During the midday break, the academyâs central courtyard was crowded with students seeking fresh air and sunlight after morning classes.
Jessica Harrow had claimed a bench with her usual group, ostensibly eating lunch but actually providing running commentary on passing students.
"âand thereâs Claire Hivolt heading toward the advanced training grounds," Jessica observed, making a mental note. "She trains every Tuesday at this time. Very consistent schedule."
"Why do you know her training schedule?" Melody asked tiredly.
Because sheâs involved in the William Cross romantic situation, understanding patterns can help foresee future developments.
Jessica watched Claire walk around the corner of a building. "Speaking of which, Lyanna is chatting with Liam. Theyâre both in the same magical theory study group."
Theyâre friends because friends talk to each other.
"Context, Melody. Always context." Jessica pulled out a small notebookâher portable version of a larger chart. "Lyanna arranged that group town outing specifically to spend time with William in a casual setting. Sheâs developing an emotional connection through friendship first, which is a clever approach for someone who appears uncomfortable with direct romantic gestures.
Hannah, who had been attempting to read as Jessica talked, finally shut her book in frustration. "Do you ever find it strange that we analyze everyoneâs relationships as if they were military strategies?"
Jessica added, "I prefer âthoroughâ over âweird.â" She explained, "This isnât just about relationships; itâs about social dynamics, power structures, and how people manage complex interpersonal situations. Itâs actually quite educational."
"Itâs gossipy."
"All social observation can be seen as a form of gossip; I simply approach it in a more systematic way."
Their debate was interrupted by a commotion near the fountain, where a group of students had gathered around what seemed to be a quarrel between two second-year students.
One was shouting, "ânot my problem you didnât submit the assignment on time!"
"You were expected to share your notes! We had agreed to collaborate!"
"I shared my notes. You chose not to use them. Thatâs on you, not me!"
The argument intensified until a professor intervened, separating the students and sending them to different areas to calm down. The crowd, having witnessed the scene, dispersed disappointed that the conflict was resolved so swiftly.
"Academic partnership gone wrong," Jessica observed, making a note. "Those happen every semester. Someone doesnât pull their weight, someone else gets resentful, the whole collaboration collapses."
"Youâre making a note about a random argument between people you donât even know?"
"Patterns, Hannah. Everything is data." Jessica closed her notebook. "By the way, has anyone noticed that Kai hasnât been seen on campus much since the expedition?"
Melody noted, "Heâs always been antisocial; rarely being seen is his usual state."
Thatâs true, but thereâs a distinction between opting for privacy and deliberately avoiding places where crowds gather. He used to show up at meals now and then.
Now? Nothing. Jessica looked thoughtful. She wondered if the expedition incident had a greater impact on him than people thought.
"Or heâs just busy with competition preparation and doesnât want to deal with people asking questions about fighting assassins."
"Also possible. But worth monitoring."
---
In the advanced combat training hall, a very different scene was unfolding.
Captain Morris had gathered the fourth-year students for what she called a "reality check session."
"Youâre graduating in three months," she announced without preamble. "Some of you will join the military. Some will pursue mercenary work. A few will enter private security or noble house service. All of you will face real combat situations." She gestured at the training equipment around them. "And most of you are not ready."
The students moved restlessly.
Last weekâs coordination assessment was poor. You were acting like individuals standing close rather than a unified combat team. Morris unfolded a tactical map and explained, "Real combat doesnât focus on individual skills. It emphasizes teamwork to accomplish objectives while remaining alive."
Gregory raised his hand. "Captain Morris, with respectâweâre academy students. Weâve trained for four years. How can we not be prepared?"
Academy training can create a false sense of security because it takes place in controlled environments with safety protocols and immediate healing support.
However, real combat lacks these safeguards. Morrisâs face was grim. "The Thornvale expedition exposed some students to real danger â Derekâs betrayal, professional assassins, life-or-death scenarios. Thatâs a closer approximation to reality than anything youâve encountered here."
"So what do you want us to do differently?" Catherine asked.
"I want you to take your remaining training seriously and coordinate with your teams as if your lives depend on it, because they will." Morris set down the tactical map.
