Chapter : 187

He saw cousins he vaguely remembered from his first life, now grown into surprisingly competent young warriors, their faces alight with fierce Ferrum pride. He saw others whose ambition clearly outstripped their actual skill, resulting in swift, often comical, defeats. He mentally cataloged strengths, weaknesses, spirit types, Void power manifestations. It was all data. And data, as his engineering background had taught him, was power. Especially when that data involved a large number of heavily armed, magically gifted relatives who might, at some future point, decide that the ‘accidental prodigy’ needed to be… re-evaluated. Permanently.

Then, the herald announced the match that brought a sudden, expectant hush to the hall, a match that everyone, Lloyd included, had been anticipating with a mixture of eagerness and trepidation.

“Next combatants! From the main Ferrum line, Lady Jothi Ferrum! And from the Ashworth Ferrum branch, Lord Rayan Ferrum!”

A ripple of anticipation went through the crowd. This wasn't just another bout. This was a rematch. A grudge match. Jothi, the reigning champion from last year’s Summit, the quiet prodigy whose effortless control over iron had left everyone speechless. And Rayan, the arrogant, powerful scion of Viscount Rubel, his pride still smarting from his previous defeat, his eyes burning with a fierce, almost desperate, need for vindication. This was the true main event, the clash of titans everyone had been waiting for.

Jothi stepped into the circle with her usual quiet, almost serene, confidence. Her dark eyes were focused, intense, her expression calm, betraying nothing of the pressure she must be feeling. She wore simple, practical training leathers, her movements fluid, economical. She looked, Lloyd thought with a flicker of familial pride he quickly suppressed (no need to get sentimental, this was a tactical assessment), like a coiled spring, radiating contained power.

Rayan, in stark contrast, strode into the circle like a conquering hero returning from a particularly successful war against a very small, very insignificant, neighboring village. His handsome face was set in a sneer of arrogant disdain, his eyes, fixed on Jothi, glittering with a predatory light. He exuded an aura of raw, barely controlled aggression, his muscles bunched, his practice sword held in a white-knuckled grip. He clearly intended to overwhelm Jothi with sheer, brutal force, to avenge last year’s humiliation and reclaim his perceived rightful place as the strongest of the Ferrum youth.

“Ready, little sister?” Rayan taunted, his voice dripping with condescension, deliberately emphasizing the familial diminutive, trying to get under her skin. “Or are you still tired from your… diligent studies at Bathelham? Wouldn’t want you to overexert yourself.”

Jothi’s expression didn't flicker. She simply met his gaze, her dark eyes holding a cool, unwavering challenge. “Save your breath for the fight, Cousin Rayan,” she replied, her voice calm, steady, devoid of emotion. “You’ll need it.”

The referee, looking even more apprehensive than usual (these two had a history, and it wasn't a history involving polite handshakes and shared cups of terrible tea), quickly called for the spirit summons.

Rayan roared his challenge, his Spirit Stone blazing. “Come forth, KONGOR!”

With a ground-shaking crash, his spirit materialized. Kongor. A monstrous, silver-backed gorilla, easily ten feet tall, its fur the color of obsidian, its eyes burning with a savage, red-hot fury. Its massive fists, each the size of a small boulder, pounded its chest in a display of primal aggression, the sound echoing through the hall like thunder. It was a creature of pure, unadulterated brute strength, a living siege engine designed to smash, crush, and pulverize. Ascension level, Lloyd noted, though perhaps not as refined as Ken’s Redborn. All power, little finesse.

Jothi, unlike in her previous match, didn't hesitate. She, too, reached for the Spirit Stone embedded in the hilt of her slender practice sword. “Seraphina,” she murmured, her voice barely audible above Kongor’s intimidating roars.

The air beside her shimmered, coalesced, and a creature of breathtaking, savage beauty materialized. Seraphina. A magnificent white tigress, larger than any natural feline, its fur pristine as freshly fallen snow, striped with intricate patterns of shimmering silver that seemed to shift and flow like liquid moonlight. Its eyes were a piercing, intelligent sapphire blue, holding a calm, watchful intensity that was a stark contrast to Kongor’s mindless fury. It moved with a fluid, predatory grace, every line of its powerful body speaking of speed, agility, and lethal precision. Manifestation level, Lloyd assessed, but clearly very close to Ascension, radiating a potent, controlled energy.

The two spirits faced each other, a study in contrasts. Kongor, the embodiment of raw, brute force, roaring its challenge. Seraphina, the personification of elegant lethality, meeting its gaze with a calm, almost disdainful, silence.

Then, the battle began.

