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The Essence Flow

Chapter 180 / 234

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Chapter 180

The Essence Flow

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Elliot pushed open the library’s heavy oak doors, the familiar scent of

aged parchment and ink

washing over him. Moonlight streamed through the high stained-glass windows, casting

dappled patterns across the silent rows of bookshelves.

(Lyris should be around here…)

His boots echoed against the marble floors as he moved deeper, eyes scanning the shadows between the stacks. No rustling pages. No murmured spells. Just

emptiness.

Professor Kaen’s desk sat abandoned

, a half-drunk cup of tea still steaming faintly beside an open ledger. That was…

wrong.

The old scholar wouldn’t leave his post unless he had to give class. But it was midnight—Where can he be?

Elliot’s fingers twitched

(Where is she?)

The worry coiled tighter in his chest—

a weight he’d never admit aloud.

Lyris was stubborn, reckless,

infuriating

—and smart.

—and right now,

terribly, dangerously absent.

The silence of the library was

shattered by the crisp sound of a page turning.

Elliot froze.

(Someone’s here?)

His hand hovered near the hilt of his dagger as he moved forward, steps

deliberately light

against the marble floor. Between the towering shelves, he spotted her—

a lone figure seated at a study table

, her face obscured by the leather-bound tome in her hands.

The dim glow of the library’s enchanted sconces cast

wavering shadows

across the pages, the only sign of movement in the still air.

Elliot cleared his throat.

"Um…"

No response.

He stepped closer.

"Hello. Have you seen Lyris?"

His voice was low, careful not to disturb the sanctity of the quiet archives.

"First Year, Second Class. I thought she’d be here."

For a heartbeat, nothing.

Then—

the book lowered.

Silver eyes locked onto his

, sharp and knowing, like moonlight cutting through fog.

Sera Vellmont.

Her lips curled into a

soft, almost amused smile

, her chin resting lazily on one hand as she tilted her head—

a predator assessing prey.

"Yeah, she was here,"

Sera said, her voice a

smooth, velvety murmur.

She let the words hang for a beat before adding,

"You’re late, Romeo."

Elliot’s gaze dropped to the book in Sera’s hands.

‘Romeo and Juliet.’

"How funny,"

he replied dryly, though his fingers tensed at his sides.

"Do you know where she went?"

Sera let out a

soft, melodic laugh

, the sound curling through the silent library like smoke.

"No."

She lifted her hands in a theatrical shrug, her silver eyes glinting with amusement.

"Outside, probably."

Elliot turned to leave—

his shoulders stiff, his pace a fraction too quick.

He’d never had much interaction with Sera before, and every second in her presence left him with the

unsettling sensation of being dissected.

"Okay… Thanks,"

he muttered, already stepping away.

Then—

"You should probably check the rooftop."

This book's true home is on another platform. Check it out there for the real experience.

Her voice was

barely a whisper

, yet it cut through the air like a blade. Elliot spun back—

"I’m sorry?"

But the table was

empty.

No Sera.

No book.

Just the

lingering scent of old parchment

and the

faintest imprint of fingers

on the wood where she’d been sitting.

Towan’s breath came in sharp bursts, his muscles burning. This wasn’t a fight—it was a

grind

.

(These fuckers—)

For the first time in his life,

anger simmered beneath his knuckles

. Not the usual thrill of combat, but something darker, sharper.

Rozer

, the axe-wielding Second Year, fought like an

unhinged storm

—every swing wide open, every step unbalanced.

A house without doors

, Towan thought bitterly. But the bastard was

relentless

, targeting every weak point:

A

hooking slash

toward his left ribs.

A

low sweep

at his right shin.

A

downward chop

aimed at his right shoulder.

Towan blocked each strike,

Essentia flaring

to absorb the shock, but the impacts still rattled his bones. Every time he saw an opening—

every time he coiled for an uppercut, a high kick, a fight-ending tornado strike

An arrow hissed through the air.

Martina

, the Third-Year archer, stood at the far end of the hall, her bowstring taut. She wasn’t just shooting—she was

waiting

, channeling

Essentia into each arrow

, turning them into

piercing lances of force

. One hit would

crack ribs, shatter bone

.

Towan had to

retreat

. Again.

It was a

stalemate

—but one where

he was the only one tiring

. No pauses. No breaks. Just

endless defense

, his body pushed closer to its limit with every second.

(Not good. Not fucking good—)

Rozer grinned, wiping sweat from his brow.

"What’s wrong, First-Class? Thought you were stronger than this."

Martina’s arrowhead

glowed faintly

, locked onto Towan’s chest.

The trap was working.

(Okay—keep it together.)

Towan forced his breathing steady, but his nerves were

live wires

.

FLASH.

Another arrow

grazed his left shoulder

, the tip searing a hot line across his skin. His

eye twitched

.

Calm? Yeah, right.

He’d been mixing

Leon’s fluidity

with

Lytharos’s brute force

, deliberately avoiding

Eryndar’s techniques

—those weren’t just lethal, they were

cruel

. And as pissed as he was, he didn’t

hospitalize people without cause.

But these two?

They were begging for it.

He

parried Rozer’s axe-swing

, the impact shuddering up his arm, and

countered with a straight punch

pure, unfiltered power

. The kind that

shattered stone walls

on a bad day.

(Wait—did I just—?)

He didn’t have time to process. Another arrow

whistled toward his ribs.

This time, he didn’t dodge.

Fine. Take the hit. End this.

He

closed his eyes

and

let the punch fly.

CRACK.

Rozer’s

solar plexus caved

under the blow, his breath exploding out in a wet gasp. The axe slipped from his fingers as he

slammed into the wall behind him

, fabric

ripping apart

from sheer force, the skin beneath already

mottled black.

WASH.

The arrow hit—

Not flesh.

Water.

(…Water?)

Towan blinked. A

barrier of swirling liquid

hung in the air, the arrow

embedded harmlessly in its depths.

"Heh. Guess I’m the one saving

you

now."

Towan

whirled.

Len stood behind him

, her hand outstretched,

water still dripping from her fingertips.

Across the hall, Martina

staggered back

, her face pale.

"Shit."

Rozer

slumped to the floor

, his ruined shirt clinging to his chest, his breath

a ragged, broken thing.

"Len!"

Towan's voice was a burst of sunlight in the dim hallway, his grin flashing as the adrenaline ebbed.

"Thank you,"

he added, rolling his sore shoulder.

"I was

this

close to losing my shit."

Len flicked water from her fingertips, the remnants of her barrier splashing to the floor.

"No problem. Plus, I

told

you I'd save you next time."

The memory hit them both at once—

the ball, the ambush, Towan yanking Len out of harm's way.

"I don’t like being rescued,"

she’d snapped.

"Then next time, rescue me first,"

he’d shot back.

A laugh punched out of him.

"That’s right."

Their moment shattered as

fabric scraped stone

. Martina had

hoisted Rozer by his collar

, dragging him backward like a sack of broken bricks. His breaths were shallow, his chest a

blotchy canvas of bruises

.

"She’s leaving,"

Len observed, voice flat.

Towan didn’t move.

"Let her."

He’d seen it—

the way Martina’s eyes had blown wide

, the tremor in her hands as she’d grabbed Rozer.

Fear.

"After that punch? She won’t dare come back."

He wasn’t proud of the damage. But right now?

Regret was a luxury he couldn’t afford.

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