[Ti]: Sumr Break, Day 37 — 10:00 AM
[Location]: The Crown of Ovelia · Grand Masters Main Arena
The Six-Part Island used during the qualifiers had been, in retrospect, an honest piece of financial communication. The Grand Masters stage did not believe in honesty.
Suspended within a transparent sub-spatial containnt field, a colossal floating landmass stretched dozens of kiloters across: not a product of geology, but a miracle forcibly stitched together from eight incompatible terrains by the terrifying industrial will of the Witch Authority. It was divided into eight precise sectors encompassing every combat bio a Witch could reasonably encounter, and several she probably couldn't.
To the absolute north, blizzards howled endlessly across the [Permafrost Tundra]. To the absolute south, heat distortion rippled above the [Crimson Desert] with the aggressive enthusiasm of sothing that wanted you to know it was hot.
The east was swallowed by the canopy of a [Prival Jungle] bleeding into [Toxic Miasma Swamps], while the west was dominated by wind-carved [Badlands] and a treacherous, cloud-piercing expanse of [Jagged Alpine Peaks], casting long shadows over a perfectly still, bottomless [Mirror Lake].
And dead center, the bullseye where all terrains collided at maximum velocity, sat the [Ancient Ruins].
The Witch Authority called it the Central Arena. The competitors called it the at Grinder. The two camps had reached consensus on which na was more accurate.
The combined live attendance and global broadcast audience was being asured in hundreds of millions. The League had been forced to tow several luxury floating islands into the airspace just to accommodate the VIP overflow. The sheer scale of the spectacle was sufficient to push any Witch's adrenaline into a coronary hazard.
Hathaway, however, had brought a thermos.
She was a substitute. Her entire tactical objective was to maintain maximum physical contact with the Royal Rosas bench, cycle through the League's complintary beverage selection, and observe the apex predators dismantle each other from behind a layer of reinforced spell-glass. She had a very clear picture of how this day was supposed to go.
Then Tasia turned around.
The golden-haired twin did not look at Rhode, who was already rolling her shoulders and adjusting her welding goggles. She looked directly at the comfortable, deeply pacified, thermos-holding benchwarr.
"You're up first."
Hathaway's thermos paused halfway to her mouth. "...?"
"Their vanguard will be Aldra Mace," Tasia said. Her tone carried the unhurried, clinical certainty of a coroner delivering a post-mortem. She wasn't consulting notes. She wasn't looking at the lineup board. She spoke the way people speak about things they observed so ti ago and have been waiting to confirm.
Hathaway's ntal database retrieved the file. The tailored midnight-blue suit from yesterday's banquet. The heavy magical rifle leaning against a crate of raw ore at the market. The woman who had spent forty years in the Void and handed out strawberry hard candies for the nerves.
I have to fight the coolest Witch I have ever seen?
How do you know their lineup before the flag drops? Hathaway thought, staring at the serene twin.
Tasia had clearly decided this was not a question that required answering. "Target her right leg. She went dragon hunting the day before yesterday and took a glancing hit from a Legendary Dragon's breath weapon on her thigh.
"Basic mobility is functionally unimpaired. But the malicious draconic mana is still clinging to the wound tissue. It is a rare opening."
She t Hathaway's eyes. "Burn your mana pool. Exhaust her. Erode her operational condition. If you defeat her, consider it a bonus."
The logic assembled itself in Hathaway's developer brain with the clean, ruthless efficiency of a build that had been stress-tested overnight.
Even high-tier resurrection protocols struggled to purge draconic mana contamination.
One more realization landed, considerably colder: Tasia spent the entire catastrophic banquet yesterday conducting a biochanical survey of every competitor in the courtyard. The polycule. The blood feuds. The Conqueror doing social surgery on the High Council. All of it was backdrop. Tasia was in the crowd with a clipboard.
Hathaway looked down the bench.
Rhode had already sat back down, flashing a wide, feral, deeply encouraging grin that communicated walk into the orbital bombardnt, I'll handle what's left with perfect clarity. Bella had locked herself into a chuunibyou pose of absolute trust, her single visible eye bright with theatrical certainty.
Alucard had her arms crossed, administratively unbothered. Nino had not looked up from her datapad.
They had reached complete, effortless consensus: Hathaway was a perfectly qualified consumable attrition unit. She had absolutely no idea where it ca from.
She stood up anyway. The departure gate was already boarding.
