Elionâs gaze sharpened for the first time since the fight had begun, and without any warning, he cast the first spell of the match, a simple water spell that formed instantly beneath his feet, and before anyone could even react.
The water froze over into a smooth layer of ice that spread outward just enough to support his movement, and in the same motion, a pressurised jet of water burst from behind him, propelling his body forward with explosive speed.
The movement was sudden and unpredictable.
Woosh!
He vanished from Williamâs line of sight.
Williamâs eyes went wide.
"Shitâ!"
The realization came to him too late.
His instincts screamed at him as he tried to snap his neck around, his body twisting awkwardly as he attempted to form a wind spell to defend himself, his mana rushing toward his hand in a desperate attempt to create a barrier or at least redirect the incoming attack.
But his thoughts were too slow, his casting too subpar, the spell never had the chance to take shape because Elion was already there.
The white blade flashed into view at the very edge of Williamâs vision, reflecting the sunlight in a brilliant arc as it came from the left, in a precise and utterly merciless angle.
In that single instant william understood.
âIâm going to lose my hand.â
The thought made him feel cold all over.
And it brought with it a surge of seething anger that burned through his fear as his teeth clenched and his eyes flared with hatred.
âThis bastard...
Heâs paying me back f
or what I did to that whore of his!
Rage surged within him, but it meant nothing because anger did not make him faster, it did not make him stronger either, and it certainly did not make him capable of stopping what was inevitable.
The blade came down in a clean and unstoppable arc.
Shing!
Time seemed to slow as Elionâs blade began to slice into Williamâs arm, and in that stretched moment between motion and consequence, his entire figure looked like nothing more than a blur.
From the instant he propelled himself forward on that jet of pressurised water to the moment his sword descended, there had been no wasted movement and no hesitation, only clean, decisive execution.
The proctor never even had a chance.
Even if she had known beforehand what was about to happen, even if she had been prepared and watching closely, her body would have never reacted in time to stop it, because the speed at which Elion moved was simply beyond her ability to intercept.
It was simply incomprehensible for a first-year student to move that first. Even the upper years would be hard-pressed to reach that kind of speed and agility.
The blade was already biting into flesh.
Woosh!
Bang!
A figure came crashing down from above.
It happened so suddenly that no one could process it.
The impact landed on Elionâs side with overwhelming force, and the sound of several bones cracking echoed loudly across the arena as several of his ribs fractured instantly under the blow.
"Arghâ!"
Elion was sent flying.
His body spun violently through the air, twisting uncontrollably like a ragdoll caught in a storm, and the speed at which he rotated made him look like a spinning top as he hurtled across the battlefield.
He hit the ground once.
Then again.
Then again.
Each collision sent dust and debris into the air, but the force behind the attack was far too great for him to stop or even slow himself down.
Bam!
His body slammed into the outer ring of the arena, the barrier that separated the battlefield from the first row of seats, and the wall caved in around him on impact as cracks spread outward from the point of contact, fragments of stone falling away as his body finally came to a stop, lodged into the broken structure.
Silence.
Absolute silence.
The entire arena went quiet in an instant, as if the air itself had been sucked away.
"What just happened...?"
It wasnât clear who said it first, but it didnât matter because it was the question on everyoneâs mind.
It couldnât beâ
There was no way that William had done that.
Every single pair of eyes snapped upward toward the figure that had descended.
Shock.
Pure shock.
To say that every spectator, every professor, every student in the arena was stunned would be an understatement, because what they were witnessing was something that should not have happened, something that broke the very rules of what this tournament represented.
Mira felt her entire body go cold, as if her soul had left her for a moment, her eyes wide as she stared at the screen without blinking.
Aria froze completely, her eyes trembling as she tried to make sense of what she had just seen, her mind refusing to accept it.
"No..."
The first voice that broke the silence came from above.
Maximus.
"DAWNCREST!"
His voice thundered across the arena, filled with unmistakable rage as the pressure behind it shook the very air.
"What is the meaning of this!?"
Yes.
Floating in the sky was Duke Cain Dawncrest.
He stood there without a trace of shame, his expression cold and unreadable as he looked down at where Elionâs body was embedded in the broken wall, as if what he had just done was nothing more than a necessary action.
He had attacked a junior in broad daylight, in front of everyone, and he did not seem to care.
Maximus moved.
And it was strange, because to everyone watching, it looked like he was both slow and impossibly fast at the same time, as if the space between him and his destination had simply folded to accommodate his will.
In the span of a single heartbeat, he had already left his balcony with his sword staff in hand.
Within a split second, he was there.
Right in front of Cain Dawncrest.
He positioned himself perfectly between him and the direction where Elionâs body had been launched, as if placing himself as a barrier, not just physically, but symbolically as well.
"Explain yourself!" Maximus thundered, his voice carrying a pressure that made even the air around them tremble slightly, and the authority in his tone left no room for misinterpretation.
Dawncrest did not flinch.
He slowly lifted his gaze to meet Maximusâs. He looked into those abyssal black eyes.
"...Donât tell me youâve grown senile, old man," Cain said calmly, his voice devoid of urgency despite the situation, as if he were merely pointing out an inconvenience rather than answering to an accusation.
Maximusâs grip on his staff tightened.
"What are you implying?"
Cainâs lips curled ever so slightly, not quite a smile, but something colder.
"Can you not see it?" he continued, his gaze flicking briefly toward the broken wall where Elion had been embedded, then returning to Maximus, "or are you only pretending... and letting this rot fester in your school?"
The words hung in the air.
Maximusâs aged eyes trembled.
A thought crossed his mind.
âDid he see it...?â
âThe origin core...?â
The implication struck deeper than the accusation itself, because if Cain truly understood what he was looking at... Then that put his plans in jeopardy.
Maximusâs expression hardened slightly as he processed that possibility.