
They had already lost him twice. Cael hated losing.
The thief moved like he had been born inside the arteries of the city, cutting through bodies without slowing, slipping between market stalls, turning shoulders at the last second. No panic. No stumble. Every stride carried intent, like the chase existed for his amusement.
A grin spread across Cael’s face. Finally.
Ten strides to the left, Riven tracked angles instead of footsteps—windows, rooftops, fire escapes, elevation shifts. The route wasn’t random; it was curated. Someone was shaping the pursuit, bleeding them into narrower streets where collateral would be easier to weaponize.
“He’s steering us,” Riven called.
“Good,” Cael shot back. “I was getting bored.”
Metal clinked at the thief’s belt as he vaulted a fruit stand. The flash of polished steel caught morning light before vanishing again into motion.
Riven’s new knuckle plate. Meals skipped for that shine. Pride hidden under practicality.
Cael cleared the stand in pursuit, boots scattering apples across stone. A woman screamed. A broom swung and caught nothing but air. Somewhere behind them, a shopkeeper began shouting about damages before realizing the damage was still in motion.
Heat rolled beneath skin, restless and impatient.
The thief glanced back and smiled—sharp, bright, pleased.
“He wants space,” Riven warned. “Stop feeding it.”
“Then stay close.”
Instead of following the alley’s turn, Cael drove shoulder-first into brick. Impact shattered mortar in a concussive blast, dust exploding outward as heat pulsed violently from his skin. Shutters rattled. A second-floor window cracked under the force. A dog howled from somewhere unseen.
The jolt traveled straight through bone and spine. Laughter followed anyway.
“That was faster.”
“That was loud,” Riven answered, stepping through settling debris. “And unnecessary.”
“It worked.”
Iron boots rang overhead as the thief climbed a fire escape two buildings up. Wind tugged loose banners between rooftops, snapping fabric like warning flags.
Three vertical strides carried Cael up the wall. Brick splintered beneath his boots, fingers catching broken ledge as momentum hauled him upward. Crumbling stone scraped palm and knuckles raw, grit embedding in skin.
The rooftop offered loose tile and shifting wind. A slide, a correction, then eye contact.
Lightning flickered around the thief’s hands, thin threads tightening into coiled arcs. Sweat ran along his temple now. Breathing harder. The game had shifted.
“Oh good,” Cael advanced. “You’re interesting.”
The first bolt split the air.
“Down.”
Instinct dropped him flat as lightning detonated tile behind, shards slicing across cheek and jaw. Ozone burned sharp in his lungs while stone fragments peppered the roof.
Rolling recovery brought him upright just as the second strike came faster and closer.
Forward instead of back.
Heat surged outward in a flaring counter, bending the bolt just enough to avoid full contact. Even so, the impact rattled through ribs and down his arm, fingers spasming from the shock.
Worth it.
A heated fist cut toward the thief’s ribs. Leather caught the blow instead of flesh, but the force staggered him half a step. Lightning snapped point-blank in retaliation, white-hot current locking muscles for a fraction too long.
That was when the tremor began.
Not from the city.
From him.
Nerves misfired as heat spiked too high and too fast, the familiar warmth sharpening into something harsher. Forearms burned wrong, control slipping at the edges.
Riven landed beside him, sigil lines cutting precise angles through dust and light.
“You are overextending,” came the calm verdict. “Again.”
“I’m managing it.”
“You are not.”
The thief broke contact and sprinted across the rooftops, breath ragged now, one side favoring where the punch had connected. No more smiling. Only calculation.
A gap between buildings disappeared beneath Cael’s leap. The landing struck harder than intended, stone cracking under boots as the roof sagged slightly from impact. Reserve burned faster than expected, not larger but sloppier.
Another launch clipped a chimney, brick shifting underfoot as balance faltered. Open air yawned below for one weightless second before fingers caught roof edge. Shoulder screamed as body weight dragged downward. Dust rained into the alley like falling ash.
