Wilting Blossoms; Sprouting Dreams

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Bell Obius
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Wilting Blossoms; Sprouting Dreams

Post by Bell Obius »

The tendrils of ivy, meticulously trained to drape from the ceiling of Dormitory 3B in the upper east wing, caught the nascent light filtering through the thin veil of Bell’s curtains. Beyond the glass, the colossal, intersecting arcs of Xelphis and Solaris performed their eternal cosmic dance, bathing the room and Bell’s face in their soft, otherworldly luminance.

She had been in this pose for an hour already, seated cross-legged on the floor amidst a quiet jungle of potted ferns and hanging mosses, her breath measured and deep. Meditation had become a cornerstone of her routine. Each morning, just before the break of dawn, her family would gather, centering themselves for the day ahead and sharing the lingering echoes of their dreams. Doing so now, alone in the quiet hum of the dorm, felt strangely incomplete without the familiar, gentle rhythm of her brother’s snotty nose just beside her left ear. The adjustment to being away from home, from that ingrained sense of togetherness, had taken time and quiet tears.

A few days had passed since the crucible of the assessment exam. Her start down this freshly chosen path at the prestigious Ars was, to put it mildly, rocky. The whispers, the pointed stares, the resurrection of the cruel moniker "Dead Blade" – it had all threatened to drown her. Yet, she had managed to pull herself together, not just to silence the snide family members who doubted her or the community that dismissed her, but to prove to herself that the "Dead Blade" was anything but, that her spirit still ebbed with as much fearsome resolve as ever.

Through the cuts and scraps of their mockery, Bell had held onto the core of her strength, drawing on the raw essence of what it truly meant for her to be a swordsman. Each time she drew her blade, it became less and less about honoring her father’s legacy and more about affirming for herself what the Soul of the Sword embodied in her own hands, in her own heart.

It had been a hard-fought victory against River, more so mentally than physically. River, while undeniably skilled, could not see past his own self-imposed greatness. His vain grandeur guided his blade, placing an ocean of arrogance between them. Yet, conversely, something similar could be said of Bell herself. Her general lack of belief in her own abilities, this self-garnered curse she was so desperate to excise, had her in constant war with her own ego. If she was truly going to achieve her ideals, the ones that had brought her here, she was going to have to cultivate more confidence in herself and keep honing her body to ensure it was capable of shouldering the formidable burden of that resolve.

"I will become strong... strong enough... to protect everyone I love." she whispered, the words a quiet vow echoing in the stillness of the room.

She opened her eyes, the burning amber gleam of her retinas shrinking slightly as the burgeoning light touched them. Rising from her position, she stretched out her limbs, feeling the satisfying pull in her muscles. She was feeling in tip-top shape now, the physical exertion of the assessment and the subsequent recovery leaving her body humming with readiness. She was ready to explore this place, to finally step outside the protective ward of her room.

She hadn't made any friends yet. Part of her was still dealing with the uncertainty of how she was truly viewed here, beneath the surface politeness. She couldn't let that anxiety paralyze her. The whole point of Ars was to build community, to connect souls within the vast Astral. She had to keep an open heart if she wanted that to change. Besides, the Obius house members weren't the only people here; it wasn't like everyone looked down on her. In fact... maybe now was the perfect time to try talking to people.

She walked over to a pot where a delicate violet orchid bloomed. Leaning down, she inhaled its sweet, delicate fragrance before smiling gently. "What do you guys think? Should I try and make some friends today?" she said softly to the plants around her.

The flowers were, in many ways, Bell's closest friends. Her most trusted confidantes and often her only companions growing up. It was to them she whispered her dreams, her worries, her sorrows. Though they never spoke back, they also never betrayed her truth to anyone, never offered unsolicited, cutting advice like people sometimes could.

"Okay then, it's settled. Today's the day!" she declared, a small, determined smile on her face. She clenched her fist, her heart brimming with a mix of excitement and trepidation. But she wouldn't let her nerves get the best of her.

She finished getting dressed quickly, pulling on comfortable, loose pants and a soft sweater, tying her long, bushy auburn hair back into a practical ponytail. She glanced at herself in the mirror, the reflection of her practical attire making her snicker. How unladylike she looked! She could almost hear her mother’s voice. '"You'll never find a man dressing like one, Bell!'" she mimicked, wagging a finger at her reflection, before chuckling to herself.

