On one side, Lyris, the embodint of everything he'd studied, now turned against him with chilling efficiency.
On the other, Chloe, no longer an echo but a roaring, unpredictable force.
And between them, a strategist whose perfect plan had just been torn in two.
A wry, almost imperceptible smile touched Elliot's lips. It was worth a shot.
"Hey… Hello…" he began, his tone deceptively light, a blatant misdirection. "Mind if I take my leave?" He already knew the answer, but the question itself was a tool—a half-second distraction to mask his body coiling to spring.
"No."
Chloe's reply was a blunt, verbal period. It was followed instantly by the real answer: a fast and powerful kick that hissed through the air where his head had been.
But Elliot was already moving. He hadn't waited for her reply. The mont the word left his lips, he was dropping into a low duck, the kick passing harmlessly over him. Using the montum, he didn't retreat; he advanced, flowing past Chloe in a blur of motion that put her between him and Lyris.
He spun to face them, his breathing controlled. The geotry of the fight had shifted.
Now he had his back to a wall of bookshelves, a secure flank. More importantly, both his opponents were now stacked on the sa vector, forced to approach from a single direction. He had, for a precious few seconds, turned a two-front war back into a manageable, linear engagent.
"Too bad, I guess," he said, the words almost lost under the sharp CRACK of his boot stomping the floor.
*I love this potato technique.* The whimsical na in his mind was a stark contrast to the effect. The tremor was localized but violent, rattling the towering shelves flanking the narrow corridor. With a groaning protest, a cascade of heavy, leather-bound tos and a cloud of ancient paper erupted from the heights, creating a deafening, impenetrable avalanche between them.
"Hey! Don't run!" Lyris's scream was instantly buried, swallowed whole by the roar of the artificial landslide.
When the commotion passed and the dust settled, the corridor was a wreck.
Only the two of them stood there, amidst the literary rubble.
"He got away," Chloe said, letting out a sigh that was part frustration, part satisfaction. She flexed the hand she'd used to block his liver punch, a faint ache a satisfying trophy. "You were right, Lyris. Hiding my speed and strength made him lower his guard completely." A fierce, proud grin broke through. "Got a good hit on him."
Lyris adjusted her glasses, a slow, calculated nod of approval. "Perfect. I knew his thodology would be his weakness. He'd try to analyze you before committing to a finishing blow." A cold, knowing smile touched her lips. "But bad data... is worse than no data at all."
Rheon, who had silently reactivated the screen projector, stood with his arms crossed as the scene unfolded. The others leaned in, their focus absolute.
"That was a heavy strike," Towan said, a proud, almost paternal smile spreading across his face as he watched Chloe. "Looks like she did take my advice about aiming through the target."
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"You ended up making it harder for your own brother," Alira remarked with a wry shake of her head, the irony not lost on her.
Towan's laugh caught in his throat, fading into a soft, wincing chuckle as the full implication landed. "Oops," he conceded, scratching the back of his head with a mix of pride and chagrin.
Rellie, her eyes fixed on the screen where Elliot was making his escape, saw the deeper pattern. "It wasn't just Chloe," she murmured, her voice analytical. "Looks like Lyris knew Elliot would try to analyze her first. The mont he focused on Chloe, he stepped into the trap. It was a setup from the start."
Sylra gave a single, sharp nod, her expression unsurprised. "I expected as much," she comnted, her tone dry. "Lyris doesn't just know how he fights. She knows how he thinks. They’ve spent a lot of ti together."
Rheon’s eyes stopped on Lyris a second too long.
Elliot retreated deeper into the maze, his mind automatically charting a path to one of the most secluded, dead-end corners his ntal map had cataloged. The silence here was absolute, broken only by the ragged sound of his own breathing.
"Okay… they caught ," he admitted to the oppressive quiet, the words tasting like ash. He clutched his throbbing forearm, the bone still singing a hymn of pain from Chloe's blocked strike. "Damn…" he hissed through gritted teeth, rubbing the tender spot. "That hurt."
The admission of pain was a vulnerability he rarely allowed himself.
Then—
A shadow detached itself from the towering shelves. A figure leaned casually against the bookcase as if she had been waiting there for hours, woven into the very darkness.
"Is Juliet getting aggressive?"
The voice was a mocking, silken purr that seed to slither from the shadows themselves
Elliot spun around, his senses screaming. Sera Vellmont stood frad between two shelves, her posture one of utter, infuriating leisure. He imdiately shifted into a defensive stance, his weight on the balls of his feet, his injured arm held tight to his body. He needed ti—just a few more seconds for the pain to recede and a new plan to form.
"Are you sure attacking by yourself is a good idea?" Elliot asked, his voice tight. It was a bluff, a classic gambit to buy precious seconds while his mind raced through escape vectors and counter-strategies.
Sera's laughter was a soft, mocking chi. "? Fight you?" she replied, her head tilting with a look of utterly fake, wide-eyed confusion. "Why would I dirty my hands? I just need to find the flag, right?" Her eyes rolled in theatrical exasperation. "Co on, Roo. Don't let Juliet win that easily. It's dreadfully boring."
The literary taunt was a deliberate twist of the knife, reducing his calculated combat to a petty squabble. Elliot's eyes narrowed, his focus sharpening. "What do you—"
He blinked.
The space between the shelves was empty. No rustle of cloth, no displaced air. Just the silent, dusty corridor and the echo of her taunt hanging in the air. She was a phantom, and she had already accomplished her goal: she had stolen his mont of recovery and left him with nothing but a fresh layer of paranoia.
"Great," Elliot muttered, the single word devoid of all humor. His expression smoothed into one of dead, chilling seriousness. "I'm starting to get genuinely annoyed with that Roo and Juliet shit."
The playful taunts had worn through his patience, sanding away the last of his analytical detachnt. What remained was sothing colder, sharper.
"I won't hold back anymore."
The declaration, spoken softly to the empty air, was not a boast. It was a promise. A command he gave to himself.
He drew a single, long breath, and as he exhaled, the air around him seed to still and thicken. The faint, ever-present hum of the simulation faded into nothing. He closed his eyes.
*Focus…*
The world didn't just go quiet; it fell into an absolute, anticipatory silence, as if the library itself was holding its breath. All the scattered variables—the pain in his arm, the mocking ghost, the two hunters—were compressed into a single, crystalline point of intent.
He was no longer a strategist reacting to a flawed board. He was the storm that would reset the ga.
The air didn't crackle with power. It grew still. The frantic, burst-like rhythm of Elliot's Thunder Flow vanished. His movents lost all flair, all waste. It was no longer a style; it was a sequence. Each step, each shift of his weight, each minute adjustnt of his hand was the absolute, geotrically perfect response to the stimuli before him.
He was no longer fighting. He was solving.
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