Adrian returned to his suite, the datapad already glowing with the details of his trial. The Shadow Panther materialized in holographic detail, sleek obsidian fur that drank light, eyes like molten amber, claws that could shred steel.
The creature had been captured alive from the Eastern Wastelands three months prior. Unlike training simulations, this beast carried the killing instinct of something that had survived in the wild.
"Nocturnal predator. Favors ambush tactics from elevated positions." Adrian absorbed each detail. "Primary weakness: light-based attacks can temporarily blind and disorient, and a vulnerable spot just beneath its jaw. "
The anatomical breakdown revealed muscle density twice that of normal panthers. Its shadow-step ability allowed short-range teleportation through darkness, making conventional tracking useless.
Adrian closed the datapad and set it aside. His suite's panoramic window showed the Academy's artificial forest sprawling beyond, a realm where death waited behind every shadow.
Sleep came easily. Tomorrow would test everything his parents had taught him.
...
The next morning, Adrian stepped into the forest.
The air tasted different here, wild, untamed, heavy with the musk of predators.
His boots found purchase on the forest floor as he advanced deeper into the undergrowth. Somewhere in this maze of ancient trees, his target waited.
A distant howl echoed through the canopy. Not his quarry, but a reminder that dozens of monsters called this place home.
Adrian's hand rested on the hilt of his training sword. The weight felt inadequate against what lurked ahead, but it was all he had besides his magic.
The forest seemed to watch him. Shadows danced between the trees, each one a potential threat that made his pulse quicken.
Then he saw it, a flash of obsidian moving through the underbrush fifty meters ahead. The Shadow Panther had found him first.
"Time to see if theory translates to survival." Adrian's voice was barely a whisper as he prepared his first spell.
The creature emerged from behind a massive oak, its amber eyes fixed on him with predatory focus. Muscles rippled beneath midnight fur as it crouched low.
Adrian's fireball blazed to life in his palm, casting dancing shadows across the clearing. The panther's pupils contracted to slits at the sudden brightness.
He hurled the spell forward with practiced precision. The fireball streaked through the air, trailing sparks and heat.
The panther twisted aside, the spell scorching bark where its head had been moments before. It vanished into shadow without a sound.
"Faster than the simulations indicated." Adrian spun in a circle, eyes scanning every patch of darkness.
The attack came from above. Claws raked down toward his skull as the panther materialized from the canopy's shadows.
Adrian threw himself sideways, feeling razor-sharp talons part the air where his neck had been. He rolled, came up running, and cast another fireball.
This one caught the beast's flank as it landed. Fur singed and the panther snarled, but the wound was superficial.
It circled him now, amber eyes gleaming with intelligence. This wasn't mindless aggression, it was studying his patterns, learning his rhythm.
"You're smarter than I gave you credit for." Sweat beaded on Adrian's forehead as he tracked its movement. His mana reserves were already dropping faster than expected.
The panther feinted left, then struck right. Adrian barely got his sword up in time to deflect claws that could have opened his throat.
The impact sent vibrations up his arm. Raw strength met trained technique as he pivoted and slashed, his blade slashing empty air.
Shadow-step. The creature had vanished again, leaving only the lingering scent of danger.
Adrian's breathing grew labored. Each spell cast drained precious mana, and his physical reserves were burning just as fast.
"This is what Father meant about real combat." His training sword felt heavier with each passing moment. Simulations never captured the bone-deep exhaustion of fighting for your life.
...
High in the branches above, Seraphina Valerius watched the battle unfold with cool detachment. Her celestial light affinity let her move through the canopy like a wraith of silver fire.
She had been tracking her own prey when Adrian's magical signature drew her attention. Now she observed his struggle with something approaching disdain.
"Echo affinity." The words left her lips like a curse. "Nothing but cheap mimicry of real power."
Her own abilities flowed from the celestial realm itself, pure, divine, untouchable. Adrian's fire magic was borrowed strength, a pale reflection of true mastery.
"He'll exhaust himself within minutes at this rate." Seraphina's luminous eyes tracked the panther's movements with casual ease. "Amateur technique. No understanding of mana conservation."
Still, she made no move to interfere. Let him fail or succeed on his own merit.
...
Adrian's chest heaved as the panther circled him again. His mana reserves had dropped to dangerous levels, and his sword arm trembled from the constant deflections.
Adrian knew he had perhaps one more spell left in him before exhaustion claimed him completely.
"Come on then." He raised his palm, feeling the familiar heat gather there. But this time, something felt different.
The fireball formed as it always had, orange flames dancing in his grip. Yet as Adrian prepared to launch it, his mind touched something deeper, the fundamental structure of the spell itself.
He saw it clearly now, the inefficiencies in the standard design, the loose formation that dispersed on impact.
The panther lunged from the shadows, claws extended for his throat. Adrian released the spell.
But this fireball didn't tumble through the air like the others. It compressed as it flew, flames twisting into a focused spiral that glowed white-hot at its core.
The drill of concentrated fire struck the panther's jaw. The creature's shriek echoed through the forest as the modified spell burned through fur and flesh alike.
Adrian watched the panther collapse, its massive form going limp. That hadn't been a simple fireball anymore.
...
High above, Seraphina's composed mask cracked for the first time since entering the Academy. Her luminous eyes tracked the fading magical signature with growing disbelief.
