Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 308: Before the meeting
Steam curled from Elysia’s skin as she stepped from the bath, the heat doing little to melt the cool calculation in her golden eyes. With efficient, practiced motions, she tied her long black hair into a severe, high ponytail. She dressed not in the elegant silks of the student council president, but in form-fitting, dark training gear designed for freedom and lethality. The conversation with her half-brother could wait. First, she needed to sharpen the blade—herself.
Her destination was not one of the public training grounds. As the council president, she had access to privileges far beyond those of a regular cadet. She walked to a seemingly ordinary wall at the back of her manor’s study, placed her palm against a specific stone, and channeled a thread of prana. The wall shimmered like a mirage and parted, revealing not a room, but a doorway into another world.
She stepped through into the pocket dimension reserved for the student council’s elite.
The air here was different—thicker, wilder, smelling of damp earth, ancient bark, and latent magic. Towering, primordial trees blocked out any concept of a false sky, their canopies woven into a perpetual twilight. Bioluminescent fungi glowed with soft blues and greens on the forest floor, and the sounds were a chorus of strange hoots, chitters, and the distant, guttural calls of things that did not exist in the normal world. This was the Verdant Crucible, a managed but deadly ecosystem for the academy’s best to test themselves against.
Elysia drew her sword. It was a slender, elegant blade, yet it hummed with a deadly potential. She didn’t stretch or warm up. She simply walked into the deep shadows of the forest, her presence an intrusion of cold purpose.
The hunt began.
It started with a pack of Shadow-stalkers—wolf-like creatures with fur that drank the light and claws that could shred steel. They emerged from the gloom, six of them, circling with low growls.
Elysia’s expression didn’t change. Her sword came up.
Chiii~ Chiii~
A faint, blue-white crackle sparked along the edge.
The first beast lunged. She didn’t step back. She stepped in, she moved at fast speed becoming a blur. The sword flashed, a line of lightning given physical form. It passed through the beast’s neck not with a cut, but with a crackle-hiss. The creature collapsed, smoke rising from its fur, its nervous system fried instantly by the precise, conducted lightning, it was deadly precious.
The others attacked as one. Elysia turned into a storm. She didn’t wield lightning as blasts from the sky; she conducted it through her sword and her body. She parried a claw strike, and lightning jumped from her blade to the creature’s limb, seizing its muscles in a paralyzing spasm. She pivoted, driving the point into another’s chest; the energy discharged internally, and the monster fell with a muffled thud, its heart stopped.
It was over in twenty seconds. Six monsters lay dead around her, small wisps of ozone-smelling smoke rising into the humid air. She flicked her wrist, clearing non-existent gore from the blade, and walked on without a second glance.
For three hours, under the eerie, perpetual twilight of the pocket world’s false moon, she rampaged. She was not training for a specific technique. She was practicing control of a singular, terrifying emotion: dominion.
A giant, scaled serpent, dripping acidic venom, dropped from the branches. Her lightning-charged sword met its fangs, the energy surging up into its skull. It fell, convulsing.
A horde of chittering, insectoid creatures the size of dogs swarmed from a burrow. She didn’t retreat. She spun, her blade tracing a perfect, continuous circle around her.
"Lightning Wheel." A ring of sustained electrical energy erupted from the path of her sword, expanding outward. The front line of creatures was vaporized; those behind were thrown back, charred and twitching.
Right now, she was like an artist of ruin. Her swordsmanship was not the brute-force hacking of a brawler, nor the flashy showmanship of a duelist. It was economical, precise, and utterly ruthless. Every step was balanced, every swing ended exactly where the next needed to begin. She flowed through the monstrous hordes like water through rock, and where she passed, only smoking corpses remained.
The local ecosystem learned. Monsters began to flee at her approach. The distant calls grew silent. The forest itself seemed to hold its breath around her. She created a moving zone of silent terror.
Finally, she stopped in a small clearing. Her breathing was elevated, but steady. A fine sheen of sweat coated her skin, but her hands were rock-steady on the sword’s hilt. She could feel it—the thrum of power within her core, refined and pushed to its very brink by the constant, effortless exertion. The energy wasn’t just circulating; it was compressing, becoming denser, more potent.
She raised her free hand, fingers splayed. Blue-white arcs of electricity, thicker and brighter than before, danced between her fingertips with a fierce, hungry crackle. The air around her hummed. The hairs on her arms stood on end.
A slow, cold smile touched her lips. The feeling was undeniable. The wall she had been pushing against for months was finally, gloriously, beginning to crack.
She was on the very cusp. The peak of the Purple Knight rank was no longer a distant goal on the horizon. It was a threshold she now stood before, her hand on the door. One more push. One more significant challenge or insight, and she would step through, leaving the high-tier Purples behind and touching the realm of the Apex Knights—the realm of legends like the Headmaster and the clan leaders.
She lowered her hand, letting the lightning fade. The sudden quiet of the terrified forest was her applause. She sheathed her sword, the soft click sounding final in the stillness.
She had come here to blow off steam, to prepare her mind for the manipulation to come. But she had received a better prize: the tangible proof of her own growing strength. Nero was a key, a tool for the clan’s future. But this—this power that was hers alone—was the hand that would turn that key.
She walked back toward the portal, her golden eyes gleaming in the fungal light. The meeting with her half-brother would be interesting. Now, she would negotiate not just from a position of political authority, but from the razor’s edge of imminent, overwhelming power.







