Chapter 172: Fifty Shades of Wind
After I finished setting up my little advantage, I sat back down on the cold floor and let my breath settle.
Xin called out from the other cell, his voice slightly curious.
āHey, kid. What did you just do? I felt the Essence shift in your cell.ā
I let out a small chuckle.
āWhat could I possibly do in here, old man? Iām just as caged as you are.ā
He scoffed but didnāt press any further. The cell fell into silence again.
I leaned a little closer to Steve and whispered,āHowās your recovery coming along?ā
His eyes were still closed, but I saw a faint smile tug at the corner of his mouth.
āI think Iām doing alright,ā he murmured.
āGood,ā I whispered again. āWant to train a bit?ā
He furrowed his brows in confusion.
āTrain? How?ā
I shifted slightly and flicked a tiny wind blade from my fingertip toward his leg. It was sharp enough to sting but harmless. The blade zipped through the air and lightly grazed his thigh.
His eyes snapped open wide as the realization hit him. Then he looked at me, scoffing.
āShow off.ā
I grinned.
āSo? You in?ā
He gave a slow nod, then asked more seriously,
āAre you planning to escape?ā
I shook my head.
āNot yet. First off, I have no idea how to even get out of this cell. Second⦠why would I rush it? We donāt know anything about whatās going on outside yet. Letās get roughed up a bit by King and see where they take us. After that, weāll come up with a real plan.ā
He listened quietly, then nodded again.
āAlright,ā I said with a grin. āHereās what weāll do, you try dodging, and Iāll attack. Easy enough, yeah?ā
He stood up and asked me.
āAre you sure theyāre not watching us from somewhere?ā Steve asked.
I chuckled.
āNope. Not even a little. Thereās a Grandmaster in this realm, Iāve got no idea what heās capable of. But thereās no way in hell Iām just going to sit quietly. Actually, I canāt sit still. Thatās not me. Still, I do believe theyāre not watching.ā
That confidence came from my Essence perception. I had scanned every inch of the cellāevery crack in the walls, every corner of the ceiling and floor. Nothing. No runes, no transfer seals like the ones Iād seen outside.
If they had something even more advanced, something beyond my reach⦠well, so be it. I was ready to face whatever came next.
****
The darkness in the cell was absolute. No flickers of torchlight. No cracks in the stone. Just thick, suffocating black and the sound of our own breathing.
We stood a few feet apart.
The [Essence Engine] thrummed inside me, steady as a heartbeat. It pulled in scraps of energy from the air, feeding the generator core. The white sphere at its center spun slowly, glowing faintly in my perception.
I lifted my hand slightly, not enough to strain the cuffs, just enough to channel. A thin blade of wind took shapeāsilent, near weightless. I flicked it toward Steveās arm.
A hiss of air. A faint sting. He flinched, just a little, too late to dodge.
Another blade. I sent it toward his side.
The sound of movement, he shifted again, this time quicker, but still not enough. The blade kissed his ribs and faded.
He grunted but didnāt complain. That was good.
I whispered, voice low and steady. āDonāt wait for the pain. Try to feel the air shift before it comes.ā
No reply. Just a slow exhale. His stance adjusted, legs slightly apart, arms loose, body alert.
Another blade. I sent it low, toward his knee.
This time, he jerked his leg back. Still slow, but the blade missed by an inch.
Better.
I kept the rhythm. I didnāt want him to relax. I didnāt want myself to either.
A blade from above now, angled downward toward his shoulder.
He shifted again, reacting too late. It caught him on the collarbone and vanished.
No words. No curses. Just a quiet breath. Resetting.
Again.
He stood in the pitch black, no vision to guide him, only instincts. No Essence to help him, only nerves and breath and sound.
It wasnāt much. But this was how soldiers were made.
The darkness didnāt matter. My Psynapse bloomed beyond it.
While Steve tried to sharpen his senses, I trained my control.
I raised both hands, feeling the cuffs strain slightly, and called the Essence around me. Wind coiled to my will, fine threads drawn from the air.
Four wind blades formed, floating quietly in the pitch-black cell. They hovered in a loose orbit around me, thin and sharp. I focused on their shapeālength, weight, edge. Then I twisted.
The blades bent, shimmered, and folded into spheres.
Each one now spun silently, the air condensed inside to near vibration. It was easier than I expected. Keeping them stable while shifting their structure required layered intent, pressure, direction, edge memory. My Psynapse surged.
The wind bent to my will like it was born for it.
I shaped six blades in the airārazor-thin and silent, orbiting me with perfect coordination. My Psynapse didnāt strain. It simply obeyed.
With a flick of thought, I transformed them into spheres. The transition was seamless. Air compressed into tight orbs, each humming faintly, invisible in the dark but pulsing in my perception.
I fired one toward Steveās side.
He flinched too late. The orb struck and burst with a soft thud against his ribs.
I shifted the spheres again, this time into dense, short daggers. Compact and deadly in form, they spun slowly in place. I let them hover, then redirected one at Steveās shoulder.
He ducked. A little faster this time. Progress.
The remaining daggers swirled in a tight spiral around me. I spread them out, then reformed them into long needlesāthin as hair, sharper than bone. Their flight was effortless. I kept them in motion, rotating above my shoulders, ready to strike at any angle.
Another flick. A needle whispered through the air toward Steveās leg.
He dodged again, barely. His instincts were improving, even if his body lagged behind.
I kept moving.
The six needles snapped into spinning discs, then into spheres again. The transformations were fluid, instant.
A blade curved toward Steveās chest. He swayed aside but caught the edge. A low grunt followed, but he stayed standing.
Good.
I shifted the wind forms one last timeāspheres, then daggers, then a wide arc of flat pressure that rippled outward like a fan.
Steveās hair fluttered from the passing wind.
I conjured a few more needles and kept the pressure on him while I focused on shaping new wind blades.
Your gift is the motivation for my creation. Give me more motivation!