The following morning arrived without ceremony. There wasn’t any alarms of urgent summons for so kind of catastrophe, it was just normal.
Sunlight filtered through thin curtains, pale and unhurried, tracing soft lines across the floorboards of his room. The house was quiet, not the tense, watchful quiet of danger held at bay, but the gentle stillness of a place allowed to breathe.
Albedo lay awake, staring at the ceiling in thought.
One week.
That was what the Academy had declared: a mandatory cooldown period following the exchange. Seven days for the students who had went on the exchange to relax themselves.
A nice, welco pause in their hectic lives. Albedo exhaled slowly in thought. This ti off felt strange.
Havoc and Ruin rested against the far wall, inert but aware, their presence no longer buzzing at the edge of his thoughts like restless predators. His mana circulated smoothly, quietly, dense, compressed, obedient. The aftershocks of his recent growth had finally settled.
Down the hall, Gwen was still asleep. He could feel it faintly through the house wards, her presence warm and steady. Seraphyne, too, awake, undoubtedly, though she gave no sign of moving.
Albedo sat up.
A week off ant sothing dangerous.
Free ti.
And for once, he intended to use it properly.
The Academy gates stood just as they always had, towering white stone traced with gold filigree, sigils etched so deeply into the archways that they seed less carved and more grown into place. Wards shimred faintly overhead, layered upon layered, a testant to centuries of paranoia and prestige.
Normally, the courtyard beyond would have been alive with activity.
Today, it was... calm.
Students lingered in clusters rather than crowds. So sat beneath trees with books they weren’t really reading. Others sparred lazily, more out of habit than intensity. Laughter carried farther without the usual din to swallow it whole.
Albedo passed through without fanfare.
There were glances, of course. There always were.
So curious. So wary. So openly awed.
He ignored them all.
His destination lay deeper within the grounds, past the lecture halls, beyond the dueling arenas, toward the ecological wing where mana signatures grew wilder and less restrained.
The Beast Taming Departnt.
Professor Luna Evervale’s domain.
The air changed subtly as he approached.
Mana thickened, not oppressive, but alive. Threads of instinctual energy wove through the space, resonating with unseen presences. The scent of leaves, earth, and sothing older, sothing prival—hung in the breeze.
He didn’t find her in her old office, so he knew Luna would be in this area.
Albedo slowed. Then stopped. Because sothing was... wrong.
No, Different. Very different. The clearing beyond the treeline was larger than he rembered. Not physically, but spiritually. The mana density there was absurd, coiling in slow, tidal currents that made even his refined senses pause. It wasn’t violent. It wasn’t hostile.
It was vast.
Like standing at the edge of an ocean and realizing it was watching you back.
"...Well," Albedo murmured. "That’s new."
"You noticed too quickly. You really have improved a ton," The voice ca from his left, amused.
Albedo turned.
Professor Luna Evervale leaned against the trunk of an ancient oak, arms crossed loosely over her chest. Her erald hair fell freely today rather than bound in its usual academic style, catching shafts of sunlight like living jade. Her silver eyes glead with quiet satisfaction.
"You always do," she continued. "Most people don’t feel it until they’re already inside."
He inclined his head slightly. "It’s good to see you, Professor."
She smiled. "Luna. You’re not my student right now. None of you are."
Fair enough.
She pushed off the tree and approached, her presence as elegant as ever—but there was sothing sharper beneath it now. A pressure that hadn’t been there before.
"You’ve grown," she said without preamble.
Albedo huffed softly. "That seems to be the the lately."
Luna circled him once, eyes narrowing—not predatory, but intensely curious. "Your mana is... layered. Like sedint compressed over centuries. That doesn’t happen naturally."
"No," he agreed. "It doesn’t."
She stopped in front of him, studying his face. "You survived sothing unpleasant."
He t her gaze. "Several sothings."
A pause.
Then she laughed quietly. "Of course you did."
She gestured toward the clearing. "Co. You didn’t co all this way just to be analyzed."
