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Chapter 33: The Cost of Power

  Arthur woke to a soft, rhythmic weight pressing against his chest.

  He opened his eyes, blinking against the dim afternoon light filtering through his bedroom window. Sitting squarely on top of him, its feathers puffed up against the chill of the room, was Elara’s majestic owl. Its large blue eyes stared down at him, unblinking.

  The crushing mental exhaustion had faded, leaving Arthur clear-headed. He didn’t flinch. He slowly reached up, gently stroked the soft feathers at the base of the bird’s neck.

  The owl let out a low, thrumming trill of approval, leaning into the touch.

  “Alright,” Arthur murmured, carefully lifting the heavy bird and setting it gently onto the mattress beside him. “Keep the bed warm for me.”

  He stood up and walked to the frost-edged window. The sky had darkened considerably since noon. The pale sun was gone, swallowed by the thick clouds. As he watched, a single, fat flake of white snow drifted past the glass, followed by another.

  Winter had arrived in Ashford City.

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  Arthur tightened his brown coat around his shoulders before heading downstairs.

  Tack.Tack. His steps reverbrated down the hallway. When he pushed open the heavy oak doors of the grand library, he found Marcus standing by the main table. The oppressive, suffocating tension from their earlier confrontation was completely gone.

  In its place settled a focused atmosphere.

  Resting in the center of the table was a perfectly spherical, transparent crystal. Its base was wrapped in a ring of dark metal, etched with intricate, ancient runes.

  “Alright, Oliver,” Marcus said, gesturing to the artifact. “Place your hands on the orb and cycle your mana. It is time we officially confirm your affinity.”

  The young heir approached the table. He took a breath, placed his palms against the cool, smooth glass, and tapped into his newly unsealed core. He pushed a steady stream of mana down his arms and into the runes.

  For a moment, he let himself hope. Maybe the otherworldly transmigration had given him something entirely unique. Space? Gravity? Lightning?

  The inside of the crystal bloomed with a swirling, flickering cloud of standard, orange fire.

  Arthur just stared at it for a moment, a distinct pang of disappointment settling in his chest. “Just… fire?”

  “You sound disappointed,” Marcus noted, an amused glint in his ember eyes. “Fire is the lifeblood of this family. You are a true Ashborn Elementalist. Now a few days ago, I gave you a foundational spellbook and instructed you to memorize the primary chants for tier 1 spells. We will begin with those.”

  Arthur pulled his hands back from the orb and scratched the back of his neck awkwardly. “Right... About that. I didn’t memorize the other chants.”

  Marcus frowned, the stern teacher instantly returning. “And why not?”

  “Because,” Arthur explained, holding up his right hand, “I spent all my time dissecting the first one, Ignite.”

  “Just Ignite?” Marcus frowned. “Oliver, Ignite is a parlor trick. The first spell a child learns to light a candle. Why would you waste an entire week on it.” He added with a stern look, "Besides, I believe I told you not to attempt to cast anything.”

  “Hahaha...” Arthur laughed awkwardly. "Anyway… let’s go back to our topic; the foundation wasn’t efficient. Watch.” He pressed, trying to switch topics.

  Arthur took a breath and recited the standard chant from the book, his voice carrying the rhythmic, archaic cadence. “Element of ash, heed my call and burn."

  A lazy, flickering orange flame bloomed above his index finger. It wavered slightly in the ambient air of the library.

  “Standard Tier 1 Evocation,” Marcus observed, unimpressed. “Your pronunciation is adequate.”

  “But it takes too long,” Arthur countered, letting the flame die. “The book had the shortened form written just beneath it. So, I tried that.”

  Arthur held up his finger again. He focused his intent and spoke the single word. “Ignite!"

  The flame returned. It was still orange, but it snapped into existence faster.

  Marcus raised an eyebrow. “Short-form casting. Impressive for a thirteen-year-old, since that means you have understood the spell, but hardly revolutionary.”

