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Chapter 110 - 110. The heir of Asha vs. Estella

As she came back to the classroom, the classroom door slammed open with the force of a heart that had finally broken its cage. Larissa stood in the threshold, breath ragged, eyes blazing like twin suns caught in eclipse. The chatter died instantly; even the fluorescent lights seemed to dim under her gaze. Professor Estela, still seated behind her desk, mid-sentence about some reclaimed narrative or another, froze. The chalk dust hung suspended, a pale ghost between them.

Larissa stepped forward. No hesitation. No apology in her posture.

Estella: You,(she said, voice low but carrying to every corner like thunder wrapped in silk.)

Larissa: You think you own truth because you hold the marker. You think you can carve righteousness out of women's pain and call it doctrine, then spit on anyone who won't kneel to your version that can actually make anyone submit.

Estela rose slowly, lips thinning. Estela: Larissa. This is not the time—

Larissa: It is exactly the time. (Larissa's words cut clean. (Karl walked out of here carrying the weight of your mockery on his shoulders. You laughed at his adoption. You laughed at his orphan heart. You weaponized the absence of a mother like it was ammunition, not a wound. And these(she swept her arm toward the rows of students, some shrinking, some staring wide-eyed—) these cowards laughed with you as if they were better than Omega. Because it's easier to follow the whip than question the hand holding it.

A girl in the front row muttered. Girl: This is dramatic—

Larissa whirled on her. Larissa: Dramatic? No. Honest. You sit there agreeing with everything she says because agreement feels safe. But safety isn't wisdom. It's sedation. One that you cannot escape from. That is to say that you are asleep. Nothing much. No nothing less.

She turned back to Estela. Larissa: You told him he doesn't understand philosophy. THAT IS FUNNY. That he's blunt and smart but just a deluded child playing at greatness. For it is not jist true, but it becomes a joke for academics. You said the more he thinks he's intelligent, the stupider he appears. Tell me, Professor. You think that by insulting his roots you can shake him. Shame on YOU! When did cruelty become a feminist virtue? When did tearing down a boy's origin story become proof of your enlightenment?

Estela's face flushed. Estella: I was making a point about power structures—

Larissa: You were making a point about power, (Larissa corrected.)Your power like a woman mocks a man she just rejected . Over him. He is not stupid. Over us. This is not justice. You demand we go through 'the process' your processof becoming the right kind of woman that could face society, the right kind of thinker that can respect others, the right kind of human that can live. But philosophy isn't a checklist that you can manipulate. It's fire. It burns away the comfortable lies. And you? You're terrified of the burn that he gave you.

The room was silent now, the kind of silence that presses against eardrums.

Larissa took another step closer. Her voice dropped, intimate, dangerous. Larissa: Karl quoted Whitman because he believes words can still matter. He goes beyond that. What is more, he does not believe anything. He knows we read poetry not for decoration, but because without beauty, without love, without the reckless pulse of being alive that can change little thing and bigger things, the rest is just machinery that cannot become human. That is to say that, medicine keeps the body breathing. Law keeps the cage orderly. But love, love is why the heart bothers to beat at all. For is the greatest dessert life can offer.

She let the words hang.

Larissa: You mocked him for knowing that. Even worse now, I CAN say that you mocked the orphan boy for daring to speak of love in a room full of people who treat affection like weakness and chemicals as if they were nothing. But here's the thing you missed, Professor: every heart sings a song that you cannot hear, incomplete like the first love, until another heart whispers back in melodious words of true love. That is to say that those who wish to sing always find a song that no one can have. At the touch of a lover, everyone becomes a poet and the loved one becomes a poem.

Larissa's eyes never left Estela's. Larissa: He still loves this place like no has ever seen. That is to say that no one could say anything the ways he speaks it into reality. Loves even the people who laughed. That's the disease Plato warned about, love as madness. But you? You fear it because it can't be controlled. It can't be graded. It can't be turned into another lecture slide that you can twist to your taste.

A boy near the back whispered, boy: She's right... we just followed...

Estela opened her mouth, closed it. For once, no quick retort.

Larissa continued, softer now, almost sorrowful.

Larissa: Omega stood up and spoke like Ezekiel because he felt the fracture of freedom, love and reason in this classroom. The end! The end has come upon the four corners of the land! ... I will unleash my anger against you... Then you will know that I am the Lord.' He wasn't cursing us like you think he was. But on the opposite, he was mourning what we've become: blind followers in a classroom that should be a garden for questions to solve and uncomforting vibe that we need to have.

She looked around at the faces, some ashamed, some defiant, most simply stunned.

Larissa: You all felt it when Karl spoke like a god. Deep down you know it. That crack in the foundation of existence. The fear of the unknown. But instead of crossing the line with him as you should have done, you stayed on this side and threw stones like slaves. That's not feminism. That's fear wearing lipstick that you cannot distinguish.

Larissa exhaled, shoulders dropping just a fraction.

Larissa: I'm not here to destroy you as if I were your superior, Professor. I'm here because someone has to say it out loud for the passion of teaching and love: your classroom isn't safe because it's polite like many mothers say outside the classroom. It's suffocating because it's policed like a man who is rejected by society and gets corrected according to their own desires. And if education means silencing the verse that doesn't fit your meter as if I were a rule, then what are we learning except how to stay small for those who wanna be bigger forever?

She turned toward the door, paused.

Larissa: Karl walked out like a shadow of the universe that we barely see in tv shows. HAHH. Peerless. Divine in his refusal to bend LIKE Nietzche. And you know what the worst part is? (She looked back over her shoulder, eyes glistening but unyielding like a cow in heat) He still believes in you. All of you. Even after everything that you have done. After all, he gave something to you by coming into your presence.

The door closed behind her, not slammed, but final. A soft click that echoed louder than any shout.

In the hallway, Larissa leaned against the wall, heart hammering. Somewhere down the corridor, she could almost hear Karl's quiet footsteps retreating, carrying the same fire she had just unleashed.

The classroom remained hushed long after she left. No one moved. No one spoke.

But something had shifted. Irreversibly.

A verse had been contributed.

And the powerful play went on.

Maybe, I am getting crazy. But I would like to get a GF like Larissa.

Anyway, I need to go do cold approaches.

 

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