Just as she took her first step toward the bridge, the massive holographic roulette wheel above the central do humd to life, randomly selecting the starting deploynt sector for the tournant's opening clash.
[Group D, Match One: Royal Rosas versus Relentless.]
[Selected Terrain: Sector 4 — Permafrost Tundra.]
Hathaway stopped dead in her tracks.
She stared at the glowing blue text hovering above the arena. Her tactical processor imdiately downloaded the environntal modifiers.
Ambient sub-zero temperatures. Deep snow drifts hindering physical mobility. A baseline thermal drain applied to all non-adapted combatants. And a passive, atmospheric amplification to all ice-attribute spellcasting speed and yield.
Hathaway’s eyes went wide.
Praise Ovelia, she thought, an overwhelming surge of genuine gratitude flooding her system. Praise the Conqueror. My causality was entangled with the First Seat, which logically ans my internal RNG seed has been officially blessed by the absolute apex of the universe. I am riding the coattails of a Star's gravity.
She verified the spell chain loaded in her spine, confird the three pre-cached charges in Star Orbit's orbital rings, and walked toward the deploynt zone.
Far across the arena, she watched her opponent step out of the [Relentless] strategy room.
Aldra Mace.
Positive-EV trade, Hathaway noted, moving down the bridge. Burn a wounded starter to drain the opponent's expected opener. The math almost always clears. You built your opening around Rhode. Unfortunately, Tasia read the play before you made it, and now you are spending that asset on .
The acoustic ward swallowed the roar of the crowd the mont she stepped through the threshold, replacing it with the howling, biting wind of the Permafrost Tundra.
The freezing air whipped her silver hair around her face, but her internal mana circuits purred in deep, resonant comfort, drinking in the sub-zero atmosphere.
Hathaway looked across the snowfield at Aldra Mace.
Standing well past the 1.8-ter mark, the veteran possessed the imposing, heavy-duty physique of soone who had spent four decades using her own body as a bulwark against the Void. Broad shoulders. Thick neck. Built with a terrifying structural density her dark combat uniform couldn't hide.
Her hair was buzzed aggressively short, a dark brown bordering on black. Her eyes were deep olive, catching the harsh glare of the ice with the flat, unforgiving gleam of field-worn machined tal—the exact sa unbothered, sleepy indifference she had carried at the market stall.
She stood at her starting mark, her boots sinking slightly into the snow, scanning the substitute with the unhurried, professional thoroughness of an operator recalibrating an engagent plan mid-deploynt.
Different profile than expected, a secondary thought noted, with the detached, technical appreciation of one ga designer studying another's encounter design. Already adjusting her paraters.
The referee, hovering above center on a casting disk, raised her hand. The fireball manifested between her fingers.
She released it.
Gravity refused to take the handoff.
Instead of plumting, the starting signal was instantly buoyed by a sickeningly familiar pale-cyan aura. [Feather Fall].
It hung in the freezing air, descending with the agonizing, floaty deceleration of an object sinking through deep water.
A delayed-start modifier. The exact sa bait.
Last ti, she'd crashed her own circuits in the panic. Fifty-count deficit, handed over for free.
Not today.
She didn't hit the ergency kill-switch. She rode the clutch. She manually throttled her own output, letting the spell model idle at 99.9% capacity—a roaring, highly pressurized engine held perfectly in check behind her gritted teeth.
She tracked the agonizingly slow descent of the sphere, her irises burning, waiting for the exact collision fra.
The fla kissed the permafrost.
The ward shattered.
In the exact microsecond of contact, Hathaway's mind went very quiet and the Ludwig genetics took the initiative without asking permission.
[Cold Justice] activated.
Her irises flared with crystalline energy. She locked her gaze on Aldra Mace. The conceptual rewrite executed: a native background process.
A microscopic flare of mana on Aldra's tactical harness.
Armor-Piercing Round.
The calculation was surgically clean. A zero-risk gamble fired entirely through a pre-loaded temporary enchantnt, betting on the statistical likelihood that an opponent greedy-casting an opening debuff without a guard up could be ended on fra one. If the gamble paid off, Hathaway was dead before [Cold Justice] finished delivering its payload. If it missed, Aldra had lost nothing.
Hathaway was a pseudo-caster. Aldra was using an equipnt trigger. The operational speeds were functionally identical.
