[Ti]: Sumr Break, Day 38 — 10:00 AM
[Location]: The Crown of Ovelia · Grand Masters Main Arena · Private Viewing Suite
Hathaway had anticipated the trash talk. Rhode hadn't delivered any, preferring the blunt instrunt of terminal velocity, but Bella was a different creature entirely.
The resident chuunibyou treated life as a high-budget RPG. Cecilia Wellington was the final boss. And every final boss deserved an opening animation.
On the central broadcast monitor, the holographic roulette spun and locked onto the new terrain.
[Selected Terrain: Sector 2 — Crimson Desert.]
The Royal Rosas deploynt gate ground open.
But instead of a competitor stepping out, an orchestral crescendo blasted through the stadium's acoustic arrays. It was an imposing, high-budget symphonic arrangent: a wall of brass and strings.
It was Ingrid Babington's famous track, Rember My Na.
The song had been written around the na "Cecilia."
Hathaway knew for a fact that Cecilia Wellington's skin was nowhere near thick enough to actually commission her own the song, but the cultural overlap was undeniable. Bella was weaponizing her opponent's nasake track as her own boss music.
A massive, foaming tide of illusionary water poured out of the Royal Rosas deploynt tunnel, roaring and crashing over the dry, red dunes of the Crimson Desert. And from the crest of the phantom waves, Bella stepped out.
She swept her heavy velvet cape back, letting the dark fabric billow out over the illusory surf. The stadium broadcast system, hijacked by whatever localized acoustic spell Bella was running, bood with a spectral choir singing the iconic lyrics over the swelling orchestra:
"Cecilia — this na of mine, a sweet and dangerous threat. Rember it: before long, every woman alive will hunger for what it promises."
"Cecilia — this na of mine will perfu the centuries long after I am ash. Rember it: my na is the precious brocade stitched into a Witch's very heart."
A rhythmic, thundering chant began to roll through the massive stadium, stamping over the orchestral baseline. It started in the lower tiers and infected the upper balconies like a virus.
"Bel-la! Bel-la! Bel-la!"
Thousands of magical flares and glowing pennants ignited across the stands.
In the VIP suite, Hathaway slowly brought both hands up and buried her face in her palms.
I can accept that Bella has completely surrendered to her own delusions, Hathaway thought, her tactical processor stalling out. But there are eighty thousand aristocrats in this stadium currently treating a hijacked pop-opera the song and a fake ocean as the pinnacle of high-concept gladiatorial aesthetics. This entire population needs to be institutionalized.
The phantom choir swelled, hitting the dramatic, soaring bridge:
"My na is a bloom, a clear spring, a kiss that lingers and aches — rember my na, do not let the one who kisses you weep."
"My na is a blade, a bullet, a dangerous and beautiful caress — rember my na, do not let the one you kiss lose their mind."
Hathaway forced her fingers apart to peek at the broadcast monitor. She had to know if Cecilia had simply collapsed on the spot from the sheer psychological weight of it all.
Down in the dunes, Cecilia Wellington stood amidst the roaring symphonic choir and the phantom crashing waves.
Not a single muscle in her face twitched. Her ocean-blue eyes remained completely, terrifyingly blank.
She is holding the line against a localized cringe apocalypse. Her ntal fortitude is absolute. She is so strong.
The stadium broadcast director, realizing that Cecilia's face was providing absolutely zero dramatic content for the viewers, ruthlessly cut the primary feed to the Greed Umbrella bench for a reaction shot.
Hathaway stared at the monitor.
Wei Changqing's perpetual, enigmatic smile had vanished for the first ti since the tournant began.
Maria's arms rose. She caught the red light of the broadcast cara, and in less than a second, flawlessly snapped back to her radiant idol smile, dropping her hands to her lap. But her index finger was twitching against the layered folds of her sleeve.
Flandmira was listening intently. Her face was rigidly calm, but her complexion was terrible, and a genuine, burning fury had ignited in her eyes.
Wow, the opera singer is taking this personally, Hathaway noted. I an, yes, Bella's entrance is a blatant, ridiculous provocation, but Flandmira looks like she is ready to commit a war cri over a pop song.
Karula sat upright, her hands elegantly folded. Her face displayed a helpless conflict: the agonizing expression of a woman who physically could not bear to witness the sheer cringe of the spectacle, but found herself entirely unable to look away from the trainwreck.
We are not alone, Hathaway realized, the ghost of a tear forming in her eye. The opposing team are the only sane, normal people left in the entire building.
The broadcast cut back to the arena floor. The music dropped to a low, dramatic, thrumming baseline. The phantom waves settled into a quiet, rolling surf around Bella's boots. The crowd's chanting shifted to a breathless, feverish murmur, hanging on her every movent.
