"...Damian, waitâ"
Salazarâs voice cracked slightly as Damian turned to leave.
Damian stopped and looked back, one eyebrow raised questioningly.
Salazar stood up abruptly, his chair scraping loudly against the ground.
His expression was conflicted, torn between duty and principle, fear and courage.
"They forced me to sever our official relationship. They demanded I stop teaching you."
His hands clenched at his sides.
"But they canât actually stop me from showing you something right now, in this moment, before you leave."
Understanding dawned in Damianâs eyes.
"I canât be your master anymore after today. But for the next hour, for right now, technically our relationship hasnât officially ended yet."
Salazar picked up his gun, checking the chamber with practiced efficiency.
"So Iâm going to teach you the remaining levels of Omega Point. All of them. Everything that I know.
However much you can absorb and understand based on your own comprehension, thatâs yours to keep."
He moved to the firing position, his professional demeanor sliding back into place.
"Watch carefully. Iâm only doing this once."
Salazar raised his gun and aimed at a distant target â a massive boulder at least a kilometer away.
"Level Three of Omega Point is based on the principle of Spatial Severance called Channel Shot.
Youâve mastered Level Twoâs Convergence Shot, where your bullet harvests ambient Aura as it travels and grows stronger with distance."
His Aura began building, far more than Damian had ever seen him use before.
"Level Three takes that principle further. The bullet doesnât just harvest Aura â it compresses space itself around the projectile."
BOOM.
The shot was different from anything Damian had seen before.
The bullet left the barrel and immediately reality seemed to warp around it.
The air itself cracked and shattered like broken glass as the projectile tore through space.
The trajectory wasnât straight. It curved impossibly, bending around obstacles, as if the bullet was choosing its own path through folded dimensions.
When it hit the distant boulder, the impact didnât just destroy the rock.
It erased it.
A perfect sphere of empty space appeared where the boulder had been, edges so clean and smooth it looked like reality itself had been scooped out.
"The spatial compression allows you to change the bulletâs direction mid-flight by manipulating the folds you create.
You can curve shots around cover using your will power, hit targets from impossible angles, and the impact damage increases exponentially because youâre not just delivering kinetic force â youâre delivering spatial rupture."
Salazarâs voice was clinical now, falling into lecture mode.
"The key is understanding that space isnât fixed. Itâs flexible and malleable. Your Aura can fold it like paper if you have the will and control."
He reloaded smoothly.
"Level Four is called Singularity Shot. Watch closely because this is where theory becomes art."
His Aura changed quality entirely. It became dense, oppressive, warping the air around him.
"At this level, youâre not just compressing space â youâre punching through multiple layers of reality simultaneously. One bullet becomes many, each one existing in a slightly different dimensional layer."
BOOM.
This time, five different impacts appeared across five different targets simultaneously, even though Salazar had only fired once.
The single bullet had split across dimensional boundaries, creating multiple versions of itself that all existed and hit their marks at the exact same moment.
"Each version is real and each of them has an impact that is genuine. Youâre essentially firing one shot that exists in five places at once by fragmenting it across spatial layers."
Salazar lowered his gun, his Aura dissipating slowly.
"And then thereâs Level Five."
His expression became distant, almost wistful.
"Iâve never achieved it myself. Itâs purely theoretical based on extrapolating from the patterns of previous levels.
But the concept is this: if Level Four splits one bullet across multiple dimensions, Level Five would allow you to fire a bullet that exists in
all
dimensions simultaneously."
"What would that even look like?"
Damian asked, genuinely curious.
"I honestly donât know. A shot that canât miss because it hits every possible location at once? A bullet that transcends causality itself? Itâs beyond my understanding."
Salazar set his gun down on the table with finality.
"But I believe itâs possible. I believe someone talented enough, someone with enough understanding and will, could reach that level."
He looked directly at Damian.
"I hope that someone is you. I hope one day youâll master Level Five and prove itâs not just theory. That would make all of this worth it somehow. And...
It would make Omega Point reach SS rank grade. The first gun weapon art in history to ever achieve this level."
Damian stood silently for a moment, processing everything heâd just witnessed and learned.
Then he spoke, his voice quiet but firm.
"I owe you a favor, Professor Blackwood. This is a genuine debt. Whenever you need something from me, anything at all, you can ask. Iâll do everything in my power to help."
Salazarâs expression crumbled completely.
As Damian turned and walked away, the professor stood frozen, watching his former studentâs back disappear into the distance.
âWhat favor? What right does a master who abandoned his disciple have to ask for favors?
This kid... he never talked about debts or favors when I was teaching him officially. He just learned and improved and occasionally thanked me politely.
But now, when Iâm forced to cut him loose, when Iâm choosing my family over his future, he treats what I taught him today as a personal favor.
As if... heâs not the one being monumentally screwed over by circumstances completely beyond his control.â
Salazarâs hands clenched into fists so tight his nails cut into his palms.
Blood dripped slowly onto the ground.
He looked up at the sky, clouds drifting slowly overhead, and felt something break inside his chest.
âI might have just made the biggest mistake of my entire life.
That kid is going to change the world one day. I can see it in his eyes, in his conviction, in the way he refuses to be broken by injustice.
And Iâll be remembered as the coward who abandoned him when he needed guidance most. Abandoned him... when he was being oppressed by my very own people.
All because I was too afraid to get my loved ones involved.â
The realization was crushing.
Salazar stood alone in the empty shooting range, staring at nothing, as the weight of his choice settled onto his shoulders like chains.
And somewhere in the distance, Damian walked away without looking back, his mind already cataloging the techniques heâd witnessed and planning how to master them without a teacherâs guidance.
And the consequences of yesterdayâs violence were only beginning to unfold.