The afternoon sun hung heavy and golden in the sky, casting long, distorted shadows that stretched like grasping fingers across the deserted training field. In the quiet hour reserved for personal pursuits, the only sounds were the scuff of boots on hard-packed earth and the crackle of nascent energy.
A sphere of roiling orange fla blood in Alira’s palm. "Any idea where Towan is?" she called out, her question punctuated by a sharp forward thrust that sent the fireball streaking toward her sparring partner. "I’ve been waiting all day to test a new technique, and my partner is mysteriously absent."
Sylra’s response was a study in silent efficiency. She didn't retreat. Instead, her arm cut a fluid, almost disdainful arc through the air. A scythe of condensed wind shot forth, not to deflect, but to bisect the projectile with a sharp hiss. The fireball unraveled into harmless, shimring tendrils of heat that dissipated on the breeze.
She finally spoke, her focus still locked on their imaginary battlefield, her stance rooted and ready. "No idea," she replied, her voice as cool as the wind she commanded. A faint, knowing smile touched her lips—the kind that suggested she saw several moves ahead in a ga only she was playing. "Haven't seen him since class this morning." Her eyes glinted with amusent. "Knowing him, he's found a more interesting distraction. Or one found him."
The scent of old paper and fresh ink filled the small, sunlit office. Rheon sat amidst a minor avalanche of parchnt, a furrow etched deep in his brow as his quill scratched across another form. Scrolls were piled in teetering stacks, half-finished lesson plans vied for space with administrative reports, and a single, forgotten cup of tea sat cold at the edge of the chaos.
"Who would have thought," he muttered to the silent, paper-strewn room, "that preparing a single sester of content would be such…" His gaze swept over the magnificent ss on his desk with a look of profound weariness. "...a monuntal pain."
A soft, deliberate knock echoed from the door—a sound that was both unfamiliar and expected. Few in the academy knew of this tucked-away office: the headmaster, a select few professors, and one forr charge he'd shared more than a few cups of tea with.
"Co in," Rheon called out, setting his quill down.
The door swung open to reveal Towan, who leaned against the fra with a familiar, easy-going grin. "It's been a while," he said, his eyes taking in the organized chaos of the room before landing on Rheon. "Thought it'd be harder to find you," he admitted, stepping inside and letting the door click shut. "Didn't expect to just find an office with your na right on the door."
Rheon's tired expression lted into a genuine, warm smile. "The obvious hiding place is often the last one people check. Not many can find this office, even with the na."
Towan's grin widened as he made a show of punching his own palm with a soft thump. A spark of understanding lit his eyes. "Wait, did you do the sa thing you did with the dojo? That weird essentia trick about the place not being found unless you're allowed to find it?"
Rheon let out a long, weary sigh that was also filled with a deep, paternal pride. He leaned back in his chair, the old wood creaking in protest. "You've gotten sharper than I rember, kid." He gestured to the lone chair opposite his desk. "So. What brings you here?"
The casual atmosphere in the office evaporated in an instant. Towan leaned forward, his usual relaxed posture gone, replaced by a focused intensity.
"Do you know anything about the Elaren house?" he asked, his voice low and stripped of its usual carelessness.
Rheon went very still. He slowly turned in his chair, his gaze sharp and analytical, searching Towan's face. "Where did you hear that na?" he asked, his tone guarded. He chose his words with deliberate care. "It's an old noble house. One of the great ones. It fell from power... catastrophically... about twenty-five years ago." He offered the barest of facts, a historian's dry summary that deliberately avoided the blood and tragedy soaked into its history.
"You see... I went to this ball last year..." Towan began, eager to connect the dots.
"Yeah," Rheon interrupted, his voice regaining so of its steadiness. "The one where you saved Lockeheart's governor and his daughter from an assassination attempt, right?" He recited the information Rellie had given him, using the known event as an anchor in the suddenly shifting conversation.
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Towan's eyes widened a fraction, surprised Rheon knew the details. "Yeah, exactly. Well, you see..." He took a breath, the mory clear. "I used this formal suit that Herb had tucked away with your old things, and..."
Rheon watched him, his expression unreadable but utterly focused.
Towan paused, the significance of the next words hanging in the air between them. He looked Rheon directly in the eyes.
"Governor Verestra told it belonged to the Elaren house. He said the suit was woven with their essence—that it would only react to the blood of that lineage." Towan's voice was steady, final. "And it... reacted... with ."