Turning away from the mirror, she moved to the right side of her room, standing now before her blade and its well-worn sheath.

"Loyalty is the root of human connection," A mantra she believed in wholeheartedly, a fundamental constant in her often-unstable world. She spoke the words aloud, the familiar sound echoing through her spirit like a soothing salve, grounding her.

Just as she placed her sword and sheath onto her person, securing the familiar weight at her hip, a soft rap sounded at the door. Curious, she went to answer it, pulling it open to find not a person, but a small, fluffy dorm-dog sitting patiently, a folded note held carefully in its mouth.

"Aww, how cute," she said, her voice softening, as she gently took the note from the dog. Unfolding the paper, her eyes scanned the neat script.

"I will be by the largest cherry blossom -- Starshadow"

She paused, perplexed. Starshadow? The name meant nothing to her. Who was this person, and why were they summoning her? Confusion warred with her newfound resolve to be open. Was this a test? A prank? Or simply an unexpected invitation? Deciding that hiding wouldn't serve her goal of building community, she took a deep breath.

Taking one last glance at her plant companions for silent encouragement, Bell closed the door behind her and started heading towards the tree, a knot of anticipation and curiosity tightening in her stomach.

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Bell Obius
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Re: Wilting Blossoms; Sprouting Dreams

Post by Bell Obius »

The grand halls of Ars Haven were a living ecosystem. Bell left the dorms, navigating the river of students as best she could, a current of chatter and ambition flowing around her. Ars was an interesting place; there weren't teachers curating schedules or pushing agendas. They hosted workshops—on blade-craft, elemental weaving, political theory, arcane mechanics—and whoever wished to attend came. It was a place of self-exploration and navigation, a sprawling buffet of opportunities that fed your ambitions, yet offered the chance to change gears whenever you felt the need.

It was chaos... yet, a meticulously balanced chaos. When she first arrived, the sheer freedom was overwhelming. She feared she would be constantly singled out, a lesser Obius adrift in a sea of prodigies. But the reaction had been the opposite. People smiled, some even walked up to her, gave their names, and asked about her swordsmanship. It seemed not everyone shared the suffocatingly snobby opinions of her own house.

For the first time in a long time, she felt like she could breathe.

"Hey there, little Bell."

The fresh air turned stale in her lungs. Meredith's voice, sharp and grating as nails on slate, screeched across her ears. Bell’s shoulders slumped. She rolled her eyes just enough for the ceiling to see before sighing and turning to face her cousin.

"Meredith..." Bell said, the single word already heavy with annoyance.

Meredith’s lips curled into a practiced sneer. "Don't think just because you managed to impress a few commoners that you're some big shot now."

"W-what? I don't—" Bell stammered, caught off guard.

"You just caught River on an off day," Meredith interrupted, stepping closer, her voice a conspiratorial hiss. "He is the pride of the Obius family, and you're just some two-bit swordswoman barely clinging to the edge of nobility. Don’t forget your place."

A new voice, smooth as polished obsidian yet carrying an undercurrent of heat, cut through Meredith’s tirade. "Tch, so this is what passes for nobility?"

Before Bell could muster a defense, a girl stepped into view. Her hair burned like a simmering flame, a stunning cascade of crimson shot through with the subtle pink rays of a Solara dawn. Bell’s eyes widened as she noticed the crest pinned to her leather tunic: House Tyre.

Meredith folded her arms, leaning into her hip with an air of challenged superiority. "Excuse me? And just who the hell are you?"

The red-haired girl didn’t answer. She took two deliberate steps forward, forcing Meredith back until her shoulders hit the cool stone wall. With a sharp thud, the girl slapped her hand against the wall beside Meredith’s head. She wore a spiked collar that glistened like diamond shards, and from her ears hung silver crosses, each one etched with a tiny, blood-red ruby.

"As if I'd bother giving my name to the likes of you," she said, her scarlet-pink eyes narrowing. The air around her hand began to shimmer with palpable heat. "But I gotta ask, are you bullying her? Because there’s nothing I hate more than a bully."

Meredith sucked her teeth, a flicker of genuine fear in her eyes, though she fought to mask it with scorn. "Well, if it isn't the Flaming Boar Princess, Nuria Tyre. Living true to the name, as brash and uncivilized as ever."

A crisp, cold voice sliced through the building tension. "One would expect royalty to rid themselves of such barbarous ways, especially the younger sister of the current Tyre crown."

