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Chapter 10 - One Original [3]

"You have a core now," I said, lowering my hand from Maya's chest. "And because I fed you magic during formation, it's large. Larger than most first-years will ever achieve."

She exhaled slowly, eyes still closed, fingers resting lightly over the right side of her chest.

Magic hummed inside her.

Not chaotic.

Not unstable.

Smooth.

It flowed inward and outward in clean circuits, like she'd done this before.

That shouldn't have surprised me.

Level 10 abilities didn't belong in weak bodies. They waited for one.

Watching her circulate, I felt a strange mix of relief and irritation.

Her speed was absurd.

Three times faster than my first attempt.

Her breathing never broke rhythm. Her energy didn't snag against internal resistance. She wasn't forcing magic to move —

she was guiding it.

"…Unreal," I muttered under my breath.

Maybe it was family heritage.

Maybe it was instinct.

Maybe Reality Manipulation users just understood structure better than the rest of us.

Whatever it was, she wasn't fumbling her way forward like I had.

"Remember this," I said calmly. "A large core doesn't make you strong. It just means your ceiling is higher. Until you can control your ability without collapsing, you're still vulnerable."

She nodded, eyes remaining closed.

Disciplined.

Good.

I stood, slipped on my shirt, and walked toward the door.

Her eyes opened immediately.

"Y-you're leaving?"

There it was again.

Not dependency.

Fear of abandonment.

"I'll be back," I said. "Keep circulating. Stabilize the structure. Don't try activating anything yet."

She swallowed and nodded.

I stepped out and shut the door quietly behind me.

Maya's biggest danger wasn't lack of power anymore.

It was attention.

And attention in the Triangle spread like infection.

Class E wouldn't move directly — not after what I did.

But pressure didn't come from the bottom.

It came from structure.

So I didn't go to Class E.

I went where pressure originated.

⭐ Class B3

The moment I opened the classroom door, the noise dipped.

Not silence.

But recalibration.

People in the Triangle were good at reading stripes.

Mine had gold.

Conversations died mid-sentence.

I stepped inside without asking permission.

Thirty students.

Three clusters.

One dominant axis.

I found him immediately.

Blaze Fholder.

Mid-tier. Loud. Built like someone who trained hard but thought harder about being feared than being strong.

He was in the middle of beating down a Class C kid.

Not efficiently.

Emotionally.

"You think you can walk into our wing and talk big?" Blaze snapped, fist slamming forward again.

The kid had a defensive skill — some kind of localized shock absorption — and Blaze hated that it wasn't collapsing quickly.

His strikes were getting sloppy.

The room tension tightened.

He reared back again.

"I'll make sure you ne—"

I moved.

I didn't use Fire Fists.

I didn't escalate.

I stepped in and slapped him.

Not hard enough to burn.

Hard enough to collapse structure.

The sound cracked across the room.

Blaze hit the floor face-first before his brain caught up with what had happened.

Silence.

Real silence this time.

Not social silence.

Predatory silence.

He pushed up on shaking hands, blinking blood out of his vision.

His eyes stopped at my boots.

Recognition.

Stripe.

Weight class difference.

I crouched and grabbed his hair, lifting his face just enough for him to see me clearly.

"You're Blaze," I said evenly.

He tried to straighten instinctively, then thought better of it.

I didn't raise my voice.

That would've made this about dominance.

This wasn't dominance.

This was messaging.

"One of your people put their hands on someone I've decided to train," I said quietly.

His eyes flickered.

Processing.

Protége meant ownership structure.

Ownership structure meant hierarchy crossing.

"Effective immediately," I continued, "she is under my name."

A ripple moved through the room.

Under my name.

That wasn't romance.

That was a declaration.

If anything happened to her, it redirected upward.

Blaze swallowed.

"…Who?" he forced out.

I leaned closer.

"You don't need her name," I said. "You need the boundary."

Then I lowered his face back to the ground deliberately — not as a slam.

As a press.

"If I hear rumors," I said calmly, "if I hear pressure tactics, if I hear that someone 'accidentally' tests her…"

I paused.

Not for drama.

For clarity.

"I won't escalate to fists," I finished. "I'll escalate to consequences."

His lackeys shifted in their seats.

None of them moved.

Everyone knew the same rule.

Class A wasn't a peer group.

It was a ceiling.

"Do you understand?" I asked.

Blaze's breathing was uneven.

"I understand," he said quickly.

Good.

I released him and stood.

On the way out, I glanced once at the Class C kid on the floor.

He met my eyes like I had just rewritten his future.

I ignored it.

Kindness wasn't the point.

Structure was.

Behind me, Blaze's voice came back — lower now.

"Tandy," he muttered to one of his faction members. "Find out who she is."

Of course.

He wouldn't retaliate directly.

He'd look for leverage.

That was fine.

Let him look.

Back at the Dorm

Steam clouded the room when I returned.

The shower was still running.

The bed had a damp patch where Maya had collapsed mid-circulation earlier.

I fixed the sheets automatically and sat cross-legged on the floor.

"Status."

Magic Energy: 210.

Climbed steadily.

Still not enough.

Watching Maya made one thing obvious:

Talent widened the gap faster than effort alone.

If her activation cost was 730, she needed at least double that in capacity to wield it safely.

Which meant I needed enough to inject, stabilize, and not cripple myself in the process.

The bathroom door opened.

She stepped out with wet hair wrapped loosely in a towel.

Cleaner. Quieter.

Still cautious.

"Did you… handle it?" she asked.

I nodded once.

"That side won't bother you."

She studied my expression like she was trying to measure how much damage that sentence cost.

"Thank you," she said softly.

"Classes start soon," she added after a second.

She didn't want to leave.

That much was obvious.

"You're not hiding in here," I said. "You go to class. You act normal. You don't respond to provocation. Not yet."

She nodded.

"Good."

We stepped into the hallway together.

A few students glanced at her.

Then at me.

Then looked away.

The shift was immediate.

Information traveled fast.

Good.

"Today's important," I said casually as we walked. "Weapon rotation."

She blinked.

"Spiritual weapons?" she asked.

I glanced at her, mildly surprised.

"You know about them?"

"I've heard," she said. "But Class E doesn't—"

"Doesn't get first pick," I finished. "Exactly."

She understood.

"Go early," I told her. "Don't hesitate. Choose something you can grow into, not something flashy."

She nodded.

Then hurried ahead before doubt could catch her.

I watched until she disappeared down the corridor.

Not because I didn't trust her.

Because the Triangle rewarded awareness.

When she turned the corner, I exhaled.

Helping her wasn't charity.

It was investment.

Level 10 abilities didn't appear randomly.

They appeared at fault lines.

And the Triangle was sitting on one.

I closed my eyes.

The first arc villain would appear soon.

In the original story, he destabilized half of Class A before anyone understood what was happening.

If the timeline stayed even partially aligned—

Chaos was coming.

I opened my eyes.

"Alright," I muttered.

Time to stop reacting.

Time to get ahead.

Because next time violence happened in these halls—

I wouldn't be responding to it.

I'd be shaping it.

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