“Stabilize your breathing,” Riven called.
A rough inhale followed as Cael hauled himself upright. The tremor crawled from wrist to elbow, small but insistent.
The hesitation did not go unnoticed.
A full arc of lightning replaced single bolts. Defensive flare came too slow. The strike slammed into raised guard and detonated outward, heat and force sending him skidding backward into a low ridge hard enough to crack it.
Air fled lungs. Vision narrowed.
Unintended heat spilled outward in a pulse that shattered windows below. A man in the alley cursed and dove for cover.
The thief stumbled at the sound.
Riven moved without shouting. Binding geometry snapped shut beneath fleeing boots, light climbing upward in tightening bands before redirecting the fall with clean control. Cobblestone met body with a hard, final impact.
The chase ended there.
Boots struck alley stone unevenly on descent. Balance wavered once, corrected by stubborn refusal to fall. Breath came harder than it should have, hands shaking more than pride allowed.
“See,” Cael forced out, grin stretched too tight. “Perfect.”
Focus remained on fracture lines climbing brick behind them.
“You burned through reserve in under three minutes.”
“I’m fine.”
“You are depleted. Output spikes when control slips.”
Sirens echoed through distant streets, arcane response triggered by half a block’s worth of shattered infrastructure.
A brief grip at the wrist checked pulse and heat.
“Your rhythm is unstable.”
“It always is.”
“Not like this.”
Fingers pulled free. The tremor lingered.
The bound thief watched them both, breathing shallow. “You fight like you want to die.”
A crouch brought eye level even.
“No,” Cael answered quietly. “I fight like I don’t want to.”
Riven said nothing, but something tightened in his expression that had nothing to do with tactics.
An arcane carriage rounded the street’s edge, blue sigils burning across reinforced frame.
“We move.”
Shoulders rolled once, posture loosening deliberately.
“Next time I’ll pace it.”
“You will listen.”
Side streets swallowed them just as officers flooded the block. Fractured brick and shattered glass marked excess, not anomaly or evidence of overdraw, not instability.
Laughter returned during the run, thinner than before.
The tremor hadn’t fully stopped.
And Riven had felt exactly how close collapse had come.
That worried him more than the lightning ever could.
Latest Chapter
What Behaves Outside the Gates
Hexis chose the place on purpose.Not far from the academy. Not hidden. Just outside the reach where authority thinned and structure lost its certainty. The suppression sigils did not end at a wall or gate. They faded, cohesion unraveling into something less absolute.She knew where that edge was.She had felt it before, a subtle shift like pressure equalizing in her ears. Magic breathed differently there. Less insistence. Fewer assumptions about how it should behave.The ground sloped into a sparse stand of winter trees, branches webbing against a pale sky. Snow lay uneven beneath them, broken by exposed roots and half-buried stones that had once marked something meaningful.Hexis stood among them with her coat open and her knives already warm at her sides.Her shadow stretched long across the snow.It did not cling. It did not lag. It waited.“Alright,” she murmured. “Let’s try again.”She stepped.The world folded smoothly, distance collapsing without violence. Shadow swallowed her
What Refused to Stay Sealed
Hexis knew better than to bring anything unfinished to an evaluation.She also knew better than to trust that rule completely. Finished, in her experience, was often just a matter of perspective. The academy preferred stability. Her work preferred responsiveness.The problem was not instability.The problem was that it listened.She sat cross-legged on the stone floor of an auxiliary practice room, sleeves rolled to her elbows, dark hair tied back with a strip of fabric she had already scorched once that morning. The room carried the quiet of disuse, not empty but patient. It felt like a space waiting to see what would be risked inside it.A low worktable stood before her, scarred by past projects that had been officially condemned and privately admired. Faint alchemical circles overlapped across its surface, layered so often they had begun to blur into patterns that no longer belonged to any single design.Hexis liked this table.It did not pretend to misunderstand her.She placed th
