âDo you know how Skills are divided?â She asks.
âIron, Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum, Diamond, True Diamond, Mithril, Orichalcum, Aetherium, Rainbow.â
I recite the list.
âThatâsâŠâ she smiles and shakes her head. âYou come from a humble background, donât you?â
I nod, slowly. Not because I trust her, but because I know the kind of look sheâs giving me right now. The same look the richer boys in the mines used to give when they knew youâd never sit at their table no matter how hard you worked.
âYes,â I say simply.
She hums, as if that confirms something.
âThatâs the market tier system,â she explains. âItâs what merchants and Guilds use to measure rarity. But thereâs another scaleâolder. More accurate. The Archivists call it the Vein Ladder. Itâs based on how deeply a Skill entwines with the userâs mana lattice and how it reshapes the body and mind.â
âNever heard of that,â I say. Honestly, it sounds like bullshit. But I keep my mouth shut, because this woman used to be a Platinum Knight at the very least and she clearly hasnât lost her edge.
I suspect sheâs even stronger than that, honestly
.
âYou wouldnât have,â she continues, tapping a small crystal cube from her belt pouch and watching it flicker with heat. âMost Knights donât. Most Tutors donât either. Youâve got something rare in you, boy. Iâm guessing that Skill of yoursâwhatever it isâlets you peek deeper than the rest. You saw through my shards like you had a prism in your head.â
I say nothing. The less I speak, the more she talks. Thatâs how you mine information.
âIâve seen only one Skill like that before,â she mutters, half to herself. âIt belonged to a man who ended a war in three days. He never fought on the front line. He just taught soldiers how to swing properly, where to aim, and when to dodge. His battalion outperformed entire legions.â
âSounds like a Tutor,â I say, cautious.
âNo. He was much greater than that,â she says, eyes sharp. âYou could say, he was
extraordinary
.â
That word settles heavy in the air between us. Not talented. Not strong. Extraordinary.
She canât have guessed it, right? Rainbow Skills are unknown. Theyâre so rare thatâ
âThere are eleven Ranks. And we classify people by the same system based on their strength. You know how each rank is about the destructive power of someone, right?â
I nod cautiously.
âBut truly, there are four major tiers of people. Iron through Silver, thatâs the highest most people in this life will ever go even if they managed to land a Gold or Platinus Skill Crystal. Thatâs because a Gold or Platinum Skill consumes too much energy to be used without any knowledge. So, thatâs the common folks. Workers who get a few Skill Crystals and level them in the mid fifties as far as levels go.
âThe second tier,â she continues, âgoes from Gold to Diamond. Thatâs the kind of talent you have to demonstrate to enter the Knightâs Academy of Ytrial, the greatest Knight Academy there is. You must show yourself capable enough to use at least a Gold-ranked Skill effectively, or to have brought multiple Silvers to full mastery. Knights in this tier form the backbone of noble housesâ forces. They are the duelists, the escorts, the elite patrols. They hold powerâbut not enough to shape the world.â
She pauses, watching me closely. I meet her gaze, still silent.
âThe third tier,â she says, her voice dropping like a blade, âis what I call the Movers. Diamond, True Diamond, sometimes Mithril. Thatâs where you find the named champions. They donât answer to kingsâthey make kings listen. Theyâre not just strong. They are
capable
in a way that makes normal men obsolete.â
âAnd the fourth tier?â I ask, already knowing she saved the most terrifying for last.
She tilts her head. âThe Wielders of Truth. The ones whoâve touched Aetherium or Rainbow. Or worseâthose whoâve
understood
them. That man I told you about? He didnât wield a Rainbow Skill. He
comprehended
it. It became a part of him. It rewrote him. People like him donât need armies. They change the outcome of wars by pointing.â
I feel my palms sweating.
Not because Iâm afraidâno. Because for the first time since I picked up that Grimoire, I realize how deep the ocean really is. Iâve been swimming near the surface, thinking the waterâs cold. But down there? Itâs colder than steel and older than the sun.
âI donât know where your Skill sits,â she continues. âBut the moment I saw you read those shards like street signs, I knew I was staring at the edge of something dangerous. And
very
rare.â
I swallow the lump forming in my throat.
âI donât know what youâre talking about,â I lie, trying not to meet her gaze now.
She laughsânot loud, not mocking. Just amused.
âKeep lying like that, and one day someone smarter than me will cut you open to see what glows inside. So be careful, boy. Careful what you show, and careful what you teach. Because if I saw it? Others will too. And not all of them will offer you tea and a good deal on Skill Shards.â
I nod again, but slower this time.
âNow, as for our deal,â she says and a globe appears in her hand from seemingly nowhere.
Wait, at her hand
.
I notice a shimmering ring.
Could it be one of the famous Interspatial Rings?
Those are rings that contain a separate space that can be used to store items. Usually, only Knights and extremely rich people can afford them. Not even Valerius was carrying one with him and had to have his servants haul his things around for him.
âI have been trying to imbue one of my Skills into this Orb of Plenty. Itâs a Mithril Ranked Artifact. However, there seems to be an incompatibility. If you can tell whatâs wrong with this, you can have all the shards.â
I look at the middle-aged woman, then at the orb, then again at her.
âThat seems like a bad deal to me,â I frown.
I actually expect her to lose her patience but, instead, she just laughs.
âSorry, old habits die hard. I like a good barter, actually. I just donât want to waste my time with weak shards. So, how about this, on top of the shards, I happen to have the other two Skill Crystals youâre looking for. Fire Armor and Fire Slash. Since those are Silver Crystals, Iâll add a third, a little gift. Most donât know it, but Hellâs Sword Set can benefit from a very specific, seemingly useless Skill Crystal.â
âWhich is?â I ask, curious.
