Chapter 434: Her Night Training
Chapter 434: Her Night Training
Let us rewind two hours.
The gravity room was cold, but Khione was colder.
She stood alone in the center of the chamber, her training suit dark against the pale walls. The gravity setting was at four times normal—enough to press down on her shoulders, to make every breath a small effort. She did not adjust it. She welcomed the weight.
Around her, the room hummed with energy. The floor was reinforced steel, scarred by past battles. The walls shimmered with containment runes. And from the shadows at the edges, the golems emerged.
They came in pairs. First, two knight-type golems, their bodies forged from silver-blue metal, their swords coated in frost. The Law of Ice, but not her ice. Their ice was brittle, hungry, mindless. They charged.
Khione raised her wand. She did not speak. She did not need to.
A wall of ice erupted between them, thick and jagged, stopping the first golem mid-swing. The second golem leaped over the wall, its sword aimed at her throat. She sidestepped, her movement fluid, unhurried. Her free hand touched the golem’s chest, and ice spread from her fingers, covering the metal, freezing its joints. It crashed to the floor, immobile.
The first golem had circled around. Its sword came low, aiming for her legs. She hopped over the blade, spun, and drove her wand into its back. Ice exploded from the point of impact, shattering the golem’s core. It fell in pieces.
The room did not pause. More golems materialized—mage-types this time, three of them, their crystalline bodies glowing with pale blue light. They raised their arms, and ice spears shot toward her from three angles.
Khione’s expression did not change. She tapped her wand against the floor. "Glacial Dome." A hemisphere of ice enclosed her, thicker than any wall she had summoned before. The spears struck the dome and shattered, their fragments skittering across the floor.
She lowered the dome and stepped out. The mage-golems were already preparing another volley. She did not give them time.
"Ice Shard Barrage." Dozens of needle-thin projectiles shot from her wand, each one finding a golem’s core. They collapsed, their light fading.
The gravity increased. Five times. Six times. The room was testing her, pressing harder. She did not falter.
A new wave: four knight-golems, two with swords, two with spears. They moved in formation, their steps synchronized, their weapons weaving a net of steel. Khione watched them come, her wand low at her side.
She waited until the first spear was inches from her chest. Then she moved.
She dropped, the spear passing over her head, and swept her leg across the floor. Ice coated the steel beneath the golem’s feet, and it slipped, crashing into its companion. She rose, thrust her wand toward the remaining two, and a wave of frost rolled from her, flash-freezing their weapons, their arms, their cores.
They stopped. The frozen ones behind her were still struggling. She turned, walked between them, and touched each one lightly with her wand. They shattered.
The gravity eased. The room paused, resetting. Khione stood in the center, her breathing even, her skin pale. Sweat beaded on her forehead, but her eyes were clear.
She was close. She could feel it—the edge of the next realm, the Master Mage stage. Her ice was sharper, denser, more responsive. Her spells came faster, with less thought. Her control had deepened.
Another wave: a single golem, larger than the others, its body etched with runes that glowed like liquid nitrogen. A knight-commander. It carried a greatsword of black ice, and its aura pressed against her like a frozen wind.
Khione raised her wand. The golem raised its sword.
They clashed.
The golem was strong, its sword strokes heavy and precise. Khione deflected with ice walls, dodged with quick steps, countered with sharp darts. The fight was silent, intense, a conversation of steel and frost.
She found an opening. The golem overextended on a thrust, and she stepped inside its guard. Her wand touched its chest. "Absolute Zero."
The ice that spread from the point of contact was not white. It was black, the color of the deepest cold, the absence of all heat. The golem’s runes flickered, died. Its greatsword clattered to the floor. It stood frozen for a long moment, then crumbled into fine dust.
The gravity room powered down. The lights returned to normal. Khione lowered her wand and stood amidst the wreckage of the golems.
Her expression remained cold. But inside, something had shifted. The door to the next realm was no longer locked. It was merely waiting for her to push it open.
She gathered her things and walked out of the room, her footsteps steady on the stone floor. Two hours had passed. Nero would be training now. She would find him later.
For now, she was satisfied.
The training room doors hissed shut behind her. Khione walked through the empty corridors, her footsteps soft on the stone. The festival still hummed in the distance, muffled cheers and distant music, but here, in the residential wing, there was only the quiet whisper of the ventilation and the occasional flicker of a lamp.
Her body was tired. Not exhausted—she had learned to pace herself—but pleasantly worn, like a blade that had been sharpened and sheathed. Muscles hummed with the memory of exertion. Her core pulsed with the steady rhythm of prana, fuller than it had been that morning. Progress. Slow, but real.
She reached her dorm and keyed the lock. The door swung open into the small, familiar space. A bed, a desk, a closet. A window that faced the garden. Everything in its place, neat and ordered. She preferred it that way.
The bathroom was tiny, barely room to turn, but the water pressure was good. She turned the tap and steam began to rise, fogging the mirror, softening the edges of the room. She undressed slowly, folding her training clothes, setting them on the counter. The water was hot when she stepped in, and she let out a slow breath as it hit her shoulders.
She stood under the spray for a long time, not moving, not thinking. Just feeling. The heat soaked into her muscles, loosening the knots that training had tied. The steam wrapped around her, a cocoon of warmth. She closed her eyes and let the water run.
When she finally stepped out, her skin was pink, her hair dark with moisture. She toweled dry, wrapped herself in a soft robe, and padded into the kitchenette.
The meal was simple—a bowl of rice, some pickled vegetables, a small piece of fish left over from yesterday. She ate standing at the counter, chopsticks moving methodically, her eyes on the window. The garden outside was quiet, the flowers closed for the night, the trees still. A single lantern swayed in the breeze, casting soft shadows.
She finished the last bite, washed the dishes, and set them to dry.
Then she moved to the bed.
The sheets were cool against her skin. She lay on her back, staring at the ceiling, her hands folded over her stomach. The room was dark except for the sliver of moonlight through the curtains. She listened to the silence, the distant festival, the soft thrum of her own heartbeat.
Her mind wandered.
She thought of the training—the golems, the ice, the way her spells had flowed without hesitation. She was close to the next realm. She could feel it, like a door just barely ajar, waiting for her to push. One more breakthrough. One more step. Then she would be a Master Mage, and the gap between her and Nero would not feel so vast.
She thought of him. He would be training now, pushing himself, chasing some impossible goal. She did not worry. He was strong. Stronger than anyone she knew. And he would come back to her, as he always did.
She thought of the festival, of the masks, of the games they had played. Of his hand in hers, warm and steady. Of the way he looked at her, as if she were the only person in the world.
Her lips curved, just slightly. A private smile, for no one but herself.
She turned on her side, pulling the blanket to her chin. The pillow was soft. The room was still. Sleep came slowly, drifting in like mist over a lake, quiet and gentle.
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