Chapter 195: Chapter 195

The battlefield hadn't gone quiet.

But for the first time since this started, the noise felt distant.

Like the air itself was holding its breath. Or watching.

Lindarion blinked the last of the light from his vision. His legs weren't moving yet, and his ribs definitely had a few opinions, but he was upright. Technically.

Ashwing paced in front of him in slow, angry circles. Tail twitching. Wings low. Eyes locked on the dark mage like he was ready to try a second round, maybe with more teeth this time.

'Settle, you overgrown ember.'

But Lindarion didn't say it.

Because Lira stepped forward.

And everything else got out of the way.

She didn't even speak.

A slow walk at first. Boots crunching through scorched frost and half-melted ice. Shadows wrapped around her ankles like affectionate serpents. Her blade hung at her side, not in defeat. In promise.

The mage raised his staff again.

Even he could feel it.

Lira was no longer holding back.

The darkness rolled out from her like ink in water. Not wild. Not chaotic.

'…Oh. So that's what real fear looks like when it's useful.'

Lindarion stayed where he was.

This wasn't his moment.

The staff flared again—too fast, too panicked. A bolt of warped crimson energy lanced toward her.

Not even a full dodge.

The spell slipped past her shoulder, exploded behind her, and turned part of the field into steaming sludge.

The ground around her darkened, literally. Light bent sideways, shadows thickening with every step like the world itself was trying to hide her. The frost cracked. Not from heat. From absence.

The mage jerked his head, scanning.

She reappeared behind him.

Blade already moving.

The first strike hit his shoulder.

The second caught the cracked edge of his mask.

The third wasn't steel.

Dark mana surged from her palm in a tight, surgical pulse.

The mage staggered, screaming.

Whatever she'd touched, whatever she'd drawn from him, left a hole. Not physical. Foundational.

Lindarion felt the pressure in the air shift.

'She didn't just attack. She basically unmade something.'

The mage swung wildly with the staff.

Lira ducked under it, flipped her dagger in a backhand grip, and dragged it across his ribs.

More steam. More black mist.

But she was gone again.

A flicker of movement behind him.

Each cut smaller. Each mark more precise.

She wasn't trying to kill him.

She was dismantling him.

Lindarion watched, arms loose at his sides, chest still heaving from the aftershock of his own power.

But something in him recognized this.

Lira reappeared again, this time in front.

Her blade came up in one clean arc, and this time—

Stone and runes exploded outward in a sharp ring of debris and sound.

The mage stumbled backward.

But the skin beneath was etched in lines of corrupted magic, veins glowing with something unnatural. His mouth opened in a snarl—or a scream. Hard to tell.

Just enough to raise her blade.

To let him see her clearly.

Ren, half-limping from the edge, let out a low whistle. "Alright. She's officially the scariest person I know."

Lindarion didn't answer.

'…Yeah. Not arguing with that.'

Ashwing flared his wings once like even he wasn't dumb enough to get between her and whatever unfinished business was unfolding.

He finally looked afraid.

Lira of Tirnaeth didn't glow.

She just emptied the space around her like a walking silence—pulling heat, hope, and arrogance straight out of the air.

She lowered her dagger now, blade slick with dark mist.

The mage staggered back a half-step, exposed face twitching under lines of fractured enchantment and raw, twitching mana scars.

He opened his mouth like he might speak.

She moved forward once, slow.

And the shadows followed like they belonged to her.

The mage didn't scream.

Opened his mouth. Tilted his head back like he'd watched enough villains monologue before dying to know how it was supposed to go.

Because Lira was already there.

Just raised her free hand and the darkness answered.

It wasn't mist. Wasn't shadow.

Everything around her blinked out for a split second. Sound. Light. Color. Like the world forgot how to exist near her.

Lindarion felt it ripple through his ribs.

Lira stepped into the mage's space. Not a single wasted motion. The ground beneath her frosted over black—not cold, just empty.

The mage tried to raise his staff.

A pulse of broken mana shivered into the air like a dying curse. It didn't reach her.

The shadows around her pulled tighter, snapped into form.

A jagged ring of blades.

The mage flinched for the first time.

The first blade hit his shoulder. The second cut straight through his hip. The third arced around and embedded deep in his exposed side.

He jerked, staggering, runed mask half-cracked, leaking black steam.

They moved like a swarm that had learned choreography. No flailing. No chaos. Just execution.

The mage vanished under a bloom of spiraling dark steel and silence.

It lasted five seconds.

Steam curled where he'd been standing.

The runes he'd carved into the ground hissed once and died.

And every single monster still breathing?

Like strings had been cut.