The dance no longer moved in perfect circles.
Where once Rheon flowed like breath between elents—wind into fire, lightning into force—now there were monts. Small, silent hesitations. Barely half a second. But in a fight like this, half a second was an eternity.
Sereth moved like a predator that slled blood.
His steps ca tighter, cleaner. Blades close to his body, arms weaving between slashes and stabs like he wasn’t just fighting a man—he was dissecting a technique.
And Rheon was losing ground.
Not all at once. Not in a collapse.
In inches.
A parry ca a beat too late—Sereth’s blade skidded against Rheon’s bracer, then dragged a shallow cut across his shoulder.
The old warrior didn’t cry out.
Didn’t flinch.
But he did bleed.
"Too slow again."
"I adjusted the pivot—why didn’t the pressure hold?"
"Left ankle’s off-center. Flow isn’t syncing..."
His thoughts ca louder now. Clearer. Not because he was panicking—because his instincts were fading, and thinking was replacing what used to be second nature.
And Sereth noticed.
Sereth pressed.
A low thrust. Twist.
A wind-feint that mimicked Rheon’s own rhythm—used against him.
Rheon raised his hand, intending a gust to counter—
But the wind ca too late.
Sereth’s blade sliced through the breeze and nicked his side.
Another shallow cut. Controlled. Intentional.
“The elents are slipping from you.”
Rheon didn’t answer.
Because Sereth was right.
He dropped into a low stance. Gathered air. Compressed fire. Lightning stirred along his spine.
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He struck with all three—a technique from the eastern school of tri-elent pressure, designed to disrupt multiple angles at once.
But as it left his hands—
The fire stuttered.
The wind twisted too late.
The lightning sparked… and died.
Sereth cut straight through it.
He spun, slashed high, then raked a second blade toward Rheon’s thigh.
This ti, Rheon caught it.
Barely.
His forearm braced the strike, muscles tensing with the effort. Sparks flew as steel t flesh t grit.
But his knee buckled.
He dropped back two steps, breath heavy.
And Sereth did not follow.
He paused—just a footstep away—and studied Rheon like a scholar reading the final page of a long story.
“You’re not the storm anymore.”
“You’re the echo.”
Rheon’s shoulders rose. Fell.
The breath he took was not sharp. Not pained.
It was deep. And final.
The air had stilled.
Not with calm.
With reverence.
As if the fight itself was pausing to watch what ca next.
Rheon stood upright. Slowly.
His left hand dropped to his side, fingers twitching—an old reflex trying to recall a technique that no longer answered his call.
His right arm trembled.
Not from fear. From effort. From weight.
Across from him, Sereth didn’t attack.
He tilted his head slightly, one blade angled toward the floor, the other resting along his shoulder.
Sereth talked with a curious tone
“No counter? No clever feint?”
“Is this where the legend dies, then?”
Rheon exhaled.
A long, low breath. Not resignation—acceptance.
Then—he closed his eyes.
And when they opened again, they were no longer focused on Sereth.
They were looking inward.
“The elents falter…”
“But sothing older remains.”
He dropped to one knee.
And placed his palm on the scorched floorboards, right where his own blood had pooled.
And it answered.
A pulse.
Small. Dim.
Then—
The room shook.
Not violently. Not like thunder.
But like a heartbeat beneath the earth.
Red light bled from beneath his hand, crawling across the floor in fine cracks, as if the wood itself was being rewritten by the mory of power.
It wasn’t fla.
It wasn’t lightning.
It was sothing deeper. Denser. Raw.
Sereth tensioned
“...What is that?”
Rheon rose.
Slowly. Every motion etched with pain—but beneath the pain was purpose.
A red glow had begun to emanate from his chest, threading through his veins like molten glass under skin.
Towan felt it in his marrow before he understood—a resonance that made his teeth hum.
Elliot’s whisper was barely audible: "That’s not elental flow…"
Towan’s throat went dry. "That’s life force."
Rheon opened his eyes.
Vital Essentia.
Not energy drawn from flow.
Energy drawn from self.
The kind that burns lifespan in exchange for absolute clarity.
Rheon’s voice beca heavier
“You wanted the legend.”
His foot shifted. A single inch.
The floor groaned beneath the pressure.
Vital Essentia cracked through his skin, each pulse a heartbeat stolen from his future. Rheon exhaled—
"Here I am."
Not a challenge. A confession.
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