Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 303: The Knight of Blood: Discussion

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Chapter 303: The Knight of Blood: Discussion

Balrog stopped launching discrete attacks. He began to dominate the environment. He spun, his arms wide, and summoned a Grand Vortex. The air in the entire chamber began to rotate, slowly at first, then faster and faster, pulling at Kaelen, trying to drag him off his feet and into the grinding maw of the cyclone.

Kaelen’s serene expression finally tightened. He couldn’t deflect this. He had to contest it. He planted his feet and raised his hands, palms facing the swirling maelstrom. He wasn’t trying to stop it. He was trying to control it.

"You want a storm?" Kaelen’s voice was barely a whisper, yet it carried through the howl. "A storm has an eye."

He began to pull. Not against the spin of Balrog’s vortex, but with a different rhythm. He created a counter-rotation at the vortex’s very center, around himself. He was stealing Balrog’s momentum, calming the chaos immediately around him to create a pocket of perfect, deadly calm—the calm where the air pressure was so low it felt like the vacuum of space. The vortex now had two hearts: Balrog’s violent outer wall and Kaelen’s serene, oppressive eye.

Balrog felt the control of his own technique slipping. His law was being reinterpreted. His fury peaked. With a guttural shout, he collapsed the vortex inward, pouring all its catastrophic energy into a single, diving point—a Typhoon Spear aimed directly at Kaelen’s calm eye.

This was it. The brute-force apocalypse against the unshakable center.

Kaelen didn’t flinch. As the spear of condensed hurricane-force wind shot toward him, he finally made an aggressive move. He stepped forward, into the attack. His hands moved in a circle, a tai chi motion of awful slowness against the blinding speed of the spear. "Law of Wind: Null Point."

He wasn’t blocking. He was disassembling.

Where his hands passed, the coherent, violent structure of the Typhoon Spear unraveled. He sliced the binding currents, dissipated the core pressure, scattered the focused will. It was like watching a tapestry being unpicked thread by thread at the speed of light. The spear disintegrated into a harmless, rushing gust that flowed around Kaelen and past him, battering the walls of the chamber.

For a split second, Balrog was overextended, his ultimate attack dissolved.

Kaelen struck. Not with a blast, but with a Suffocating Palm. He was suddenly in front of Balrog, his hand not touching Balrog’s chest, but stopping an inch away. The air directly around Balrog’s head and chest was instantly siphoned away, replaced with a vacuum that also pulled at the blood in his veins and the air in his lungs. Balrog’s eyes bulged. It wasn’t damage; it was systemic shutdown.

But Balrog Cassius was the Knight of Blood for a reason. In crisis, his instinct wasn’t to retreat, but to erupt. He couldn’t breathe, so he used the last air in his lungs to roar a single, focused syllable. The sound, amplified and compressed by his law, became a Sonic Lance fired point-blank from his mouth.

FWUMP!

It was a desperate, close-range blow. It hit Kaelen square in the stomach, not cutting him, but blasting the air from his lungs and hurling him across the chamber. The vacuum palm technique broke.

Both men skidded to a halt on opposite sides of the room. They were bent over, gasping. Balrog sucked in huge, ragged breaths, his ears ringing. Kaelen clutched his midsection, his precise control shattered by the brute-force sonic attack.

After a moment, Balrog straightened up, a trickle of blood from his ear. He started to laugh, a deep, rumbling, joyful sound that echoed in the sealed space. "Hah! Now that was a duel!"

Kaelen winced, but a faint, genuine smile touched his lips. He’d forgotten the sheer, visceral thrill of clashing at this level. "Your subtlety... remains an inspiration, Balrog."

"Shut up," Balrog grinned, walking over and offering a hand. "You almost suffocated me, you bastard. That was a good move."

Kaelen took the hand and was pulled up. "And you nearly burst my liver with a shout. We are, as ever, a terrible influence on each other."

The containment runes glowed softly, absorbing the last eddies of wild wind. The storm was over. The itch was scratched. As they walked out, already arguing about who would explain the fresh scoring on the chamber walls, there was a mutual, unspoken respect. They had not fought to win, but to remember what they were: not just teachers, but masters of a glorious, devastating law. And for a little while, in the heart of their manufactured storm, they had both been gloriously, devastatingly alive.

•••

The sealed chamber’s hum faded behind the heavy door, replaced by the familiar, quiet stone of the academy’s private halls. The adrenaline still sang in their veins, a pleasant buzz beneath the lingering ache of a good fight. Balrog led the way to a small, unused observation balcony overlooking the night-shrouded training fields. He reached into his coat and pulled out a flat, silver flask, unscrewing the cap with a satisfying click.

