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Chapter 257 - Chapter 257: Twenty Minutes of Light

Arthur led him to a quiet meditation room deep in the sanctum. He closed the heavy wooden doors, sealing them in.

They stood facing each other. Arthur could feel the Death's Mark beneath his shirt, a faint warmth against his skin. 

His magical channels were still scorched and healing; conventional spellwork was beyond him at the moment.

But this wasn't conventional magic. The Death's Mark didn't draw on his magical core. It drew on something else entirely. Soul energy.

He closed his eyes and focused on the triangle burned into his chest.

A cold, silver light began to emanate from him. The shadows in the room deepened. Not with darkness, but with a solemn gravity that pressed against the walls. The air grew thin and still.

"You are in luck, Kaecilius," Arthur whispered, his eyes opening to reveal pools of shifting grey mist. "Your wife... she hasn't moved on. She's been watching you. She's been worried about you."

He reached out his hand and turned his wrist slowly, as if unlocking an invisible door.

The air shimmered. Silver mist coalesced, gathering into a form.

Slowly, heartbreakingly, a figure appeared. She was pale, translucent, glowing with a soft inner light. She wore the simple clothes she had died in, and her face was etched with a love that transcended the grave.

Adria.

Kaecilius let out a sound that was half-sob, half-laugh. He fell to his knees, his hands reaching out instinctively.

"Adria?"

The ghost smiled. She reached out a hand to touch his face. Her fingers passed through his skin, but Kaecilius leaned into the phantom warmth anyway.

"My love," she whispered.

Arthur stepped back toward the door. "It's a soul echo, Kaecilius. But it's her. I'll give you twenty minutes."

He slipped out, closing the door softly behind him.

Arthur sat on the stone bench outside the meditation chamber and watched the sky.

Twenty-three minutes. That's how long it took.

He felt the connection fade. The heavy, cold presence of the Deathly Hallows receded back into dormancy. The silver light extinguished.

He waited a moment, then knocked once and entered the room.

Kaecilius was sitting on the floor. His face was wet with tears. He looked emotionally wrecked.

But the gloom, the dangerous resentment that had been fueling his descent into darkness, was gone.

It wasn't replaced by happiness. Arthur knew better than to expect that. Grief doesn't vanish. But it was replaced by something quieter. Something more fragile and infinitely more valuable.

Peace.

Arthur lowered himself to the floor across from him and waited.

Kaecilius looked up. And for the first time in years, he smiled. A sad smile, wet and trembling, but genuine.

"She scolded me," he said, his voice rough.

"Oh?"

"She told me I was a fool." Kaecilius wiped his eyes with the heel of his hand. "She said her life had meaning because she loved me and I loved her and we made a beautiful boy together. She said our son's life had meaning because he was kind and funny and made both of us better people for knowing him. And she said those meanings don't disappear just because the ending was cruel. They're still real. They still matter. They'll matter long after both of us are gone."

Arthur felt something tighten in his chest. He thought of his own parents, standing in that silver light years ago, telling him to live. To make friends. To find joy. Different words. Same truth.

"She told me I was being selfish," Kaecilius continued, a bitter laugh escaping him. "That I was so consumed with finding meaning, or getting them back, that I'd forgotten to do the one thing that would have honored both of them. Which was to live. Teach. Build something. Care about the people who are still here instead of tearing the universe apart trying to reach the people who aren't."

He fell silent for a moment, tracing the pattern in the stone floor. When he spoke again, his voice was softer.

"She said she'd been watching me spiral for years. Watching me drift toward darkness. She couldn't move on because she was afraid of what I'd become if she wasn't there, even as a ghost I couldn't see." He swallowed hard. "She stayed because she loved me too much to leave me alone with my worst instincts."

Arthur let the silence hold.

"And then she told me she was going to move on. Now."

The word hung in the air between them.