Bell’s gaze darted to the source, a familiar dread coiling in her stomach. River Obius. He stood there, immaculate in his uniform, an aura of condescending grace about him. Nuria’s eyes cut towards him like freshly brandished blades. Taking advantage of the distraction, Meredith scurried from under Nuria’s arm, pivoting to stand safely by River's side.

Bell’s eyes widened again. The younger sister of the crown? Was this girl that important?

Nuria flexed her hand, gripping the wall with uncanny strength. A sharp crack echoed in the hall as a spiderweb of fractures spread from her palm. The sound drew the attention of everyone nearby. Students began to clamor around them, a chattering ring of spectators drawn to the confrontation like moths to a flame.

"I would very much appreciate it, Lord River," Nuria said, turning to face him fully, her body now outlined with a faint but decorous scarlet hue. It was the aura of a fire mage, barely contained. "If you refrained from mentioning my brother. That is, of course, unless you're consenting to be beaten by yet another girl in front of the whole school?"

She shot a quick, coy smirk at Bell. A warmth bloomed in Bell’s chest that had nothing to do with Nuria’s power. She shyly pushed a loose strand of hair behind her ear, returning the gesture with a small, grateful smile of her own.

"Tch, why I—" River snarled, his face beginning to flush.

A bold voice from the crowd shouted, "Daaamn, Obius got burned! Again!"

An orchestra of mocking laughter erupted around them. River’s face went from flushed to a deep, embarrassed crimson. The pride of the Obius family looked utterly flustered.

"Alright, alright, break it up!" One of the few adults who roamed Ars Haven, a man with a grizzled beard and the patient eyes of someone who’d seen it all, stepped through the crowd. "This is a damn fire hazard. That goes double for you, Nuria."

Nuria clicked her tongue but casually dropped her hand, allowing the simmering veil of heat to dissipate into nothing.

"Dammit, this isn't over, Boar Princess," River spat, his voice low and furious. He turned his glare on Bell. " And you, get the hell out of my way, cretin." He and Meredith shoved their way through the sea of students, their hasty retreat only fueling the onlookers' amusement.

As the crowd dispersed, Nuria sauntered over to Bell, a relaxed grin on her face. "Don't mind them. Some nobles are just real snobs. Can't stand their ilk." She held out a hand. "Nuria Tyre. So you're Bellamarasu Obius, eh? Kind of a badass name for a girl so shy."

Bell shook the offered hand, surprised by its warmth and the calluses on the palm. "Oh—um, thank you, Miss Nuria—"

"Aht-aht," Nuria cut her off with a wave of her other hand. "None of that 'Miss' or 'Lady' crap. Nuria is just fine. Besides…" She winked. "We're friends now. Friends don't need formalities and junk."

Bell blinked. "R-Really? Just like that?"

"Yeah, why not?" Nuria shrugged, her ruby earrings catching the light. "I like your face. Plus, I saw your exam match. You're not nearly the pushover you let everyone think you are." She leaned in a little, her voice dropping. "I can tell, Bell… there's a flame burning inside you. It's just… simmering. But I got a feeling one day… it's going to burn as bright as Xelphis and Solara combined."

Bell’s breath caught in her throat. Esteem, pure and potent, washed over her. No one outside of her immediate family had ever spoken such life into her. She could tell, with a certainty that settled deep in her bones, that Nuria wasn't the type to coddle egos. She meant every word.

"Thanks… Nuria," Bell managed, the name feeling natural on her tongue.

"No problem. So, where were you headed before those inbreds started pestering you?"

"I… I got a letter," Bell said, pulling a folded piece of parchment from her pocket. "From someone named Starshadow. To meet them by the big cherry blossom out back."

Nuria’s easygoing demeanor vanished. Her eyes went wide. "S-Starshadow?!"

"You know of him?"

"Uh, yeah, how do you not?" Nuria exclaimed, her voice a mix of awe and disbelief. "He's only the strongest Obius known to the Nine. They say he once turned down the chance to be the Crown! The Blade of the entire kingdom!"

Bell was thoroughly stunned. The Tyre and the Obius clans had a long history; the very ore for the famed Obius blades was foraged and blessed by Tyre fire-smiths. Yet her father, who had drilled so much of their family’s lore into her, had never once mentioned a Starshadow. Why would such a prominent family member be a secret? And what could he possibly want with her?

