Font Size
15px

{IRIS}

How was I supposed to explain that I couldn’t feel it?

That whatever arcane slept inside was distant, muted—like a voice trapped behind layers of ice and fog?

"I..." My fingers curled at my side. "I don’t—"

The words refused to co.

I didn’t know how to manifest it.

I didn’t know how to call it forth.

I barely knew it existed at all.

Sol’s gaze sharpened, just slightly.

"You don’t know how?" he asked—not unkindly, but plainly.

I shook my head.

Silence stretched between us.

The shadows around him shifted, reacting subtly to his attention, but never once straying from his control.

"...That’s unusual," he said at last.

Not judgnt. Observation.

"I can feel it," I blurted before I could stop myself. "Sotis. But it’s faint. Like it doesn’t want to answer ."

It wasn’t a lie but not the truth either. It was there, Lord Val said so, but I couldn’t feel it.

Sothing flickered in his eyes then.

Interest.

"You can feel it," he repeated. "Then it exists."

He studied —not as a noble, not as a vampire—but as if assessing a puzzle.

"Try again," he said quietly. "Don’t command it."

I frowned. "Then what?"

"Listen."

Easy for him to say.

I did close my eyes and pretended to listen, even though I knew it would be impossible.

The world dimd behind my lashes, the cold stone beneath my boots grounding as I inhaled slowly.

I followed the steps I had morized long before setting foot in this academy. Every breath, every count, every ntal door I was supposed to open.

I had willed my arcane. I had done everything by the books for months—no, longer than that.

Even before this school had started. It had been part of my training with Sebastian, and Lord Val, drilled into with relentless patience and unforgiving training.

Morning ditations. Nightly exercises. Painful focus until my temples throbbed and my bones ached.

But no such thing happened.

There was no spark. No warmth. No familiar hum beneath my skin.

My arcane must have been locked with my wolf—bound so deeply to it that it only slipped free in monts of distress or heightened emotion. Fear. Rage. Desperation, in tis of life threatening situations.

The kind of emotions no sane instructor would ever recomnd relying on.

"What’s wrong?" Sol asked. "Can’t you summon it yet?"

I opened my eyes and found that Sol’s brow was slightly furrowed.

For soone I had thought indifferent and cold, he seed genuinely bothered by the fact that I couldn’t use my arcane.

His posture was relaxed, but there was a sharpness in his gaze now, as though he were dissecting a flaw in a weapon that should not exist.

"I’m sorry..." My voice ca out quieter than I intended. "It seems that I couldn’t summon it."

He sighed and looked away. The indifference returned to his face and voice as if a switch had been flipped. "Then you’re wasting ti here. Professor," he called out.

My heart hamred when the professor turned and strode toward us.

"What is it?" Professor Thornwick demanded.

"She can’t summon her arcane," Sol said, pointing at .

It was a good thing Sol’s voice was smooth and low. I was afraid the others would hear.

But then again, they would find out sooner rather than later.

Professor Thornwick’s sharp eyes settled on . "Is that true?"

I nodded, sha burning beneath my skin. "I’m sorry, Professor. I couldn’t feel or summon my arcane."

Best to co clean now. Maybe—just maybe—he could help .

Professor Thornwick sighed and looked at with thinly veiled disdain. "Then why are you in this academy? This is the first ti I have encountered soone with arcane magic who cannot use or summon it."

I pressed my lips together and lowered my gaze. "I’m sorry, Professor. It was the Dean who recomnded to this place."

At the ntion of it, Professor Thornwick frowned deeply and glared at . "I don’t care who recomnded you. If you still can’t summon your arcane by next week, then you are expelled from here."

My breath caught.

Wait—wasn’t that unfair?

"B-but..." My voice trembled despite my effort to steady it. "Aren’t you going to help ?"

Professor Thornwick snapped, his patience evaporating. "Didn’t you know that no teacher can make you summon your arcane? It’s supposed to be innate. The best we can do is teach you to control it. If you can’t even summon it—even if you supposedly have one—then you don’t belong here. Co back when you can."

And with that, he turned away, already addressing another student as if I had ceased to exist.

Sol casually stepped back to his place and began observing the others, as though the entire exchange had never concerned him in the first place.

At least he didn’t mock considering that he was a vampire and part of Morgana’s inner circle.

I exhaled slowly.

I really thought the teachers could help with my problem.

Wasn’t that why I was here? Wasn’t this academy ant to nurture those who struggled—to refine raw power, to unlock what lay dormant?

