Chapter 154: Chapter 153: Top 8 Match Draw & First Direct Clash Setup
The fourth morning of the National Championship did not arrive with celebration, nor did it carry the restless excitent that had once filled the city streets during the early days of the tournant. Instead, it ca with a quieter, heavier presence—one that settled over the Imperial City like a held breath that no one dared to release too soon.
The absence of noise was more telling than any roar.
Where rchants had once shouted predictions and children had once argued loudly about their favorite teams, there was now restraint. Conversations still existed, but they were subdued, asured, and thoughtful. Spectators no longer debated possibilities with careless enthusiasm; they discussed probabilities, outcos, and consequences.
Because by this point, the tournant had revealed its true nature.
There were no more easy victories.
No more unexpected upsets driven by luck or inexperience.
No more teams that could be dismissed with a glance.
Only contenders remained.
And each of them had already proven, beyond doubt, that they belonged here.
The Imperial Championship Arena reflected that shift.
Overnight, the battlefield itself had changed.
The once pristine white stone had been reinforced with deeper layers of runic inscriptions, etched so finely into the surface that they seed almost invisible unless viewed from certain angles. When the early light of dawn struck the arena floor, those inscriptions responded faintly, glowing in thin, interconnected lines that ford a vast containnt matrix.
Above, the barrier arrays had been strengthened.
Previously, they had shimred like a distant veil, barely noticeable unless one looked directly at them. Now, they pulsed with quiet power, their presence unmistakable. Waves of protective energy moved across their surface in slow, controlled rhythms, designed to absorb and redirect forces far beyond what earlier matches had produced.
Even the air felt different.
Denser.
Charged.
As though it, too, had been prepared to endure what was coming.
The crowd began filling the arena long before the official proceedings started.
But this ti, they did not co for spectacle.
They ca for certainty.
They wanted answers.
Who would rise?
Who would fall?
And more importantly—
Who would survive what ca next?
Within Skygate Academy’s preparation chamber, the atmosphere mirrored that tension in a quieter, more focused form.
Rowan stood near the central table, arms crossed, his gaze fixed on the projection slate that hovered just above its surface. The display currently showed the eight remaining team sigils, each rotating slowly in place, radiating distinct auras that reflected their identities and strengths.
Valen leaned against the wall, stretching his shoulders in slow, deliberate motions. Unlike the earlier days of the tournant, there was less careless energy in his movents. He was still confident—still eager—but that eagerness had sharpened into sothing more controlled, more deliberate.
Liora stood opposite him, adjusting the fit of her gloves with practiced precision. Her expression remained calm, but there was a heightened awareness in her eyes, a quiet acknowledgnt that the margin for error had now disappeared entirely.
Aether stood slightly apart from them, his gaze directed toward the projection, though his focus seed deeper than what was visibly displayed.
No one spoke.
Not because there was nothing to say.
But because they all understood the sa thing.
From this point forward—
Every decision mattered.
The announcent began without ceremony.
The arena lights dimd slightly, drawing attention toward the central platform where the announcer stood.
"Top Eight Match Draw—Comncing!"
The words carried across the entire arena, amplified by layered sound arrays that ensured no one could miss even the faintest change in tone.
Above the battlefield, the eight sigils rose higher, spreading out into a circular formation.
They rotated slowly.
Deliberately.
Each one glowing with its own distinct energy.
The crowd fell silent.
Not out of instruction—
But out of instinct.
Because this mont—
This draw—
Would define everything that followed.
Within the preparation chamber, Valen exhaled softly through his nose, his eyes narrowing slightly.
"Let’s see who’s unlucky enough to face us next," he muttered, though his tone carried less arrogance than it might have earlier in the tournant.
Rowan didn’t respond.
He was watching too closely.
The sigils began to move.
At first, their motion was slow and almost elegant, drifting across the air as though guided by unseen currents. But then, gradually, their paths intersected, forming connections that snapped into place with sudden finality.
The first pairing ford.
The announcer’s voice returned, now carrying a deliberate weight.
"Skygate Academy... versus Shadowfen Coven."
For a brief mont—
Nothing happened.
Then the reaction ca.
It wasn’t a roar.
It wasn’t excitent.
It was sothing quieter.
Sothing sharper.
A ripple of unease that spread through the audience like a subtle tremor.
"Them...?"
"That’s a terrible matchup..."
"Shadowfen... that’s not good..."
Even those who had not followed every match closely could sense it.
This pairing was different.
Back in the chamber, Rowan’s expression darkened imdiately.
"This is not good," he said, his voice low but firm.
Valen tilted his head slightly, studying the na as though trying to recall sothing.
"They don’t look impressive," he said after a mont. "No flashy wins. No big displays. Are they really that dangerous?"
Rowan turned toward him sharply.
"They are worse than dangerous," he replied. "They are patient."
That single word carried more weight than a full explanation.
Liora spoke next, her tone calm but precise.
"They specialize in illusion and ntal disruption," she said, her eyes still on the projection. "Their contract beasts are aligned with shadow and mind-affinity traits. They don’t fight directly. They interfere, distort, and break perception."
Valen frowned slightly.
"So... tricks?"
Liora shook her head once.
"No," she corrected. "Not tricks. They alter how you interpret reality."
Valen paused.
"...That sounds significantly less fun."
Rowan let out a slow breath.
"They don’t overpower opponents," he added. "They dismantle them. Teams don’t lose to Shadowfen because they are weaker. They lose because they stop functioning as a team."
A quiet understanding settled over the room.
Skygate’s greatest strength—
Was coordination.
Shadowfen’s greatest strength—
Was destroying it.