"I wonder what he wants with me…" she murmured, more to herself than to Nuria.

"Only one way to find out," Nuria declared, her adventurous spirit reignited. She grabbed Bell’s hand, her grip firm and reassuring.

"Let's go!"

And just like that, the pair was off, running through the chaotic halls of Ars Haven towards the ancient cherry blossom tree. Bell didn't know it yet, but she was running toward a meeting that would change her entire life, shifting the very course of a destiny she was only just beginning to believe she could command.

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Bell Obius
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Re: Wilting Blossoms; Sprouting Dreams

Post by Bell Obius »

The air in the courtyard of Ars was a soft balm, scented with damp earth, night-blooming jasmine, and the subtle, sweet perfume of moss clinging to ancient stones. It was a place designed for peace, a sanctuary where architecture bowed to nature. Walkways of polished river rock wound through groves of silver birch and weeping willows, their leaves whispering secrets to the gentle breeze. Ivy crept over the warm terracotta walls of the dormitories, its green fingers interwoven with the latticework of balconies and archways. For the students of Ars, this was not merely a path to their quarters; it was the beginning and end of each day's meditation, a constant, quiet reminder of balance and harmony.

It was through this living tapestry that Nuria guided Bell, her steps light on the stones while Bell’s were more hesitant, her senses overwhelmed. In time, the manicured beauty of the dorms gave way to a wilder, more profound majesty. The Grand Blossom emerged from beyond the horizon, a titan of bark and bloom. It was less a tree and more a mountain, its gnarled branches reaching for the heavens like the arms of a praying god. A perpetual shower of pale pink petals drifted from its canopy, catching the sunlight in a cascade of shimmering light that granted it an almost ethereal and supernatural allure.

"So this is the Grand Blossom..." Bell murmured, the words a lost breath in the vastness of the tree’s presence.

As they drew closer, the scale of it became breathtaking. Its trunk was as wide as a small cottage, its bark a history book of deep, winding fissures. Beneath its sprawling canopy, the light was soft and rose-tinted. And in that gentle light, a figure stood waiting.

Nuria stopped so abruptly that Bell nearly collided with her. "It's him..." she whispered, her voice an odd mixture of reverence and weariness, the tone one reserves for a respected but dangerous storm.

A sudden, unwelcome tightness seized Bell’s chest as she laid eyes on the man. He was clad in what was unmistakably armor, yet it flowed with the grace of ceremonial robes. It was the color of a starless night, polished to a mirror sheen and etched with filigree of the purest gold she had ever seen. A mask, bisected perfectly into night-black and sun-gold, hid his face. But it could not hide his eyes. They were sharp, predatory, and they swept over the two of them in a single, assessing glance that felt as though it weighed their very souls.

"So you've come," Starshadow spoke. His voice was a low baritone, stern and resonant, yet beneath the steel was a fragile octave of something that might have been care.

"Y-yes... I'm Bell—"

"I know who you are," he cut in, his abruptness a sharp edge. He then turned that piercing gaze to her companion. "You as well, Nuria Tyre." His arms were folded casually across his chest, a posture of relaxed authority that was more intimidating than any overt threat.

"Oh—um, good to meet you, Starshadow sir," Nuria stammered, her usual confidence evaporating under his scrutiny. Bell couldn't help a flicker of a smirk; seeing her friend so flustered was a small, amusing comfort.

"I was expecting you to come alone," Starshadow said, his tone pointedly directed at Bell.

Guilt pricked at her. "I-I'm sorry, I had planned on it, but—"

"Don't judge her too harshly. I kinda forced myself on her," Nuria interjected, stepping slightly forward as if to shield her friend.

A low sound, half sigh, half chuckle, escaped from behind the mask. "Heh... it seems no matter what, the Tyre and Obius are always fated to be tethered." He looked at them, but his gaze seemed to drift past, into a history they couldn't see. "After all... we share a destiny forged in the cosmos." He glanced at the katana resting at his side, its hilt wrapped in black silk and gold wire.

"Starshadow, sir," Bell said, finding her voice. "Can I ask why you have called me here?"

His focus snapped back to her, the intensity returning. "The reason... yes, of course." His tone hardened, shedding any trace of reminiscent warmth. "Simply put, Bellamarasu Obius, Daughter of Benemaru, I challenge you to a spar."

