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Chapter 28 - Ch 28: The limits

Marcus/Rocco

By the third

round, I knew something was off.

Not during the

fight.

After.

That was the

problem.

I stood in the

clearing, blades still in my hands, breathing steady- but there was a delay. A

strange heaviness settling into my limbs, like my body was catching up to

something my mind had already moved past.

Across from me,

Callie rolled her wrist slightly, the whip coiling back into place at her side.

"You're slower."

She said.

"I just finished a

round," I replied.

"That's not what I

meant."

I frowned

slightly.

Then I tried to

step forward again, but my foot didn't respond the way I expected.

"… okay," I

muttered. "That's annoying."

From the

side-lines, Noah clapped slowly.

"Ah yes," he said.

"The mighty warrior has discovered fatigue. Truly ground breaking."

Riley elbowed him

lightly. "Not helping."

"I'm helping

morale," he said. "Very important role."

I ignored them and

tightened my grip on the blades, focusing inward.

The bracelet

pulsed faintly. But it wasn't the same.

Not like

yesterday. Not like during the fight.

Now it felt…

quieter. Distant even. Like it had already given what it was going to give.

 I stepped forward again, forcing my stance

into place.

"Again," I said.

"You're pushing

it," she replied.

"I'm fine."

"You're not."

I exhaled sharply.

"I said I'm-"

"Then prove it."

That did it. I

moved, fast.

Faster than

before.

Or at least- I

tried to be.

The first step was

clean.

The second-

slower.

Callie saw it

immediately.

Of course, she

did.

Her whip snapped

forward, not full force, but enough to test me. I raised one blade to block,

adjusting-

Too late.

The impact pushed

me off balance, not hard, but once again enough to break my rhythm.

I recovered

quickly, stepping in, trying to re-establish control. But the flow was there.

My body felt stiff

and slightly out of sync. And that slight difference? It mattered a lot.

Callie moved in

now, closing the distance instead of keeping it. That alone told me everything.

She wasn't testing

me. She was showing me...

Her movements were

sharper, faster and cleaner. Every strike forced a reaction, every step cut off

an option before I could take it.

I tried to respond

and force the rhythm back. But it didn't come. Not fully or naturally.

"Stop," she said.

I froze.

Not because I

wanted to. Because I had to.

My chest rose and

fell more heavily now, that strange delay in my body becoming more obvious.

"… That's new, " I

muttered again.

Callie lowered her

weapon.

"You lasted longer,"

she said. "But you burned through it."

I glanced at the

bracelet, still faintly pulsing.

"But I controlled

it," I said.

"You did."

"Then what's the

problem?"

She held my gaze

for a moment before answering.

"You think control

means unlimited use."

That… landed.

Before I could

respond.

"Because if it

does," Noah cut in, stepping forward, "I would like to officially request super

strength for approximately five minutes. I have plans."

Riley sighed. "You

don't even know how to use a knife properly."

"I have

enthusiasm," Noah replied. "That counts for something.

"It doesn't."

"It should."

I let out a small

breath that almost passed for a laugh.

 

Seraphina stepped

into the clearing then, her presence immediately shifting the atmosphere. She

didn't say anything at first. Just looked at me.

"You felt it," she

said.

Not a question.

I nodded slightly.

"After the fight,"

I replied. "Not during."

She stepped

closer. "That's the cost."

I frowned. "Cost

of what?"

"Power used

without balance," she said. "The realm does not give endlessly. It circulates."

I tilted my head

slightly. "Circulates how?"

"It feeds you,"

she said. "An then it takes time to recover what it had given."

"That sounds like

energy."

"It is more than

that."

Her gaze flicked

briefly to the bracelet.

"The realm is not

just power. It is a containment."

Containment…

"For what?"

She didn't answer

immediately.

Callie glanced at

her. Even she was paying attention now.

Seraphina exhaled

slowly.

"Fragments," she

said. "Of something that should not

exist freely."

That didn't

exactly clarify things.

"It strengthens

you by channelling that energy," she continued. "But if you push too far, your

body becomes the weak point- not the source."

"So, I burn out,"

I said.

"Yes."

I looked down at

my hands again. Then back at her.

"And if I don't

stop?"

Her expression

didn't change.

"You won't be able

to fight at all."

Silence followed.

 

Noah raised his

hands slightly.

"Quick question,"

he said. "Hypothetically speaking, if he collapses dramatically mid fight, do

we catch him or…?"

"You're not

funny," Riley said.

"I'm hilarious,"

he replied. "You're just stressed."

"… I am stressed."

"Exactly."

 

Callie turned back

to me.

"So," she said.

"Now you know."

I nodded slowly.

"Yeah."

"You can't rush

this."

"I know."

She studied me for

a moment longer. Then,

"Again tomorrow."

Of course.

 

Later that

evening, I found Seraphina alone near the edge of the property.

She didn't turn

when I approached.

"You still have

questions," she said.

"Yeah."

I stopped beside

her.

"You said the

realm contains something," I continued. "And Aldo's been looking for it."

She was quiet for

a moment. "Yes."

"What happens if

he gets it?"

Her gaze shifted

slightly.

"For centuries,

the balance has held," she said. "Because the power he seeks has never been

fully his."

"That's not an

answer."

"It is the only

one you need right now."

I exhaled slowly.

"You always do

that."

"Because you are

not ready for everything."

I leaned back

slightly, crossing my arms.

"Then tell me

this," I said. "Why me?"

She finally turned

to look at me.

"Because you

survived," she said.

"No," she agreed.

"It isn't."

Silence stretched.

"You were chosen

because you could carry it," she added. "Not because you understand it.

I looked down at

the bracelet for the once again.

It pulsed once.

 

As I walked back,

Noah jogged up beside me.

"So," he said. "On

a scale of one to 'we're all doomed,' how bad is it?"

"… We're not

doomed," I replied.

He nodded

seriously. "Okay, but like… a little doomed?"

I glanced at him.

"… A little."

"Cool," he said.

"I can work with that."

I shook my head

slightly, with a smile.

For the first time

all day, things didn't feel so heavy.

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