But Hathaway had survived Bella's [Echo Casting] training. Her ambient mana perception had been calibrated to catch the residue signatures of spells that no longer existed. An armor-piercing enchantnt activating at three hundred ters was, by comparison, a foghorn.
There was no ti to cast a shield.
She threw her upper body violently to the left.
Fwhip.
The armor-piercing round sheared the freezing air exactly where her sternum had been one fra prior. The vacuum ripped several strands of silver hair from the side of her head.
She blinked at empty air, boots skidding across the packed snow. Did I just physically dodge a spell? With my body? No shield? No ward? I just contorted away from a supersonic kinetic slug using pure reflexes I did not know I possessed?
Her internal monologue had formulated a very enthusiastic follow-up when it was violently preempted.
The [Cold Justice] payload had fully applied, the conceptual rewrite complete: Cold Resistance stripped, [Vulnerable to Cold] active and calculating. White frost blood across Aldra's skin, climbing her tactical harness and crystallizing along individual strands of her hair.
The olive eyes were clear and steady. The Will save had held. And because her casting concentration was intact, her wand was already raised.
[Greater Hold Person].
Hathaway's stomach dropped with the clean, diagnostic precision of a developer reading a fatal error log.
That spell requires a Will save. I left that stat at base.
Her preloaded spell chain sat in the chamber, sequence locked before deploynt: [Wall of Ice] → [Ice Storm] → [Charged Sonic Boom] → [Slow] → [Greater Invisibility] → [Flight Suppression].
The logic was simple enough to print on a card. Aldra had a wounded right leg: therefore her gear would compensate for her greatest weakness with mobility enchantnts, short blinks or directional bursts, enough to maintain a functioning combat footprint.
The essence of a displacent effect is moving from coordinate A to coordinate B within N-dinsional space. The essence of [Wall of Ice] is deleting viable coordinates. Before the glaciers rose, she could appear anywhere within a 360-degree radius. After: a handful of narrow, inescapable corridors.
The first trigger fired.
[Quicken] · [Wall of Ice].
The golden light slamd into her. Her limbs locked.
A glass cannon, firmly bolted to the frozen floor.
Massive, jagged structures erupted from the permafrost in seamless camouflage, carving the Tundra into a frozen labyrinth.
Star Orbit's three orbital rings humd. All three pre-cached charges were the sa spell.
The first ring fired. A localized blizzard detonated. Aldra's displacent enchantnt activated with veteran precision, threading her through the blast along a lateral vector. The ice caught empty air.
The second ring fired. Aldra accelerated through a gap in the corridor wall, the shrapnel tearing at her coat but missing her core completely. Flawless execution. Two misses.
One ring left.
But the ice walls had reduced the coordinate space to a handful of predictable trajectories.
Her injured leg and the deep snow already cut off wide flanking routes. The geotry of her remaining evasion options had converged to a single logical endpoint: the chokepoint at the corridor's edge, the only coordinate that still offered line of sight on the paralyzed target while completing the displacent arc.
The third geotric ring detached from its orbit. It moved to a specific, apparently empty point at the edge of the ice corridor: the exact point where terrain geotry and injury and the physics of displacent forced Aldra to land.
The ring is your hand.
Tasia's voice, delivered with geological patience in a training hall that felt very far away right now.
Hathaway placed her hand precisely where Aldra was about to step, and closed her fist.
Aldra materialized from her displacent. The dark ring was already hovering at her chest.
The full true-damage multiplier of [Vulnerable to Cold], boosted by the ambient Tundra modifiers, calculating against a source that had originated at the target's own coordinates.
In the final fra of the exchange, Aldra didn't flinch away from the detonation. She leaned into it, wand locked on the paralyzed Hathaway, and fired from inside the blast.
Two attacks crossed the void simultaneously.
Aldra's [Finger of Death] struck Hathaway squarely in the chest, a concentrated beam of necrotic annihilation that did not negotiate.
Hathaway's third [Ice Storm] engulfed Aldra Mace at zero range: the coldest thing her mana had ever produced, amplified by a vulnerability she had spent the entire match installing.
The shockwave shattered the remaining ice walls, sending a plu of white powder high into the air.
The arena went still.
Sowhere in the ringing silence between the impact and the darkness, a secondary processing thread finished its running calculation and returned a result with the cold, satisfied precision of a spreadsheet reaching the final row:
Target at critical threshold. Remaining operational capacity: minimal. Cleanup classification: trivial.
Job complete.
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