Chapter 346: Torvain’s Resolve
Chapter 346: Torvain’s Resolve
Hestia remained still for a moment, her crimson aura slowly withdrawing into her body as she forced her anger back under control. The empty space where Yselia had vanished still carried faint traces of dark blue essence, mocking in its silence, but there was nothing left there to strike.
After a few seconds, she turned away from the fading spatial ripples and moved toward Adrian and Aerin, her expression calm on the surface yet carrying a pressure that made even the oppressive willforce of the micro-dimension feel secondary.
Adrian was still helping Aerin recover. He held her carefully in the void, one hand pressed gently against her head as golden essence from his willforce recovery spell flowed into her body and circled around her mind.
Aerin's situation gradually stabilized under the spell's effect, but her willforce was still too fragile to endure the suffocating pressure within the micro-dimension by herself. Adrian's presence became a shelter around her, his will quietly pushing away the invasive pressure of the surrounding wills so that she could be calm, think, and remain conscious without collapsing again.
When Aerin finally recovered enough to look around properly, her golden-white eyes flickering back to their normal brown, she immediately sensed danger.
Hestia floated near her with her arms folded beneath her chest, her pale golden eyes sharp enough to make Lara and Maelis instinctively avert their gazes. "So," Hestia said slowly, each word calm in a way that was far worse than shouting, "my dear Aerin, would you like to explain who gave you permission to enter a battlefield reserved for Peak Rule Stage cultivators?"
Aerin's spine went cold.
The battlefield, Yselia, the strange Chaos power, and even the terrifying sensation of nearly losing her consciousness all suddenly felt less frightening than the look in her master's eyes. She shifted immediately, slipping behind Adrian with whatever strength she had left, clutching the back of his robes as if she had found the safest shield in existence. "Uncle," she said in a trembling voice, her tone carrying a desperate plea that would usually have melted him instantly, "please save me."
Adrian looked at her, then at Hestia, then back at Aerin. For a moment, he seemed to weigh the situation as though facing a battlefield far more dangerous than Yselia, and then he turned toward Hestia and opened his mouth carefully. "Hestia, she is still weak right now, so perhaps we should—"
Hestia's gaze snapped to him so sharply that the rest of the sentence died before it could form. "Do not even think about protecting her right now."
Adrian closed his mouth.
Aerin's eyes widened in betrayal as she stared at him from behind his back, "Uncle, you are giving up on me already?"
Adrian said nothing, recognizing that any words he spoke right now would only make things worse.
Hestia reached past Adrian and caught Aerin by the back of her collar. Aerin let out a small startled sound as Hestia pulled her out from behind him and held her in place with one hand, her expression severe enough to erase any remaining hope of escape.
"No one is saving you today," Hestia said firmly.
Aerin lowered her gaze instantly, her earlier courage evaporating under the full pressure of her master's anger. "Master, I was only trying to help. I thought if I could do something important, then maybe the battle would change."
"You nearly died," Hestia said, her voice hardening as the fear she had suppressed began to bleed into the anger. "Do you understand that? Without whatever power awakened inside you, Yselia would have killed you, and even that power almost destroyed your willforce because your foundation was not strong enough to bear it."
Aerin's lips parted, but no answer came. What could she say? She had felt her consciousness fragmenting, felt the terrifying emptiness as pieces of herself scattered into nothingness. If the golden-white power had not flooded into her at that exact moment, she would have ceased to exist.
Hestia moved closer, and the cold anger in her eyes became something rawer, something far more painful. "War is dangerous, Aerin. Lives are lost, and every disciple who came here understood that when they stepped onto the battlefield. But there is a difference between courage and foolishness. Entering a sealed micro-dimension where Peak Rule Stage beings are fighting, without telling anyone, without enough strength, and without understanding what kind of pressure exists here, is not courage. It is arrogance dressed up as bravery."
Aerin's eyes lowered further. The weight of those words struck harder than she expected, because she could not deny them.
Adrian tried again, his voice gentle. "Hestia, she did survive, and what awakened in her may be something we need to understand carefully before we—"
Hestia turned toward him immediately. "And you are part of the reason she behaves like this."
Adrian stopped completely.
Aerin blinked, startled enough to forget her own fear for a moment.