Which ant this was not just another match.
It was a direct clash of philosophies.
Valen straightened slightly, rolling his shoulders again, though this ti the movent was slower, more thoughtful.
"So they’re going to ss with our heads," he said. "Fine. I’ll just hit them harder."
Liora gave him a brief glance.
"If you can tell what you’re hitting," she said.
Valen opened his mouth to respond, then paused.
"...Fair point."
Aether, who had remained silent until now, finally spoke.
"They’re useful," he said.
Both Rowan and Liora turned toward him.
"Useful?" Rowan repeated, clearly not expecting that response.
Aether’s gaze remained steady.
"They reveal weaknesses," he said simply.
There was no arrogance in his tone.
No dismissal.
Just a statent of fact.
And that, sohow, made it more unsettling.
Before the discussion could continue, the announcer’s voice rose again.
"Before the next feature match, we present the first Top Eight battle—Imperial Royal Team versus Northern Glacier Institute!"
The reaction this ti was imdiate and explosive.
Because this—
Was a clash everyone had been waiting for.
Lion Solvaris stepped onto the battlefield with undeniable presence.
His armor reflected the arena lights like captured sunlight, each movent deliberate, each step asured. Beside him, the Golden War Lion moved with regal power, its mane shimring faintly as if lit from within.
Two additional contract beasts materialized in bursts of controlled energy, each radiating strength that marked them as elite.
Across the field, the Northern Glacier Institute responded in kind.
A massive ice bear erged, its form towering, its breath releasing cold vapor that imdiately began to alter the environnt. Frost spread outward from its paws, creeping across the stone floor, reshaping the battlefield into a frozen domain.
The match began without hesitation.
Ice surged forward in jagged waves, attempting to seize control of space.
Fla answered in controlled bursts, not wild or explosive, but precise, calculated.
Lion did not rush.
He did not overwhelm.
He adapted.
Each movent was asured, each command deliberate. Where once he might have relied purely on force, he now demonstrated restraint, timing, and awareness.
The Golden War Lion moved in perfect synchronization with him, its attacks coordinated rather than instinctive.
The battle was intense.
Shockwaves collided.
Temperature extres clashed violently.
But slowly—
Inevitably—
Lion gained control.
The ice bear faltered.
Its movents slowed.
Its domain cracked under sustained pressure.
And then—
It fell.
The referee declared victory.
The arena erupted.
But Lion did not celebrate.
He stood still.
Silent.
Then, slowly—
He turned his gaze.
Not toward the crowd.
Not toward the officials.
But toward the preparation chambers.
Toward Skygate.
It was not a challenge spoken aloud.
It did not need to be.
The ssage was clear.
I am ready.
And for the first ti—
It did not sound like arrogance.
It sounded like intent.
Night fell over the Imperial City with an unusual stillness.
Within the Skygate residence, that stillness deepened into sothing more deliberate.
The courtyard lay quiet.
Too quiet.
There were no footsteps in the halls.
No distant sounds of the city.
No guards visible at the outer periter.
It was not natural silence.
It was controlled.
Manufactured.
A faint distortion spread across the courtyard.
It resembled heatwaves—but colder.
Subtler.
Three figures erged from that distortion.
Cloaked.
Masked.
Their presence was controlled, their movents precise.
They were not amateurs.
They were not scouts.
They were sothing else entirely.
Aether was already there.
Standing in the center of the courtyard.
Waiting.
The Fla Sovereign Pup lifted its head, its eyes opening slowly.
The Spirit Fairy hovered nearby, its glow dim but steady.
From the shadows, the Fallen Succubus watched with quiet amusent.
"You’re late," Aether said.
The three figures paused.
One stepped forward.
"You expected us," the figure replied.
"Yes," Aether said.
There was no tension in his voice.
No surprise.
Only acknowledgnt.
"No more notes," the figure continued.
"Good," Aether replied.
"You refuse cooperation."
"For now."
A brief pause.
Then—
"We verify."
The air shifted.
Dark energy spread outward, not violently, but deliberately.
It ford a field.
A pressure.
Not physical—
ntal.
It pressed inward, attempting to probe, to asure, to understand.
Aether did not move.
He did not summon additional beasts.
He did not resist visibly.
Instead—
Sothing unseen activated.
Golden threads flickered faintly around him, so subtle they could not be perceived by ordinary senses.
The Heaven Eye (Half).
The incoming pressure t that invisible boundary—
And stopped.
Not slowed.
Not weakened.
Stopped completely.
For the first ti, the cloaked figures reacted.
"That... is impossible," one murmured.
Aether’s gaze remained steady.
"You’ve seen enough," he said.
But they did not withdraw.
Which ant—
They had not.
The Fallen Succubus moved.
Silently.
Effortlessly.
Her influence spread like a shadow over water, barely visible, yet impossible to ignore once felt.
Perception shifted.
mory blurred.
The three figures stiffened.
Too late, they realized—
They were no longer observing.
They were inside the observation.
Inside his control.
Aether watched them for a mont longer.
Then spoke.
"Leave."
There was no threat in the word.
But there was certainty.
And that—
Was enough.
The figures dissolved back into distortion.
Gone.
The courtyard returned to silence.
The Spirit Fairy dimd slightly.
The Fla Sovereign Pup relaxed again.
The Succubus laughed softly.
"That was entertaining," she said.
Aether turned his gaze toward the distant arena.
"Tomorrow won’t be," he replied.
Dawn would co soon.
And with it—
A battle not of strength.
But of the mind.
Because the next opponent would not attack the body.
They would attack reality itself.
And this ti—
Control would matter more than power.
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