Chapter 1035 A Knight’s Glance, A Mage’s Echo
Chapter 1035 A Knight’s Glance, A Mage’s Echo
Silence settled like dust.
Not the peaceful kind.
The aftermath kind — the heavy, ringing quiet left behind when the world stops trying to kill you.
Valeria exhaled once. Controlled. Precise. The way she’d trained herself to breathe after a kill, after a clash, after a battlefield’s rhythm stuttered into stillness.
Her blade lowered.
She didn’t sheath it yet.
Not until the proctor dismissed the dome.
But her eyes —
her eyes went to the trio beside her.
Ren Aldric, breathing hard enough that each inhale scraped the air. Knees shaking, but refusing to fall again.
Liliana Crestfall, hands trembling as she unstrung her bow — not fear, but adrenaline wearing off too quickly for her small frame to compensate.
Both exhausted.
Both competent.
Both dependable enough to work with.
Valeria’s gaze softened by a fraction.
They held.
She’d worked with first-year teams before — in field evaluations, in mock patrol drills, in Marquis Vendor’s clearance missions when she was the “Olarion knight” stationed as his temporary blade. Most teams cracked under pressure. Lost formation. Lost nerve. Lost themselves.
But these two hadn’t cracked.
She would remember that.
Her eyes lifted—
And stayed.
On the third one.
Elowyn Caerlin stood at the center of the ruins like frost given human form — steady, composed, mana still faintly bleeding from her fingertips in strings of melting light.
Not shaken.
Not even visibly strained.
Valeria felt something tighten beneath her ribs.
Not discomfort.
Not suspicion.
Something rarer.
Recognition.
Because what she had just witnessed —
what that girl had done —
was not normal.
Not for a four-star.
Not for an academy student.
Not for most trained battlemages.
Valeria had worked with plenty of mages during the Vendor investigations. When the Magic Tower insisted on participating — claiming jurisdiction over any arcane residue connected to the Cloud Heavens Sect — her family didn’t object. The involvement diluted the credit she would receive, of course, but refusing cooperation would have created friction she couldn’t justify. Several lords in the outer-east relied on assigned tower mages for their territory’s stability; stepping on those toes would have undermined Vendor’s entire operation.
So she tolerated them.
She tolerated their commentary, their habit of turning every encounter into a chance to expound on spellcraft, their tendency to diagnose the ambient mana of a battlefield out loud as if speaking to apprentices. She tolerated the endless intellectual noise because she had to — because the Purge Knight could not afford to alienate allies, even uninvited ones.
Some of those mages had been competent. A few were exceptional. Many were forgettable.
But one, in particular, resurfaced in her thoughts now.
A young man assigned from the Tower’s ice division — not because he specialized in frost, but because he fancied himself a scholar of “elemental structures.” He had spent half a patrol lecturing her about the nature of ice spells while she attempted to track footprints through the snow.
‘The thing about low-tier ice magic,’ he had said, matching her stride while she wished he’d stay ten paces behind, ‘is that its geometry is simple. Straight lines. Sharp angles. It’s not like lightning, which curves according to the path of least resistance. Ice tends toward fixed vectors unless the caster is exceptionally trained.’
He’d gone on for far too long.
‘Snap Freeze is directional. Fracture Vein anchors into the ground in linear paths. Iceprint is reactive. Glacier Vein is basic shaping — very rigid. You can’t make it bend without years of modification.’
Valeria recalled nodding with the politeness expected of her station, even while she mentally charted the angle of a fresh trail her squad had found. At the time, his words had slipped into the background like falling sleet.
Now they came back with disquieting clarity.
Because the spells she had just seen Elowyn cast were… wrong.
Not wrong in failure — wrong in how they moved.
Glacier Vein had arced like a serpent instead of rooting straight across stone. Snap Freeze hadn’t burst outward in a cone; it had sliced through a shockwave like a blade, angled with surgical intention. Iceprint had formed beneath a charging construct without any visible tracing, placed with the instinctive precision of someone who understood how to manipulate footing under duress.
Even her Frostfall Net — a spell Valeria had only ever seen as a crude grid meant to slow targets — had formed an intricate lattice, each line placed with purpose.
‘Was that guy just straight up lying or is there something different about Elowyn?’
Valeria replayed the moment Elowyn’s frost spiraled across the field, shaping flow, influencing momentum, tethering beasts into predictable arcs. None of it matched the simple diagrams that mage had sketched in the dirt to pass the time while waiting for Vendor’s orders. He’d drawn clean X-shapes and straight veins with a stick. Nothing curved. Nothing lived.
Elowyn’s magic lived.
It breathed and shifted and adapted, as if the frost responded not just to mana, but to intention.
Had she misremembered?
No. Valeria was disciplined, but she wasn’t arrogant enough to assume her understanding of spell mechanics was flawless. Even so, she wasn’t imagining what she had seen.
Ice magic simply did not behave like that — not from a four-star student who introduced herself with the effortless politeness of a minor baron’s heir.
Her grip tightened slightly around her hilt, the faint warmth of the leather grounding her thoughts.
Holding her hilt a moment longer, she grounded herself through the familiar texture of worn leather. Even now, long after the frost stopped moving, her thoughts would not.
The frost she commanded wasn’t adhering to prescribed forms. It was responding to intention. It was shaping the battlefield the way a tactician shaped soldiers. It was alive.
And Valeria realized, with a strange tightening in her chest, that there was only one explanation her mind readily reached for.
‘She’s a genius.’
Not a prodigy in the scholarly sense — the Tower had plenty of those, and Valeria had never been impressed by their bookish brilliance. No, Elowyn’s brilliance felt different. Raw, instinctive, the kind that wasn’t polished in classrooms but forged through trial, mistake, pressure.
Lucavion’s shadow crept into her thoughts before she noticed it.
Because he, too, had been like that.
Rough-edged, self-taught, but frighteningly capable of taking a technique, breaking it apart, and rebuilding it into something sharper. His swordwork had evolved in front of her eyes during those brief weeks in Andelheim. His footwork had grown cleaner, his grips more precise, not because someone trained him — but because he learned by doing, adapting, adjusting in real time.
She had never known people like that growing up.
Her family valued discipline, lineage, instruction. Her father taught through drills. Her siblings learned through inherited forms. She became a knight because she worked for it — every stance, every cut, every breath trained into her bones by repetition and correction.
Meeting Lucavion had cracked that view of talent open just a little.
Watching Elowyn shatter it felt… strangely familiar.
‘There are people who learn on their own,’ she thought, ‘in ways I don’t understand.’
She didn’t consider whether Elowyn had been trained. The thought didn’t even occur to her. Not out of ignorance — but because her mind had already categorized the girl as one of those impossible individuals who seemed to grow through instinct rather than instruction.
‘People like her… they’re born with this kind of talent.’
The assessment was partially correct.
She didn’t know how correct.
The dome’s illusion continued to dissolve, gold motes drifting in the air like the remnants of some unspoken ceremony. The others began lowering their weapons. Ren sighed in relief; Liliana pressed a hand to her knees. The tension that had bound them all a moment ago dispersed into the dust.
Yet Valeria remained still.
Not tense. Not guarded. Just uncertain.
And that, somehow, was worse.
The silence stretched — not uncomfortable for the trio, but unsettling for her. Normally she would find silence preferable to awkward chatter. It was easier to maintain composure when words weren’t required. But now she felt something unfamiliar tug at her ribs.
It was the urge to speak.
NOVGO.NET