The effect was instantaneous. All the color seed to drain from Rheon's face. His mouth fell open, but no sound ca out. His carefully maintained composure, the mask of the knowledgeable professor, shattered into pure, unadulterated shock. He had braced for many questions from Towan, but this was a revelation that struck at the very foundation of the boy's identity, and it was one he was utterly unprepared for.
The silence in the office was thick enough to taste. Rheon leaned back in his chair, the wood groaning softly as he stared at a point sowhere beyond Towan, his mind racing through decades of mory and consequence.
"Okay…" he finally replied, the word slow and asured, as if he were testing the weight of each syllable. He let out a long, slow breath, not of shock anymore, but of dawning, inevitable understanding. "That's… surprisingly fitting."
"How so?" Towan asked, his voice barely above a whisper, caught in the gravity of the mont.
Rheon’s gaze remained distant, looking into the past. "The Elaren bloodline was renowned for one unique trait: a natural affinity for raw, unaltered essentia. They couldn't command fire or shape water. Their gift was purity. Power in its most fundantal, un-elental form." His eyes finally shifted back to Towan, sharp and clear. "It now makes perfect, frustratingly obvious sense why you and Elliot were such prodigies, mastering core power where others relied on elental crutches."
He pushed himself up from the desk and walked to the window, staring out at the academy as if seeing its very foundations in a new light. "The suit you wore," he said, his voice dropping, "was commissioned for Ardentis."
(Ardentis?!) The na detonated in Towan's mind like a silent thunderclap. The leader of the Essentia Warriors. A legend. The only warrior in history said to have achieved Pure Essentia—a power so potent it could scour corruption from the world.
"He was one of the last surviving mbers of the main family," Rheon explained, his tone laced with old, respectful grief. "The suit was a masterwork, woven with their lineage's unique signature. It was designed to recognize and adjust automatically to any bearer who shared that blood." He turned from the window, his expression unreadable for a mont before he delivered the final, personal blow. "It was mine, before it was his."
Towan's mind, already reeling, seized on the connection. The pieces—the blood, the suit, the legacy—slamd together with the force of a physical blow.
"Does that an…" Towan stamred, the world tilting on its axis, "you're an Elaren, too?" His eyes, wide with a desperate, hopeful confusion, locked onto Rheon's. "And… we're family?"
A slow, warm, and profoundly weary smile finally broke through Rheon's solemn mask. It was a smile that carried the weight of a secret finally laid to rest.
"That," he said softly, "is what it looks like."
Rheon didn't look up, his hands moving with a practiced, almost ditative rhythm as he straightened the piles of parchnt on his desk. It was easier to talk about a world-shattering truth while performing a simple, mundane task.
"Ardentis was my older brother," he said, the na falling into the quiet room with the weight of a sacred relic. "In our day, we were called the twin prodigies of the Elaren line." A faint, ghost of a smile touched his lips, there and gone in an instant. "He was the embodint of our bloodline's legacy—the only one in centuries who could truly wield Pure Essentia."
He paused, finally setting a heavy ledger aside. "And I…" he continued, his tone shifting to one of wry self-awareness, "...was the anomaly. Fundantally different from what our lineage expected. Where he commanded the pure source, I excelled with its children." A flicker of fla danced over his knuckles, followed by a wisp of mist, a shard of ice, and a tremor in the stone floor, all in a seamless, silent display. "I'm good with the four basic elents."
A slow, understanding grin spread across Towan's face. The pieces of the legend finally clicked into a coherent picture. "Huh," he let out, the sound full of revelation. "Explains why you were the youngest Essentia Warrior in history. You weren't just one thing; you were a master of all of them."
Rheon let out a soft, genuine laugh, the sound rich with the echo of old comrades and shared battles. The mory was a bittersweet warmth in his chest. But just as quickly, the practical scholar in him resurfaced. "I still don't know how exactly you're an Elaren, though," he admitted, his brow furrowing slightly. "I was thought to be the last. I don't know of any other relatives who are alive, or who would know the truth of your parentage."
Towan absorbed this, the initial shock giving way to a solid, unwavering resolve. He gave a single, firm nod. "I'm gonna tell Elliot," he declared. It wasn't a question. It was the first step in claiming this new, bewildering identity.
He turned and left without another word, the door clicking shut softly behind him.
Rheon was left in the sudden silence of his office, the ghost of his brother and the living presence of his newfound... nephew?... hanging in the air.
"Sure thing," he murmured to the empty room, the words a quiet blessing for the storm of questions he had just unleashed.
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