. He accepted its passage, respecting its power by allowing it to exist exactly as intended—just not where it needed to be.
The air blade grazed his cheek, so close it severed a few stray strands of silver hair without even stirring the rest. It passed harmlessly into the courtyard wall behind him, leaving a clean, hairline fissure in the ancient stone.
And through it all, Voidwalker's gaze never left Rheon's. The ssage was clear: I see your art. I respect it. And I am its perfect counter.
The door to the guest professors' quarters stood slightly ajar. Lytharos gave a perfunctory knock before pushing it open. "Rheon? The headmaster's ready to see—"
The room was empty. Sunlight stread through the window, illuminating dust motes dancing over a small table where two empty teacups sat, still carrying the faint, floral scent of a recently shared conversation.
"Damn it," Lytharos muttered, running a hand through his silver hair. "Where did that restless fool wander off to now?"
Then, he felt it.
It wasn't a sound. It was a pressure, a sudden shift in the very atmosphere of the academy that raised the hairs on his arms. It was the feeling of the air before a cataclysm, the deep, subsonic hum of two imnse powers aligning against one another.
His senses, honed by centuries of adventuring, flared to life. Not one, but two auras, clashing in a secluded part of the grounds. One was a familiar sun—fierce, brilliant, and elental. Rheon.
But the other… the other was an abyss. A cold, absolute silence that seed to consu the very energy around it. A pressure he hadn't felt since the great battles of his youth.
Rheon was fighting.
The thought was imdiately followed by a colder, more startling one: Who in all the hells could possibly match him?
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Nas and faces of legendary figures, retired masters, and hidden monsters flickered through his mind, each dismissed as quickly as they ca.
Then, a mory surfaced—sharp and clear. The first ti he tested Towan. The boy had perford a flawless spinning kick, a move far beyond his years. And in that mont, Lytharos had felt it: a faint, distant echo clinging to the technique. A presence that was ancient, hollow, and utterly alien. He’d dismissed it as a trick of the light, a strange resonance.
It couldn’t be… could it?
While other, more logical possibilities still raced through his thoughts, his gut, his adventurer's instinct, scread that the impossible was the only answer.
Without another mont's hesitation, Lytharos turned from the empty room and moved. He didn't run; he flowed through the hallways like a gust of wind, a silver streak heading unerringly toward the epicenter of the converging storms, his heart pounding with a mixture of dread and irresistible curiosity.
The space between them vanished. Voidwalker didn't blur. He didn't vanish in a burst of fla or a gust of wind. He took three strides—deceptively normal, almost casual steps that sohow devoured the distance between them in the ti it took a heart to beat.
(Let's see... was it like this?)
The thought was a cool, analytical spark in his mind. A mory surfaced: Elliot, just days ago in the training yard, drilling a specific, powerful thrust. The motion had been raw, unrefined, but the potential was there.
Voidwalker's body beca the perfect expression of that potential. His arm snapped into position, tucked tight against his side, his hand closing into a fist that seed to pull the very light from the air around it.
Rheon's eyes widened, not in surprise, but in sheer, stunned recognition. The stance, the energy coiling not as elental force but as pure, concussive potential—it was unmistakable.
"Thunder-Strike," he breathed, the na a whisper of disbelief.
It was Lytharos's invention. A technique that mimicked the very essence of lightning—not by summoning the elent, but by replicating its devastating principle: an instantaneous transfer of overwhelming force.
"No way..." The words escaped him, hollow with awe.
Voidwalker's fist beca a spearhead aid directly for Rheon's core. It was a blow ant not to wound, but to obliterate, to end the conversation in a single, decisive period.
At the very last possible nanosecond, Rheon's arms crossed. A roaring wall of crimson fire erupted between them, not to block, but to blind—a brilliant, disorienting curtain.
In the sa fluid motion, water, cool and shimring, sheathed Rheon's forearms. He didn't et the force head-on. He flowed with it, his hands guiding the terrifying montum of the Thunder-Strike, redirecting it on a harmless tangent past his side.