She takes out of thin air a small red Skill Crystal, a Silver one.
âFire Veins,â she says, dangling it in front of me. âIts normal effect when used alone is to⊠warm up your mana veins. Normally, that favors the circulation of mana a little, but its effects are so negligible that no one cares about it. However, if you absorb Fire Veins
after
completing the set, it will fuse with the set and generate a Secret Gold Skill, Veins of Fire.â
âIsnât that the same name?â I frown.
âVeins of Fire is one of those very rare, secret combinations, kid, that most nobles dream of. It increases every aspect of your power, from your Fire-attuned mana to your bodyâs power.
Oh wow, that actually sounds incredibly strong
.
âAnd all I have to do is help you out,â I say.
âAll he has to do, he says,â she laughs. âYes. Watch me try to fuse the Skill with the Orb of Plenty and tell me what you see.â
I look intently, pulling onto The Grimoire Extraordinaire as the woman opens a palm up.
A flicker of light blossoms in her hand.
The Orb of Plenty hovers an inch above her palm, spinning lazily like a dying star. Its surface shiftsâglass-like and pearlescent.
The woman raises her other hand and begins to chant under her breath.
"Elettraâs Judgment," she whispers.
The Skill answers instantly.
A high-pitched whine cuts through the tentâso sharp it makes my teeth hurt. The air thickens, and all color drains from the world except for a single point of light forming above her head. It glows violet-white, the kind of light that doesnât illuminate but sears. It pulses onceâand even though it's not aimed at me, I stagger back.
If that lightning touches me, I will die. Not because Iâm weakâbecause Iâm nothing compared to it.
[Elettraâs Judgment â Middle Mithril Rank Offensive Spell]
Grimoire Extraordinaire:
Elettraâs Judgment Lv. 78 contains 6 distinct flaws.
Itâs not about the Skillâs flaws right now
.
Sheâs
holding it
.
Her palm stays level under the orb. Her eyes are narrowed, focused, but calm. As if sheâs weighing nothing heavier than a jug of water. Her veins glow faint blue from mana surging through them, yet her breath doesnât quicken.
Sheâs not just a former Platinum Knight. Sheâs
way
past that.
But thereâs friction. The Skillâs energy arcs against the orb, but it wonât bind. Sparks ripple over the orbâs surface before the light bleeds out the wrong side and fizzles into smoke.
I activate The Grimoire again, this time focusing hard on the orb.
[Orb of Plenty â Mithril Grade Artifact]
[Function: Passive mana storage / amplification. Capable of receiving direct Skill fusion.]
[WARNING: Skill fusion incompatible due to incorrect vein-path mapping.]
My eyes widen.
Itâs not that the Orb canât absorb the Skill. Itâs absorbing it
wrong
. Itâs trying to treat the lightning like a currentâbut the Orb has a different lattice structure.
The Grimoire zooms inâprojecting a map of the Orbâs internal veins. Theyâre not linear, like a heart pumping outward. Theyâre
specular
âmirror-structured. A twin-vein system, almost like lungs breathing in and out at once.
Sheâs channeling the Skill straight through the center, like into a sword or gem. But the Orbâs pathways reflect and fold on each other. It needs a mirrored path.
âStop,â I say, stepping closer, ignoring the taste of copper in my mouth from the pressure. âYouâre flooding the core wrong. The vein structure inside the orb isnât linearâitâs mirrored. You have to cast in reflection.â
She doesnât glance at me, but I see one eyebrow twitch.
âReflection?â
âStart with the Lightning Cloud veins,â I say, trusting the Grimoireâs diagram, âbut cast them in reverse through the right palm. Then match them left-to-right instead of front-to-back. Think of it like... braiding a rope in reverse. If you push it through the main path, it bleeds out.â
Her hands donât move immediately. But then, slowly, she shifts her left palm under the orb. Her right fingers splay, and I see the first strand of mana weave outwardânot spiraling this time, but curling inward along the mirrored paths.
The light flickers again.
The tent glows blue-white.
And thenâ
Snap.
The lightning doesnât burst outward.
It
enters
.
The Orb of Plenty swallows it whole, and the entire tent rocks with pressure before settling into absolute stillness. The orb dimsâthen brightens againâthen turns clear, crystalline, almost invisible.
Then it begins to
hum
.
Low. Resonant. Like the heart of a storm waiting to be called again.
The woman exhalesâonly now does she let the tension go.
She closes her hand around the orb, which no longer resists.
âBoy,â she says, voice dry, but thereâs an edge of real awe in it. âYouâre dangerous.â
I donât answer.
She waves a hand, and a tiny chest floats from under her table and lands at my feet with a dull
thud
.
âAll the shards. Fire Armor. Fire Slash. Fire Veins,â she says. âAnd a warning.â
She stands now, taller than she seemed before. Her voice becomes cold.
âIf anyone else ever saw what you just didâif youâd told anyone
but me
how to do thatâtheyâd have carved it out of your head. Not bribed you. Not threatened you.
Cut it out.
â
She turns back to her bench.
âAnd Iâm telling you this because I want you to live long enough to learn
everything.
â
I pick up the chest.
âWait, I didnât catch your name,â I say.
âYou havenât earned that yet,â the woman smiles mysteriously. âBut you might be on the right track.â
And I realize: this wasnât just about shards or spells or Skill combinations, was it?
This felt like a test.