The resident chuunibyou pressed two fingers elegantly against the edge of her lace eyepatch.
"I am the watcher at the edge of the abyss," Bella proclaid.
Clause one, Hathaway noted numbly. And they are actually quieting down to listen.
"—the weaver of severed destinies,"
Clause two. A wave of anticipatory cheers ripples through the east stands.
"—the silent architect of the final eclipse,"
Three. Hathaway froze. 'Architect of the final eclipse.'
She is using a Grand Masters broadcast to gloat about my wardrobe. Hathaway squeezed her thermos until the tal groaned. I am the only person on this entire continent who understands she is bragging about the starter pack.
"—the sealed harbinger of the inevitable collapse..."
Four. Oh Ovelia, she's pausing for dramatic effect. She's winding up for the finale. The entire stadium is vibrating.
"...the Crimson Sovereign of the False Horizon!" Bella's single visible eye glead with absolute theatrical fatalism. "The stage is set. I arrive as promised."
Five, Hathaway thought, her soul finally detaching from her physical body. A five-clause introductory title. I share a bloodline with a conceptual biohazard.
The broadcast cut once more to the Greed Umbrella bench.
Victoria's eyes were completely, utterly dead. She was taking slow, deep breaths, ticulously adjusting the cuffs of her gloves. Her fingers were trembling.
House Wellington spent three hundred years building specific counterasures against Ludwig speed, fire, and kinetic force. They completely forgot to patch their vulnerability to direct, unmitigated psychic damage.
The feverish murmur shattered into a singular, deafening explosion. A roar like a collapsing mountain hit the VIP suite windows. Eighty thousand people utterly losing their minds.
Beside Hathaway, Spectra leaned forward. The Ghost Witch's eyes reflected the phantom sea on the monitor.
"She is playing her opponent's leitmotif," Spectra murmured.
Hathaway's head snapped sideways. Spectra's expression carried a heavy, almost chilling professional respect.
"In classical composition, when Character A's the is orchestrated into Character B's scene, it is not an homage," Spectra analyzed, her pale fingers motionless on her lap. "It is a hostile takeover. She is stating: I own your lody. Until the final asure concludes, every lyric sung about 'Cecilia' is simultaneously describing the woman walking out of the sea."
Spectra's deep green eyes locked onto Bella's figure. Her voice dropped to a flat, profound whisper.
"This is not psychological warfare. This is a compositional claim."
Hathaway opened her mouth. No words ca out.
Oh, that is why Flandmira looked like she wanted to physically strangle soone on the bench.
You're validating her! Hathaway clutched her thermos as she stared at Spectra in horror. You are an actual musician, and you are telling her ani-villain logic is structurally sound! If this is how classical composition works, then your entire art form is just as deranged as she is!
Down in the dunes, the symphony slowly faded. Cecilia Wellington had absorbed the entire introduction without flinching.
But as the final orchestral note died, the absolute limit of her twenty-seven years of cultivated aristocratic composure was finally, inevitably reached.
Cecilia tilted her head downward by approximately three degrees. Her gaze dropped to the red sand beneath her boots. It was the universal, involuntary reflex of soone desperately breaking line-of-sight to physically swallow an overwhelming, catastrophic emotional reaction.
The broadcast cara was locked tightly on the Wellington heir's face, and Hathaway's developer brain processed the half-second fra data with crystal clarity.
She almost broke, Hathaway realized, staring at the screen in pure awe. Bella actually did it. She forced Cecilia Wellington to break eye contact and look at the floor during an official Grand Masters match. That is a tactical victory.
Cecilia's head raised back to level. Her posture locked. Her ocean-blue eyes returned to a cold, depthless calm, where pressure and silence had made peace with each other.
She looked at Bella across the scorching red sand.
"Rhode has already gone down," Cecilia said. Her voice was a quiet blade. "You should go accompany her."
The referee hovered above the center of the desert.
The fireball dropped.
The ward shattered.
Bella's mana ignited.
[Illustrious Glare].
The desert was instantly flooded with golden radiation. The ambient heat distortion magnified the light, turning the shimring air above the crimson dunes into a suffocating, hyper-focused mirror broadcasting on every frequency simultaneously.
Hathaway sat up, her analytical engine snapping back into gear.
This isn't Rhode's match. Rhode's combat style ran entirely on speed and reflexes. Blinding her own radar cost her nothing.
But Bella was the opposite. Perception was Bella's highest stat. It was the engine behind [Echo Casting]. Maintaining [Illustrious Glare] ant continuously broadcasting a jamming signal that crippled her own magical infrastructure.
Bella still has her physical vision, while Cecilia has been forced into total blindness to avoid the sensory overload. But Bella is deliberately amputating the core engine of her own build just to deny Cecilia her eyes.