Had Lord Val been misled?

Was it a mistake that I was here?

Rather, leaving was supposed to be the most logical choice. The safest one. If the teachers couldn’t help summon my arcane, then maybe it would be better if I just—

My thoughts were dragged violently to the surface by a sharp gasp rippling through the class.

Whispers followed. Shocked murmurs. Fear.

I snapped my head up.

Across the training ground, Morgana stood with her arm extended, her expression twisted with fury. Flas danced violently around her palm—untad, wild, far hotter than what was permitted in a basic control session.

Caroline stood frozen in front of her.

My blood ran cold.

Morgana released the fire.

"Caroline!" I scread.

Ti slowed.

The dark flas tore through the air like a living thing, roaring hungrily as they rushed toward her.

Caroline stumbled backward, eyes wide, her arcane flaring too late—weak, panicked, insufficient.

The protective wards around the arena flickered but did not activate. This wasn’t a sanctioned duel. This was raw, uncontrolled magic.

Soone shouted. Soone else scread.

I didn’t think.

I moved.

My feet pounded against the stone as I ran, every instinct screaming at to stop, to think—but instinct had never listened to reason.

The heat scorched my skin before I reached them, the air thick with smoke and burning mana.

Caroline didn’t move.

The fire was seconds away from swallowing her whole.

Fear crashed through .

Pure, suffocating terror.

Sothing inside snapped.

The world tilted.

Caroline did not scream.

That alone stunned .

For a brief, frozen heartbeat, as Morgana’s fire tore through the air like a living beast, Caroline stood her ground. Her eyes widened—but only for a fraction of a second. Then instinct took over.

The temperature dropped.

I felt it before I saw it.

A sharp, biting cold surged outward, racing across the stone floor in pale veins of frost. The air crackled, breath turning visible, as Caroline raised her hands—not in panic, but in focus. Her arcane answered her call with startling clarity.

Ice blood around her.

It wasn’t clumsy or fragile. It wasn’t the brittle frost of a novice. Shards of translucent blue-white crystal erupted from the ground, spiraling upward like a defensive crown.

A wall of ice ford before her, layered and dense, glowing faintly with arcane sigils etched deep within its surface.

I stared, srized.

It was the first ti I had ever seen Caroline use her arcane in combat.

Even as a human, she could summon powerful ice.

Real arcane manifestation—pure, elegant, and terrifying in its own quiet way.

The flas collided with the ice.

The impact shook the arena.

Steam exploded outward in a violent hiss as fire and ice clashed, heat and cold screaming against each other in defiance.

For a split second, it looked as though Caroline had succeeded. The ice held. It did not shatter. It resisted, glowing brighter as she poured more power into it, her teeth clenched, her body trembling under the strain.

But Morgana’s fire was different.

It wasn’t just heat.

It was devouring.

The black flas did not simply lt the ice—they consud it.

Blackened cracks spread across the crystalline barrier as the fire burned through layers ant to withstand far worse.

The ice scread as it died, collapsing inward, evaporating into scalding mist.

Fire decided everything.

"No—!" I shouted.

Caroline cried out as the backlash hit her. The remaining shards exploded outward, slicing the air as she was thrown back.

She skidded across the stone floor, her protective spell shattering into fragnts that lted before they could even hit the ground.

Professor Thornwick thundered forward, his voice ripping through the chaos.

"What the hell are you doing?!"

The sheer authority in his shout shook the courtyard into silence.

Morgana turned slowly, her arm still extended, flas licking lazily around her fingers before retreating back into her palm as if answering a master’s call. She looked utterly unbothered.

Then she stuck out her tongue.

"Sorry, Professor," she said lightly, almost playfully. "Seems like I couldn’t control my arcane."

She giggled.

The sound crawled down my spine.

I knew she was lying.

Everyone did.

You are reading Covens of Midnight Chapter 70: Fire and Ice on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

I am the Queen cover
Same author

I am the Queen

MiuNovels ·Romance

[MatureContent] Evangelinehasitall,thelooks,themoney,themen.Shewasunstoppableandtookanythingandeverythingshewantedwithasmileonherface.Themenadorehe...

I Only Tame Dragons cover
Same author

I Only Tame Dragons

MiuNovels ·Action

“ComenotbetweentheDragonandhisWrath.” —WilliamShakespeareTheyearwas2140,andEarthwasnothingbutadistantmemory.Humanitynowdriftedthroughthegalaxiesabo...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.