Lara and Maelis both looked away with the very deliberate expressions of people who did not wish to be dragged into this conversation, especially when one of the people being scolded was Adrian himself.
Hestia's eyes remained fixed on Adrian. "Every time she causes trouble, you smile. Every time she does something reckless, you call it spirit. Every time she crosses a line, you stand beside her and make her feel that no consequence can truly reach her because Uncle Adrian will always be there."
Adrian remained silent.
Hestia's voice softened slightly, and that softness made the words even heavier. "I understand why. You love her. We all do. But if you keep shielding her from every consequence, then one day the battlefield will teach her instead, and the battlefield will not be kind."
That silenced him completely.
Aerin looked between them, and the guilt in her expression deepened. She had expected Hestia to scold her. She had not expected Adrian to be scolded with her, and somehow that made everything feel worse. Her recklessness had not only frightened everyone; it had placed Adrian in a position where even Hestia had to confront him.
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Hestia turned back to Aerin, releasing her collar but keeping her gaze locked firmly on the girl. "You awakened something extraordinary today. I do not deny that. What you did against Yselia was impossible by every normal standard, and later, when we have time, we will understand what happened to you properly. But do not mistake a miracle for permission to gamble with your life. A miracle saved you once. It may not come again when you are foolish enough to need it."
Aerin swallowed hard and nodded, her voice barely above a whisper. "I understand, Master."
"Good," Hestia replied, her tone still stern. "Then you will return to the safe zone immediately. You will not reenter the front lines today. You will rest, recover your willforce, and wait until we return. If I hear that you tried to sneak back into battle, I will personally seal you inside your room for the next hundred years."
Aerin's face paled. "A hundred years is a very long time, Master."
Hestia's eyes narrowed.
Aerin immediately straightened as much as her weakened state allowed, her hands folding neatly in front of her. "Yes, Master. I will rest properly and not sneak anywhere."
Adrian exhaled softly, half amused and half relieved despite everything. He raised his hand and opened a portal connected to one of the secured medical chambers within the Crimson Vital fleet. The portal shimmered beside them, stable and guarded by his essence so that Aerin would not be harmed by the transition.
Before Aerin stepped through, she looked back at Adrian, then at Hestia, Lara, and Maelis. The embarrassment on her face softened into something quieter, something more genuine. "I'm sorry," she said, her voice small but sincere. "I just wanted to matter."
For a moment, the anger in Hestia's eyes softened.
"You do matter," Hestia said quietly. "That is why we are angry."
Aerin stared at her for a moment, then nodded slowly. With that, she stepped through the portal. The portal closed behind her, leaving Adrian, Hestia, Lara, and Maelis alone inside the suffocating void of the micro-dimension.
For a brief moment, none of them spoke. The silence carried the remnants of battle, fear, relief, and unfinished anger.
Then Hestia turned her gaze toward the distant darkness where Yselia had escaped, and the softness that had appeared in her expression vanished completely. Her crimson aura flared once, sharp and cold. "She ran today," Hestia said coldly. "Next time, she will not."
Adrian nodded slowly.
…
In another region of the same micro-dimension, far from the place where Aerin had awakened the power of Chaos and Yselia had fled, Torvain, Caelum, and Varcain were locked in battle against Asteria.
The battlefield around them was torn with countless scars of authority and divine essence. Crimson light flickered and collapsed, defensive spells shattered almost as quickly as they were created, and the void itself trembled beneath the speed of the woman moving through it.
Asteria was not fighting like Yselia. She did not rely on overwhelming pressure or elaborate intimidation. She fought with a terrifying, direct efficiency, her body moving so fast that even Peak Rule Stage perception struggled to follow her properly.
Among the three Crimson Vital elders, only Torvain possessed the kind of deep combat experience needed to engage her directly. He had survived countless battles across the long history of the sect, and his instincts were sharp enough to predict killing intent before it fully formed.
He moved with heavy, disciplined precision, using every ounce of authority he possessed to create openings where none should have existed. Caelum and Varcain floated near him as support, both keeping their domains stable and their senses fully locked onto Asteria's authority fluctuations.
