At dawn, Arcvale Academy slept.
The towers, carved from pale stone and etched with ancient runes, stood shrouded in mist like monuments to forgotten gods. Soft light filtered through crystalline windows, catching on dust motes drifting silently through the grand halls. Elemental wards hummed faintly in the background — unseen but omnipresent — pulsing with layered enchantments to protect the academy from intrusions both magical and mundane.
But beyond the wards… in the untamed wildwood where Arcvale’s control began to fade… the earth stirred — slowly, unevenly, like a creature still learning to breathe.
A tremor rolled through the roots and moss, more uncertain than violent. And at the center of that fragile disturbance stood Zarek Vonn — barefoot, breathless, and shaking — locked in a clumsy struggle not against an enemy, but against his own weakness. His heel dug into the soil with effort, knees wobbling as he braced himself. He let out a grunt, not of power — but frustration.
A small rise in the ground answered—not a pillar or a spike, but a jagged mound of earth, barely shin-high and crumbling at the edges. Zarek collapsed to one knee, arms limp, chest rising and falling in desperate gasps. Sweat soaked through his shirt, and his skin was smeared with dirt and bruises, the kind earned from countless failed repetitions.
He wiped his brow with a shaky hand. “Again…”
“Feel it. Shape it,” he whispered through gritted teeth.
He forced himself upright, legs unsteady. Both arms extended forward, fingers twitching with strain. A new spike of rock edged upward, crooked and barely formed. It trembled under its own weight — and then, like his balance, it faltered and fell. He winced and doubled over, hands on knees, throat raw and dry.
“That’s… wall number three,” he muttered, half-laughing, half-coughing.
Around him, a ragged ring of broken attempts and unsteady formations marked the training ground he’d carved from the wildwood. The terrain was uneven, scarred with failed efforts — stumps split from misfires, vines blackened by minor magical surges. Moss had peeled away where his tremors had struck, revealing the raw, scraped earth beneath.
This wasn’t a master’s arena. This was a novice’s proving ground. Not built with strength — but with stubbornness. Because Zarek Vonn had no teacher. No bloodline of prestige. No elemental guide but instinct and pain.
Far from Arcvale’s grand towers, in the poorest stretch of the commoner district, his home was a slumped shack of cracked wood and leaking roof tiles. But beneath its rotted floorboards, buried in silence and dust, he had found something that changed everything. A wooden chest—old, damp, and forgotten.
Inside: martial scrolls. Their surfaces cracked and brittle, the parchment yellowed with age and singed around the edges as if they had narrowly escaped a long-forgotten blaze. Each page was densely covered with intricate symbols—flowing diagrams of stances, detailed sequences of breath control, and precise instructions that wove disciplined movement with raw, untamed force. The ink had faded in places, but the weight of generations of training seemed to pulse from the fragile pages, as if the very energy of those who once studied them still lingered within the fibers.
At the bottom of one scroll, scrawled in familiar handwriting:
“Joren Vonn,” — His father.
Zarek stared at the name for a long time. He didn’t remember the man well. Just the scent of smoke and steel. The feeling of being carried under starlight.
On another page:
“Power is useless without control. A strong body anchors a strong will.”
Zarek had whispered the words aloud like a prayer, though they felt strange on his tongue. He barely knew his father—just a tired man who worked the land from dawn till dusk, powerless to shield his family from hunger or harm. No magic, no grand legacy—just grit and quiet suffering. How had this same man left behind scrolls like these? What had he hidden in silence all those years? He shook his head, trying to push the questions away. There was no time for doubt—not now. He needed to focus. To train. To turn weakness into strength.
Now, standing on shaking legs within his crude stone circle, he moved—feet apart, shoulders tense, left palm raised; step, shift, breathe. The motions were clunky. Every strike felt like moving through mud. His balance tipped often. His muscles cramped. But with each repetition, his form sharpened. His body started to remember — or maybe it was just learning for the first time.
