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Chapter 56 - Special Chapter: Reiyell

‎Reiyell's POV – The Duel

‎The frost curled lazily from my fingertips, coiling into the air like ribbons of moonlight. The moment the first shard of ice kissed the ground, I could feel his pulse quicken — even without looking at him.

‎Wads.

‎The boy with eyes too stubborn to bow and hands too calloused for his age. Months ago, he would've been frozen in the first heartbeat. Now… he was still standing.

‎My Abyssal Freeze blossomed across the field, turning soil to glass and air to knives. I expected him to buckle immediately. Instead, I felt the ripple — gravity itself bending, my frost's natural drift suddenly dragging toward the ground.

‎A smile tugged at my lips. So you've been holding back on me.

‎He moved like someone who had memorized the weight of his own limits. Every step was deliberate, every dodge too precise to be accidental. I had to admit — his Gravity Lattice made my attacks hesitate, linger, as though the world itself was unsure which way to lean.

‎But power is more than tricks.

‎I raised my hand, palm open, and the temperature dropped sharply enough that my own breath crystallized. His balance wavered — a subtle thing most wouldn't notice, but to me, it was the sound of a match nearly going out.

‎"Still think you can reach me?" I asked, my tone light, almost teasing.

‎"Not yet," he answered, voice low but steady. "But I'll get there."

‎That determination… it was dangerous. Not because he could beat me now — he couldn't even graze me if I stood still — but because it reminded me of someone. Someone I used to spar with in the palace courtyards when the world was still simple...simple? what am I even talking about?

‎He lunged again, pushing gravity to force me into missteps, but I simply let the frost carry me, a dance he couldn't yet lead. His blade missed by inches, his force collapsing into a spiral of heavy air and fractured ice.

‎Even as I pushed him back, his eyes didn't dim. They sharpened.

‎The duel ended when I decided it would, my ice blooming outward to lock the ground beneath him. His knees buckled from the sudden chill seeping up his legs, but he didn't look away.

‎I stepped forward, the sound of cracking frost between us. "You've grown, Wads. Faster than most."

‎He didn't respond at first — just caught his breath. Then, more formal than I liked, he said, "Princess Reiyell, I—"

‎"Rei," I interrupted, brushing frost from my sleeves. "When it's just us, call me Rei."

‎His brow furrowed, as if unsure whether I was serious. But he nodded.

‎For the first time in a long while, I felt… curious. Not about his strength now, but about how far he'd climb.

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