Succubi Chapter 66. Perfection Doesn't Exist
The final minutes of class passed in a steady hum of scribbling pens and quiet grunts of academic suffering. People shuffled up to the podium one by one, sliding their quiz sheets onto the desk in front of Callahan like they were offering tribute to a mildly traumatized demigod. No one said anything, and neither did he.
But he did check them.
Not all of them—just one section.
There was a question halfway down the page, one of the last ones. It wasn't about elemental sequencing or stabilizer runes or reflex cast speeds.
It was… weirdly open-ended.
"In a real-world scenario where ally survival depends on your decision to override standard casting protocol, describe the logic behind your action. There is no perfect answer—only process."
He didn't even pretend to skim the others.
As each paper came in, he flipped straight to that question. His fingers twitched slightly when he read some of them. Sometimes, he raised a brow. Once, he even blinked slowly like someone just tried to explain magic using fruit metaphors.
Then it was my turn.
I walked up, slid mine onto the desk, and met his eyes for just a second.
He flipped to the question.
Paused.
His jaw twitched. Not a wince. Not a smile. Just… something tight. A restrained reaction.
He didn't say anything.
Just nodded slightly and moved it into the finished pile.
As I turned away, I swore I saw the same thing happen again—Adrian handed his in, and Callahan stopped at the same spot, brows drawing down ever so slightly.
Then another girl—petite, bob-cut, sharp eyeliner, purple nails. I recognized her. Kyra Nocthollow. A moon witch, known for enchanting her own notebooks to bite people who tried to copy her notes in her high school days. Savage. Brilliant. How did I know it? Cause a friend of hers posted it on social media, of course.
The last one was a tall guy named Felix Levanche—pristine robes, the kind of student who always smelled like expensive cologne and carried his mana wand in a leather case. Rumor said his family owned a floating vineyard somewhere above Silvanvale.
Same thing. One look at his answer to that one question—and Callahan's brows ticked up again.
We all returned to our seats as the classroom slowly cleared out. Chatter bubbled again once the quiz-induced stress faded, but it didn't fill the room like before. There was a buzz in the air now. Curiosity. Tension. Respect, maybe. Or shared trauma.
Callahan didn't say anything at first.
He just stood there for a moment, hands behind his back, cloak still smoldering slightly at the hem from where he'd blown up his own laptop like it owed him rent. The projector flickered once, sputtered out with a dying wheeze.
Then he spoke.
Calm.
Even.
But the words hit.
"If today taught you anything," he said, eyes scanning the room slowly, "let it be this—perfection doesn't exist. Not in magic. Not in battle. Not in life."
No one moved.
Not even the note-takers.
He paced slowly in front of the podium, boots echoing soft thuds across the stone floor.
"You'll fall. You'll miscast. You'll embarrass yourself so badly, your soul tries to crawl out your own ears." A pause. His lips quirked. "Hypothetically."
Laughter rippled quietly through the room.
"But if you can stand up after that? If you can still cast? Still think, still act, still fight—then you're Arcana. Doesn't matter how pretty your circle looks or how crisp your rune edges are. What matters is how fast you recover."
He stopped center-stage. The lighting framed him in a soft violet glow.
"Control isn't about never making mistakes. It's about not letting the mistake control you."
There was a quiet hum of agreement. Heads nodded. Even the snarky ones.
Callahan gave a short, final nod.
"Class dismissed."
Class. Over.
And somehow, it felt like we'd survived something more than just a lecture.
Students grabbed their stuff, some talking quietly about the quiz, others whispering about "the laptop incident." A few even tried to peek at the destroyed remains, but it was already cleaned up—Callahan had vaporized the whole thing with a flick of his wrist and no explanation.
I stood, stretching my back. Was just about to head out when—
"Evan."
My name. Cold. Direct. Not a shout. Not a question.
I turned.
Callahan didn't even look up.
"Adrian. Kyra. Felix. Stay."
Adrian shot me a look. "What did we do?"
"I don't know, but if he makes us watch another Ariana L'Vyre clip, I'm out."
