Chapter 142: Chapter 142: Games and Blades
The colosseum stadium had gone quiet.
Not silent—fifteen academies worth of supporters ensured there was always noise—but the quality had shifted. Gone were the excited chatter, the casual betting, the relaxed atmosphere of a spectacle. In their place: tension. Focus. The particular hush of people watching something that could end badly at any moment.
The massive hologram dominated the arena’s center—a three-dimensional display that showed every individual participant in their own screen, one hundred and fifty windows arranged in a grid that floated above the arena floor. Each window was labeled with name, academy, and vital signs. Some showed students running. Others showed them fighting. A few flickered with static where environmental interference blocked the feed.
"Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen!" The commentator’s voice was controlled energy—enthusiastic but professional. "For those just joining us, we’re twelve minutes into Round One, and the action is already INTENSE!"
Cameras shifted, zooming in on different screens.
"We’ve got Karacus Drakemore of Heaven’s Gate squaring off against Dean Hawthorne of Astral Zenith—two absolute POWERHOUSES going at it in the eastern mountains! And—oh, this is interesting—we’ve got the Moonveil sisters approaching the western pass, and it looks like they’ve got company!"
The mountain pass was narrow—barely wide enough for three people to walk abreast, with sheer cliff faces rising on either side and a drop that disappeared into mist below. The wind howled through the corridor like a living thing, carrying dust and small rocks that pinged off stone surfaces.
Sage and Rue stopped at the entrance.
Four figures blocked the path ahead.
New Dawn Academy. Sage recognized the sigil on their uniforms—a rising sun over crossed swords. Three men and one woman, all clearly prepared for a fight.
"They’re blocking the pass," Rue murmured, her voice too quiet for the enemies to hear. "We could go around, but that adds at least forty minutes."
Sage’s smile spread slow and predatory.
"Or we could have some fun."
Rue’s tails twitched. "Fun?"
"This is a game, little sister." Sage’s nine tails fanned out behind her, golden fur catching the dim light. "They’re not trying to kill us—the rules don’t allow it. That means we can play."
She stepped forward.
The New Dawn squad tensed. The woman in front—heavy armor, fire manipulation if the orange glow around her hands was any indication—raised her voice. "Stop there! This pass belongs to—"
Sage’s illusions snapped into existence.
A complete replacement of reality that wrapped around the four enemies like a cage made of lies.
The cliff faces vanished, replaced by endless plains. The narrow pass became a wide field. And where Sage and Rue had been standing—
Twelve identical copies of each sister now surrounded the New Dawn squad, each one grinning, each one with tails spread wide.
"What the—"
"Where did they—"
"Which ones are real?!" fгeewebnovёl.com
Panic spread through the squad like wildfire. The fire manipulator’s flames flickered and died as her concentration shattered. One of the men stumbled backward, eyes darting between illusions that moved with perfect synchronization.
Rue watched from the real position—still at the pass entrance, completely invisible thanks to Sage’s Perception Filter.
Her eyes found the most panicked enemy—a young man with wind manipulation, currently spinning in circles trying to track illusory foxes that didn’t exist. His breathing was ragged. His eyes were wide.
"Run."
One word.
The Word Magic hit him like a physical force. His eyes glazed. His body tensed. And then he ran—sprinting directly away from the illusions, directly toward the cliff edge, directly into—
CRACK. BOOM.
Lightning found him.
The bolt struck the ground three meters from where he’d been running, close enough that the electric discharge sent him flying. His body hit the cliff face with a sickening THUD, and he crumpled, unconscious but alive.
"One down!" the commentator’s voice boomed through the stadium. "Incredible use of whatever magic that was by Rue Moonveil! The New Dawn Academy student walked right into an environmental hazard!"
The remaining three New Dawn students were breaking.
"Regroup! Regroup!" The fire manipulator was screaming, trying to rally her teammates, but Sage’s illusions weren’t done. Fake portals shimmered into existence around them—convincing enough that one of the men made a break for the nearest one.
He ran straight into a solid cliff wall.
THUD.
"OH!" The crowd winced collectively. "That’s going to leave a mark!"
The woman was the last one standing. She’d managed to rekindle her flames, orange fire licking up her arms, and she spun in a desperate circle trying to find the real sisters.
"SHOW YOURSELVES!"
Sage appeared directly in front of her.
"Boo."
The fire manipulator screamed and threw a fireball—wild, uncontrolled, missing Sage by a meter. Sage’s tail caught her around the waist, yanked her off her feet, and slammed her into the ground with enough force to knock the wind out of her lungs.
WHAM.
She didn’t get up.
Sage dusted off her hands as the illusions dissolved, revealing the real landscape once more. Four New Dawn students lay scattered across the pass—three unconscious, one groaning but unable to move.
"And that’s FOUR for ZERO!" The commentator was losing his mind. "The Moonveil sisters dismantle an entire squad without taking a SINGLE POINT OF DAMAGE! Is there anything these foxes can’t do?"