"Not because she wanted to leave," Kaecilius said quickly. "But because staying was enabling me. As long as she was on the other side - reachable, even theoretically - I would never stop searching. She knew me. She knew that as long as there was even the smallest crack in the door, I'd spend the rest of my life trying to break it open."

His voice cracked.

"So she closed it herself. She said she was at peace. She said our son was at peace. And she asked me - told me, really, in that voice she always used when she wasn't going to take no for an answer - to find mine."

He fell silent. The narrow window cast a bar of golden light across the stone floor between them. The mountain wind hummed softly against the walls.

Arthur studied the man across from him. Kaecilius was still raw. Still fragile. The grief hadn't vanished. That would take months, maybe years. But the direction had changed. The desperate, spiraling descent toward darkness had been arrested. For the first time, Kaecilius was facing forward instead of backward.

It wasn't a cure. It was a first step.

"You're wondering something," Kaecilius said, reading Arthur's expression with the perceptiveness that had always made him a formidable rival.

"Am I?"

"You're wondering if I resent you for this." Kaecilius gestured vaguely at the room, the empty space where his wife's phantom had stood. "You gave me a conversation. But the conversation ended with her closing the door. Permanently. If you hadn't done this, if I'd never spoken to her, there might have always been a chance. A sliver of possibility that I could find a way to bring her back. Now there isn't."

Arthur didn't deny it. The thought had crossed his mind. Hope is a dangerous thing to kill, even false hope.

Kaecilius shook his head. "No. If I'd somehow found a way, if I'd torn open the Dark Dimension, bargained with some entity, broken every law of nature to drag her back... I would have become someone she couldn't love. I would have gotten her back only to lose her in the worst way possible." He met Arthur's eyes. "You gave me the truth. That's worth more than a sliver of false hope."

"Good." Arthur exhaled, relief washing over him. "Because I can't afford another enemy hiding in the shadows."

Kaecilius frowned. "Another?"

"Recently dealt with one. Long story." Arthur waved it off. "Different day."

The frown deepened into something closer to concern, but Kaecilius didn't push. They'd known each other long enough to recognize when a subject was closed.

"Thank you, Arthur," Kaecilius said. The words were simple, unadorned, and utterly sincere. "For the conversation. For the honesty about the Ancient One. For... all of it."

"My pleasure. As long as we're good."

"We're good."

Arthur nodded. He climbed to his feet and offered Kaecilius a hand. Kaecilius took it and stood steadier than Arthur expected. There was a resolve in his posture that hadn't been there an hour ago. Fragile. New. But real.

"What will you do about the Ancient One?" Arthur asked.

Kaecilius considered the question. "I don't know yet. I'm still angry. But..." He glanced out the narrow window, toward the courtyard below. "She built this place. Trained me. Protected the world. Those things are real, whatever else she's done. I need time to sort the anger from the judgment."

"That's the healthiest thing you've said all day."

"Don't push it."

They walked out of the meditation chamber and back toward the main terrace. The sun was lower now, casting long shadows across the mountain peaks. The courtyard below was occupied again - a different class of students, more advanced, their forms sharper and more confident. Several of them glanced up at the terrace, at Kaecilius, with quick, reverent looks before returning to their practice.

Arthur noticed. More importantly, he noticed Kaecilius notice.

"They look up to you," Arthur said.

"They shouldn't."

"And yet they do. Master Chen tells me half of them requested your advanced seminar specifically. The other half are on the waiting list."

Kaecilius didn't respond, but his eyes lingered on the students below.

"They need you," Arthur said softly. "More than you realize. A good teacher, a truly good teacher, can be the difference between a sorcerer who protects the world and one who tears it apart. You know that better than anyone."

The words landed. Arthur saw them hit. Saw Kaecilius's expression shift, the grief and the exhaustion giving way to something that looked tentatively like purpose.

"I've been a poor teacher lately," Kaecilius admitted.

"Then be a better one. Starting now."

Kaecilius nodded slowly. "I will." He straightened, and the gesture had a decisiveness to it that Arthur recognized from their student days, Kaecilius making a choice and committing to it with his entire being. "I'll teach properly. The way she trained me."