“Elemental martial arts,” he murmured. “If I can link it… fuse the movement with the magic…” He didn’t finish the thought. Because right now, he couldn’t even hold the magic for more than a few breaths before it fought back — draining him like it didn’t belong in him yet. But he’d keep trying.
Snap.
A twig cracked.
Zarek flinched, spinning clumsily. His arms jerked forward, and a sputtering sheet of earth shot up as a flimsy shield — barely knee-high.
A voice followed—smooth, cool, irritated: “You really are hiding something.”
Aven stepped from the trees, her robes untouched by sweat or mud. The wind moved around her like it obeyed her without question. She looked across the scarred clearing, her pale blue eyes narrowing with subtle disapproval.
Zarek’s shield crumbled instantly. His body sagged with exhaustion. “I don’t want trouble,” he said hoarsely.
“Too late,” she replied, walking slowly around one of the half-formed stone pillars. “You’re training with earth magic… alone. That’s illegal.”
The breeze lifted her hair slightly. She didn’t raise her voice. “You know what they do to unlicensed mages in this kingdom.”
Zarek’s fists clenched, more from shame than anger. “I didn’t steal this power,” he said. “It just… came.”
Aven gave a tired sigh. “They all say that.”
“I’m not one of them.”
She looked at him for a long time, face unreadable, but her eyes—sharp and glinting—didn’t soften. “We’ll see,” she said at last. “I’m watching you, Vonn. But don’t go hard on yourself—Ren told me you’ve been training like crazy since you got the powers. Your body’s too weak to handle this. Rest, or the magic will kill you.”
Then—a whisper of wind, a blur of movement—and she was gone. Zarek stood in silence, the weight of her words like stone on his shoulders. He turned back to his half-formed wall. The one that had taken more energy than it was worth. His body felt like it might collapse with one more breath.
But his eyes still burned. “I don’t care if they watch me or if I die,” he said quietly.
He stepped back into stance—trembling, slow—but determined: left foot grounded, right hand pulled back; his father’s scrolls echoed in his mind. The stone cracked—barely—dust puffed upward, his knuckles split, weak arms, unsteady magic, pain with every breath, but still he moved.
Fist to rock, blood to earth, strength to will—from weakness, he would rise. Zarek would make the magic obey him—not because he was born to it, but because he earned it.
Not even the gods would deny him that.
Latest Chapter
Chapter 022 – The Crucible of Stillness
The bite.The memory of the Lava Ant’ searing venom was a beacon of reality. That pain had been real. This… this was a phantom. Aeltharion’s voice echoed, not as a command, but as a revelation. "You must learn to separate your mind from your body’s agony."This was agony. This was terror. But it was not real.With a Herculean effort of will, Zarek stopped fighting. He stopped clawing at the dead arm. He stopped trying to buck the weight off his chest. He forced his body to go limp, accepting the cold earth beneath him and the crushing weight on top of him.He let the phantom choke him.He stared up at the corpse’s hollow shroud, at the maggot now crawling towards his eye, and he did not flinch. He embraced the horror. He let the icy fingers feel as if they were crushing his vertebrae, let the lack of air burn in his lungs.And as he accepted it, as he stopped resisting the nightmare, something shifted.The pressure on his neck lessened. The cold began to recede, replaced by the famili
Chapter 021 – The Hanging Grove
The first Lava Ant had bitten him.A scream, raw and primal, built in his throat, a pressure valve demanding release. He clenched his jaw so hard he felt a tooth might crack. Tears of pure, undiluted agony welled in his eyes, blurring the faintly glowing dome above.Silence. Aeltharion’s command echoed in his mind, now a lifeline. You will not scream. You will not move.The burning spread, a wildfire contained within the single limb. It was a pain designed to break minds, to make the strongest warrior beg for mercy.Zarek, his body trembling violently, his knuckles white where he gripped his knees, threw his head back and stared blindly at the stone eye above. He did not scream. He did not move.He let the fire consume him, and in its heart, he began the terrible, agonizing work of finding his silence. The pain from the ant bite was a forge, and Zarek’s will was the metal being hammered upon its anvil. For an hour, maybe an eternity, the world was nothing but that single, burning leg.