The quiet courtyard seemed to fall silent. The rustling leaves, the distant chime of bells—all of it vanished, replaced by the ringing in Bell’s ears. "Ch-challenge me?"

"Sir, with all due respect," Nuria burst out, her protective instincts overriding her fear, "you are a renowned swordsman... to go up against a student—"

"The sword is a vessel of the strong to cut down the foes of the weak," Starshadow intoned, and the words struck Bell like a physical blow. They were not just a saying; they were a key, unlocking a deep chamber in her spirit.

!!!

"I wish to see for myself the strength of your convictions, the power of your resolve," he continued, his eyes narrowing behind the mask. " For if I find either lacking... I will send you home a failure."

The weight of his declaration was staggering. Bell could feel the aura of a true warrior radiating from him, a palpable pressure that made the air thick and hard to breathe. It was terrifying. Yet, tangled with that fear was a burning curiosity. Who was this man who knew her father's most private creed?

"Your terms?" Bell asked, her voice steadier than she felt.

"You are to land a single blow upon me. Do so, and I will acknowledge you. However, if I manage to shatter your sword, you lose and must give up the path of the blade… forever."

The stakes were absolute. Her entire future as a swordswoman balanced on this single encounter.

"I accept," she said, surprising even herself with her conviction. "But if I succeed, you reveal your true identity to me. Everything."

"Bell, you can't be serious!" Nuria hissed, grabbing her arm. "He's in a literal league of his own."

"I must, Nuria," Bell replied, her gaze locked with the half-gold, half-black mask. "Those words... those are the words my father taught me. A personal code and creed of the blade. That he knows them… means there's more to this, and I have to see it through. Besides," she added, a ghost of a confident smirk touching her lips as she echoed her friend's earlier bravado, "I'm not nearly the pushover I pretend to be."

Nuria stared at her for a long moment, then a slow grin spread across her face. She squeezed Bell’s arm. "Right. Give him hell, Bell."

Starshadow gave a slow, deliberate nod. "Very well. I accept. Follow me."

He turned without another word and began to walk, not back toward the dorms, but deeper into the grounds of Ars, along a path less traveled. The grand cherry blossom receded behind them, its ethereal light replaced by the deepening shadows of an ancient cypress grove. The air grew cooler, heavier. The silence between them was absolute, broken only by the crunch of their footsteps on fallen leaves. Starshadow moved with a liquid grace, his armor making no sound, as if he were a phantom gliding over the earth. Bell and Nuria followed, the initial shock giving way to a chilling, suspenseful anticipation.

They arrived at a clearing Bell had never seen before. It was a perfect circle of flattened, gray stone, surrounded by towering cypress trees that blocked out most of the sky, creating a natural arena. In the center of the stone circle were faint, worn carvings—ancient runes of power and combat. This was not a training ground; it was a dueling floor, steeped in history and purpose.

Starshadow stepped into the center and turned, his hand resting on the hilt of his blade. "Prepare yourself, daughter of Benemaru. Let me see the steel that carries your conviction."

Bell’s heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic drumbeat in the silent woods. This was it. With a deep breath, she drew her own blade, the familiar weight a small comfort in the face of the impossible. The polished gleam of her scabbard in the dim light, a sliver of hope against the encroaching shadow. The spar was about to begin.

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Bell Obius
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Re: Wilting Blossoms; Sprouting Dreams

Post by Bell Obius »

The world was a circle of gray stone and shadow. Towering cypress trees stood as silent sentinels, their dense boughs interlocking to form a canopy that swallowed the sky, leaving only a sliver of bruised twilight above. This was not a training ground; it was a hallowed dueling floor, its surface etched with the faint, worn runes of power and combat, each line a testament to centuries of Öbius history. The wind that ghosted through the arena was a strange thing—it carried the solemn howl of wolf cubs, a high, lonely sound, yet it moved with a lightness that sent fallen leaves skittering across the stone. This lightness was a lie, a cruel trick of the air that did nothing to lift the suffocating tension pressing down on Bell.

Her grip on the hilt of her Komorebi was firm, but a fine tremor ran up her arm, a physical manifestation of the anxiety and doubt coiling in her gut. Her knuckles were white against the Ferrosilk wrappings of the tsuka. Starshadow saw it. Of course, he did. His eyes, visible slits in a mask of polished obsidian, narrowed with a predator’s focus.

