Chapter 27: The Arcane Equation
Kaelith returned back to our side of the clearing. She moved with a silent, predatory grace that showed her elegance beyond the horizons. This elegance was a brutal contrast to the deathly victory she had just achieved. Her presence itself seemed to absorb the heat and the chaos of the swamp.
Onto the other side of the arena, Caelen Aurelius was trying hard to maintain his figure of Reverand Nobility. His jaw was tightened by the raging fury he was trying to hide. His fist struggled not to break his bow in pure frustration. Both his duelist and Elementalist were lost due their arrogance and underestimating their opponents for being inferior and half breed.
He turned to his remaining teammate, a tall Elf with intricate silver runes etched onto his vambraces. "Theron. Enough games. End this. Use the Sunfire Lance. I don't care about the energy cost."
The Elf, Theron, nodded grimly, his expression one of focused resolve. He moved forward, accepting the challenge that life had thrown at him. He found solid ground as he subtly manipilated the earth beneath his feet. He was what they called an Arcane Archer. He was a specialist in precision and overwhelming magical force that was hard to come by just anywhere.
I placed a hand on Kaelith's shoulder, feeling the tense coil of muscles beneath my fingers. "Good work. Rest up."
Then, I turned to Nyssa. Her emerald eyes were already alight with a terrifying, analytical fire. She had not just been sitting there and enjoying the show. She was calculating the potential firepower and abilities of their opponents before the matches. She had already ran several scenarios where she could fight any of the opponents in the opposite team. She was ready for some blood.
What had happened in the Locker room was not an easy experience to handle, but Nyssa was far from normal. She was much more stable now than ever. Her mental blocks were shattered. She had developed a more sincere connection with me and my aura had wrapped around her as a protective mantle.
"It is your turn, Nyssa," I said with my firm voice. "Show them what we outcasts are made of! Show them that their bloodline means nothing against our sweat!"
I could see a small, sharp smile on her face. "It will be my pleasure, Grik."
She stepped forward, gripping her polished oak staff. Her cracked, silver-rimmed glasses caught the dim light. She didn't look like a terrified scholar anymore; she looked like an executioner.
Theron nocked an arrow made of pure, golden light. "A Hobgoblin mage? I've read the reports. Your kind's arcane potential is limited. A crude imitation of true Elven mastery."
Nyssa pushed her glasses up her nose, a gesture that was now less about anxiety and more about pure, unadulterated condescension. "Your 'mastery' is based on millennia of rote memorization and flowery incantations. You cast spells. I rewrite the laws of reality. The difference is not trivial."
The bone-horn sounded.
Theron acted first. He drew his luminous bowstring, the Sunfire Lance spell coalescing with blinding intensity. The air around the arrowhead superheated, distorting with waves of shimmering heat.
"Behold the pinnacle of Elven warcraft!" he declared, his voice booming with theatrical pride.
"Solar Flare!"
He loosed the arrow. It didn't fly; it erupted. It became a miniature sun, a screaming comet of golden energy that tore through the fog, leaving a tunnel of superheated air in its wake. It was a spell designed for overwhelming power, a statement of dominance that could vaporize a squad in a single shot.
Nyssa didn't move. She didn't even raise a shield. She simply planted the base of her staff into the mud. A complex, glowing matrix of crimson light appeared in front of her, a web of impossible geometry.
"Your spell's core is unstable," she stated, her voice calm and clear, cutting through the roar of the approaching inferno. "You're channeling 300 units of thermal energy through a mana vector rated for 250. A fundamental design flaw."
The Sunfire Lance slammed into her crimson matrix.
And shattered.
It didn't explode. It deconstructed. The matrix didn't block the energy; it unraveled it. The magnificent golden comet dissolved into a shower of harmless, golden sparks that fizzled out in the humid air, like a firework in the rain.
Theron stared, his bow held loosely in his hand. "What... what did you do?"
"I performed a targeted mana-frequency inversion," Nyssa explained, taking a slow, deliberate step forward. "I introduced a counter-harmonic frequency that collapsed your spell's structural integrity. It's really quite basic arcane theory. I'm surprised your tutors didn't cover it."
"Insolent half-breed!" Theron roared, his face flushing with rage and embarrassment. He began nocking another arrow, this one crackling with violet lightning. "Let's see you dismantle a Thunderhead Coil!"
Nyssa sighed, as if he were a particularly slow student. "A tier-three evocation spell with a five-second casting time? You might as well be painting a target on your forehead."
While he chanted, she was already moving. She didn't run; she walked with purpose, her mind a blur of calculations. With a flick of her wrist, three shimmering duplicates of herself blinked into existence, each one a perfect, mana-infused copy.
Theron, mid-chant, hesitated. "Illusions? Child's tricks."
"Are they?" all four Nyssas said in perfect, chilling unison.
He loosed the Thunderhead Coil. The bolt of violet lightning screamed toward the Nyssa in the center. But at the last second, she and her two side-duplicates dissolved into mist, leaving only the one on the far left. The lightning bolt passed harmlessly through the space where she had been.
The remaining Nyssa smirked. "Probability calculus. I predicted you would target the original's position with an 87.4% certainty. Simple, really."
"You're just a coward hiding behind tricks!" Theron snarled, frantically trying to track her as she blinked and weaved between the twisted trees of the swamp.
"I'm a tactician," Nyssa corrected, her voice echoing from all directions. "You rely on power. I rely on efficiency. Watch."
She stopped in the center of a small clearing and raised her staff high. The air grew heavy. The water in the mud began to vibrate. Theron instinctively raised a shimmering barrier of golden light, bracing for a massive attack.
But Nyssa wasn't targeting him.
She slammed her staff down. "Gravitic Inversion Field."
For a split second, nothing happened. Then, the mud, the water, the loose stones, and even the dense fog within a thirty-yard radius of Theron suddenly lost all connection to the ground's gravity. Instead, they were violently yanked toward the center of his own powerful golden barrier.
It was an avalanche of swamp. A churning vortex of mud, water, and debris slammed into his shield from all directions at once. The barrier, designed to withstand a single, powerful blow, was being assaulted from a dozen angles simultaneously. The golden light flickered, cracked, and then shattered under the immense, sustained pressure.
Theron was blasted off his feet, engulfed by the very swamp he had been standing in. He hit the ground with a wet, spluttering cough, covered head to toe in stinking mud, his elegant silver runes completely obscured.
Nyssa walked calmly toward him, her pristine uniform somehow untouched. She loomed over the sputtering, humiliated Elf.
"You see," she said, her voice dripping with academic finality, "your magic is an equation. And I am the mathematician who just proved your theorem is fundamentally wrong."
She raised her staff, a small, dense sphere of crackling crimson energy forming at its tip. It wasn't large or flashy, but it hummed with a terrifying, contained power that made the very air tremble.
"Shall I demonstrate the principle of kinetic overkill?" she asked, her emerald eyes cold.
Theron, covered in mud and utterly defeated, could only squeeze his eyes shut and raise a trembling hand. "I yield! I yield!"
The crimson sphere vanished. Nyssa stopped her incantation and lowered her staff. She had a look of a profound scholar on her face. She could not hie the intellectual satisfaction from her face as she smiled happily after completely obliterating her opponent.
She had completed her job and she walked back to us with the pride of the knowledge. One to go.
Caelen Aurelius stood alone.