Chapter 020 – The Eye in the Stone
He lifted his eyes, half in search of distraction, half in rebellion against the encroaching dread, and stared upward into the dome above him.And what he saw made his breath catch.The patterns etched into the ceiling were far more elaborate than he had realized. Now, with his vision accustomed to the strange phosphorescent glow, he could see how they danced and twisted—not randomly, but with terrifying precision. Spirals of sigils, concentric rings of symbols older than language, drew the eye inward. They converged, all of them, toward a single point at the dome’s highest curve—directly above where he now sat.The feeling was unmistakable. It was like sitting at the bottom of a great, stone eye.Zarek swallowed hard, the dryness in his throat almost painful. He didn’t know whether to feel watched or judged or both. Something about the design pulled at the mind, bent thought into unnatural spirals. Were these the glyphs of an ancient priesthood? A forgotten sect? Aeltharion’s own cre
Chapter 019 – The Pit
The trapdoor slammed shut above him with a final, resonant thud that echoed like the tolling of a crypt-seal, reverberating down the narrow shaft and into the hollow space below. In an instant, Zarek was plunged into a darkness so complete it became a weight on his chest, pressing down with a suffocating force.It wasn't merely the absence of light—it was a living, suffocating blackness, thick and absolute, like being swallowed whole by the mountain itself. His breath caught in his throat as his eyes flailed for orientation. Nothing. Not even the hint of motion or form. The silence was cavernous, oppressive, alive with the suggestion of unseen things watching, waiting.He did not move at first.m, His body had gone taut, held in place by primal instinct, every nerve ending aflame with the memory of what he had just escaped above—the seething mass of ants, their obsidian shells clicking, biting, swarming. But here, down below, there was no sound. No skittering.Only his own breath, raw
Chapter 018 – A Candle in the Storm
Consciousness returned to Zarek not as a gentle dawn, but as a rude shove into a world of dull, persistent ache. The memory of fire was a brand on his soul, but the reality was the coarse, scratchy wool of a blanket against his raw skin. He lay on a low, hard pallet, the thin mattress stuffed with what felt like straw and dried herbs that released a faint, bitter scent with his every movement.He was in a single room, a hut so small and sparse it felt more like a prison cell carved from wood and stubbornness. The walls were woven from dark, aged wattle and daub, cracked in places, allowing thin blades of searing morning light to cut through the dimness. The air was thick with the smell of dust, dried sage, and the faint, ever-present tang of ozone and ash that seemed to follow Aeltharion. The floor was packed earth, worn smooth and hard by generations of feet. A single, small, shuttered window was the only other feature, aside from a rough-hewn wooden door. There was no decoration, no
Chapter 017 – The Firelord’s Warning
The beast snarled and lunged forward, driven by either fear or defiance. Its claws carved gashes into the ground as it hurled itself toward Zarek — but the moment it crossed the threshold of that infernal maelstrom, the explosion came.A wave of searing light and heat roared outward in all directions — a sunborn blast that swallowed man and beast alike. The ground split. The heavens trembled. The mountain itself groaned, as if unsure whether to collapse or burn with them.Then — silence.Ash rained down gently, like snow falling in a dead world.When the light finally faded, Zarek stood alone in the center of a scorched wasteland. All around him, the land had melted into glowing stone, still pulsing with afterheat. Cracks spidered across the ground, glowing like veins of fire beneath glass. His body trembled, his chest rising and falling in jagged, shallow gasps. His clothes hung in tatters, half-burned and still smoldering. His skin bore the markings of flame — his arms streaked with
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