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Chapter 60 - Fracture’s Duel

The gong's echo still shook the mountain.

Stone cracked beneath our feet. Clouds bent around the peak.

Two blades locked—his steel humming with centuries of discipline, my Inkblade shrieking with hunger and shadow.

The elder's eyes burned into mine.

"You are a fracture," he said again, voice like thunder.

"Finally," I rasped, grinning through blood, "someone says it out loud."

He pressed harder.

His qi stormed through his blade, weight crushing against mine. Sparks flared as shadow strained to hold.

Fracture Sense screamed across my vision.

Threads tangled. Cords strained.

But his were different.

Not fragile. Not chaotic.

Disciplined. Ordered.

Every cord bent with him.

Every strike was script, not instinct.

The Inkblade hissed, eager.

"…cut him… find the marrow of discipline… break his order…"

I lunged forward, ribs cracking, blood spraying from my lips.

My blade slashed at a trembling cord near his footing.

The elder twisted, steel intercepting, qi spiraling outward.

The cord bent—did not break.

He smirked faintly.

"Not all threads can be cut."

His sword snapped downward, qi carving stone.

The platform split, chunks of rock tumbling into the abyss.

I staggered back, shadows flaring to deflect, but the impact sent me sprawling, ribs grinding like broken glass.

The system pulsed cold in my skull.

[ Warning: Vital stability critical. ][ Endurance exceeds scenario baseline. ]

Even now, it sounded almost… unnerved.

Arjun's ember flickered violently against my chest. His faint voice strained.

"…Ishaan… stop… you'll die…"

I coughed blood, grinning weakly.

"Maybe. But at least I'll die interesting."

The ember pulsed faintly, as if sighing.

The elder advanced, each step heavy as thunder.

"You wield a cursed blade. You sever what should not be touched. You are corruption on this mountain."

I dragged myself upright, blade trembling in my grip.

"And yet here I am."

His eyes narrowed.

"And here you end."

He raised his sword.

Qi erupted—filling the air, wrapping stone, bending clouds.

A storm given shape.

The mountain itself seemed to kneel under his strike.

Fracture Sense nearly blinded me, cords screaming, reality trembling.

The Inkblade laughed in wild delight.

"…yes… YES… cut him… cut the marrow itself…"

I staggered forward, shadows boiling, blood pouring from my wounds.

And for a moment—

We struck together.

Steel and shadow collided.

The mountain shook.

Clouds split.

Threads screamed.

And the gong above boomed again—shattering the silence into a storm.

The mountain split beneath our blades.

Shadows tore through qi, qi carved through shadow. The platform shuddered with every strike, cracks racing across stone, chunks tumbling into the abyss below.

The elder's face remained calm, his eyes steady, his movements precise.

Every swing of his sword was a lesson.

Every cut a sentence.

And I was the heretic scrawling across his book.

Fracture Sense burned across my vision, cords vibrating violently.

Most bent with his will. Some snapped under my cuts.

But always, more remained.

Disciplined. Unyielding.

He wasn't just fighting me.

He was rewriting the cords as he struck.

A master.

The Inkblade screamed in my grip, shadows writhing wildly.

"…yes… YES… he bends the marrow itself… cut it… sever discipline… tear it all apart…"

I lunged, blood spraying from my lips, blade arcing for a trembling cord.

His sword met mine mid-swing, sparks erupting.

He pressed forward, qi crushing down like the weight of mountains.

"You are strong," he said, voice like stone.

"But strength without order is chaos."

I coughed blood, grinning crookedly.

"Good thing I like chaos."

My shadows flared, lashing outward, tearing at cords behind him.

For the first time, his stance faltered.

Barely.

But enough.

I shoved forward, Inkblade screaming, shadows devouring qi.

The elder staggered back a single step.

His eyes narrowed, faint interest flickering.

Arjun's ember pulsed faintly, whispering weakly.

"…Ishaan… you can't win this…"

"I don't need to win," I rasped, blood dripping down my chin.

"I just need to not lose."

The elder raised his sword high, qi spiraling upward into the sky.

Clouds darkened. The gong above thundered again, louder, sharper.

"This is your end."

He struck.

The air split.

The mountain shook.

A torrent of qi roared downward like a waterfall of steel.

Fracture Sense nearly blinded me.

Threads screamed across my vision, cords tearing, reality bending.

And I saw it.

One cord.

Thin. Trembling.

The marrow of his strike.

If I cut it, the storm would collapse.

If I failed—

I would die.

The Inkblade howled, shadows lashing violently.

"…YES… cut it… cut it now…"

Arjun's ember flickered violently in my arms.

"…Ishaan… don't…"

I grinned through blood, teeth red.

"Too late."

I swung.

Shadows screamed.

Threads snapped.

The cord split.

And the elder's storm shattered.

Qi exploded outward, tearing the platform apart, hurling both of us back.

I slammed against stone, ribs shattering, blood flooding my throat. My vision went red, then black, then red again.

The elder staggered for the first time, blade trembling faintly in his grip.

His calm face cracked—only for a heartbeat.

Then it returned.

"You cut it."

I dragged myself upright, swaying, blade trembling in my hand.

"Habit."

Blood dripped from my lips, soaking the stone.

The elder's gaze burned into mine.

"You will not survive long in this world."

I grinned faintly.

"Then I guess the world should hurry."

The gong struck again.

Not for alarm.

Not for warning.

But acknowledgment.

The sect had seen.

The sect had judged.

And I was not dismissed.

The elder lowered his blade slowly.

"You are not yet worthy of my full strength."

His voice rumbled like thunder rolling off cliffs.

"Climb higher. If you survive, the mountain will test you again."

He turned, qi dissolving into the clouds, his form vanishing with it.

Leaving me broken, bleeding, but standing.

Arjun's ember pulsed faintly, whispering weakly.

"…you… lived…"

I coughed blood, smiling faintly.

"Story of my life."

The Inkblade purred, shadows curling in delight.

"…more marrow ahead… climb, fracture… climb…"

I lifted one foot, placed it on the next step, and began to climb.

The mountain waited.

And so did I.

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