"Impossible! That power reading..." She gripped the branch beneath her. "F-Rank students don't create spells like that."
The modified fireball had carried the resonance of something far beyond its original design. Not copied, rebuilt from the ground up with ruthless efficiency.
Her celestial light flickered around her fingers as understanding dawned. Echo affinity wasn't mere mimicry after all.
"If he can innovate in real-time..." Seraphina's voice carried a note of something she rarely felt. Uncertainty.
She had dismissed him as a pretender wielding borrowed power. Now she realized she might have been watching the birth of something unprecedented.
The competitive fire that had driven her to the Academy's elite suddenly blazed hotter. If Adrian Blackwood thought his little display would intimidate her, he was gravely mistaken.
Seraphina raised her hands toward the canopy, calling upon the one skill she had mastered. Motes of concentrated sunlight filtered down through the leaves, gathering around her like fallen stars.
"Solar Beam." The words carried absolute conviction as divine radiance coalesced in her palms. "Let's see how your innovations fare against true celestial power."
She had her own hunt to complete, and Adrian's unexpected breakthrough only strengthened her resolve.
Seraphina's luminous eyes locked onto her target, a Thornback Boar rooting through the underbrush fifty meters away. The creature's hide bristled with poisonous spikes, each one capable of paralyzing prey with a single scratch.
She raised both hands skyward, feeling celestial power flow through her veins. The canopy above responded to her call, filtering natural sunlight into concentrated motes of energy.
"Solar Beam."
The words carried absolute conviction as radiance coalesced between her palms. A lance of pure white light erupted downward, cutting through the boar's armored hide like it was paper. The creature collapsed without even a death cry.
Seraphina lowered her hands, breathing hard but victorious.
...
Across the forest, Kai Ashford pressed his back against an ancient oak, sweat streaming down his face. His Shadowmaw Wolf circled the clearing with predatory patience, yellow eyes gleaming with hunger.
"Spatial Blink." The words came out as a rasp as Kai vanished from one spot and reappeared ten meters away. His mana reserves plummeted with each desperate teleportation.
Space manipulation demanded precision that his F-Rank understanding couldn't provide. Each blink felt like tearing reality with his bare hands, crude and exhausting.
The wolf lunged. Kai blinked again, appearing behind the creature. His training sword found the gap between vertebrae, ending the hunt through sheer persistence rather than skill.
"Not elegant, but effective." He slumped against a tree, completely drained but alive.
...
Marcus Steele stood motionless as his Ironback Bear charged through the clearing, each footstep shaking the earth beneath them.
"Metal Hardening." His skin took on a dull grey sheen as iron particles in his blood responded to the spell. The bear's claws raked across his forearm, leaving scratches instead of gaping wounds.
His counterattack came swift and brutal. Enhanced fists struck with the weight of hammered steel, each blow denting the creature's natural armor until bone cracked beneath.
The bear fell with a thunderous crash. Marcus flexed his fingers, watching the metallic coating fade from his skin.
...
Elena Armas exhaled slowly, her breath misting in the suddenly frigid air around her. The Flame Salamander hissed and retreated as frost spread across the ground beneath her feet.
"Ice Shard." Crystalline projectiles formed in the air around her, each one sharp enough to pierce leather. The salamander's natural fire resistance meant nothing against it.
The creature's flames sputtered and died. Elena's ice claimed victory through patient attrition rather than overwhelming force.
She knelt beside the fallen salamander, touching its cooling scales. "Fire and ice. Natural enemies, but I respect your strength."
...
Damon Hill crouched in the shadows, watching the Razorclaw Lynx pace beneath the tree where he'd taken refuge. Purple veins pulsed beneath his skin as poison coursed through his system.
"Toxic Cloud." He exhaled a noxious green mist that drifted down toward his prey. The lynx's enhanced senses worked against it now, forcing it to inhale the concentrated toxins.
The creature stumbled, then collapsed as paralysis claimed its nervous system. Damon dropped from his perch, careful not to breathe his own deadly creation.
"Poison doesn't discriminate between predator and prey." He pressed two fingers to the lynx's neck, confirming its death. "It simply is."
...
Lyra Song stood in the center of a small clearing, her eyes closed as she felt sound waves ripple through the forest around her. A Steelback Porcupine had launched a barrage of quills that now littered the ground at her feet.
"Sonic Pulse." Her voice carried an otherworldly resonance that made the air itself vibrate. The porcupine staggered as the sound waves disrupted its inner ear.
A second pulse, perfectly tuned to the creature's natural frequency, shattered its equilibrium completely. It toppled sideways, unconscious before it hit the earth.
Lyra opened her eyes, studying the fallen creature. "Every living thing has a frequency. Find it, and you find their weakness."
...
As the last echoes of battle faded, the forest settled into an unnatural quiet. Seven prodigies had faced death and emerged victorious, each wielding only the barest fraction of their affinity's true potential.
Adrian cleaned his training sword on the Shadow Panther's fur, his modified fireball still burning in his memory. The spell had worked, but questions remained about how he'd managed such innovation under pressure.
The unspoken truth lingered in the air like morning mist. This trial had been a test of survival, nothing more. The real challenges lay ahead in wastelands, where monsters wouldn't hunt alone and victory wouldn't come so easily.