Lines Beneath the Snow
Riven hated breaks.He didn’t say it. Didn’t complain. Didn’t pace the dorms or pick fights or hunt noise to drown the quiet. He just kept working.The outer training yard was empty, its usual geometry erased beneath fresh snow. Distance lines and form markers had vanished, softened into suggestion. The academy looked smaller like this—less absolute, like stone could forget.Riven stood near the center anyway.Staff planted lightly against buried flagstones, breath steaming in measured intervals, he lifted one hand and traced a sigil into the air. It lingered: a pale spiral of geometric light, rotating once before settling into place. He whispered the incantation under his breath—not loud enough to carry, not quiet enough to lose its edge.The sigil locked.He stepped back, adjusted his stance, and dismissed it with a flick. Light collapsed inward. Nothing remained but disturbed snow and a faint pressure in the air that faded seconds later.Again.This time he drew two sigils, one abo
Snow Holds Sounds
Snow changed the academy.Not its shape. Not its rules.The buildings stood where they always had. Stone paths cut the same lines through the grounds. Regulations etched into plaques remained rigid and unyielding.Snow did not create anything new.It softened what was already there.Edges blurred. Corners lost their bite. The academy, so often loud with purpose, lowered its voice without being asked.Sound did not carry the same way.Footsteps pressed into the ground and vanished instead of echoing. Doors closed with dull finality instead of sharp authority. Voices dropped instinctively, as if the air itself discouraged interruption.Even magic felt quieter.Not absent.Just restrained.Cael stood at the edge of the courtyard, hands buried in his coat pockets, watching snow gather along the stone railing.Flakes settled. Paused. Melted. Then settled again.He had been standing there longer than he meant to.Long enough for cold to seep through his boots. Long enough for his br
The Same Bells
The bells rang the same they always had.Three times.Low. Even. Measured.Not an alarm. Not a celebration. Just enough to remind everyone where they were supposed to be.Riven felt the shift ripple across campus before he consciously reacted to it. Voices tapered. Footsteps aligned. Doors closed with practiced ease. The academy moved like a body that had rehearsed this motion for generations.The evaluation hall.Again.Winter light slanted through the open stone doors, pale and thin, catching on old scuffs etched into the polished floor. Marks left by disciplined magic. Scrubbed back into compliance whenever they grew too visible.Riven took his seat without speaking.So did the rest of them.Thane settled beside him, stretching her shoulders once before stilling. Her eyes moved immediately. Entrances. Instructors. Spacing. Habit, not paranoia.Ilyra folded her hands neatly in her lap on Riven’s other side. Calm did not mean unaware with her. It never had.Cael lingered half a step
What Remains
The end of the school year did not arrive all at once.It came in pieces.In instructors speaking more slowly, no longer racing syllables against bells, no longer treating every lesson like a contest with disaster.In lectures that drifted instead of snapped to attention, where pauses were allowed to exist without being filled, and questions were sometimes left unanswered on purpose.In assignments that ended with reflection rather than evaluation, where the question shifted from what did you achieve to what did you notice.And noticing, for the first time, was enough.The academy did not declare the year complete.It loosened.Corridors grew louder in the evenings and quieter in the mornings. Doors remained open longer. Training grounds held more conversation than correction.Hexis noticed it first in the light.It lingered now.Not just in courtyards, but in the narrow landings between towers, in ivy threaded through old stone, in stairwells worn smooth by generations of passing han
You may also like

Paths of Extinction
TheCrow34.5K views
The Founder Of Qi Cultivation, Reincarnates?
TSETH117.7K views
The Chronicles of a Mage God
Benjamin_Jnr63.5K views
Become the Strongest God
Jajajuba37.0K views
How the Demon Lord Conquered the Kingdom
Corbeau186 views
Ashbone: The Record of Burning Heaven
Kai Lennox 2.8K views
THE CODEX OF SHADOWS: AWAKENING OF DERICK GREENWOOD
Hanju-Ink398 views
Destroyer of the Dao
Evanscapenovel29.0K views