The dawn broke with silver fire over the training cliffs of Ilyen Gorge. Below, the wind howled like a mourning beast, sweeping through the stone ridges and stirring the long banners of the Academy with the chill of high-altitude air. Thalen stood alone atop the stone platform shirtless, scarred, and silent.
The sword in his hand gleamed faintly in the morning light. It was his blade a rare variant of the Dusksteel Class, forged to respond to his Blade Aura. The hilt pulsed with life, reacting subtly to his heartbeat, as if recognizing his doubt and desire in equal measure.
Across from him, Master Raikor stood like a carved figure of war clad in simple cloth, eyes like iron storms. He was not a man who needed grandeur. His presence alone made the world seem smaller, the sky thinner.
"You've grown fast," Raikor said, his voice cutting through the wind. "Too fast, maybe. You passed the Tyrant Spirit Exam. You've awakened what only nine others in this realm possess. And yet…" He gestured toward the sword. "You still swing like a man with only one soul."
Thalen tightened his grip. "I've trained every day. Fought every opponent thrown my way. What more can I do?"
"Two rivers never become one by standing still." Raikor stepped forward, drawing a curved saber from the wind behind him. "You wield two auras now Blade and Tyrant. But you treat them as strangers. If you don't learn to merge them, one will devour the other."
Thalen nodded. He understood, at least in theory. But the practice… that was another matter.
Raikor moved, and the air screamed. His saber lashed through the space between them, not aiming to kill, but to command attention. The strike halted just before Thalen's neck. "Begin."
Thalen reacted. His aura flared, blue and swift like a river. The blade in his hand became an extension of his will, cutting forward with practiced precision. But as he swung, something inside him staggered the moment his Tyrant Spirit flared, the Blade Aura seemed to resist it.
He was fighting himself.
Raikor struck again. Each move was a lesson carved in pain. Cuts opened across Thalen's chest and arms, shallow but burning. His footwork slowed. His breathing lost rhythm. And still the lesson continued.
"Why can't they sync?!" Thalen growled, retreating two steps and gasping.
"Because you still think like a boy with two weapons!" Raikor's aura exploded outward a storm of gravity and force that cracked the stone underfoot. "They are not tools. They are not separate! The Tyrant Spirit is not a power you wear. It's the other half of your soul!"
Thalen dropped to one knee, panting. The ground shook from Raikor's pressure. His body screamed in exhaustion, but his mind… it was beginning to change.
He remembered the moment he awakened the Blade Aura as a child his first spark of defiance, when he raised a stick against the village hunter to protect a younger boy. The aura hadn't come because he wanted to win. It had come because he needed to protect.
And the Tyrant Spirit? That had awakened in the Exam when he refused to kneel before failure. Not because he was strong but because he believed strength could be earned, not inherited.
Thalen exhaled slowly. "They're not just power," he whispered. "They're my convictions."
The sword in his hand responded humming lowly, like a creature stirred from sleep.
He stood.
Raikor tilted his head slightly. "Again."
This time, Thalen moved differently. As the Blade Aura surged, it didn't collide with the Tyrant Spirit. It flowed around it welcomed it. The edges of his sword flared with twin colors blue and deep crimson. And when he slashed forward, the wind didn't just split the very sound of it fractured.
Raikor met the strike, and for the first time, stumbled half a step.
The older warrior grinned. "Better. You've started walking the path of two blades."
Thalen's chest heaved. His arms shook. But the look in his eyes was clear. "Teach me everything."
Raikor sheathed his blade. "Then follow me. Your real training begins now."
That night, Thalen sat alone beneath the stars, watching them burn like a thousand silent torches in the void. His arms ached. His legs trembled. But inside, something had clicked. Not mastery but harmony.
He still had a long road ahead. The fusion between his Blade Aura and the Tyrant Spirit would take months, years even, to perfect. But it had begun. The foundation was there.
He pulled his sword onto his lap. The metal pulsed softly, and for the first time, he felt it speak not with words, but with rhythm. It understood. It was ready.
Just like him.
Tomorrow would bring another trial. Another lesson in pain and strength. But Thalen no longer feared the journey. Because now, he wasn't just the boy who had trained to keep up.
He was the warrior forging a legacy all his own.
And somewhere, beyond the borders of the Academy, the first shadows of a greater war were beginning to stir.