[Ti]: Day 39, Wednesday, 07:50 AM
[Location]: Yggdrasil Academy · Lecture Hall 7 · "The Golden Zone"
The lecture hall was a chaotic sea of chatter, floating quills, and flying paper airplanes.
But in the center of the very front row, there was an island of silence.
An invisible "Aesthetic Barrier" had ford, repelling anyone who lacked the confidence—or the mana resistance—to approach.
To the Left:
Surtrina, the Balor Witch.
She sat like a statue carved from obsidian and resentnt—arms crossed tight, skin radiating a dry, constant 45°C, her imdiate personal space a simring furnace.
She stared at the empty blackboard with golden, slit-pupiled eyes. A dormant volcano. Beautiful, majestic, and utterly unapproachable.
To the Right:
Spectra, the Ghost Witch.
She was the entropy sink.
Since installing the [Heartbeat Core], she no longer actively drained life, but she was still a walking refrigerator.
She sat perfectly upright, staring straight ahead. As Hathaway approached, Spectra slowly turned her pale face.
"Good morning, Ludwig," Spectra murmured. Her voice was flat, entirely devoid of inflection, yet paradoxically, it carried a strange, absolute sincerity. "You are radiating an acceptable level of thermal energy today."
In the Middle:
Hathaway.
She nodded at the Ghost and took her seat. She sat stiffly, her heart beating a little fast.
Not from fear. But from Excitent.
To her left, the scent of sulfur and burning cedar. To her right, the scent of cold lilies.
She was the at in the world's most dangerous, and most beautiful, sandwich.
She had fought for this seat. She had risked being beaten and hung from a tower to air-dry by the Balor, or having her caloric energy entirely vacuud by the Ghost, just for this view.
And now, she wanted to cent her status.
Co on, Hathaway. Be cool.
Don't act like a fan. Act like a peer.
Initiate the 'Morning Protocol'. Establish the bond.
"Cola?" Hathaway whispered.
She tried to sound casual. Breezy. Like she did this every day.
She reached into her bag and pulled out a can of [Frost-Bite Cola].
Not like a servant. She held it up in the air, slightly to the left—dangling it like a lure.
It was an invitation. A non-verbal check: Are we cool? Are we a squad yet?
Snap.
Surtrina didn't uncross her arms. She didn't even look down.
But the corner of her black lips twitched upward—a smirk.
She took the bait.
From beneath the desk, a thick, deep crimson-scaled tail whipped up. It moved with the speed and lazy arrogance of a cat's tail.
The spade-shaped tip glowed a soft, cherry-red heat.
Hiss.
With surgical accuracy, the hot tail-tip sliced the tal tab of the can. The heat cauterized the aluminum edge instantly. It was a show of control. A flex.
Yes! The Balor interacts!
We have contact!
But before Surtrina's tail could curl around the can, a blur of pale motion intercepted.
Yoink.
Spectra moved.
Gaze still fixed forward. One pale hand reached across Hathaway and snatched the can right out of the demon's trajectory.
Surtrina's golden eyes snapped open. The magma veins on her neck flared bright orange.
"Dead Girl," she hissed, her voice low and husky. "I opened that."
Hathaway held her breath, her eyes darting between them.
Here it cos. The banter. The chemistry.
Spectra ignored the threat. She brought the can to her pale lips and took a small sip.
Sizzle.
A tiny wisp of white vapor curled from the rim—the Balor's warmth eting the Ghost's absolute zero, head-on.
Three degrees Celsius. Instantly.
Spectra sighed, a breath of cold mist escaping her lips. She placed the now frost-covered can back on the edge of Surtrina's desk.
"I cooled it for you, Lizard," Spectra murmured, her voice flat and unhurried. "You drink it warm? Barbarian."
Surtrina stared at the can—the frost, then Spectra's face. Calm. Pale. Annoyingly pretty.
The fla at the tip of her tail flickered, then dimd.
The logic held. Warm cola was indeed barbaric.
She huffed—a puff of hot air escaping her nose—and picked up the can.
She took a sip.
Perfect.
The carbonation hit her throat with an icy bite that balanced her internal fire.
Surtrina side-eyed Hathaway.
She didn't say "Thank you." Balors don't say thank you.
But she uncurled her tail further, letting it rest heavily against the leg of Hathaway's chair.
The radiant heat increased by 5%. A cozy, enveloping warmth.
Approval.
Hathaway exhaled, sinking back into her chair with a satisfied smile.
Mission Accomplished.
The circuit is complete. Fire, Ice, and the Supplier.
"Nice assist," Hathaway whispered to herself, feeling irrationally proud.
She leaned back and glanced over her shoulder. Directly behind her, Victoria was watching the entire exchange.
The aristocratic freshman's unfocused blue eyes were tracking the invisible currents of magic between the three of them. Hathaway, [Analytic Vision] idling in the background, saw exactly what her roommate was watching: Magma Orange flaring on the left, Void Grey rippling on the right, and her own Deep Red Wine swirling in the middle—three thermal systems held in uneasy, gorgeous balance.
"You are enjoying this too much," Victoria comnted softly, her chin resting on her hand. "You look like a collector who just completed a set."
"Shh," Hathaway whispered back, grinning like an idiot. "Don't ruin the vibe. We are bonding."
"You are feeding the wildlife," Victoria corrected, "but I admit... the thermodynamic efficiency is excellent."
"Speaking of thermodynamic efficiency," Surtrina spoke up, her golden eyes flicking toward the blank blackboard. "The rumor is Nino is going to test us on the Ether Drag deviation trics from Week 4. It's her favorite trick question to separate the tourists from the engineers."