He followed.
Each step forward intensified the sensation—the feeling of being observed by sothing impossibly large and patient. Mana brushed against his senses like cold water against skin, familiar in its alienness.
And then, he saw her. A young woman stood near the center of the clearing. At first glance, she appeared human.
Tall, willowy, dressed in simple robes of deep sapphire and silver. Long blue hair cascaded down her back in loose waves, catching the light like polished glass. Her eyes—bright, clear, impossibly deep, were the exact shade of a sunlit sea.
She turned as they approached.
And the world shifted.
Albedo froze.
His instincts scread in both danger and recognition.
A pressure slamd into his soul, not crushing, but expansive, like a door being thrown open inside his chest. Ancient mories stirred. Echoes of abyssal depths and thunderous waters. The sensation of standing before sothing that had existed long before nas had aning.
His pupils contracted.
"...No way," he breathed.
The young woman blinked, then smiled, soft, tentative, unmistakably familiar.
"Hello, Albedo."
His heart skipped.
Once.
Twice.
"...Nymarielle?" he asked slowly.
Her smile widened, relief flooding her expression. "You rember."
He stared.
Then laughed, short, incredulous, sharp with disbelief. "I would have recognized you as a tidal wave, a storm, or a city-sized serpent."
He gestured vaguely at her. "But this? This was not on the list."
Luna chuckled. "Humanoid forms rarely are."
Nymarielle shifted slightly, suddenly shy. "Is it... strange?"
Albedo took a step closer.
Then another.
The pressure intensified, but now he understood it. Leviathan mana, coiled and restrained, condensed into a shape barely capable of containing it. Every breath she took displaced power. Every blink rippled through the ambient mana field.
"You’re beautiful," he said honestly. "And terrifying."
She laughed, a bright, lodic sound like water over crystal. "Good."
That, too, was familiar.
"How?" he asked, eyes never leaving her. "Last ti I saw you, you were stabilizing. Stronger, yes, but this?"
Nymarielle glanced toward Luna.
The professor nodded. "Go on."
The Leviathan drew a breath—and the clearing responded, mana flowing toward her in slow spirals.
"After the Black Thunder Pool," Nymarielle began, "my connection to the Echoing Deep strengthened. Ti flows... differently there. I rembered more. Learned faster."
She lifted one hand slightly.
The air condensed.
Not into ice. Not into water.
Into pressure.
A sphere of invisible force ford above her palm, warping light around it. Albedo felt gravity bend subtly, the ground beneath his feet responding instinctively.
"I reached a threshold," she continued. "One that required... perspective."
Luna took over. "She was approaching a sovereign bottleneck. Remaining in a purely beast form would have limited her growth. So I guided her through manifestation theory."
Albedo blinked. "You taught a Leviathan to beco humanoid."
Luna smiled faintly. "I suggested it."
Nymarielle tilted her head. "I decided it."
The pressure vanished.
Silence rushed back in.
Albedo let out a low whistle. "You’ve crossed into a whole different category."
She nodded. "I am no longer rely a Leviathan."
That was... ominous.
"And?" he prompted.
"And," she said softly, "I wanted to see you again."
Sothing tightened in his chest.
"I owe you my life," she continued. "Not just for saving , but for believing I could beco more."
Luna watched quietly, silver eyes unreadable.
Albedo scratched the back of his neck. "You’re doing a lot with that belief."
Nymarielle smiled, then hesitated. "I didn’t know if you would recognize . Or if you would be... uncomfortable."
He t her gaze steadily. "You’re still you."
Her eyes shimred.
"That is good to hear."
They stood there for a mont, the three of them, surrounded by a clearing that felt far too small for what it now contained.
Eventually, Luna clapped her hands lightly. "Well. Since you’re both here, and classes are suspended..."
Her smile turned dangerous.
"...how do you feel about a friendly demonstration?"
Albedo’s lips curved into a familiar grin.
Nymarielle’s eyes lit up like a storm cresting over open sea.
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