The next day began differently.
I decided:
It was ti to show that I, too, was growing.
At least a little.
Not to show power—
but to show thought.
And when we were led out to the field again and paired up, I caught Finn’s gaze.
He smirked.
“So, Zen. Let’s see what you pull today.”
I replied calmly:
“We’ll see.”
1. Fight with Finn — The First VictoryThe Opening
He went on the offensive imdiately.
The air around his arm trembled—pressure resonance building.
Fire flared and stretched forward—
a tongue of fla ten ters long.
The impulse was massive. The temperature—dangerous.
I had no intention of taking that hit.
Zen’s Maneuver
A rapid wind dash forward.
A thin layer of water on my skin—steam protection.
It absorbed part of the heat, turning it into steam and dispersing the energy.
The approach was swift, like a gust of wind.
Finn was surprised.
“You… that fast?..”
He tried to push off with wind and widen the distance.
But I was already thinking two steps ahead.
The Icy Ground
I slamd my hand into the ground—
a stream of water shot out beneath Finn’s feet,
You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story.
and in the sa mont I cooled it to a crackling chill:
an icy surface.
He hit it at full montum and started to slide.
Exactly what I needed.
The Lockdown
While he was losing balance, I:
— froze his boots to the ground with thin threads of ice,
— stepped forward,
— and struck the solar plexus just hard enough to knock the breath out of him, without injuring him.
Finn collapsed to the ground.
The instructor raised a hand.
“Winner — Helvard.”
I exhaled.
My first honest victory.
Finn, rubbing his chest, grinned.
“Alright… that was actually cool.”
2. Siren — Pure Reaction
Siren stepped in front of , energized.
“Ready? On three.
One. Two. Three!”
He vanished.
Or rather—accelerated with wind, almost saring through the air.
I instantly raised an ice wall in front of him.
He punched it—and at that sa mont I dissolved the wall into water.
It crashed down from above.
And while the droplets were still falling—
I froze them all at once.
Hundreds of tiny ice needles clung to Siren, locking his movents.
He froze for a fraction of a second.
The instructor announced:
“Victory.”
I wasn’t even tired.
Finn had been harder.
3. Noah — Illusions vs Tempo
Noah was a difficult opponent.
Not because of strength.
Because of illusions.
He started classically—triple image, doubling, blur.
At the sa ti—a water shot aid at my head.
I sidestepped, accelerating with wind.
The Secret
Noah’s illusions broke if you pressured him.
If you gave him ti—he’d build a perfect one.
So I simply…
moved forward.
Fast.
Relentlessly.
Not giving him ti to breathe.
He tried to:
fire water shots,
distort his silhouette,
blur the space.
But tempo shattered everything.
After a few seconds, the illusions began to collapse—unevenly, nervously.
Then I repeated the pattern:
water droplets → crystallization.
He froze, encased in ice.
“That… I didn’t expect…” he breathed.
The instructor nodded.
“Helvard. Victory.”
4. The Princess — The Fight You Can’t Win
With her… I had no intention of showing everything.
She stepped out confidently, calmly, as if she already knew the result.
“We’ll see,” she said. “How much you’ve grown.”
And she began.
Her Attack
Four spears of water—
precise as arrows.
Six waves of wind—
destructive, aid at my legs to break my footing.
I ford ice beneath ,
anchored myself with stability mantras,
dodged—left, right, up—ducking under the gusts.
She increased the pressure.
Every movent—sharp.
A series of jumps—almost aerial.
I understood: she was stronger than most mages here. A real talent.
She needed footing.
She made it with wind.
I had to catch that mont.
And I did.
The Decision
When she went for the decisive lunge—
I crystallized the entire space around us within a five-ter radius.
She was caught.
For one second.
But her strength…
her output…
her will…
She tore through the ice around her as if it were cloth.
And slamd
to the ground.
The instructor declared:
“Victory — Princess Elinia.”
She stood over , breathing fast, but smiling.
“That was interesting,” she said. “Make it harder for
next ti.”
I nodded.
5. The Hunger for a Rematch
The other students looked at :
“I’m next!”
“No, !”
“I want a rematch!”
“ too!”
A hunger for growth.
A hunger to compare.
A hunger to find out what they were capable of.
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