Chapter 139: Chapter 138: Third Bridge Counterattack
Dawn had not yet fully broken over the mountains when the world seed to hold its breath.
It was not the kind of silence that suggested peace, nor the kind that invited rest. Instead, it carried a tension so fine and stretched that even the wind seed hesitant to move too quickly, as though afraid of snapping sothing unseen. The towering ridges that surrounded the narrow pass stood like ancient sentinels, their jagged silhouettes cutting into the pale horizon, while a thin veil of mist drifted lazily between black pine trunks and uneven rock formations, softening edges but hiding intent.
From a distance, the basin that had housed the academy convoy the previous night appeared abandoned.
The fires that had once burned bright had been reduced to dull embers, their faint glow barely visible beneath layers of ash. The ground bore marks of hurried movent—tracks from wheels, imprints of boots, and signs of hastily shifted supplies—but no voices lingered, no guards stood visibly at attention, and no students whispered in anxious clusters.
It looked, to any observer, like a camp that had packed in haste and left without care.
That illusion had been crafted deliberately.
Aether stood within the shadow of a low ridge overlooking the basin, his figure partially obscured by a jutting formation of stone that blended seamlessly with the surrounding terrain. His posture was relaxed in appearance, one hand resting lightly against the rough surface beside him, while the other hung loosely at his side. To anyone glancing his way, he might have appeared as nothing more than a quiet observer, a young man watching the world move past him without involvent.
Yet beneath that stillness, his mind moved with sharp, deliberate clarity.
Every detail had been accounted for.
Every movent asured.
Every possibility weighed.
The prisoner’s confession from the previous night had not rely provided information—it had given direction. The ntion of the Third Bridge, of timing at dawn, of another planned interception, had not triggered haste or fear. Instead, it had clarified the pattern.
They were not dealing with reckless attackers.
They were dealing with individuals who believed themselves in control.
And that belief could be turned against them.
Behind Aether, partially concealed among the trees and rock outcroppings, Instructor Rowan adjusted the straps of his armor with a slow, thodical motion that betrayed more tension than he would have preferred to show. His expression was stern, his gaze scanning the distant structure of the bridge as if attempting to see through the layers of deception that now defined the battlefield.
For a long mont, he said nothing.
Then, finally, he exhaled.
"You’re certain they’ll commit?" Rowan asked, his voice kept deliberately low, though the weight behind it was unmistakable. "After what happened yesterday, after losing two teams already... any reasonable commander would reconsider, or at least delay until better conditions."
Aether did not turn to look at him imdiately. His eyes remained fixed on the distant outline of the bridge, where faint shapes moved like ghosts through the morning haze.
"They will commit," he said at last, his tone calm and even, as though discussing sothing as mundane as the weather. "Not because it is wise, but because they have already invested too much to withdraw."
Rowan frowned slightly, his brow tightening.
"That sounds like a dangerous assumption."
"It would be," Aether replied, finally shifting his gaze toward him, "if it were based on reason."
A faint pause followed, and then he continued, his voice carrying a quiet certainty that left little room for doubt.
"But it is based on pride."
Rowan held his gaze for a mont longer than necessary, searching for sothing—uncertainty, perhaps, or hesitation—but found neither.
Instead, he let out a short, breathless laugh.
"You speak like soone who has spent decades watching people destroy themselves."
"I speak like soone who dislikes repeating the sa mistake twice," Aether said.
The answer was simple.
Too simple.
And yet, for reasons Rowan could not entirely explain, it felt entirely sufficient.
The Third Bridge ca into clearer view as the first faint light of dawn began to spread across the mountains.
It was an old structure, built long before the current generation of architects had refined their techniques, and it bore the marks of ti and weather. Its foundation was carved from thick stone, anchored deep into the opposing cliffs, while its upper structure consisted of reinforced wooden planks, bound together with iron supports that had been repaired and replaced over the years.
Below it, far beneath the narrow crossing, a river roared through the ravine, its waters crashing violently against jagged rocks, sending up a constant mist that dampened the air and filled the space with a low, thunderous hum.
It was not rely a bridge.
It was a choke point.
Only one convoy could cross at a ti.
Only one direction of movent could be maintained without risk.
And if sabotaged correctly, it could beco a trap with no escape.
Which made it perfect.
Not just for ambush.
But for reversal.
At Aether’s signal, movent began.
From the hidden lower trail that curved beneath the ridge, two wagons rolled forward slowly, their wheels creaking convincingly against the uneven stone path. Canvas covers had been drawn tightly over their contents, their silhouettes shaped to mimic seated passengers and stacked supplies. From a distance, they appeared exactly as expected—part of a convoy that had survived an attack and was now continuing cautiously through dangerous terrain.
The illusion was nearly flawless.
What it concealed, however, was far more important than what it showed.
Inside those wagons were not students.
Not supplies.
But reinforced stone blocks, carefully arranged and locked into place with iron braces designed to hold position under sudden stress.
They were bait.
And more than that—
They were anchors.
High above, unseen to the naked eye, observers watched.
