A single motion.
—
And the flames obeyed.
—
They surged outward—
But not as chaos.
—
As **form.**
—
A shape emerged from the blue fire.
Length first.
Then structure.
Then—
—
A head.
—
A serpent.
—
Its body coiled into existence mid-air, entirely composed of condensed blue flame. Its edges flickered and warped, but its core held—stable, defined, *real.*
—
Its eyes burned brighter than the rest.
Focused.
Alive.
—
It released a silent hiss—
The air around it distorting violently.
—
The fox didn't move.
Didn't speak.
—
For once—
She simply watched.
—
"…You've got to be kidding me…"
—
Her voice was quieter now.
Not annoyed.
—
Measured.
—
Because this—
Was different.
—
Before—
He controlled elements.
—
Now—
He was **creating with them.**
—
The serpent moved.
Not wildly.
Not instinctively.
—
But *deliberately.*
—
It coiled once in the air, its body leaving streaks of blue flame that lingered for a moment before fading into nothing.
—
Then it turned—
Its gaze locking onto the lizard.
—
Waiting.
—
The lizard stared at it.
Unblinking.
—
A pause.
—
Then—
A thought.
—
*…It holds.*
—
Not perfectly.
Not yet.
—
But it didn't collapse.
Didn't disperse.
—
It existed.
—
His tail flicked once.
—
The serpent responded instantly—
Diving downward before snapping upward again in a smooth arc, its movement fluid, controlled—*his will made visible.*
—
The fox exhaled slowly.
Her tail lowered slightly behind her.
—
"…So that's what you were doing."
—
A faint smirk tugged at her lips.
—
"Burning me alive for experimentation."
—
Her eyes gleamed.
—
"…At least it worked."
—
The serpent coiled again, hovering beside the lizard—silent, waiting, dangerous.
—
And the forest—
what remained of it—
—
Stayed very, very still.
—
The blue flames began to die down.
Not all at once—
But in layers.
—
The serpent unraveled first.
Its coiled body flickered… distorted… then collapsed inward, breaking apart into strands of fading light before vanishing completely.
—
What remained—
Was heat.
Charred earth.
And silence.
—
The fox stepped forward.
Cautiously this time.
—
Not rushing.
Not careless.
—
Her eyes scanned the surroundings.
Burned trees.
Scorched ground.
The air still trembling faintly from what had just happened.
—
Her tail flicked sharply.
Annoyed.
—
"…You do realize what you just did?"
Her voice cut through the quiet—low, controlled, edged with irritation.
—
"We were hidden."
A step closer.
—
"Undetected."
—
Another.
Her eyes narrowed.
—
"And now?"
A small gesture to the forest around them—
Blackened.
Exposed.
Obvious.
—
"They know."
A pause.
—
"They *all* know."
—
Her gaze locked onto him fully now.
—
"This wasn't some random burst."
Another step.
—
"That was a signal."
—
A brief silence.
Then, sharper—
—
"A very loud one."
—
Her tail lashed once behind her.
—
"You couldn't wait?"
—
But—
No response.
—
The lizard stood there.
Still.
—
The last faint traces of blue flame faded from his scales.
Gone completely.
—
And his eyes—
Weren't on her.
—
They were distant.
Focused inward.
—
Thinking.
—
"…This isn't it."
—
His voice came quietly.
Flat.
—
The fox's expression didn't change.
But she stopped moving.
—
Listening.
—
"Fire…"
A pause.
—
"…isn't rigid."
—
His head tilted slightly.
—
"It flows."
—
Images replayed behind his eyes.
The lion.
Its flames.
How they moved.
Spread.
Wrapped.
—
"It only disappears when extinguished."
—
Another pause.
—
"It remains… until something removes it."
—
The fox crossed her arms—watching now instead of interrupting.
—
"…But lightning…"
—
His eyes narrowed slightly.
—
"…doesn't remain."
—
A faint tension entered his voice.
Not frustration—
But analysis.
—
"It strikes."
—
A brief flicker of blue danced across his claw—
Then vanished instantly.
—
"…Then it's gone."
—
He looked down at his limb.