Hathaway's smug smile froze.
Week 4.
Wait.
I wasn't even in this body during Week 4. I was an overworked corporate drone staring at an Excel spreadsheet on Earth.
She had spent the last week desperately cramming the standard curriculum—textbooks, archived lectures, borrowed notes. But the curriculum wasn't the problem. Two months of a professor's habits, shorthand, and offhand remarks scrawled on a blackboard.
That kind of data couldn't be acquired retroactively. You couldn't patch in context you'd never downloaded.
Click.
The heavy brass doors at the front of the hall swung open.
The chatter instantly died.
Nino Lucent walked in.
Grey coat slightly wrinkled. Eyes: baseline hostility, as advertised. In her hand, a thick stack of pristine, terrifying parchnt.
"Books away," Nino commanded, her voice slicing through the room like a scalpel. "Seventy minutes. Introduction to Magitech — Mana Fluidity under High-Pressure Resonance. Begin."
With a flick of her wrist, the stack of parchnt exploded into the air, distributing itself with terrifying precision onto every single desk in the hall.
Hathaway gripped her quill.
Questions 1 through 3 were manageable. Fluid dynamics, standard Tier-2 thresholds, the kind of foundational work that survived even a gap in attendance history. Her quill moved. Her mind noted, in the sa breath, that the materials delivery was scheduled for 10:00 AM at the dormitory front desk—roughly ninety minutes from now. She ran the ROI on re-engraving Greater Mage Armor while writing the next equation. Both calculations completed in approximately the sa ti. Neither one interrupted the other.
To her left, Surtrina's quill was moving so fast her paper was beginning to smoke. Literally. She was searing the answers into the parchnt.
Show-off.
Then she hit Question 4.
[Q4: Calculate the phase shift of a Tier-2 Fireball when subjected to a localized 4000Hz acoustic disruption, applying the ∇(Lucent) coefficient.]
What the hell is a ∇(Lucent) coefficient?
She ran the symbol through her mory banks. Nothing. She cross-referenced the standard curriculum. Nothing. She checked the academy's public archives. Nothing.
Because it wasn't from any public archive. It was a Nino Lucent Exclusive—a custom notation she had undoubtedly defined in so offhand remark during Week 2, while every other student in this room had been quietly copying it into their notebooks as gospel.
This is a legacy chanic with no patch notes, the ga designer in her brain announced flatly. I don't have the docuntation for this expansion.
She couldn't leave it blank.
The surrounding equations were the only map. If ∇(Lucent) was embedded in a thermodynamic frawork, and the output had to resolve to a stable mana construct, then it wasn't an amplification variable—it had to be a containnt term. Sothing that localized pressure. A pressure valve, disguised as notation.
She plugged the theory in. The equation balanced.
Probably right.
The process took twelve excruciating minutes of brute-force logic to deduce what Surtrina had probably answered in twelve seconds. The structure of her derivation was hideous—the mathematical equivalent of duct-taping a Ferrari engine to a unicycle. Functional. Ugly. Utterly devoid of elegance.
But the final number sitting at the bottom of the page?
It should be right, Hathaway thought, wiping a bead of sweat from her forehead. I think.
"Pens down."
Nino's voice cut through the hall exactly seventy minutes later.
Three thousand papers instantly floated off the desks, forming a massive, orderly cyclone of parchnt that zipped directly into Nino's leather satchel.
The Tyrant didn't offer a word of encouragent. She didn't even glance at the front row. She simply turned on her heel and walked out the door.
The heavy brass doors clicked shut.
A collective groan of pure agony echoed through Lecture Hall 7.
The mont the doors opened, the students flooded out like refugees fleeing a disaster zone.
"That acoustic disruption question was a complete trap," Surtrina grumbled as they walked down the sunlit corridor. Her tail flicked irritably behind her. "She hid a secondary harmonic variable in the sub-text. If you didn't compensate for the structural echo, the whole equation collapses."
Spectra drifted alongside them, entirely unbothered. "The answer was a 12-degree negative shift. It was trivial."
"I got 12 degrees," Surtrina said, her golden eyes narrowing slightly as she looked at Hathaway. "What did you get, Ludwig?"
Hathaway didn't miss a beat.
"12 degrees," she replied smoothly.
What I won't ntion, she thought, is that my derivation looked like a toddler finger-painting with calculus. The number is right. The road to that number is best left unexamined by anyone who values their eyesight.
Before Surtrina could press her for the derivation thod, a grey sleeve slid into her peripheral vision. Perfectly tailored.
"If you are quite finished comparing survival notes," Victoria's voice cut in, smooth, polite, and carrying the undeniable weight of an eviction notice for the other two Witches.
Surtrina narrowed her golden eyes at the aristocrat. Spectra rely blinked slowly. Neither of them said a word.
Victoria didn't even look at them. Her blue eyes were fixed entirely on her roommate. "We are leaving, Ludwig. You have a ten o'clock logistics delivery at the dormitory, and I refuse to loiter in the hallway while you socialize."
It was a classic Victoria Wellington maneuver. Polite, flawlessly logical, and entirely non-negotiable. She had simply weaponized Hathaway's own itinerary to smoothly extract her from the conversation, shutting down the Balor and the Ghost without ever directly addressing them.
Hathaway suppressed a grin. She knew perfectly well Victoria couldn't care less about logistics deliveries or dormitory schedules. But the rescue—or perhaps, the reclamation—was executed so perfectly that she wasn't about to argue.
"I need to head back," Hathaway said, a genuine, eager smile breaking across her face. "I have so extrely important packages to unbox."
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