The technique's full, unchecked power discharged into the courtyard's far wall. There was no explosion of debris, only a terrifyingly clean, precise crunch as a massive section of the ancient stonework simply ceased to exist, vaporized into dust.
Silence returned, heavier than before, broken only by the faint crackle of dying flas and the settling of fine powder.
The air grew still and heavy, the way it does before a hurricane. Rheon took a single, deliberate step back, creating a pocket of space that instantly filled with palpable intent. The easygoing curiosity vanished from his eyes, replaced by the focused calm of a master composer preparing his symphony.
(Let’s get serious…)
The thought was a silent command, and the world itself obeyed.
The Earth was his first instrunt. The very ground beneath their feet trembled, then rippled, the solid stone courtyard transforming into a churning, unstable sea. It wasn't just an attack; it was a fundantal denial of footing. Every step Voidwalker took would be a gamble, every stance inherently flawed.
The Air was his second. The atmosphere around Voidwalker thickened, the pressure spiking exponentially. It was an invisible vise, a crushing weight ant to slow his movents, constrict his breathing, and grind him down. The very space around him beca a prison.
The Water was his third. From the moisture in the air, from the dew on distant leaves, Rheon drew liquid into his fingertips. It coalesced, shimred, and flash-froze into a dozen needle-like icicles, each one honed to a vicious point and hovering with lethal intent. They aid not for center mass, but for the subtle, vital points that would disrupt essentia flow—the throat, the joints, the temples.
The Fire was his crescendo. Rheon brought his hands together, palms eting with a soft clap that seed to be the spark itself. From that point, a serpent of pure, white-hot fla uncoiled into existence. It didn’t roar; it hissed, a sound of unimaginable heat that made the light warp around it. It charged forward, not as a mindless blast, but with a predatory intelligence, its incredible temperature threatening to incinerate anything it touched before physical impact was even made.
In the span of a single breath, Rheon had transford the secluded courtyard into a masterpiece of elental annihilation. Every elent worked in concert, a perfect, inescapable symphony of destruction conducted by the strongest master of this new world.
But Voidwalker stood amidst the cataclysm like a statue in a storm, utterly unmoved. A faint, almost imperceptible smile touched his lips as the ground churned beneath his feet. He didn't fight the movent; he adapted to it, his balance becoming fluid and effortless, each slight shift of his weight perfectly countering the earth's tremor.
(Is he used to fighting in unstable terrain?) Rheon's thought was a spike of alarm. His opponent looked not hindered, but more comfortable, as if the solid ground had been the limitation all along.
The crushing air pressure, ant to pin him in place, simply… stopped. Not with a bang, but with a perfect, equal counter-pressure. Voidwalker’s own essentia surged outward, eting Rheon’s invisible vise with the exact sa imnse strength, creating a sphere of neutral, dead air around him. It was the only way to stop such an attack—a flawless, mathematical execution of counter-force.
Then, Voidwalker extended his hands. In a mirror image of Rheon’s own technique, a dozen needle-like projectiles materialized before him. But these were not made of ice. They were crafted from a cold, calm, and intensely focused blue fire that seed to drink the light from the air around it.
With a flick of his wrist, he sent them flying. They did not aim to pierce Rheon’s icicles; they intersected them with pinpoint accuracy. Where blue fire t frozen water, they did not explode—they neutralized each other in a silent, mutual annihilation, leaving behind nothing but a faint mist.
The great serpent of white-hot fire arrived last, its hiss promising utter consumption. Voidwalker’s hand rose to et it, not with a shield, but with a shaping of his own. The ambient moisture in the air, the residue of the neutralized elents, coalesced into the form of a sleek, diving water hawk in the palm of his hand.
Beast of fire t beast of water.
There was no clash. There was a great, rushing hiss as the two constructs vaporized each other upon contact, filling the courtyard with a thick, obscuring cloud of steam.
As the mist slowly swirled between them, the two legends locked eyes once more. The ssage was clearer than ever: for every note in Rheon’s symphony, Voidwalker had already written the counter-lody.
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