Chapter 324: Breakthrough
Chapter 324: Breakthrough
I leaned toward the latter.
I exhaled and stepped to the side, feeling the ground beneath me waver again, the instability still present, still working against me.
I didn't dwell on it.
There was no point.
Instead, I let my instincts take over, letting [Focus] strip away the unnecessary noise while [Battle Instinct] guided the flow of my movement, shutting down any thoughts that would slow me down.
Then I moved.
I charged, accelerating into a controlled blitz, not reckless but sharp, every step placed with intent.
At first, the resistance was there, the same subtle drag that had been interfering with my movement, but as I continued forward, as I committed to the motion, it began to weaken—not disappearing entirely, but easing just enough to give me cleaner transitions between each step.
Caius moved at the same time, closing the distance instead of retreating, his aura darkening as it flared, the shift immediate and purposeful as he attacked.
I didn't counter.
I watched.
His blade came down, clean and direct, and I shifted instinctively, not forcing the movement, not overcorrecting, just letting my body move the way it needed to.
The cut still landed.
But there was a difference.
It was lighter than before, the edge grazing rather than biting deep, the impact reduced just enough for me to feel it.
Caius caught it.
He paused for a fraction of a second, the change not escaping him, but he recovered immediately, his aura deepening as he moved again, faster this time, the intent behind the strike more pronounced.
The environment surged with him.
Crimson spread wider, rising higher, the distortions growing more aggressive, pressing into the space around us as though trying to overwrite everything in its reach, while the white beneath me thinned even further, to the point where it no longer felt like solid ground at all.
It felt like standing on something that could give at any moment.
But I didn't panic.
The gap between us was widening.
He was escalating.
And I could feel it clearly now, the pressure building with every movement, every shift in his aura, every adjustment the domain made in his favor.
But I didn't panic.
I let [Focus] take over, letting the passive do its work, stripping everything down to what mattered, and I reacted accordingly.
Caius' blade came down in a clean arc, sharper than before, and the moment it moved, I felt it—the correction, the subtle alignment, the sense of inevitability behind it, like the space itself was guiding the strike toward me.
I moved.
Not away, not fully.
Just a slight shift forward, angling myself just off his line, enough to change the path without breaking my balance.
The blade still clipped me.
But the cut wasn't deep.
My eyes sharpened.
I was starting to understand it.
Caius didn't slow down.
If anything, he pressed harder, following through without hesitation as he chained his attacks together, each strike flowing into the next with increasing speed and precision. There was no wasted motion in him, no excess force, just controlled, deliberate execution as his aura shifted with every movement, crimson flaring, darkening, tightening around his body like a system constantly recalibrating in real time.
But I met him.
Not with force.
I stopped trying to overpower the exchange, stopped trying to win each clash outright, and instead let go of that approach entirely, allowing [Battle Instinct] to guide me, letting my body respond to the rhythm of his attacks rather than forcing my own onto it, moving with the flow instead of against it.
At first, it felt wrong.
Like I was giving up control.
Letting go like that went against instinct, against the way I had been fighting up until now, where every movement was deliberate, every action forced into place through sheer intent.
But then...It clicked.
The resistance I had been feeling wasn't constant. It wasn't some fixed disadvantage pressing down on me equally at all times. It shifted, subtle but consistent, changing depending on how I moved, how I approached each action.
When I forced my movements, when I tried to impose my will directly, the pushback grew stronger, sharper, correcting harder against me.
And when I stopped doing that—when I let instinct take over instead of forcing the outcome—the interference lessened.
And that was enough.
Caius' blade came again.
This time, I didn't try to avoid it completely. I didn't aim for a perfect escape.
Instead, I adjusted just enough, shifting into the path that required the least correction, letting the motion align with the flow rather than fight against it.
The strike landed, but it only grazed, and in that same instant, my hand moved on its own with intent.
And the space around my blade twisted slightly, distorting in a way that felt familiar, controlled without being forced.
A rift slash slipped free from the edge, cutting forward and striking Caius.
Caius' eyes narrowed.
A shallow cut opened along his side, and he leaped back immediately, creating distance without hesitation, but the look on his face betrayed him—disbelief, clear and unhidden, as though what had just happened didn't align with anything he thought possible.
"I see you're rattled," I said, repeating his earlier words, my tone steady.
"That attack should've split you in two, no matter what defense you had used."
"You…" he said, his expression twisting, the composure he had maintained until now cracking for the first time. "How were you able to just do that?"
I grinned.
"Your domain only blocks system-based actions and outcomes," I said, meeting him as I spoke, "not raw existence or natural response… does it not?"
"What do you mean?" he demanded, his gaze locking onto mine.
"Your domain prevents those trapped in it from activating their skills," I continued, my voice even, "but it can't actually erase what's already part of them—their inherent output, their natural response. That part still exists."
I held his gaze.
"Is that not correct?"
Caius furrowed his brow, the shift in his expression subtle but clear, the earlier confidence giving way to something more unsettled.
"It is," he admitted, though the words came with resistance, "but that still doesn't explain how you were able to do that. Activating your ability through intent alone inside my domain shouldn't just be difficult—it should be impossible. The level of concentration required alone makes it unfeasible, and beyond that…"
His gaze hardened.
"I possess a higher authority. This is my domain."
"Higher authority," I mouthed, letting the words linger for a moment as I studied him. "Are you sure about that?"
Caius went still for a moment, a faint crease forming between his brows as the thought settled in, and then he said, slower this time:
"That is not possible."
I let out a quiet breath, my expression easing into something faintly amused.
"I didn't take you for someone naive, Caius," I said, my tone even, though there was an edge to it now. "Or maybe it's not naivety. Maybe your ego just doesn't let you see past what you already believe."
"There's no rank higher than S-rank," he said, the statement firm, almost instinctive, like something he had accepted long ago as fact.
I answered with a grin.
"According to who?"
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