He had yet to draw his own blade. Instead, with a liquid grace that was both beautiful and deeply unsettling, he settled his weight, his hands held open and relaxed at his sides. He slipped into a martial stance that Bell recognized instantly, a form that sent a fresh spike of ice through her veins.

"But that's…" she breathed, the words catching in her throat.

Akarai. The Dancing Current.

It was one of the clan’s esoteric and revered art forms, a style that eschewed the blade entirely in favor of manipulating the battlefield itself. It was a dance of absolute control, using an opponent’s own energy, their own weapon, against them.

“The Paryi’s is a style of a single, perfect moment,” he said, his voice a low resonance that seemed to emanate from the stones themselves. “Yet it might as well be an anchor that weighs the user down, to the past, to the obsolete.”

Humiliation burned hot in Bell’s cheeks, a fire that momentarily chased away the cold dread. He was belittling her. He was deeming her, her blade, and her inherited style unworthy of a true duel. The insult was a whetstone to her resolve.

Fine.

If he would not honor her with steel, she would force his respect.

Her world narrowed to a single point: Starshadow. The Paryi’s way was not about prolonged combat; it was about ending a fight before it truly began. She closed her eyes, pulling her Anthem from deep within her core. The Ferrosilk in her scabbard and hilt flared with invisible energy.

Then she moved.

It was less a step and more an explosion. Her body surged forward, and in the same heartbeat, her blade left its sheath. The specialized scabbard, Void, resonating with her magnetic pulse, launched her Komorebi out with breathtaking velocity. The air screamed as the steel drew an arc like that of a setting sun, a line of pure, destructive intent aimed directly at Starshadow’s chest.

He didn’t retreat. He didn’t block. He flowed.

As her blade neared, Starshadow’s left hand swept in a gentle, circular motion. Bell felt it instantly—a subtle, irresistible tug on her sword. His Anthem, a force like a vast, deep river, had reached out and caught her own. Her blade, so eager for its mark, suddenly felt heavy, sluggish, as if cutting through thick honey. Its trajectory shifted by a mere fraction of an inch, but it was enough. The tip of her katana sliced through empty air, passing harmlessly by his side.

"!!!"

Her momentum carried her past him. She stumbled, catching herself on the edge of the stone circle, her heart hammering against her ribs. The explosive force of her attack was spent, leaving her breathless and exposed.

Starshadow hadn’t moved from his spot. “The river does not fight the stone,” he murmured, his voice calm. “It simply flows around it.”

Frustration warred with her fear. He was using her own Ferrosilk against her, the very material that was supposed to be an extension of her will. She could feel his magnetic presence, a constant, gentle pressure on the metallic threads of her uniform, her scabbard, her sword. He was reading her every twitch, every intention, before she could even act.

"Your beliefs, your blade...they are stones, ensnared by the ebb of my skill...carved by it's will"


Gritting her teeth, Bell took a breath and let it out slowly. She would not be goaded into another reckless charge. She would show him the ghosts of the old way still had teeth.

She began to move. Her steps were a subtle cadence, a soft rhythm against the ancient stone. Woven into the heels of her boots were small discs of magnetized naten. With each step, she left a faint, invisible signature of her Anthem upon the ground. This was her father’s specialty: the Dance of the Fallen.

Suddenly, the arena was filled with her. A half-dozen afterimages shimmered into existence, held together by the lingering magnetic resonance of her steps. They mimicked her movements, a spectral troupe of swordswomen, each with a hand resting on the hilt of a phantom blade. The technique was designed to overwhelm, to induce panic, and force an opening.

Starshadow remained still, a statue at the heart of her phantasmal storm. He watched, his head tilting slightly. “Your father’s ghosts,” he murmured, the words laced with a cold pity. “They dance well. But they are still only echoes of a blade that is already dead.”

With a movement as fluid and inevitable as a river flowing around a stone, he shifted. He didn’t attack her illusions; he simply moved through them. His own magnetic field, a subtle and powerful current, pulsed outwards, disrupting the naten signatures. One by one, her afterimages dissolved into motes of shimmering light, collapsing like puppets with their strings cut. He hadn't broken a sweat. He was now within her guard, his open palm aimed not at her, but at the air just beside her head. He could have ended it.

Bell leaped back, her heart hammering against her ribs. The casual ease of his counter was terrifying. He was toying with her...

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