Chapter 75: Symbols 2
Oinaru shifted his stance and hurled a spear of fire straight at Maya.
The flame condensed as it flew, not dispersing like a normal blaze but sharpening into a focused, elongated point of heat and force. The air around it warped, shimmering violently as it crossed the chamber in an instant.
Maya met it head-on.
Her sword came up without hesitation. Rock armor tightened around her arm and shoulder, reinforcing the guard as she planted her feet. The moment the fire struck, the impact detonated against her blade in a burst of pressure and heat that rippled outward across the chamber floor.
Stone cracked beneath her boots.
Dust lifted in a circular wave.
She slid backward several steps, boots scraping lines into the ground, but she did not fall.
She did not break stance.
She stopped herself by force alone, exhaling sharply as she absorbed the remaining energy through her armor.
Yuto’s eyes narrowed as he watched her.
Something about her movements kept catching in his mind.
Not just that she was blocking.
Not just that she was reacting.
There was something more deliberate underneath it, something that didn’t belong to instinct alone.
There was structure in it.
A hidden framework beneath the chaos, like invisible lines she kept returning to without ever breaking form.
A rhythm beneath everything.
Her sword strikes weren’t scattered responses or desperate corrections.
They repeated with purpose, circling back to the same underlying pattern each time,
Something intentional.
Like a sequence.
A pattern layered under combat itself.
He couldn’t fully grasp it yet, but it sat at the edge of his understanding, almost forming into something readable.
Then Maya stopped.
Just for a moment.
Her breathing steadied.
Her grip adjusted.
She lifted her sword slightly, not in preparation for a block or a counter, but in a motion that looked almost simple.
Then she slashed the air.
Clean.
Controlled.
Almost understated.
Oinaru froze mid-motion.
A sharp tremor ran through his body.
He staggered backward as if something had struck him internally rather than externally.
His hand went to his side.
His eyes widened.
"What—what is this—"
His voice cut off abruptly.
Then his form began to break.
Not like injury.
Not like blood or damage.
Like structure losing coherence.
A faint distortion spread across his body, edges of his form unraveling into thin trails of light and smoke-like fragments that drifted away without direction.
The others froze.
Even Shinto stopped moving completely.
Oinaru’s presence flickered again.
More unstable now.
His outline no longer held steady.
Then he shouted, voice cracking as realization hit him.
"She cut them... my tethers!"
Silence followed immediately.
The chamber felt different after those words, like something fundamental had shifted in understanding.
Maya lowered her sword slightly.
Her voice came steady, but tired, like she had been holding the explanation back until the moment it became necessary.
Part of sorcery, she said, taught that a soul was anchored to the world through tethers.
Invisible connections.
Bindings that allowed manifestation, stability, and form within the physical realm.
When Oinaru’s soul had been sealed away from the physical world, those tethers had been broken.
That was why he had been unable to manifest properly at first.
The gemstone had begun repairing those links when Shinto activated it.
Not fully restoring him.
Just enough to pull him back into partial existence.
That was why he had felt incomplete.
That was why his presence had been unstable.
And that was why he had been vulnerable.
Maya hadn’t been fighting a direct body.
She had been reading the structure underneath it.
Her sword swings had never been random attacks.
Each movement had carried precise alignment.
Each strike had traced invisible lines in space, following a pattern she had reconstructed through observation and timing.
Not just combat.
Construction.
She had been carving symbols into the air itself.
A sequence hidden inside motion.
And the final slash had completed it.
All tethers severed at once.
Oinaru’s body collapsed inward.
Light broke out from within his form as the structure holding him together failed completely. freёwebnovel.com
Then he shattered.
Not into pieces.
Into absence.
His presence dissolved into scattered light and vanished entirely from the chamber, leaving nothing behind where he had stood.
For a moment, no one moved.
The silence felt heavier than the fight that had preceded it.
Then the gem dropped from where it had been suspended.
It hit the ground with a sharp, clean sound that echoed through the chamber.
Tami reacted first.
He rushed forward and grabbed it before it could roll further across the stone floor.
The moment his fingers closed around it, the glow stabilized slightly, still faintly pulsing but no longer erupting with uncontrolled energy.
Maya tried to step forward, but her strength gave out.
Her knees buckled, and she collapsed onto the stone.
Tami turned immediately.
"Maya!"
Shinto stood frozen in place, staring at the empty space where Oinaru had disappeared.
His voice came out barely above a whisper.
"Master..."
No answer came.
Only silence.
Yuto stepped forward slowly, both swords still in hand, eyes fixed on Shinto.
His voice was calm, but firm.
"Maya already finished her part," he said quietly. "Now I finish mine."
Shinto didn’t respond.
He simply vanished.
One moment he was there.
The next, nothing.
No movement.
No trace.
Just absence.
Yuto clicked his tongue, he is a little annoyed that Shinto vanished, after all Maya already proved herself, he wouldn’t get to prove himself.
. "Seriously..."
Tami knelt beside Maya, still holding the gem tightly as if afraid it might react again.
For a moment, none of them spoke.
The chamber felt emptier now, but not peaceful.
Just quiet in a way that still held weight.
Then Maya exhaled slowly, exhaustion settling into her posture.
"We got the gem," she said.
For the first time since he met, there was something close to a smile on her face.
Yuto looked at the gem.
Then at her.
Then at Tami.
And finally, he let the tension in his shoulders ease.
"Yeah," he said.
A pause.
Then a faint smile of his own formed.
"After all that... we finally did."
End of Volume 1: Genesis