"Good. And I'll come by once or twice a month for a while."

"You don't need to babysit me, Arthur."

"I'm not babysitting. I'm reinforcing." Arthur chose his words carefully. "There are things out there that prey on grief and isolation. The kind of darkness you were drifting toward doesn't always happen naturally. Sometimes it has help. A whisper in the dark. An offer that sounds too good to refuse. I want to make sure your mind is fortified against that kind of influence."

Kaecilius frowned. "You think something was targeting me?"

"I think you were vulnerable, and the universe is full of things that exploit vulnerability. Let me shore up your defenses. Consider it a favor between old rivals."

"Old rivals." Kaecilius's mouth twitched. "Is that what we are?"

"What would you call it?"

"I'd call it a very one-sided competition, given that you cheat by using three different magical disciplines simultaneously."

Arthur grinned. "Speaking of which. I've been hearing some very bold claims from the Masters. Chen says you're the strongest sorcerer in Kamar-Taj after the Ancient One."

"That's not a claim. That's a fact."

"Debatable."

Something shifted in Kaecilius's expression. A spark. Faint, buried under layers of exhaustion and grief, but unmistakable. The old competitive fire, stirring from the ashes.

"It's not debatable at all," Kaecilius said. "In pure mystic arts - no wizarding tricks, no chi manipulation - I surpassed you two years ago."

Arthur raised an eyebrow. "That's a bold statement."

"It's a true statement. You spread yourself too thin, Arthur. A finger in every pie. Mystic Arts, wizarding magic, chi, martial arts... you're competent at everything and transcendent at nothing. I have devoted myself entirely to the Mystic Arts for over a decade. There is a difference."

"Competent." Arthur's eye twitched. "He said competent."

"In pure sorcery? Yes. Competent. Perhaps gifted." Kaecilius's lips curled into a smirk. "But not the best."

They stared at each other. Below them, the courtyard had gone quiet. The students sensed something in the air, the charged silence before a storm.

Arthur rolled his shoulders. "As it happens, my wizard magic is completely shot right now. Healing from a rather significant battle. The Mystic Arts are all I have at the moment."

"How convenient."

"Isn't it?" Arthur's smile turned sharp. "Shall we settle this? Just Mystic Arts. No wands, no chi. Pure sorcery."

"Now?"

"Right now. Unless you're too tired from all that crying."

The spark in Kaecilius's eyes caught fire.

"The practice arena," he said. "Five minutes."

Word spread through Kamar-Taj like wildfire.

By the time Arthur and Kaecilius reached the large practice arena, a crowd had already gathered. Students pressed against the railings, jostling for better views. Masters stood with their arms folded, expressions carefully neutral but eyes bright with interest.

Even the Ancient One had stepped out onto her balcony to watch, a satisfied smile playing on her lips.

Arthur assumed his stance, orange sparks forming a complex mandala around his fists.

Kaecilius drew two translucent Eldritch daggers from the air, settling into a low, predatory crouch.

"Ready when you are, wizard," Kaecilius taunted.

"Don't cry when you lose," Arthur retorted.

Kaecilius lunged.

Arthur sidestepped, parrying the dagger with an Eldritch shield, and countered with a crackling whip of orange energy.

They moved in a blur of orange light and precise geometry. It was a dance of mastery, spells woven and unraveled in microseconds. Arthur wasn't holding back, and neither was Kaecilius. They fought with the joy of two masters pushing each other to their limits, trading blows that cracked the air.

The crowd gasped as Kaecilius's blade nearly took Arthur's head off. They cheered as Arthur's counter sent Kaecilius skidding across the arena floor.

And as Arthur deflected another strike that would have ended the match, he saw it.

Kaecilius was smiling.

Small. Barely there. More in the eyes than on the lips. But unmistakable.

Yeah, Arthur thought, spinning to counter. He's going to be fine.

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