  “It’s faster,” Arthur agreed, dismissing the orange flame again. “But then the internal pathway—the way the mana actually moves from my core to my hand—is still following the wide route dictated by the spell’s original design. So, I tried it without the words by memorizing the feeling of the pathway itself.”

  He closed his eyes for a fraction of a second. No words. No chants.

  A flame silently popped into existence on his fingertip.

  Marcus stepped forward, his ember eyes narrowing slightly. “Silent casting. To do that with a newly unsealed core requires a terrifying amount of mental discipline.”

  “But it’s still just orange fire,” Arthur pointed out. He looked up at the High Mage. “I listened to you a few days ago, when you were in the courtyard guiding Aria. You told her that mana is guided by pure intent.”

  Marcus went entirely still, realizing the boy had been silently absorbing magical theory just by listening.

  “The standard spell,” Arthur continued, his voice dropping into the analytical tone of an engineer, “pushes the mana through the widest pathways in the arm, and they act like a massive heat sink. By the time the mana reaches the hand, it loses its purity.”

  Arthur held up his hand one last time.

  He didn’t speak.

  He just engaged the circuit he mapped out in his own body.

  “So, I found a smaller route,” Arthur said quietly.

  "A direct one."

  Just intent.

  "… And I stopped wasting it."

  Fwooosh.

  The air didn’t explode, but the nature of the fire fundamentally changed.

  Instead of a flickering orange candle, it was a perfectly still flame—like a shard of living sapphire balanced on the tip of his finger.

  The temperature in the surrounding area immediately shifted.

  A profound, radiating warmth washed over the library table.

  Marcus stared at the blue star burning quietly on the boy’s hand. He didn’t recoil, but his breath hitched.

  “Gods above,” Marcus breathed, his voice barely a whisper. “Blue fire... you didn’t just cast the spell, Oliver. You rewrote it completely.”

  Arthur closed his fist. The blue flame vanished, taking the comforting warmth with it. “I didn’t add more mana, Marcus. I just stopped letting the body waste it.”

  This tale has been pilfered from Royal Road. If found on Amazon, kindly file a report.

  The High Mage stared at the thirteen-year-old boy in absolute, stunned silence.

  This wasn't talent.

  This was the mind of someone who would rewrite magic itself.

  He let out a breathless, disbelieving laugh. “You are a genius... Come. We are not stopping here. Let us see how you would handle the next spell before the sun sets.”

  Marcus didn’t waste another second. He walked toward the massive hearth at the end of the library, gesturing for Arthur to follow him. The stone fireplace was deep enough to walk into, its back wall charred black from centuries of use.

  “If you understand the spark, you must understand containment and projection,” Marcus instructed, his voice echoing slightly in the cavernous hearth. “The second spell in your book is the standard Fireball. It requires conjuring the fire, holding it in a spherical boundary, and physically expelling it.”

  The High Mage raised his hand toward the blackened stone. “Element of ash, gather and condense. Fireball.”

  A sphere of swirling orange fire, roughly the size of a melon, bloomed in his palm. He pushed his hand forward, and the fireball shot across the short distance, shattering against the back of the hearth in a harmless wash of heat and smoke.

  “The incantation builds the boundary,” Marcus explained, turning back to Arthur. “Now you. Do not attempt to alter it yet. Recite the full chant. I want to see your baseline.”

  Arthur nodded. He stepped up to the hearth, raising his right hand. He closed his eyes, focusing his entire mind inward, visualizing the dormant mana in his core.

  “Element of ash, gather and condense. Fireball!”

  As he spoke the words, the young heir tracked the exact sensation inside his body. He felt the mana draw from his chest, flowing down his shoulder and into his arm like water rushing through a wide, rocky riverbed, before finally launching forward.

  Arthur opened his eyes just in time to see his orange fireball splash against the stone wall.

  “Adequate,” Marcus noted. “Your containment was slightly loose, but the projection was—"

  “It’s the same as plumbing,” Arthur interrupted, looking down at his palm.

  Marcus blinked. “Excuse me?”

