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The change did not announce itself with pain.

It revealed itself through imbalance.

At first, it was subtle enough to ignore. A slight delay between breath and movent. A faint heaviness in the limbs that did not belong to fatigue. A quiet resistance in the body, as if sothing within Karna had begun pushing back against the very force he had awakened.

He stood alone at the edge of the training ground before the session began, his posture straight, his breathing controlled, but his awareness turned inward.

Sothing was not aligning.

Not the flow.

Not the environnt.

Him.

The instinctive layer he had touched in the previous training was still there, still active in so form, but it was no longer smooth. It did not integrate cleanly with his movent. It surged, then faded, then surged again—unpredictable, powerful, but unstable.

Karna exhaled slowly.

Not rejecting it.

But not embracing it blindly either.

Because he understood sothing important.

Power that appeared suddenly—

Always carried a cost.

Duryodhana approached from behind, stretching his shoulders with a slight grin, though there was a stiffness in his movent that had not been there before.

"...You feel it too, don’t you?"

Karna glanced at him briefly.

"Yes."

A pause.

"It is not stable."

Duryodhana rolled his neck slightly, wincing for just a fraction of a second before masking it.

"Good."

Karna looked at him.

Duryodhana smirked.

"If it was easy, it wouldn’t be worth it."

Karna did not respond.

Because that—

Was not entirely true.

The instructor’s presence cut through the space again.

Silent.

asured.

Watching.

"You have stepped beyond structure."

A brief pause.

"And touched sothing deeper."

His gaze settled on Karna.

"But your body has not caught up."

That—

Was the truth.

Not harsh.

Not exaggerated.

Just exact.

"Begin."

The command ca as always, without excess.

But today—

The difference was imdiate.

The mont the first attack ca—

Karna responded.

Instinct.

Clean.

Direct.

But the mont after—

There was a delay.

A fraction.

Barely visible.

But real.

The second strike ca faster than his recovery.

He blocked it—

But not perfectly.

The impact pushed him half a step back.

Not enough to break balance.

But enough to notice.

His eyes narrowed slightly.

Not in frustration.

But in recognition.

The instinct was still there.

But it was not sustaining.

It activated—

Then withdrew.

Like a fla flickering under unstable wind.

Another attack ca.

Karna moved again.

This ti smoother.

Better aligned.

The motion flowed cleanly—

Until the end—

Where again—

There was resistance.

A slight stiffness in his shoulder.

A delayed follow-through.

The opponent recovered faster than expected.

Forced another exchange.

Karna adjusted.

But now—

He was aware.

And awareness—

Made it heavier.

Duryodhana, on the other side, was pushing harder than before.

He had embraced the rawness of instinct differently.

Less refinent.

More force.

Each strike he made carried full commitnt.

But it also carried strain.

His movents were no longer efficient.

They were powerful—

But taxing.

A swing connected.

Clean.

The opponent staggered.

But Duryodhana’s stance broke slightly after.

His recovery slower.

His breathing heavier.

"...Tch."

He didn’t stop.

Didn’t slow.

But it was there.

The cost.

The instructor did not interrupt.

Because this—

Was necessary.

Karna stepped into another exchange.

An attack ca—

He responded—

Perfect.

For that mont.

But then—

Nothing.

The instinct did not follow.

His body moved—

But without that deeper alignnt.

The next strike hit him.

Not hard.

But direct.

A sharp impact against his side.

Karna stepped back.

Not shaken.

But stopped.

For a mont—

He did not move.

Because now—

He understood.

This was not about failure.

This was about limit.

He exhaled slowly.

And this ti—

He did not call the instinct.

He did not rely on it.

He returned—

To foundation.

Flow.

Movent.

Breath.

Simple.

Stable.

The next attack ca.

He moved.

Not perfectly.

Not as fast as instinct.

But consistent.

Reliable.

The second followed.

He adjusted.

The third—

He countered.

And this ti—

There was no delay.

Because he was not switching states.

He was staying within one.

Stable.

Grounded.

The old man’s voice ca quietly from the side.

"You are forcing it."

Karna did not look.

"I know."

A pause.

"Then stop."

Simple.

Direct.

Karna nodded slightly.

Because that—

Was the answer.

The instinct—

Was not sothing to activate.

It was sothing to grow into.

Duryodhana, anwhile, pushed through another exchange—

But this ti—

His movent faltered.

Just slightly.

His grip shifted.

His stance weakened.

The opponent took advantage.

A strike landed against his shoulder.

Harder than before.

Duryodhana stepped back imdiately.

Eyes sharp.

But breathing heavy now.

"...Alright."

A short exhale.

"...That’s enough."

He lowered his mace slightly.

Not in defeat.

But in awareness.

The instructor raised his hand.

And the training stopped.

Silence settled across the ground.

But it was not calm.

It was heavy.

Because both of them—

Had felt it.

The limit.

The instructor stepped forward.

His gaze steady.

"Power without foundation breaks the body."

A pause.

"Control without balance breaks the mind."

Another pause.

"And growth without restraint—"

His eyes hardened slightly.

"—breaks both."

Karna listened.

Not resisting.

Not questioning.

Because he had already seen it.

The system pulsed.

Stronger than before.

But different.

Not a notification.

A warning.

[Instinctive Layer — Unstable]

[Body Adaptation: Insufficient]

[Overuse Detected]

[Recomndation: Stabilization Required]

A brief pause.

Then—

[Warning: Continued Forceful Usage May Cause Internal Damage]

Karna acknowledged it silently.

Because this—

Was the first ti.

The system was not guiding.

It was cautioning.

Duryodhana walked up beside him, rolling his shoulder again, slower this ti.

"...That didn’t feel great."

Karna nodded.

"No."

A pause.

"It should not."

Duryodhana smirked faintly.

"...Good."

A brief silence.

"ans we’re getting sowhere."

Karna looked ahead.

Calm.

But thoughtful.

Because now—

The path was clearer.

Not forward.

But deeper.

This was not about gaining more.

It was about holding what he had—

Without breaking.

The old man stepped closer.

His gaze softer now.

"You have touched the edge."

A pause.

"But the body is the vessel."

Another pause.

"If it cannot contain what you awaken—"

His voice lowered slightly.

"You will lose it."

Karna closed his eyes briefly.

Not in rest.

But in acceptance.

Because that—

Was truth.

When he opened them again—

There was no urgency.

No push.

Only clarity.

He would not chase the next step.

He would build toward it.

Properly.

Because now—

He understood the cost.

The wind moved across the ground again.

Unstable.

Uneven.

But present.

Karna stepped forward.

Not forcing alignnt.

Not seeking power.

Just moving.

Because for now—

That was enough.

Next Chapter Preview — Chapter 167: The Path of Restraint

Karna begins controlled training to stabilize instinct and body togetherDuryodhana struggles with slowing down and holding back powerA new training thod focuses on endurance and internal balanceSystem reduces activity, forcing Karna to grow without assistanceA deeper understanding of restraint begins to form

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