The private sparring garden was a tiered terrace of white marble carved into the side of the ridge. It was open to the sky, and the cold mountain air felt sharp against Vane's skin after the stifling atmosphere of the dining hall. There were no plants here. Instead, the ground was covered in a fine layer of gray volcanic ash that shifted with every breath of wind.
Alistair Sol stood in the center of the terrace. He had changed out of his formal wear and now wore a simple black tunic. He was just standing there, looking out at the darkened valley, but the air around him was distorted. It was a localized pocket of heat that made the falling snowflakes vaporize before they could hit the ground.
Valerica stopped at the edge of the ash. Her violet hair was pulled back into a tight braid, her eyes reflecting the dim glow of the mana sconces. "You wanted to see us, Father."
The Duke turned around. He did not look angry. He looked at Vane with a clinical, focused interest. "I watched the sensor logs from the Iron Cathedral. Your duel with the Glacium boy was not a typical exchange. Most mages at your rank rely on the quantity of their mana to win. You relied on the frequency of your rejection."
Vane walked onto the terrace, his boots making a soft crunching sound in the ash. "I used what I had."
"You used an Expert's logic while sitting in an Elite's body," Alistair said. He walked toward Vane, his movements slow and deliberate. "To reach Rank 3 in Oakhaven is more than just luck. It means your mana channels are naturally wider than a noble's. Your soul has a density that should not exist in someone without a lineage. It is a biological curiosity."
The Duke stopped five paces away. "I want to see it. Show me the silver mana that bypassed the Pale Eternity."
Vane felt the Usurper authority in his soul tighten. He knew he could not beat a Rank 8, but the Duke was not looking for a fight. He was looking for a benchmark.
"Valerica, stand back," Alistair commanded.
The Duke did not raise his hands. He simply let a fraction of his intent leak into the air.
The pressure hit Vane like a physical wall. It was not the cold spatial compression Isaac used; it was a dry, radiating gravity that felt like the mountain itself was leaning on him. Alistair was the center of the world, and everything in his orbit was being pushed toward the floor.
Vane's heart hammered against his ribs. He felt the weight in his lungs, making every breath a struggle. Beside him, Valerica was forced to a half crouch, her own mana veins glowing violet as she fought to maintain her posture.
Vane did not fall. He planted his feet, the marble beneath his boots cracking under the atmospheric weight.
He triggered the [Internal Pulse, Grade B]. His heart thudded a heavy, metallic rhythm in his chest. He pushed the silver mana into his skeletal structure, using the high frequency vibration to disrupt the Duke's gravity. He was not trying to out muscle the Grandmaster; he was trying to vibrate at a frequency that the Duke's light could not catch.
Silver sparks began to drift from his skin. They were tiny, matte silver motes that danced in the air, refusing to be extinguished by the golden pressure.
Alistair's eyes glinted with a sharp, yellow light. "There it is. The Silver Fang. Most people would have their veins burst trying to manifest that law at Rank 3. Yet yours are holding. Your foundation is not just solid; it is reinforced."
The Duke closed the gap in a heartbeat. He did not use a spell. He just placed a hand on Vane's shoulder.
The contact was like having a hot iron pressed against his skin. Vane's vision flared as the Duke's mana surged into his channels. Alistair was not attacking; he was mapping. He was looking at the Sentinel Gate. He was looking at the raw, high density mana Vane was using to hammer at the door to Rank 4.
Vane did not pull away. He looked the Duke in the eye, his silver mana humming so violently that the air around them began to blur.
"You are a monster," Alistair noted, his voice calm. "A commoner with the soul of a King. You are not just reaching for the Sentinel rank. You are demanding it. But the Gate does not open for demands. it opens for stability."
Alistair pulled his hand back, and the pressure vanished instantly. Vane stumbled, coughing as the oxygen rushed back into his lungs. Valerica stood up, her face pale and her hands shaking.
"He is ready for the transition, Father," Valerica said, her voice strained.
"He is ready for the attempt," Alistair corrected, turning his back on them. "But the hall tomorrow will be the judge of that. I do not care about your rank in the classroom. I care about your output in the field."
The Duke walked toward the manor. "Go to bed. I expect you both in the hall at dawn. Do not make me wait."
The glass doors slid shut, leaving Vane and Valerica in the silent garden. The ash settled around their boots.
Vane wiped a trail of blood from his nose. He looked at Valerica. She was staring at the ground, her fingers digging into her palms. She looked like she was carrying the weight of the entire Sol lineage on her shoulders.
"He is not wrong about the stability," Vane said, his voice raspy. "I can feel the core vibrating. It is like a furnace that is running too hot."
"He is right about me, too," Valerica whispered. She looked up, her violet eyes bright with a mixture of frustration and respect. "I am Rank 3, but I am just following the rules. I am not like you, Vane. I do not know how to break the world yet."
Vane walked over and put a hand on her shoulder. "Then I will show you how. We are not here for his approval, Valerica. We are here to take what we need."
Valerica looked at his hand, then at his face. She managed a small, tired smile. "You are very arrogant for someone who just got poked by a Grandmaster."
"It is a survival habit," Vane said.
They walked back toward the guest wing. As they reached Vane's door, Valerica paused.
"Vane," she said quietly. "My mother thinks you are dangerous. But she told me that the most dangerous things are usually the only ones worth trusting. Try to get some sleep. Tomorrow is going to be brutal."
"I will be there," Vane said.
He entered his room and closed the door. He did not turn on the lights. He sat on the bed and looked out at the lights of the capital in the distance. He could feel the Sentinel Gate in his mind. It was closer than ever.
He thought of Gareth, the knight who had killed his mother.
'I am not going to break,' Vane thought, gripping the shaft of his spear. 'I am going to ascend.'
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