Morning at the Bastion was usually quiet.
But not today.
The courtyard was a storm of motion trainees sparring, aura exercises underway, and a chill wind slicing through the training fields.
At the center of it all stood Elya Varin, SSS Hero and newly appointed guest instructor.
And in front of her, trying not to fall flat on his face, was Thalen.
"Again," she barked.
Thalen raised his sword. Sweat streaked his brow, and his arms ached from hours of forms. "This is the eighth repetition."
"And your footwork is still garbage."
He gritted his teeth and lunged.
Aura in Motion
Elya caught his strike with the flat of her blade and spun, sweeping his legs out from under him.
He hit the ground hard.
She pointed her sword down at him, expression sharp.
"Aura is not just something you feel. It's something you move with. Your blade must breathe with it."
He groaned. "I'm not a dancer."
"No," she said. "But unless you learn rhythm, your aura will always fight you instead of flowing with you."
She helped him up.
"Again."
The Blade Pulse
Later, in a quiet chamber beneath the forge, Elya brought him to a pool of still water.
"Draw your sword," she said.
He did.
"Now activate your aura. Let it wrap around the blade but keep it steady."
He focused. Ember Aura flared along the weapon's edge, red light flickering like molten breath.
The water rippled faintly.
"Now," she whispered, "match your aura to your heartbeat. One pulse at a time."
Thalen tried.
But the moment he forced the flow, the blade vibrated violently, and a sudden surge nearly knocked him over.
Elya sighed. "You're overthinking."
"What am I missing?"
"You're still trying to command it. You don't command a storm you ride it. Let the aura move through you, not from you."
He closed his eyes.
Breathed.
Let go.
This time, the Ember Aura curved gently across the sword, and the water remained still.
A perfect pulse.
Elya smiled.
"Good. Again."
News from the North
Later that night, as the halls quieted and the fires dimmed, Thalen walked the ramparts of the Bastion.
A familiar voice joined him.
Ragan.
"The Council has made a decision," he said.
Thalen tensed. "The Eastern Wall?"
"They're going to open it. A scouting expedition leaves within the week."
"And you want me to go?"
"I want you to watch. Learn. See what real danger looks like before you chase power you don't yet understand."
Thalen nodded. "And if what's out there comes back with them?"
"Then the world will need its Tyrants."
Whispers of Wind
In the days that followed, Elya trained him harder.
Sword forms in the morning. Aura channeling at dusk. Mental focus drills at night.
She pushed him past exhaustion but not without reason.
"You've got something in you," she said one evening, as they sat by the training cliffs. "Something even I don't fully understand yet."
Thalen stared at the sky. "I just want to be strong enough not to fall behind."
She gave him a sideways glance.
"You don't realize it yet, but you're already ahead of most. Not because you're powerful but because you endure."
He looked down at his hands calloused, scarred, steady.
The Wind that Waits
One night, unable to sleep, Thalen returned to the training fields alone.
The stars shimmered overhead, and a low breeze curled around him.
He drew his sword.
Let Ember Aura awaken.
And began to move.
This time, there was no pain in the motion. No stiffness in his stance. The sword moved like a part of him, carving arcs of flame in the cold air.
He didn't know how long he danced.
But when he stopped, someone was watching.
Elya, arms folded, hair drifting in the wind.
She said nothing.
Only smiled.
And vanished into the breeze.