  “The spell,” Arthur murmured, his eyes tracking invisible lines across his own skin. “It’s fundamentally the same as Ignite. The foundation is identical. The only difference is that the mana pools at the exit to build a containment wall before it is released, which means the optimization should carry over.”

  “Oliver, wait. Forming a stable boundary without the chant is highly vola—"

  Arthur didn’t wait.

  He didn’t speak.

  He closed his eyes and seized the mana in his core. He guided it into the narrow, direct pathway. Compressing the flow, he felt the immediate, dangerous build-up of heat in his forearm.

  Instead of letting it spark freely, he forced the mana into a tight, spinning sphere just above his palm.

  Vrrrrrrrrrm.

  The sound wasn’t a crackle of fire. It was a low, aggressive hum.

  Marcus took a sharp breath. Hovering over Arthur’s hand was a sphere the size of an apple, burning with a ferocious, blinding blue intensity. The heat radiating from the compressed core was staggering, warping the air around them so violently that the stone of the hearth began to crackle from the proximity alone.

  Arthur gritted his teeth, sweat instantly beading his forehead. The physical toll of holding the small sun was immense.

  Without a word, Arthur thrust his hand forward.

  The blue fireball snapped across the hearth like a bullet. It detonated, blasting a small crater in the ancient brickwork.

  Silence descended on the library, broken only by the hiss of melting stone in the fireplace.

  Marcus stared at the glowing crater, then slowly turned his head to look at the thirteen-year-old boy.

  “You...” Marcus started, his voice completely hollowed out. “You just built a Tier 3 Evocation projectile using a Tier 1 spell.”

  Arthur opened his mouth to explain.

  But the words never came.

  A sudden, violent wave of nausea slammed into him.

  The vibrant colors of the library instantly washed out to a sickening gray.

  His legs gave out beneath him.

  Arthur collapsed onto the cold stone floor, gasping desperately for air as his vision rapidly began to tunnel.

  “Oliver!” Marcus rushed to his side, his hands already glowing as he knelt beside the boy.

  “I’m fine,” Arthur wheezed, clutching his chest. “I just... I’m empty. I just feel empty."

  Marcus’s brow furrowed in deep confusion. “Empty? That is impossible. You cast Tier 1 spells only a few times. Even newly awakened, a noble’s core should sustain at least a dozen basic casts before suffering mana depletion.”

  The High Mage stood up quickly, walking over to a locked cabinet. He returned with a different artifact—a tall, cylindrical glass tube filled with heavy, silver liquid.

  “Push whatever mana you have left into the base,” Marcus commanded, his voice tight with concern.

  Arthur placed a trembling hand against the glass.

  The silver liquid bubbled.

  It rose steadily up the cylinder.

  One quarter.

  One third.

  Then it slowed.

  Marcus frowned.

  The liquid stopped.

  Exactly at the halfway mark.

  The library fell dead silent.

  Arthur looked up; he immediately understood the meaning. “My capacity...”

  Marcus looked grim. “Your core is stunted.” He added, “Whether from the coma, the forceful unsealing, or simply from an unknown reason... you possess exactly half the mana capacity of a normal mage your age.”

  Arthur let his head fall back against the leg of the table.

  The reality was a bitter pill.

  He had the engine of a supercar but the gas tank of a lawnmower.

  His spells might be extremely efficient, but in a prolonged fight, any average thug with a normal core would simply outlast him.

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  By the time Layla came to call them for dinner, Arthur had regained some of his strength.

  Outside the frost-edged windows, the snow had thickened into a blinding white curtain.

  Arthur pushed himself slowly to his feet.

  A stunted core.

  Half the mana of a normal mage.

  He exhaled.

  “Fine,” he muttered under his breath. “Then I will just have to make every drop count.”

  Across the room, perched silently on top of the tall bookcase, the owl watched him.

  Its glowing eyes never blinked.

  Thanks for reading! Hope you enjoyed!

  Also let me know if you like the new look of spell incantations or not!

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