That's a brutal trade. But the alternative is facing a fully operational Cecilia Wellington with all her senses intact. Which is not a trade. That's just dying.
Then, inside the blinding golden light, she unhooked the lace eyepatch and let it fall to the red dust.
Cousin. You are taking the eyepatch off now? While you are actively flooding the entire arena with maximum-yield visual radiation? You are unsealing a low-wattage desk lamp inside a localized supernova. What is the tactical value of this animation—
On the massive beanbag chair, Surtrina sat bolt upright. Beside her, Spectra's posture shifted from decorative stillness to locked, rigid focus.
On the screen, Bella moved. It happened in a single, impossible breath.
Even with the suite's localized ti-dilation wards slowing the broadcast to a third of its speed, Hathaway caught nothing but a chaotic, incomprehensible blur of overlapping mana signatures.
"The classical six-fold deceptive opening," Surtrina rumbled, her golden eyes still tracing the afterimages across the sand. "Perfect execution."
Hathaway stared at the monitor. Six? I didn't even see one.
"Left hand grazes the scroll, flicks the wand—two layers," Surtrina narrated, her voice a low, approving gravel as she broke down the fras Hathaway couldn't read.
"Right boot drags backward, sketching a rune in the sand—one layer. Both eyes flare with raw luminescence—one layer. Right hand traces the vertical-to-hexagram motion of a high-tier evocation—two layers. Six false signals, all fired at once."
Spectra's voice hovered in the air, carrying the precise, obsessive energy of a maestro dissecting a masterpiece.
"Coloratura," the Ghost Witch murmured. "Fioratura. The extre ornantal trill. Classical grace notes exist to decorate the tonic chord. The listener expects a core lody. The ornantation revolves around it."
Spectra's pale fingers twitched against her lap, tracing Bella's movents through the air as if conducting an invisible orchestra.
"She simultaneously played six grace notes. But there is no tonic chord." Spectra stared at the screen. "The listener cannot find a reference point. The ornantation itself has beco the entire musical phrase."
A brief pause.
"You cannot identify the lody, because the lody does not exist here. It will only appear in the next asure."
Hathaway's tactical processor threw a fatal exception.
My cousin is executing six-layered, fra-perfect animation cancels in real life. If the tournant bracket ever puts in this lobby, I am just going to unplug my own router.
Across the red dunes, the blind Cecilia responded.
All Hathaway caught was a sar of motion. The broadcast's automated spell-reading overlay began aggressively glitching out.
The holographic UI next to Cecilia's na rapidly flickered, violently overlapping the blue icon of a defensive barrier with the crimson warning tag of a high-tier offensive transmutation.
"Filthy," Surtrina rumbled, though the word carried heavy, genuine respect. "Look at her hands and mouth. Her fingers are snapping into a complex defensive seal, and she's rapid-firing the verbal incantation for it.
"But she's intentionally bleeding the residual mana off that defensive posture to forcefully project a secondary, offensive transmutation matrix."
"Double Counterpoint," Spectra breathed. Her fingers stilled. "Two lodic lines running in exact parallel. Either can serve as the primary the or the accompanint. They are interchangeable."
Spectra turned back to the screen, her pale hands resting motionless.
"She answers with a phrase that is simultaneously a cadence and an exposition. The feint is the true action, and the true action is the feint. The mont the defense completes, the attack has already begun. The listener cannot find the end of the first movent, because it never ends. It directly becos the second."
Hathaway stared at the glitching broadcast UI, her own tactical processor outputting a wall of critical error ssages.
What are any of these movents?! Your hearts are completely filthy, both of you! You are just continuously lying to the tournant's server engine! Is that legal?! It must be legal because nobody has stopped the match! WHY IS IT LEGAL?!
The entire battle that followed was built from nested falsehoods.
Every genuine spell was buried under at least three fake ones.
Bella pri a [Blink]: obvious casting motion, right hand drifting to the wand on her thigh, left hand spreading then snapping two fingers against the palm, a triple elental flash.
Cecilia pushed forward with a blazing Evocation signature that was actually masking a Divination trap, which was itself covering a false positional advance.
Hathaway pieced this together retroactively from the rapid, muttered jargon being exchanged between Surtrina and Spectra.
What she saw never matched the actual magical output, and by the ti she tried to reverse-engineer the previous fra, the next fra had already landed. It was like reading a highly advanced mathematical proof where the entire text consisted of it is trivial to show and as easily deduced.
But she could track the blood.
Cecilia's psionic aura flared. [Forced Damage Sharing].
Bella's answered. [Pain Sharing].
You want to share damage? Fine. I'll share the agony.
