Font Size
15px

(A/N Big thanks to everyone for the Power stones and Golden tickets, they an a lot. As usual, please don't hesitate to comnt or drop a review. ENJOY)

---------------------------------

The Observation Hall buzzed faintly with the hum of mana. Eleven translucent screens hovered in a wide arc across the air, each about ten feet tall. Ten displayed the top contenders; the last, centred slightly above the rest, cycled between notable events and exceptional manoeuvres.

Rows of students filled the stands. Faculty mbers sat at the front, murmuring occasionally, eyes fixed on the displays. The scent of polished stone and ink hung in the air, sterile, like every academy facility.

Elysia Chronos sat among the upper-year section, her posture straight, her chin balanced on her hand. She wasn't particularly interested in the noise around her, but her eyes, cold, grey, were glued to the top left screen, where a silver-haired boy had just appeared within a forested zone.

"Who's that?" a Second-year beside her whispered.

Elysia didn't look his way. "Orion Chronos," she said.

"The one the instructors keep talking about?" He asked.

She nodded subtly.

The screen flickered as Orion examined his surroundings. No wasted movent. His posture centred. His gaze, still but sharp. There was sothing deliberate about everything he did, like even his breathing was planned.

"Interesting," Elysia muttered.

Down below, the instructors were discussing the paraters of the shrinking zones. One of them adjusted the viewing matrix, the forest image expanding slightly, increasing resolution.

"Look at the way he's scanning the terrain," said another voice from a few seats down.

Elysia's eyes flicked briefly to another screen. Another one nad Kael Chronos was using brute strength to overpower two opponents. His movents were raw but effective, direct, and no wasted mana. Another showed Aalaya Chronos securing a shrine. The golden glow pulsed steadily from her sigil stone on the altar.

"They've already found shrines?" a voice said behind her.

"So zones have them nearby," Elysia said.

"Luck plays a role in the opening minutes. But keeping it, that's where the difference shows." She said.

Another instructor, a middle-aged man with streaks of white in his hair, spoke from the front, voice amplified by magic.

"Five minutes into the comncent. Current top ten unchanged. Most participants are still orienting themselves."

No one paid much attention; their eyes stayed on the screens.

Orion had started moving. The forest blurred as he glided through it. No mana visible, only the physical fluidity of soone who had long outgrown his age. His steps were calculated, his balance perfect.

"He's tracking soone," Elysia said suddenly.

The words drew attention. The students around her leaned forward.

"How do you know?" Soone asked.

"His eye movent," she said.

"He's not looking at random intervals; it's patterned. He's following residue or trace movent. Soone was there."

As if to confirm it, Orion crouched, touching the soil. The image magnified slightly, subtle indentations, almost invisible. He rose, expression steady, eyes narrowing.

The hall stayed silent as he disappeared from the spot, a blink movent, instant but clean. No flash, no flare.

"Teleportation," soone said.

"No," Elysia corrected.

"That wasn't aether step, not standard. He's manipulating space differently, not teleporting, just making it easier to break through. It's not uncommon, so even do it unconsciously, but he's definitely doing it consciously." She said, her eyes narrowed.

"You can tell?" They asked.

"I can see it," she said, eyes glowing slightly.

"The mana displacent is quieter. He masked the transition."

Her attention stayed fixed. The screen followed as he appeared behind another boy with short silver hair, the air snapping faintly from the displacent.

The hall collectively exhaled as the confrontation began.

The boy turned, startled. The two exchanged no words for several seconds. Then, motion — clean, sharp, minimal. The punch landed, and the silver-haired student dropped.

They watched as the student perford a last-ditch effort by throwing his sigil stone.

"Smart," Elysia comnted.

But her eyes narrowed when she saw the sa stone in Orion's hand.

"I thought the stone was gone. How did he get it?" Soone asked.

"That shouldn't be sothing an acolyte can do," Elysia said.

"No, it shouldn't," soone said beside her.

A short light flashed as the rge completed.

"Two points," Elysia murmured.

"First recorded rge," said one of the faculty mbers below. "Candidate Orion Chronos, one elimination achieved."

The ranking list adjusted automatically, his na rising from the middle of the screen to the top ten.

The Observation Hall broke into muted chatter.

"That was quick."

"Less than eight minutes in."

"Who did he take down?"

"Unknown yet. Probably from outer districts."

Elysia didn't comnt. Her eyes remained on the forest image, now calm again, Orion walking away like nothing had happened.

"What do you think?" the second year asked beside her.

"Efficient," she said.

"Too efficient."

"You an he's hiding sothing?"

Elysia turned to him with an expression that said, "Hiding what?"

The person just coughed and looked away.

"No," she said after a pause.

"I an, he's used to this. That's not the movent of soone fighting for the first ti."

The upper-year students around her exchanged quiet glances.

"I highly doubt he's the only one that isn't fighting for the first ti among all of them." The second year said, hesitantly.

"I'm not talking about practice." She replied simply.

The second year's eyebrow rose, shocked by what she was insinuating.

The floating middle screen changed, shifting briefly from another candidate's duel to display Orion again, a rare double feature. His actions had been marked as notable. The caption below read:

Below the screens, faculty began noting details on a parchnt. Elysia leaned back, eyes thoughtful.

"Soone's going to have to stop him before the compression begins," one of the spectators said.

Elysia humd, noncommittal.

"If anyone can." She said.

The glow from the screens reflected faintly off her eyes. She wasn't smiling or frowning, just watching.

No one replied. They just watched the boy on-screen walk deeper into the forest, expression unreadable, as the image slowly zood out, ten nas still on the board, one beginning to climb faster than the rest.

You are reading Emisarry Of Time And Space Chapter 76 76: Insight 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

Big Data Cultivation cover
Similar genre

Big Data Cultivation

Chen Fengxiao ·Fantasy

Asagraduatewithadoubledegreefromaprestigiousuniversity,FengJunsomehowremainsunemployedaftergraduation.Hestrugglesinthecity,buthecan’tletgoofhisprid...

On the Path to the Great Dao cover
Trending now

On the Path to the Great Dao

Pig Nerd ·Action

【Fromtheauthorof''!】Mygrandfatherisverypeculiar.Everyday,helightsincenseforhimselfandeatscandlesinfrontofhisownancestraltablet.Thevillagersareallte...

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