We gathered at the front as the rest of the students filtered out. Callahan waited, still seated behind the desk, fingers steepled in front of him. That eerie calm was back on his face. Professional. Composed. Like the laptop never existed. Like the last ninety minutes didn't just put half the class into a meme thread.
"Question seven," he said flatly, glancing at none of us directly. "The override logic. Explain your answers."
I blinked. "You mean out loud?"
He arched a brow. "Unless you'd like to cast interpretive illusion theater, yes. Start with you."
Of course.
I took a breath.
"I wrote that… in a live scenario, it's less about perfect spellform and more about intent under pressure. If the protocol slows me down, I'd rather risk a weave collapse than watch someone bleed out. Even if the cast breaks mid-layer, the initial mana surge might be enough to shield, deflect, or draw aggro. Partial success is better than polished failure."
Callahan stared at me for a second longer than was comfortable.
Then nodded. Slowly.
"Interesting," he muttered. "You weighed risk against moral threshold."
I shrugged. "I mean. Real fights aren't written like scrolls. You do what you can with what you have."
He gestured lazily toward Adrian. "Next."
Adrian stepped up, fidgeted with the edge of his sleeve. "I answered that I would attempt to modify the spell using a dual-thread override. It's inefficient but fast. I also mentioned embedding a decoy layer into the cast to confuse the enemy while saving time. It's not elegant—but it works."
Callahan tilted his head. "Advanced solution for a first-term student."
Adrian gave a tight smile. "I modeled it off a dual-thread sequence I've been experimenting with during sparring drills. Figured I'd test if it actually holds up under pressure."
Kyra rolled her eyes. "Simp."
Callahan didn't react.
"Kyra?"
She stepped forward, completely unbothered. "I said I'd compress the cast structure. Cut the glyph complexity in half, lean on instinctive threading, and redirect ambient mana from the terrain. Less elegant, more reactive."
Callahan's lips twitched. The closest thing we'd seen to amusement all day.
"Risky method. Not much room for error."
Kyra tilted her head, that signature smirk playing at the corner of her lips. "Maybe. But sometimes, shaving a second off the cast is what saves someone. Not a perfect spell—just the right one, fast enough."
"Calculated improvisation," he said.
"Better than polished regret."
A beat passed.
"Felix," he said.
Felix adjusted his cuffs like he was about to present a business pitch. "I would isolate the threat, deploy a static mana seal, and use a condensed burst of light magic to blind the opponent while casting a healing projection through deflected mirror threads. Fast, low-cost, elegant."
Callahan looked at him. Looked through him.
"…Of course you would," he muttered.
That silence lingered. Long enough that even Kyra stopped chewing her gum.
Then Callahan stood, slowly, pacing behind the desk. The air in the room shifted.
"You four had the most… unorthodox answers," he said. "Not the most correct. Not the safest. But the most adaptable."
He paused, turning toward us.
"In Arcana, that matters."
None of us spoke.
He tapped his knuckle against the desk. "There's a supplementary duel program. Optional. Invite-only. Small class. Focused on adaptive combat and rogue spellcraft. Real scenarios. Unpredictable challenges."
Kyra's eyes lit up. "We talking underground?"
"Authorized," he said dryly. "Barely."
Adrian practically vibrated. "Wait, like… actual field tests?"
Callahan nodded. "I'll be teaching it."
He didn't say if you're interested. He didn't ask. He just handed us each a black sigil card, etched in silver with his crest and the Arcana rune glowing faintly in the middle.
"If you show up tomorrow evening at seven sharp, I'll assume you're in. If not, I'll burn the cards and never speak of it again."
"Dramatic," Kyra said.
"Efficient," Felix replied.
Me?
I just stared at the card.
It felt… heavier than it should be. Not in weight. In promise.
Because this?
This was the opportunity.
Not just to learn faster, deeper—but to stand out. Build something. Get ahead.
I looked at Callahan.
And he looked back.
Unblinking. Evaluating.
I gave a slow, quiet nod.
"I'll be there."
So would the others.
And as we walked out of that lecture hall—sigils glowing faint in our pockets—I knew one thing.
Arcana wasn't just going to change me.
It already had.
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