Rue dropped the Perception Filter, becoming visible beside her sister. Her expression was thoughtful.
"That was fun."
"We’re just getting started." Sage stretched, tails swishing. "The other two are still conscious. Want to play with them before we move on?"
Rue’s smile was innocent and kinda dangerous.
"Why not?"
Southwest of the portal zone, Caelan Asten was not having fun.
The wind tunnel stretched before him—a corridor of compressed air so dense that it visibly distorted light. It was the only path through this section of the terrain, and it should have been impassable. The wind speeds exceeded anything a Mana Heart cultivator could normally endure. Gravity here was six times standard of other areas on this small planet. Lightning struck the walls every few seconds, each bolt leaving scorch marks that glowed angry orange.
Caelan stood at the tunnel’s entrance, breathing hard.
At his feet lay a young man in Imperial Academy colors—unconscious, breathing steadily, definitely alive. The fight had been brutal but brief. Caelan’s sword intent had overwhelmed the student’s defenses in under a minute, a testament to the gap between them.
But the victory had cost him.
His mana reserves were down to forty percent. His body ached from the constant environmental punishment. The wind tunnel ahead was a wall of air that would strip the flesh from his bones if he tried to force his way through.
Can’t go around. Can’t go through. Can’t—
Caelan stopped thinking.
He sat down.
Right there, in the middle of the killing field, with lightning striking fifty meters away and wind screaming loud enough to deafen, Caelan Asten closed his eyes and meditated.
What is sword intent?
The question wasn’t new. He’d been asking it since he was ten years old, since the day he’d first felt that white energy coat his hands and knew—knew—that the blade was his path.
Sword intent is the desire to cut.
But that wasn’t right either. Cutting was the result, not the essence. The desire to cut was the motivation, not the method.
Sword intent is—
The wind screamed. Lightning crashed. His body screamed with him.
Sword intent is the alignment of self with the edge.
Caelan’s breathing slowed and deepened. The chaos around him didn’t fade—if anything, it intensified—but his perception of it shifted. The wind wasn’t attacking him. It was simply moving. The lightning wasn’t hunting him. It was simply discharging. The gravity wasn’t crushing him. It was simply pulling.
All of it was chaos. All of it was directionless energy, waiting to be given purpose.
If I can’t resist the chaos...
His sword intent stirred. That white energy that had become as much a part of him as his own heartbeat. It pulsed in his chest, in his hands, in the blade at his hip.
...then I’ll cut through it.
Something clicked like a lock finding its key.
Caelan opened his eyes.
The world looked different. Not visually—everything was still horrid, still chaotic, still trying to kill him. But his understanding had changed. The wind wasn’t a wall anymore. It was a thousand individual currents, each one moving in a specific direction, each one with gaps between them.
Gaps he could cut wider.
He stood. Drew his sword.
The white energy that coated the blade was different now—sharper, more focused, carrying an edge that hadn’t been there before.
"Whispering Willows." His voice was quiet, almost reverent. "Fifth Form."
SWISH.
He swung.
Not at the wind. Not at the tunnel. At the concept of obstruction itself. His blade traced a line through the air, and reality parted—the chaotic currents separating, the wind tunnel splitting open like a curtain, creating a corridor of relative calm that extended twenty meters into the chaos.
"Sky Departure."
The crowd in the colosseum went absolutely wild.
"DID YOU SEE THAT?!" The commentator was screaming now, all pretense of professionalism abandoned. "Caelan Asten of Heaven’s Gate Academy just CREATED A TECHNIQUE MID-COMPETITION! I THINK. He cut through a wind tunnel that should have been impassable! Is this kid for real?!"
Caelan was already moving—walking through the corridor he’d created, sword still drawn, intent still blazing. The wind howled on either side, but the path before him was clear.
He emerged on the other side three minutes later, stepping into a wide valley that opened up before the portal zone and appeared on the stage.
Three figures were already there.
Two wore the sigil of Empyrean Celestial Academy—silver and white uniforms, postures relaxed, expressions confident. The third wore the dark colors of Neon Abyss Academy, standing slightly apart from the others, arms crossed.
All three turned to look at Caelan as he approached.
"Looks like Heaven’s Gate finally sent someone." One of the Empyrean students—tall, silver-haired, with an aura that screamed dangerous—smiled without warmth. "We were starting to wonder."
Caelan said nothing.
Four people now at the stage with less than two hours remaining.
The commentator’s voice boomed through the stadium, electrifying the crowd.
"CAELAN ASTEN REACHES THE PORTAL ZONE FIRST AMONG HEAVEN’S GATE PARTICIPANTS! He joins three others—two from Empyrean Celestial, one from Neon Abyss! The race is ON, ladies and gentlemen! Which will be the first academy to qualify?!"
In the VIP section, VP Dubois sipped her tea and smiled.
In the Vorn family box, Thalia leaned forward, eyes bright. Marcus said nothing, his expression dark.
And somewhere in the western pass, two fox-kin sisters were still playing with their prey, having the time of their lives.