Asteria could not freely use her authority techniques. The moment her will gathered to modify reality, Caelum and Varcain would immediately negate the attempt, forcing her to abandon it before the technique could fully manifest. Because the two of them shared the burden, the pressure on their mana and willforce was far lighter than what Maelis had suffered earlier while trying to suppress Yselia alone. On paper, the battle should have favored them. Three Peak Rule Stage elders had surrounded one opponent and denied her access to her most dangerous tools.
But even with those advantages, Asteria refused to fall.
She displayed a level of physical speed that was disturbingly similar to what Adrian had shown when he slaughtered the Peak Rule Stage beings outside the Crimson Vital star system. She did not teleport or fold space. She simply moved with raw bodily speed enhanced by a body art so refined that her figure seemed to vanish and reappear between heartbeats.
Most of the time, Torvain struggled to keep up even with authority assisting him. His own physical speed was not slow, and his battle experience allowed him to survive, but surviving and winning were not the same.
Asteria flashed past him, her fist wrapped in violent heat as it smashed against the side of his defensive field. The impact rang through the void like a bell, and cracks spread across the shimmering barrier.
Torvain twisted his body and redirected the force with an authority command, but the impact still threw him backward through the void, his robes tearing slightly from the sheer violence of the blow. Before she could pursue, Varcain's domain tightened around her movement path, narrowing the space she could occupy, and Caelum issued a direct negation to disrupt the force gathering in her legs.
Asteria clicked her tongue and shifted her trajectory instantly, slipping out of the narrow window before it could become a true trap. Her eyes gleamed with cold amusement as she looked at them, "You three are better than I expected from an alchemy sect. Unfortunately, better than expected is still not enough."
Torvain stabilized himself, blood leaking from the corner of his mouth, "You speak as though this battle is already over."
"It is," Asteria replied, her body lowering slightly as heat shimmered around her limbs. "You are spending too much just to keep me contained. I am not trying to kill you quickly because I do not need to. Time is already on my side."
Torvain did not respond, but he knew she was right. Even with three against one, even with Caelum and Varcain suppressing her authority techniques, Asteria had not been driven into a true corner. Her energy reserves seemed endless, her body art consumed far less than expected, and her movements did not degrade despite the duration of the battle.
By contrast, the three of them had already been spending mana and willforce continuously. If this continued, they would be the ones to deplete first, and the moment their coordination broke, Asteria would kill one of them before the others could react.
Torvain could see where this was going. Thinking through every possible answer, only one path stood firm in his mind. It was dangerous, perhaps suicidal in his current state, but it was the only method that could shift the balance before exhaustion consumed them.
At that instant, his body began to dissolve rapidly. Crimson essence erupted from within him, flesh and bone transforming into a swirling, turbulent mass of energy. His robes disintegrated into light, his physical outline blurred, and his Rule Core resonance spread through the void as he activated his energy body art.
Varcain's expression changed violently. "Torvain, you fool, do not activate it in your current state!" he shouted, his usually controlled voice breaking from urgency.
Caelum floated still, his face tightening, but his mouth remaining closed. He understood why Torvain had made this decision. In this situation, even he could not think of another way to create a decisive opening.
The danger of energy body arts was known throughout the universe, and they were more familiar with that danger than most because they had witnessed what such techniques had done to their own sect leader.
Torvain was already close to a depleted state. Activating an energy body art now was extremely risky. Even if they won the battle, there was a very real possibility that they would lose him afterward.
Asteria's smile widened, but her eyes sharpened. "Now that is better. I was wondering how long it would take before one of you became desperate enough to burn yourself."
Torvain's energy form finally stabilized into a humanoid shape of dense crimson essence. The pressure radiating from him surged violently, pushing Caelum and Varcain backward through the void despite their efforts to hold position.
The increase in authority was immediate, his presence becoming sharper, heavier, and far more dangerous than before.
A voice emerged from within the crimson energy, distorted yet unmistakably Torvain's. "Go and tell Master... that my death was not in vain."
Varcain's face twisted with anguish. "Torvain—"
"Go!" The command erupted from the energy form with enough force to shake the void. Caelum grabbed Varcain's arm, pulling him backward even as the man struggled. Both knew that staying would only give Torvain something else to worry about, another weakness Asteria could exploit.
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