Aether could feel them long before he saw them.
The Heaven Eye artifact resting against his chest pulsed faintly, its presence subtle yet undeniable, like a second sense layered beneath his own perception. Threads of intent flickered at the edge of awareness—movents that did not belong to the natural flow of wind or wildlife, but to sothing more deliberate.
Three presences on the western slope.
Two near the lower support beams of the bridge.
Four clustered behind broken stone formations further back, their posture steady, their breathing controlled.
And one—slightly distant, slightly elevated.
Watching.
Commanding.
Aether morized their positions without effort.
Patterns ford instantly in his mind.
Distances.
Angles.
Timing.
Weak points.
Then—
A sound.
A bird call echoed once across the ravine.
Then again.
Not random.
Too precise.
Too controlled.
A signal.
"They’re beginning," Rowan murmured, his voice barely audible.
Aether did not respond verbally.
He did not need to.
His attention had already shifted.
Below, movent erupted.
Hidden saboteurs rushed into position beneath the bridge, blades flashing as they cut through partially weakened support ropes. Small, embedded spirit charges—carefully concealed within the structure—began to glow faintly, their energy building toward detonation.
Above, archers raised their bows in unison, black-feathered arrows nocked and drawn, their aim steady as they tracked the slow movent of the wagons toward the center of the crossing.
They waited.
Timing mattered.
The mont the convoy reached the midpoint, the charges would be triggered, the supports severed, and the entire structure would collapse into the ravine below—along with everything on it.
Clean.
Efficient.
Final.
Aether watched for exactly one second longer.
Then he spoke.
"Now."
The word was quiet.
Almost casual.
But it carried through the hidden positions like a command etched into the air itself.
Everything moved at once.
The wagons, upon reaching the center of the bridge, shifted suddenly—not forward, but outward. Hidden chanisms released, locking the reinforced stone blocks into place with a heavy, grinding sound that echoed across the ravine. Iron braces snapped into position, anchoring the structures against the wooden planks beneath them.
The bridge could no longer collapse cleanly.
At the sa mont, academy guards burst from concealnt on both flanks, their movents sharp and coordinated. Crossbow bolts tore upward toward the ridges, while spears launched toward the saboteurs below.
Shouts shattered the morning silence.
The ambush had been reversed.
For the briefest fraction of ti, the enemy hesitated.
It was not long.
Not even a full second.
But it was enough.
Aether moved.
The Fla Sovereign Pup appeared beside him in a burst of red-gold fire, its small body radiating an intensity that seed far too great for its size. Its eyes burned with focused aggression, its flas rolling low across the ground like a living tide waiting to surge.
Together, they advanced.
Aether’s steps were precise, controlled, his body moving with a fluid efficiency that wasted no motion. He did not rush blindly forward. He chose his path—angles that minimized exposure, routes that forced the enemy into unfavorable positions.
The first saboteur barely had ti to turn.
Aether’s hand rose slightly.
"Condense."
The Pup inhaled sharply, its flas drawing inward, compressing into a single, concentrated point. Then it released.
A narrow beam of searing fire cut through the air like a spear, striking the man in the shoulder with devastating force. The impact hurled him backward, his body slamming against the edge of the bridge before disappearing into the mist below.
Another attacker reacted faster, summoning a blade-type beast that lunged forward with tallic claws extended.
Too slow.
The Pup t it mid-charge, its paw striking with explosive force. Flas erupted on contact, shattering bone and sending the creature crashing sideways into the wooden railing.
Above, the western ridge erupted into chaos as Rowan unleashed his Granite Bear.
The massive creature climbed the slope with terrifying montum, its weight crushing loose stone beneath it as it surged forward like a living avalanche. One archer barely managed to loose an arrow before the Bear reached him—only for the shot to veer wildly off course as the ground beneath him shook violently.
The Bear’s paw ca down.
The man disappeared beneath it.
Another attempted to retreat, only to be seized and thrown from the ridge, his scream cut short by the distance below.
Rowan’s voice rang out, filled with a strange mixture of exhilaration and disbelief.
"I had almost forgotten how much I missed real combat!"
Back on the bridge, the battlefield shifted further.
The Spirit Fairy hovered above the academy forces, its small form glowing with warm, golden light. That light spread outward in soft waves, touching each guard, each fighter, reinforcing them in ways that were subtle but profound.
Wounds that should have slowed movent beca manageable.
Fatigue that should have dulled reaction sharpened instead.
Fear—perhaps most importantly—was pushed aside.
One guard, who had nearly lost his footing near the edge, suddenly steadied himself, his grip tightening just enough to recover. His spear thrust forward instinctively, piercing through the thigh of an advancing attacker.
He blinked in shock.
"That... that wasn’t
alone..."
The Fairy chid softly in response, its presence steady and reassuring.
Elsewhere, confusion spread among the enemy ranks.
The Fallen Succubus had not revealed herself fully, but her influence was unmistakable.
One archer blinked—and suddenly saw the edge of the bridge where there was none, his footing faltering as he hesitated.
