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Chapter 9 - Incomplete Alignment

Three days later, the attic felt smaller.

Ivor sat on the thin mattress with his back against the wall. His shoulders were bent forward, and he stared at the crystal in his hand. His eyes were red and dry from lack of sleep.

Near his knee, three broken crystals lay on the floor. They were dull and empty now, their light completely gone. He had not touched them since they cracked. They were proof of how much time had passed.

The fourth crystal rested in his palm.

Without realizing it, he tightened his grip. The sharp edges cut into his skin, and thin lines of blood ran down his fingers. He did not react.

A quiet fear sat heavy in his chest.

He was afraid of the silence.

The last three days felt unclear in his memory. He slept only a few hours at a time, never more than four before he woke again. He had not gone to work. He had not left the attic.

He did the same thing over and over.

He pulled mana from the crystal.

He waited for it to settle inside him.

He focused on guiding it through his core.

Then he repeated the process.

Again.

And again.

He barely noticed when he ate. Water had no taste. Life continued below him. He sometimes heard Rhea walking in the house. Once or twice he heard Kael's voice. But he stayed in the attic, answering only when he had no choice.

The pressure behind his eyes never left.

It watched.

Ivor forced his breathing to slow and straightened, crossing his legs more out of habit than intent. The attic felt thin, as if the air itself had been stretched too far. Mana here was weak and scattered, but it was all he had left.

He closed his eyes.

Everyone was born with a mana core. Dormant. Empty. A vessel waiting to be filled for the first time. That first filling defined everything that followed—the base capacity, the density, the limit. Once full, the core would resonate with a Primal Matrix, binding the two and marking true awakening.

That was how it was supposed to work.

Ivor reached inward and opened the path again.

Mana answered.

It slid into him, drawn from the crystal and the thin air alike, guided forward with careful control. He fed it into the same silent space near his chest, he had been filling for days, the place that had never once pushed back.

This had to be enough.

The crystal warmed in his hand.

Dimmed.

Then went dark.

Nothing happened.

Ivor stayed where he was, his hand clenched around the dead shard. The silence pressed in, heavier than sound. After a moment, he opened his fingers and let the broken crystal fall from his palm.

The pressure behind his eyes gathered again, tighter this time. His breathing slowed on its own, each breath measured and shallow. His focus narrowed until the attic blurred into something distant and unimportant.

He pulled again.

Harder.

Mana rushed in, no longer limited to the crystal's remains. Thin threads were dragged from the stagnant air, then thicker streams, forced inward by sheer insistence. Dust lifted from the floor. The attic's air shifted, stirred by a faint, uneven wind.

Ivor didn't notice.

His attention was locked inward. He stopped guiding the flow and let instinct take over, drawing more, demanding more, his pulse hammering in his ears.

The pressure surged.

His vision darkened at the edges. A low sound slipped from his throat as his teeth clenched.

Then something changed.

The pressure folded inward instead of pushing out. Mana that had been flooding wildly suddenly found a boundary. It poured in, dense and heavy, filling the last remaining space in one smooth, unstoppable wave.

Ivor gasped.

Heat spread through his chest, deep and steady. It wasn't painful. It was full, like a held breath finally locked in place.

The wind died. Dust settled. The attic went still.

Ivor remained seated, his hands braced against the floor, breathing slowly as his heartbeat steadied. The pressure behind his eyes eased, not gone, but contained.

He closed his eyes again.

Carefully, he turned his awareness inward.

The core no longer felt open. When he pressed against it, there was resistance. Mana pressed back, dense and contained, refusing to thin or disperse. He could almost see a glowing ball of blue mana.

"It's full."

The realization brought no relief.

Instead, the mana inside him shifted, as if aligning.

Ivor opened his eyes and adjusted his posture, setting his breathing, steadying himself. Once the core was full, resonance was inevitable. You could only prepare for it.

And wait.

He remained still, breathing slow, because this was the part his father had insisted he understand properly.

The mana core did not decide what a person became. It only stored mana.

Kael had explained that clearly. The core was simply a vessel where raw mana gathered and was refined. It remained neutral and unaligned, no matter what path a person later followed.

What truly mattered was what happened when that mana was used.

That was the role of the Primal Matrix.

When resonance occurred, the filled mana core aligned with a single matrix. The matrix was not something external. It already existed within the body, overlapping with the mana circuit like a second layer woven into it. It acted as a framework that controlled how mana behaved once it left the core.

The matrix did not change the mana itself. It changed how the mana responded to intent.

There were seven matrices still active in the world.

Ignis allowed control over fire.

Aqua allowed control over water.

Terra governed earth.

Aero governed wind.

Lux shaped light.

Echo shaped sound.

Umbra shaped darkness.

Once someone resonated with a matrix, that alignment became fixed.

From that point onward, any mana they channeled would pass through both their mana circuit and the aligned matrix. The raw mana would leave the core, move through this framework, and emerge transformed into flame, water, stone, wind, light, sound, or shadow.

Not because they chose it each time.

But because that was the rule the matrix enforced.

That was why awakened fighters could not mix elements. It wasn't a lack of imagination or training. Their bodies simply would not allow it. Mana answered the matrix before it answered the will.

"You don't command the element," Kael had said. "You accept how mana listens to you."

Tools and arrays were different. They handled raw mana externally, through runes, conduits, and structure. That was why array architects could work across domains, why cuffs could suppress beasts, why rods could trigger effects their wielders could never cast themselves.

And once resonance locked, it could never be undone. That was the true weight of awakening.

Ivor let the understanding settle as the mana inside him remained full and steady. There was no movement outward yet, no sign of alignment but he knew it was coming. Resonance was not something you summoned. It followed completion, answering in its own time.

The resonance did not come like an explosion. It came like things falling into place.

Ivor felt the mana inside his body shift. The heavy fullness in his chest stopped pressing outward and instead began to move with direction, as if it had finally been given instructions. The raw mana filling his core slowed, then settled, no longer restless or leaking away.

His attention was pulled inward without effort.

He could see inside himself.

Thin lines of light ran through his body, spreading from his chest into his shoulders, arms, spine, head and legs. They formed a connected network, looping and branching in clean, repeating paths.

It was the Mana circuit.

They were clearer than he expected. Each line steady, evenly spaced, carrying mana away from the core in controlled channels. This was right. This was how it was described.

The alignment deepened.

Something within his core turned, settling toward a single framework. The movement was subtle but unmistakable, like a lock beginning to slide into place. Ivor focused, holding still, letting it happen.

Then suddenly the world went white.

Pain detonated behind his eyes, sharp and immediate, far beyond the pressure he had grown used to. It was not a surge or a build. It was sudden, absolute, as if something had been driven straight through his skull.

Ivor tried to gasp.

His mouth opened, but no sound came out.

His body refused to respond.

The light swallowed everything, and the pain intensified, tearing through his senses as his vision shattered into fragments. His limbs locked in place, muscles seizing without command, his spine arching slightly as if pulled taut from the inside.

The mana inside his core churned violently, its smooth flow breaking apart as it slammed against itself, compressing, folding, colliding. The containment he had felt moments ago collapsed, replaced by a wild, grinding pressure that made his chest feel too small to hold it.

It felt like it was going to burst.

No—worse.

It felt like it was tearing itself apart.

Ivor's thoughts scattered under the strain. His heartbeat thundered in his ears, loud enough to drown everything else out. He couldn't move. Couldn't scream. Couldn't even force a breath as the pain behind his eyes flared again, hotter, deeper, wrong in a way he had no words for.

This wasn't how it was supposed to go.

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