—
"Wind does the same."
—
A memory.
Currents shifting.
Forming—
Then scattering.
—
"When I shape wind…"
A pause.
—
"It exists… only while I hold it."
—
The fox's gaze sharpened.
—
"And when you don't?"
—
The lizard answered immediately.
—
"…It disperses."
—
Silence settled again.
—
Then—
—
"Lightning behaves the same way."
—
Another flicker—
Gone again.
—
"It cannot *rest.*"
—
His eyes lifted slightly.
—
"It doesn't settle like fire."
—
The fox tilted her head.
—
"…So you're saying you're trying to force something that isn't meant to stay… to stay?"
—
A beat.
—
"…That sounds stupid."
—
Blunt.
Direct.
—
The lizard didn't react.
—
"…No."
—
Calm.
Certain.
—
"It means I'm approaching it wrong."
—
A pause.
—
"Fire exists… then spreads."
—
"Earth exists… then moves."
—
"Wind moves… and only exists while moving."
—
His gaze sharpened.
—
"Lightning—"
—
A flicker.
—
"—is movement itself."
—
The fox's ears twitched slightly.
—
That—
Was different.
—
"…Go on."
—
The lizard's tail shifted once.
—
"I tried to make it *stay*…"
—
A slow breath.
—
"…like fire."
—
Another flicker sparked—
Then vanished again.
—
"But that's why it failed."
—
His eyes glinted faintly.
—
"It isn't something that stays."
—
A pause.
—
"It's something that *happens.*"
—
Silence.
—
The fox stared at him.
Longer this time.
—
Then—
A small smirk pulled at her lips.
—
"…So instead of forcing it to become something it's not…"
—
Her eyes gleamed.
—
"You make something that *never stops happening.*"
—
The lizard didn't answer.
—
But the faintest spark—
—
Crackled.
—
And this time—
—
It didn't disappear immediately.
—
It lingered—
Just a fraction longer than before.
—
The forest, scorched and silent, seemed to lean inward—
—
Because whatever he was about to figure out next—
—
Would be far more dangerous—
—
Than what just happened.
The fox watched the faint spark linger—
Just a fraction longer than before.
And that alone told her something had shifted.
Not complete.
Not stable.
But closer.
—
Her tail swayed slowly behind her.
Thoughtful now.
Not annoyed.
—
"…You're overcomplicating it."
—
Her voice cut through his focus—not sharply this time.
Measured.
—
A step closer.
Not cautious—
But deliberate.
—
"You're treating lightning like it's something you *have to build.*"
A pause.
—
"But that's not how you use anything else."
—
The lizard didn't look at her.
But he listened.
—
"When you use earth…"
She gestured lightly to the scorched ground.
—
"It's already there."
—
"When you use wind…"
A faint breeze stirred, as if responding.
—
"It's already moving."
—
"Water… ice…"
Her eyes flicked slightly.
—
"Same thing."
—
A small pause.
—
"Even ice—"
Her lips curved faintly.
—
"—you're not creating it."
—
"You're just forcing what's already there… to change."
The lizard's eyes shifted slightly.
Just slightly.
—
"…Condensation."
He murmured.
—
"Temperature drop… structural shift…"
—
The fox nodded once.
—
"Exactly."
—
Then—
Her gaze sharpened.
—
"But lightning and fire?"
A small tilt of her head.
—
"Those are the only things you *force into existence.*"
—
Silence.
—
The lizard's thoughts paused.
—
That—
Was true.
—
Fire didn't exist until he made it.
Lightning didn't exist until he called it.
—
They weren't *there.*
—
They were *produced.*
—
The fox stepped closer.
Closing the gap.
—
"So stop treating lightning like something you have to *hold together*…"
—
A brief pause.
—
"…like fire."
—
Her eyes gleamed faintly.
—
"Because fire exists once it's born."
—
"But lightning?"
—
A small, sharp smile.
—
"It only exists while it's happening."
—
The lizard's pupils narrowed.
—
"…While it's happening…"
—
The words echoed.
—
Wind.
Movement.
—
Not form.
—
Process.