He took a long pull, hissed through his teeth as the liquor burned its way down, and handed it to Kaelen. "Here. For your liver."

Kaelen accepted it with a soft grunt, taking a more measured sip. The whisky was cheap and strong, a soldier’s drink, not a scholar’s. It warmed the cold precision in his gut. They sat in comfortable silence for a moment, looking out at the dark, their recent clash still hanging in the air between them like ozone after a storm.

"The first-years are back," Balrog said finally, his voice a low rumble. "Means the outside missions start next week. The real stuff. No more simulated golems in a gravity chamber."

Kaelen nodded, passing the flask back. "The board finalized the zones. Mostly low-risk reconnaissance and stabilization tasks near the border wilds. Standard fare. A good wake-up call." He paused. "For most of them."

Balrog took another drink. "Yeah. For most." He didn’t need to say the name. He swirled the liquor in the flask. "What do we do with him, Kaelen? The kid. Nero."

"We teach him," Kaelen said simply. "As we are tasked to do."

"Don’t give me that ’Silent Gale’ cryptic crap," Balrog snorted. "You felt it when you watched the recordings. You saw what he did on my training ground today. That’s not just a student. That’s... a variable. An equation the world hasn’t solved yet. Two laws. Not just two, but Lightning and whatever his first one is—something dense, foundational. He’s a Red Knight who fights like a Purple. He’s a walking storm."

Kaelen was quiet for a long minute, listening to the distant sound of a lone cadet practicing late in a far-off yard. "Every generation has its prodigy," he said softly. "Its anomaly. They become legends, or they become warnings. The storm he brings... it won’t be his choice. The world will react to him. The other clans are already moving. My sources say the Undine girl has already secured her father’s backing for him. The Leclairs have made their position public. He is gathering shields, whether he wants to or not."

"That’s politics," Balrog waved a dismissive hand. "I’m talking about the mission. Put him in a standard squad, on a standard low-risk patrol, and what happens? Either he holds so far back he’s useless, or something goes sideways—which it always does—and he’s forced to cut loose. Then the whole world sees a first-year cadet unleashing power that shatters the scale. It’s a beacon. It’s asking for trouble."

"So, we don’t put him in a standard squad," Kaelen said, his eyes sharp in the dim light. "We design a mission that expects a storm. A mission where his abnormal power is the solution, not a secret to be hidden."

Balrog leaned forward, interested. "You mean throw him into the deep end on purpose."

"I mean we assess him accurately," Kaelen corrected. "If he is a sword, we do not use him to cut butter. We test him against a worthy challenge. There is an old watchtower in the Northern Scar. The readings have been... irregular. Strong, unstable energy fluctuations. It was deemed too volatile for a standard first-year team. Too unknown."

"A perfect puzzle for a dual-law wielder," Balrog finished, a fierce grin spreading across his face. "Send him. Send his whole little pack—the Undine girl, the Leclair boy, the others. They stick to him like glue anyway. Let’s see how they function as a unit when the scenario isn’t a game. Let’s see how he functions when there’s no teacher to step in, and the problem isn’t just a stronger knight, but a mystery."

Kaelen took the flask back for a final sip. "It is a risk." 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞

"Everything with that kid is a risk," Balrog said, standing up and stretching, his joints popping. "But keeping him caged in ’normal’ is the biggest risk of all. He’ll either break the cage or rust inside it. I’d rather see him break something useful."

He looked out at the sprawling academy, a place built on order and tradition. "A storm is coming, old friend. You can either board up the windows and hope it passes, or you can learn to sail in it. I say we teach the boy to sail."

Kaelen stood, handing the empty flask back. "I will propose the Northern Scar watchtower to the mission board. Emphasize its need for... unique problem-solving capabilities."

Balrog clapped him on the shoulder. "That’s the spirit. Now, come on. We’ve got those faculty meetings. You can explain the new scoring on the chamber walls. Tell them it was a teaching demonstration."

Kaelen sighed, the sound whispering like a breeze. "A terrible influence."

But as they walked back inside, both men felt it. The pleasant fatigue from their fight, the burn of the whisky, and the quiet, certain knowledge that they were no longer just grading papers and running drills. They were standing at the edge of something new, something their carefully balanced world had never seen before. And they were deciding, drink by drink and word by word, how to meet it.