Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 299: Khione’s Intense Training
Before Khione could reinforce it, bolts of lightning arced over the wall, forking toward her. Khione's free hand swept up. A disc of mirror-bright ice, layered a hundred times thin, formed in the air. The lightning struck it, refracting wildly and scorching the ground around her. The heat from the fire attack washed over her left side; the ozone scent of lightning filled her right.
Then the Shatter Knight was there, having flanked her with surprising speed. It didn't use a weapon; its fist, pulsing with destructive energy, drove straight for the ice wall. On impact, the law did its work—the already-cracked wall didn't just break, it disintegrated into a cloud of harmless powder.
Khione was exposed. The Fire Knight recovered, heaving its sword for a downward cleave. The Lightning Mage gathered a larger, roiling ball of energy.
This was the forge. Pressure. Chaos. Multiple vectors of attack.
Khione's mind, cooled by her meditative state, analyzed it all. Fire was aggressive but straightforward. Lightning was fast but predictable in its paths. Shatter was dangerous but short-ranged. Under the heavy gravity, her movements had to be minimal, efficient. She couldn't waste an ounce of energy.
As the fire blade fell, she didn't retreat. She stepped in, under the arc of the swing. At the same moment, she pointed her wand at the ground at the Fire Knight's feet. A pillar of ice, not defensive but offensive, shot upward like a spearing stalagmite. It didn't aim to kill the golem, but to disrupt its balance. The pillar struck its chest, knocking it back a step, the greatsword embedding itself in the earth beside her.
She spun, already facing the Lightning Mage. The crackling orb shot toward her. She didn't block it this time. She met it with a lance of concentrated cold from her wand tip. The two energies collided mid-air—not in an explosion, but in a violent cancellation. The lightning froze in a bizarre, static-filled ice sculpture before shattering.
But the Shatter Knight was on her. She had no time for a complex spell. So, she used the simplest one: shape. A thick coating of ice flashed over her own forearm. She crossed her arms in a guard as the Shatter Knight's fist landed.
CRUNCH.
The ice around her arm exploded into dust, and the force, even dampened, sent a painful jolt up to her shoulder. But it held. Her real arm wasn't shattered. Using the momentum of the blow, she let herself be pushed back, sliding across the weighted ground. As she slid, she traced a complex rune in the air with her wand. The air temperature in the arena plummeted.
Fog began to roll in. Not normal fog, but a freezing mist, dense and blinding. In the heavy gravity, it sank low to the ground, churning. The golems, programmed for direct combat, hesitated for a microsecond, sensors confused.
Khione vanished into the mist she had made.
Inside the freezing fog, Khione moved. Every step was an effort, every breath burned cold in her lungs. But here, she was in her element. The mist carried tiny ice crystals that touched her skin, feeding her information—shifts in pressure, vibrations in the ground, the heat signature of the Fire Golem. To her, the fog was a map. To her constructs, it was a prison.
The Fire Knight swung its sword in a wide arc, trying to dispel the fog with gusts of heat. It only created temporary tunnels of clarity. Khione struck from within one such tunnel. A single, needle-thin spike of ice, harder than steel, shot from the gloom. It didn't target the body, but the knee joint of the Fire Knight. There was a sharp ping and a crack. The golem staggered, its mobility compromised.
The Lightning Mage responded, sending wild, diffused arcs of electricity through the fog, trying to find her by sheer area of effect. Khione dropped flat to the ground, the electricity passing overhead. She placed her hand on the cold earth. A wave of frost radiated out from her touch, not on the surface, but through it. It reached the Lightning Mage's feet and surged upward, encasing its legs in a sudden, deep freeze, locking it in place.
The Shatter Knight, more intelligent in its programming, stood still, listening. It heard the faint crunch of her movement as she rose. It lunged, fist aimed at the sound.
Khione was ready. She didn't summon a wall. She created a slope. A slick, frictionless plane of ice appeared on the ground at her feet, angling away. The Shatter Knight's foot landed on it and shot out from under it. As the construct fell, Khione was already moving past it. Her wand tapped its back. Not a powerful spell, but a precise one: Permafrost Anchor. The ice that flashed over it was thin, but its effect was profound—it didn't just freeze; it bound the golem to the very cold of the earth, sapping its kinetic energy, making it struggle to rise under the combined weight of gravity and enchanted ice.
She turned her attention back to the damaged foes. The Fire Knight was trying to limp toward her, flame guttering. Khione raised both hands. From the swirling mist above it, a single, perfect snowflake began to fall. It landed on the golem's head. Then it multiplied. A second, a third, then a blizzard concentrated on a single point. The Blizzard Seed. The Fire Knight was buried, then compressed, then finally frozen solid in a block of clear, blue ice, its internal fire magic smothered and still.
The Lightning Mage, trapped from the legs down, gathered all its energy for one final, massive blast. Khione didn't interrupt it. She watched it build, a storm of sparks gathering above its orb. Then, just as it released, she pointed her wand. She didn't counter with ice. She shaped it. A funnel of spiraling ice appeared in the path of the lightning bolt, catching it, channeling it, spinning it like a top until the raw electrical energy was woven into a helix of frozen lightning, a beautiful, deadly sculpture that hovered for a moment before clattering to the ground, inert.
Silence returned, broken only by Khione's heavy, labored breathing. The gravity pressed down on her like a physical hand. Sweat had formed on her brow and immediately chilled. She dismissed the fog with a wave. The three golems stood (or lay) defeated: one frozen solid, one rooted and powerless, one struggling against a sapping bind.
She lowered her wand. The session wasn't about defeating them quickly. It was about control. About using minimal movement under maximum pressure. About making her law an extension of her will in the most hostile conditions. Her ice wasn't just about cold; it was about shaping the battlefield, controlling the terms of engagement, using the environment itself as a weapon.
With another tap on the panel, the gravity normalized. The sudden release was dizzying; she felt impossibly light, as if she might float away. The golems dissolved back into light. The aching fatigue in her muscles was deep and real, but beneath it was a profound, thrumming clarity. The political worries, the suffocating love of her father, the watchful eyes of the academy—they were distant noises.