Chapter : 188

Jothi, however, was already moving. She didn't meet force with force. She danced. Her movements were fluid, precise, almost balletic, as she and Seraphina wove around Kongor’s clumsy, telegraphed attacks. Seraphina, a blur of white and silver, darted in and out, raking at Kongor’s flanks with claws that left shallow, smoking furrows on its obsidian hide, then evading the gorilla’s retaliatory swipes with contemptuous ease.

Simultaneously, Jothi herself engaged Rayan. Her control over her Iron Blood ability was, as before, breathtaking. She didn't need grand gestures, no overt displays of power. Subtle shifts in the metallic dust on the floor created invisible tripwires that hampered Rayan’s aggressive lunges. The iron studs on his boots suddenly seemed to cling to the stone, throwing off his balance. His practice sword felt heavier in his hand, its movements sluggish, as if fighting against an unseen resistance. Jothi didn't attack directly; she controlled the battlefield, using her Void power to disrupt, to unbalance, to frustrate her more physically powerful cousin.

It was a masterclass in controlled, intelligent combat. Jothi and Seraphina, working in perfect sync, were slowly, methodically, dismantling Rayan and Kongor’s aggressive assault. Rayan grew increasingly frustrated, his roars of rage echoing through the hall, his attacks becoming wilder, more desperate. Kongor, bleeding from a dozen shallow cuts, its fury mounting but its movements becoming increasingly clumsy, was clearly outmatched in agility and precision.

Then, something shifted.

Jothi, after executing a particularly elegant evasion that left Rayan stumbling and Kongor roaring in frustration, faltered. Just for a fraction of a second. A barely perceptible tremor ran through her, her breath hitched almost inaudibly, and a fleeting shadow of weariness, of profound exhaustion, crossed her usually composed features. It was gone in an instant, replaced by her usual focused intensity. But Lloyd, his senses honed by eighty years of observation and a lifetime of analyzing subtle tells, had seen it.

She’s tired, he realized with a jolt of surprise. Genuinely tired. Not just the normal fatigue of combat, but something deeper, a weariness that went bone-deep.

The battle continued, but the rhythm had changed. Jothi’s movements, while still precise, seemed a fraction slower. Seraphina’s attacks, while still swift, lacked some of their earlier bite. Rayan, sensing a shift, perhaps mistaking her fatigue for weakness, redoubled his assault, his roars of rage now tinged with a desperate, almost feral, hope. Kongor, battered but still immensely powerful, pressed its advantage, its blows landing with increasing frequency.

The turning point came swiftly, brutally. Jothi, attempting to create another metallic dust snare, hesitated for a fatal fraction of a second. Her concentration wavered. Rayan, seizing the momentary opening, lunged, his practice sword a blur. Jothi tried to parry, but her movement was too slow, her block too weak. Rayan’s sword slammed into hers, the impact jarring, sending a shockwave up her arm. Her sword flew from her grasp, clattering across the stone floor.

Simultaneously, Kongor, with a final, desperate roar, landed a crushing blow on Seraphina’s flank. The white tigress shrieked in pain, its form flickering violently, then, with a final, sorrowful glance towards Jothi, it dissolved into shimmering motes of light, vanquished.

Jothi stumbled back, disarmed, her spirit defeated, her face pale with shock and a dawning, horrified disbelief. She stared at Rayan, who stood panting, his obsidian bear spirit, Kongor, roaring in triumph behind him, its chest still heaving, but victorious.

The silence in the Grand Hall was absolute, stunned. Jothi Ferrum… defeated? By Rayan? Impossible.

Rayan himself looked almost as surprised as everyone else, his initial triumphant grin quickly morphing into an expression of dazed disbelief, then solidifying into a sneer of pure, unadulterated, gloating satisfaction. He had done it. He had actually done it. He had beaten Jothi. He had avenged last year’s humiliation.

“Well, well, little sister,” Rayan panted, leaning heavily on his sword, trying to project an arrogance he probably didn't entirely feel, his victory clearly as unexpected to him as it was to the crowd. “It seems your… diligent studies… at Bathelham have left you a little… out of practice. Perhaps you should spend less time with dusty books and more time in the training yard. Like a true Ferrum.” He spat the last words, a final, contemptuous dismissal.

Jothi didn't respond. She simply stood there, her face pale, her dark eyes wide with a mixture of shock, shame, and a profound, almost unbearable, weariness. She looked… broken.

Lloyd stared, his own earlier amusement, his strategic assessments, forgotten. He felt a surge of something unexpected, something fierce. At the exhaustion he had seen flicker across Jothi’s face. She hadn’t lost because Rayan was better. She had lost because she was tired. Deeply, profoundly tired.

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