Jonah's mind was still buzzing from the Essence Archive. He felt like a kid who'd just been given a tour of a candy factory but wasn't allowed to eat anything. He remembered the glowing orbs - Gryphon Wing and Wyvern Talon - and it made him deeply long for them.
He was lying on his bed, gently touching the faint lines of his nine-headed God Mark, when a loud knock on his door pulled him out of his thoughts.
It was Sergeant Seraph. Of course, it was. She didn't wait to be invited, just walked right in with the same direct energy she used to make people move aside. She carried a smooth, dark grey case that seemed tough enough to survive anything.
She set it on his small desk with a solid thud.
"Your work in the archive was… acceptable," she said. Coming from her, that was very high praise. "The Headmaster agrees. You've shown you can spot good things. Now we need to see if you can make them."
Jonah sat up, eyes locked on the case. It had a digital lock and a bio-scanner, the kind of tech he used to dream of stripping for parts.
Seraph entered a code into the lock. It opened with a soft hiss. "Your first official assignment."
Jonah slid off the bed and approached the desk cautiously. Inside the case, nestled in custom-molded foam, were three items. Two were familiar motes of light, the Essences he was starting to understand.
One orb was a shiny, rainbow-silver color, glowing softly with a steady beat. The other was a dark brown orb that seemed to pull in all the light around it.
Between them lay the third item: a Genesis Core. It was a beautiful, palm-sized egg, its shell a swirl of pale blue and white, like a storm cloud captured in stone. It felt impossibly light, almost hollow.
"Gale-Raptor Egg," Seraph stated, pointing to the core. "Avian type. Highly adaptable." She then gestured to the two essences. "Glimmer-Moth Essence - Air and Illusion properties. And Armored Slug Essence - Earth and Defense. Your task is to synthesize them into a single, Grade-2 Progeny."
Jonah's breath hitched. Two essences? Into one core? His first creation had been a desperate guess, combining a rock and a bug. This was something else entirely. This design was very detailed and made on purpose.
"This has never been successfully attempted by a student," Seraph continued, her tone flat, leaving no room for argument. "The official designation for this assignment is Project Chimera. You have one week to plan. Don't disappoint me."
She turned and left as quickly as she had come, the door closing behind her with a click. Jonah was left alone with the humming case, feeling the heavy meaning of the word 'chimera.' He was no longer just a scrapper with an unusual power. Now, he was an engineer, and this was the most unbelievable blueprint he had ever seen.
________________________________________
Two days later, Jonah's room looked like a mad scientist's hideout. Datapads were scattered across the floor, his little chalkboard was covered in scribbles and diagrams, and an empty instant-noodle cup sat loosely on a stack of research files.
The situation was far too difficult for him.
He knew he needed help. His brain, which was good at survival and quick instincts, couldn't handle this kind of complex, book-learned theory. There was only one person at the Academy whose brain worked like a supercomputer.
He found Vanessa in the library, naturally. She was in her usual spot, hidden behind a large pile of mana physics books. When he came near, she looked up. The annoyance in her eyes changed to curiosity when she noticed how tired he looked.
"Rough couple of days?" she asked.
"You have no idea," Jonah sighed, pulling up a chair. "I, uh… I need your help. With a project."
She raised a perfectly sculpted eyebrow. "Oh? I thought your work was top secret."
"It is," he said, leaning forward and lowering his voice. "But I can give you the theoretical framework. I need to… understand the synergistic potential between illusionary and defensive bio-magical properties."
He tried to say it with a straight face, to sound like a legitimate researcher. He failed. The words felt strange and hard to say.
Vanessa stared at him for a long moment, then let out a quiet laugh. "Synergistic potential? Jonah, you sound like a textbook. A very confused textbook."
He blushed. "Okay, listen. I have two items. One can trick people, making them believe things that aren't real. The other is a living rock that's extremely strong. I need to combine them."
Her curiosity quickly took over her amusement. Her eyes lit up. "You mean combining two disparate essence signatures? The mana conflict would be immense! Their core parts would push each other away. It's a classic problem in advanced construct theory. Most scholars consider it impossible without a stabilizing element of near-divine power." She leaned in, her voice dropping to a secret whisper.
"What are you really building?"
"A really weird pet?" Jonah offered weakly.
She rolled her eyes but was clearly hooked. "Fine. Don't tell me. But the problem is fascinating."
And so their "synergy project" began. Vanessa, unaware of the true nature of his power, became his chief consultant. She'd bring stacks of datapads to his room, and they'd spend hours on the floor, mapping out creature genealogies.
"The Glimmer-Moth's illusion is based on light refraction and mild psychic suggestion," she explained, pointing at a holographic diagram of the creature. "It's fragile and hard to catch."
"And the Armored Slug produces a dense, earthen mana that reinforces its shell," Jonah countered, pointing to another diagram. "It's all about being impossible to move. It's direct and powerful.."
"Exactly! One means 'you can't hit me,' and the other means 'you can't hurt me.' They're complete opposites," Vanessa said, getting more and more excited. "You can't just force them together. It's like trying to combine silk and rock. The silk would just tear apart."
Suddenly, it made sense to Jonah. That was it.
He wasn't trying to build something simple and solid. He was trying to create something complex and intricate, like a woven picture. The elements were alive, and they actively resisted each other.
He looked at the Glimmer-Moth's shimmering essence and the Armored Slug's dense, brown mote, still sitting in their open case. He imagined trying to force them together. He could practically feel the explosion in his mind - a psychic backlash that would probably leave him drooling for a week.
This wasn't addition. This was integration. He couldn't just jam the slug's toughness onto the moth's wings. He needed to find a way to make the illusion serve the defense, and the defense support the illusion.
"What if," Jonah said slowly, thinking aloud, "the armor isn't just armor? What if it's a canvas for the illusion? A hard surface to project light onto?"
Vanessa stopped, her finger paused over her tablet. Her eyes got a bit wider. 'Like an invisibility shield?' she asked. "Using the strong, defensive mana to power a shell that bends light with the illusion magic? The power needed would be immense, but their magic types… they might not fight. They might… work together."
A wide grin appeared on Jonah's face. He felt the same way he did in the Undercroft right before a risky idea worked out. The thrill of a smart risk.
He now understood the true challenge of Project Chimera. Seraph hadn't just asked him to build a bigger monster. She had asked him to solve an impossible puzzle. His power didn't just let him create life; it demanded that he understand it, on the most fundamental level.
He looked from Vanessa, lost in her calculations, to the two glowing essences on his desk. The panic was gone, replaced by a cold focus. He had the theory. He had the materials.
Now, he just had to do the weaving.