Another turned to strike what he believed was an approaching guard—only to find his blade cutting through empty air as his ally stared at him in stunned confusion.
A third loosed an arrow at a target that shifted at the last mont.
The arrow struck his own commander in the leg.
Chaos deepened.
And then—
The commander stepped forward.
He was not easily shaken.
Broad-shouldered, clad in dark armor that bore the faint marks of removed insignia, he moved with the confidence of soone who had survived far more than a single failed ambush. His aura flared, strong and controlled, marking him as a peak-level combatant.
His gaze locked onto Aether instantly.
"Kill the boy!" he commanded, his voice cutting through the chaos with sharp authority.
Three attackers responded at once.
They moved in formation, their approach coordinated, their timing precise. Blades angled from multiple directions, their intent clear—to overwhelm, to restrict movent, to force a mistake.
Aether stepped forward instead of back.
The world seed to slow.
The Spirit Fairy’s light sharpened his perception.
The Succubus’s influence distorted the attackers’ timing by fractions too small to consciously notice.
The Pup’s flas intensified, ready to strike.
The first blade passed within inches of Aether’s shoulder.
He did not block it.
He redirected it—just enough.
His hand caught the attacker’s wrist, twisting slightly, shifting the trajectory of the strike into the path of the second attacker.
Their movents collided.
Balance broke.
In that instant—
"Now."
The Pup spun, its body becoming a streak of fire. Its claw carved through both opponents in a single, sweeping arc, flas exploding outward as they were thrown aside.
The third attacker lunged.
His strike was perfect.
Precise.
Deadly.
And completely wasted.
The Aether he struck dissolved into a ripple of distortion.
An illusion.
Before he could react, a palm struck his chest.
A pulse of compressed fla surged inward.
He dropped instantly.
Then the commander moved.
He did not hesitate.
He did not wait for reinforcents.
He attacked personally.
His saber ca down with heavy force, each strike backed by experience and strength. The blade t fla as the Pup intercepted, sparks and embers scattering across the bridge as wood groaned beneath the impact.
Aether gave ground deliberately.
Not retreating.
asuring.
Testing.
Reading.
The commander pressed forward, his rhythm steady, his attacks disciplined.
"You’re not as invincible as they think," he growled, his voice low with controlled aggression.
Aether’s lips curved slightly.
"You’re not as careful as you believe."
For a fraction of a second, confusion flickered in the man’s eyes.
Then—
His foot shifted.
The rope beneath him—already weakened, already cut earlier—gave way.
His balance faltered.
Just slightly.
But in battle, slightly was enough.
The Pup moved instantly.
A condensed blast of fla erupted at point-blank range, striking the commander squarely in the chest. His armor glowed, then buckled inward under the heat and force.
He was lifted off his feet.
Thrown backward.
Over the edge.
And gone.
Silence followed.
Not complete.
But enough.
The remaining attackers broke.
So fled.
So surrendered.
So were cut down before they could escape.
Within minutes, the battle was over.
The bridge still stood.
Damaged.
Scarred.
But intact.
Rowan approached slowly, his breathing heavy, his gaze fixed on Aether with sothing that had shifted from skepticism to sothing closer to reluctant respect.
"You used them," he said, his voice quieter now, more thoughtful. "Every one of them. You turned their plan into your own."
Aether looked toward the rising sun, its light finally breaking over the peaks and casting long shadows across the ravine.
"Yes."
Rowan let out a long breath.
"You drew them out, revealed their positions, forced their commander into a predictable response... and then eliminated him with his own montum."
"Yes."
There was no pride in the answer.
No arrogance.
Just acknowledgnt.
Rowan shook his head slightly.
"I’m not sure if that makes
feel safer... or more concerned."
Aether’s gaze remained on the horizon.
"Inefficient enemies concern
more."
Far away, in a chamber within the Imperial Palace, a ssenger knelt before Lion Solvaris, his body trembling as he delivered the report.
"The Third Bridge team... has been destroyed. The commander... confird dead."
For a long mont, there was no response.
Then—
The sound of glass shattering echoed sharply as the cup in Lion’s hand broke under the pressure of his grip.
On a distant ridge, two cloaked figures lowered a viewing artifact, their expressions unreadable beneath their hoods.
"...He anticipated layered sabotage," one murmured.
The other remained silent for a mont.
Then spoke.
"Report upward."
"What ssage?"
A pause.
Then, cold and precise—
"Target is becoming uncontrollable."
By the ti the sun had fully risen, the academy convoy crossed the bridge.
This ti, openly.
Without deception.
Students whispered among themselves, their voices filled with awe and disbelief.
Guards stood straighter, their confidence restored.
Rowan no longer questioned every decision.
And at the front of it all, walking with quiet, unhurried steps, Aether moved forward with his hands in his pockets, his expression calm, as though the chaos behind him had been nothing more than a minor inconvenience.
But the mountains had changed.
And so had the hunt.
Because now—
The prey no longer waited to be caught.
It had learned to set traps of its own.
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