"Starting today, weâre conducting combat scenarios with real consequencesânot injuries, since I wonât risk getting you killed before graduation, but failure. Teams that donât work well together will fail these scenarios, and those failures will be reflected in your final assessments."
The room went very quiet.
"This isnât meant to scare you. This is meant to prepare you." Morrisâs voice softened slightly. "Youâre talented students or you wouldnât have made it to fourth year. But talent alone doesnât keep you alive. Teamwork, communication, and tactical thinking do. Weâre spending the next three months developing those skills intensively."
She divided them into teams and led them through a challenging scenario with simulated monster attacks, environmental hazards, and coordination tasks.
The first team collapsed within five minutes because of poor communication.
The second team held out longer but committed key tactical mistakes that could have caused casualties in real situations.
By the time the session ended, every student looked sobered by the experience.
"Better," Morris said, though her tone implied that âbetterâ was relative. "Youâre beginning to grasp the extent of the problem.
Tomorrow, weâll move on to more complex scenarios. Come ready to collaborate effectively."
---
The evening saw the academy returning to its usual routines, though a subtle tension lingered from the dayâs many revelations.
In the library, study groups gathered to work on the weekâs assignments. The silence was occasionally interrupted by frustrated sighs or whispered questions.
Patricia sat at a table with David, Marcus, and Emma, working on magical theory questions.
Marcus complained for the third time, "I still donât understand essence resonance. The diagrams are helpful, but the actual mechanism remains baffling."
Think of it like this..." David paused, searching for an apt analogy. "You know how some sounds can shatter glass if the frequency aligns perfectly?"
"Sure."
Essence resonance works similarly. Different essence types vibrate at distinct frequencies. When you mix types with compatible frequencies, they reinforce each other. Incompatible frequencies cause interference and instability.
David quickly drew a diagram. "Fire and wind have naturally complementary frequenciesâthatâs why they blend easily. Water and fire have opposing frequenciesâthatâs why combining them needs careful control."
Marcus examined the diagram and said, "That... actually makes sense." He then asked, "So, do multi-element users need to discover frequency combinations that work well together?"
"Exactly. Thatâs why genuine multi-element cultivation is so rare. It demands precise control to synchronize the frequencies of different essence types simultaneously."
"Just like William apparently does."
"Or Kai ." Patricia looked up from her work. "I still canât believe a second-year achieved that level of control. Itâs usually said to take years of dedicated practice."
"Perhaps theyâre both prodigies," Emma proposed. "Some individuals simply possess innate talent for essence manipulation."
"Natural talent alone canât explain how you defeated professional assassins," Marcus noted. "That takes combat experience and training, not just cultivation ability."
They kept speculating as they worked on their assignment, the mystery of their more successful peers distracting them from difficult magical theory.
At a different table in the library, Timothy tried to study as his friends offered commentary.
"Youâve been staring at that same page for ten minutes," observed his friend Rachel.
"Iâm thinking."
"About magical theory or about Sarah Grant?"
Timothyâs head snapped up. "What? Iâm notâthis is about the assignment!"
Rachel said with a knowing smile, "Youâve been distracted since the lunch incident," and added, "And youâve mentioned her name at least four times in unrelated conversations."
"I have not!"
"You absolutely have," confirmed Michael. "Yesterday you were talking about essence cultivation and somehow brought up Sarahâs comment about meditation techniques. Today during combat practice you mentioned her opinion on defensive formations. Itâs obvious."
Timothy closed his book with resignation. "Okay, fine. Maybe I think sheâs interesting. Sheâs smart and she was nice about the whole lunch disaster even though I completely ruined her meal."
"So ask her to study together or something."
"I canât just ask her to study together! Thatâs too forward!"
"Timothy, you literally bought her replacement lunch and extra food. I think youâve already established that youâre interested." Rachel pushed his book back toward him. "Just be casual about it. âHey, want to work on this assignment together?â Very simple."
"What if she says no?"
"Then she says no and you move on. But youâll never know if you donât ask."
Timothy considered this while his friends watched with varying degrees of amusement and encouragement.
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