The Crimson Desert had beco a at grinder.
Bella was drenched. The flesh of her left arm had been stripped away, exposing gleaming white bone as the corrosive toxins woven into Cecilia's strikes ate her alive.
Cecilia, in turn, was covered in dozens of bloated, crimson-black mana leeches, burrowing through her pristine uniform and vacuuming both her blood and her arcane reserves in pulsing, rhythmic gulps.
Neither Witch scread. Neither flinched. They traded catastrophic mutual destruction under the blazing sun with the flat, dead-eyed focus of machines executing an algorithm.
Hathaway winced. Phantom pains ran up her own arm just from watching it.
The feints were working. Cecilia was blind and relying entirely on hearing and [Prophet] to navigate the kill-zone.
But [Prophet] was a divination ability, and divination could be jamd by divination interference. Every branching tiline Cecilia's foresight tried to render was cluttered with six layers of aggressive magical static. That was the only reason Cecilia was taking hits at all. The only reason Bella's attrition strategy was viable.
But viable wasn't winning.
[Pain Sharing] transmitted the neurological sensation of agony. It did not transfer the structural damage. Bella was bleeding out in real ti. The corrosive toxins were reaching her core. The HP race was moving in only one direction.
On the screen, she shattered her remaining wards. The excess mana flooded her physical shell.
A Tier-8 spell matrix violently locked into reality.
[Ovelia's Evil Lantern Cat Sunflare Burst].
Hathaway shot to her feet.
The training room. Rhode leaning against the wall with her arms crossed. Bella standing in the center of the mat, adjusting her eyepatch after a drill, and telling her about [Hypervelocity String], the Wellington bootleg of Ludwig casting chanics, and then, almost as a footnote: and this is what we have.
The family will give it to you eventually, Bella had told her, wiping sweat from her brow. It is the family's true weight.
The Tier-8 trump card gifted to the Ludwig family by Ovelia herself. A spell the Ludwigs valued above their own Legendary incantations.
The chanics assembled themselves in Hathaway's mind with cold, precise clarity.
Inject all remaining mana into the epidermis: a purely kinetic, blast-resistant armor that absorbed concussive force. Release particle-level [Solar Ion Lantern Cat Forms] into the imdiate vicinity. Force them to divide sixty-five million tis per second. Detonate the accumulation.
A localized apocalypse. Power sufficient to level cities, boil seas, shatter planetary crusts, forcibly compressed into a spherical boundary. The output vastly exceeded standard offensive Legendary magic, at a fraction of the casting cost.
The trick was the containnt radius. Ovelia could compress that world-ending yield into a sphere with a radius of exactly 115 ters.
Bella's absolute minimum containnt radius was 1,500 ters.
Hathaway looked at the wide-angle shot of the desert.
She knew Cecilia was inside that circle.
She knew Bella was also inside that circle.
The broadcast feed left no ambiguity.
The Crimson Desert simply ceased to exist.
The entire cara feed was swallowed by a second sun.
An expanding sphere of blinding, perfect gold overwrote the red dunes, the sky, and the two combatants simultaneously. It hit its 1,500-ter boundary. It froze there, held against physics for three agonizing seconds, a flawless golden monunt to apocalyptic containnt.
Hathaway couldn't track the spell paraters anymore. Her analytical engine stalled out completely. As the golden sphere hung over the red sand, a single mory surfaced from a life she had lived very far away from here. An old broadcast of a different desert, and a different explosion.
Now I am beco Death, the destroyer of worlds.
It was a quote Oppenheir had pulled from the Bhagavad Gita, spoken by Vishnu to Arjuna.
And here, the spell was [Ovelia's Evil Lantern Cat Sunflare Burst].
Both were mythic truths about annihilation, detonated in barren deserts where the sun never apologized.
Hathaway stared at the screen. The weight of the mont crushed the last remnants of second-hand embarrassnt out of her.
Then, very slowly, the golden sphere began to dim.
She knew, Hathaway realized, a cold, heavy ache settling into her chest like ballast. When she cast it, she knew. She walked into the arena this morning knowing exactly what the radius would be, and exactly where she was standing.
The golden light faded entirely, revealing nothing but floating dust and a massive, perfectly smooth crater of molten glass where the dunes had been.
On the beanbag chair, Surtrina didn't move. The Balor Witch sat perfectly still, the can of cola hovering halfway to her mouth, held at an angle that physics had apparently agreed to maintain indefinitely.
Beside Hathaway, Spectra was silent for a brief, profound mont.
Then, the Ghost Witch slowly, reverently, closed her deep green eyes.
"This is the grand pause of the entire movent," Spectra whispered into the quiet of the soundproofed room.
Empty air hung where the desert had been.
"The greatest sound is silence."
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