The lessons began at dawn on the penthouse balcony. The air was cool and clean, the rising sun casting long shadows across the city of Avalon. Alice stood opposite me, her presence as calm and unreadable as the morning sky. "You have chosen your project," she said, her voice a quiet law. "To fulfill an old promise by creating a new path for an old art. Before you can build, I must see the foundation. Show me the art as it exists. Perform it, as perfectly as you know how." I nodded. This was familiar ground. I settled into the opening stance of the Mount Hua form, the movements a deep-seated memory in my bones. I let my High Radiant power recede, drawing only on the simple, clean mana required for the art. I was not Arthur Nightingale, the High Radiant with Sword Accord. For this moment, I was just a swordsman, honoring a tradition. First Movement: Violet Sunset Genesis. I moved, and a fine, shimmering mist of perfect violet energy bloomed from my hands, spreading across the balcony. It was beautiful, ethereal, and masterfully controlled, obscuring the world not with a heavy fog, but with a dreamy, disorienting haze. Second Movement: Fan of the Scattering Pearls. I swept my hands in a wide, fanning motion. The mist coalesced into hundreds of tiny, bead-like projectiles, each one a perfect sphere of violet light. They shot across the balcony with a soft, hissing sound, striking a containment field in a glittering, perfectly distributed pattern. Third Movement: Crimson Sunset. I drew the mist back, its color deepening from violet to a bloody crimson. I shaped it into a single, devastating blade of pure energy and executed a powerful, finishing strike that left a searing, temporary line on the air itself. The form was flawless. Fourth Movement: Natural Paradox. I let the crimson energy dissolve, returning to the violet mist. I moved through it, my form seeming to split and create a dozen after-images, turning the mist into a disorienting hall of mirrors, a clever, conceptual defense. I finished the sequence and stood in the center of the gently swirling mist, my breath even. It was a perfect recitation, the art performed at the very peak of its potential. Alice was not impressed. "That was a perfect recitation of a poem written for children," she critiqued, her voice cutting and precise. "It is beautiful. It is skillful. And it is utterly useless for the man you are now." She gestured at the gentle mist. "This art was designed for a river. You are now an ocean. The vessel is too small for the power you carry." She took a step forward, her gaze sharpening. "Perform it again. But do not use the river. Do not use simple mana. Use yourself. Use The Grey." A knot of apprehension tightened in my gut. I knew what would happen. I had already seen it in my training with Tiamat. But an instruction was an instruction. I took a breath, centered myself, and performed the First Movement again, this time opening the gate to the transcendent power born of Purelight and Deepdark. Tʜe source of this ᴄontent ɪs 𝚗𝚘𝚟𝚎𝚕·𝚏𝚒𝚛𝚎·𝚗𝚎𝚝 The result was instantaneous and chaotic. A thick, roiling fog of pure Grey erupted from me, the color of refusal and deep space. It was not a "violet mist." It was a heavy, oppressive blanket that swallowed the morning light and felt like metaphysical static against the skin. The air grew cold, and the scent was not of plum blossoms, but of rain on stone and the silence between possibilities. "It’s too much," I said, struggling to control the output. The Grey didn’t want to be a subtle haze; it wanted to be an absolute statement. "Of course it is," Alice said. "The form was not designed for this language. Continue." I forced myself into the Second Movement: Fan of the Scattering Pearls. I tried to shape the heavy Grey fog into delicate blossoms. It refused. Instead, the fog condensed into jagged, unstable shards of folded space. They didn’t scatter; they tore through the air with a silent, vicious hunger, striking the containment field with enough force to make it groan, leaving behind tiny, spiderwebbing cracks in reality that slowly healed. It was brutally effective, but it was not the art. It was just violence. I stopped. I couldn’t continue. The third and fourth movements were even more complex, and I knew I couldn’t force The Grey into those shapes without losing control entirely. I let the Grey fog dissipate, leaving the air on the balcony feeling strangely thin and empty. "I see the problem," I said, my voice rough with effort. "The Violet Mist art is a language of suggestion, written with mana," Alice diagnosed, walking toward me. "The Grey is a language of absolute truth, written with the grammar of the universe. You cannot speak both at the same time and expect a coherent sentence. You are shouting a whisper." She stopped in front of me. "Your project, therefore, is not simply to add a fifth movement. It is to translate the entire art into this new, more powerful language. You must deconstruct every form, every stance, every intent, and rebuild it from the foundation up. You must teach this art how to bear the weight of The Grey. Only then can you create a fifth movement that is a true conclusion, and not just a clumsy postscript." I looked at my hands. She was right. The challenge was far greater than I had imagined. It wasn’t an addition. It was a complete reinvention. "Where do I start?" I asked. "At the beginning," she said simply. "You will learn how to make your ocean fit inside a teacup without breaking it or spilling a single drop. You will learn to make The Grey whisper." She gestured to the empty space. "Again. The First Movement. But this time, do not try to create a mist. Create a single, perfect Grey plum blossom. One. And make it float." I spent the rest of the morning in a state of deep, humbling frustration. It was the hardest magical training I had ever undertaken. I could call down lightning. I could fold space. I could make the world agree with my blade. But I could not make one, simple, weightless flower out of The Grey. Every time I tried, the result was a failure. Either I used too much power, and a heavy, jagged crystal of Grey would form and clatter to the floor, or I used too little, and the energy would dissipate into nothing. I couldn’t find the balance. The Grey was a power of ’yes’ or ’no,’ of ’is’ or ’is not.’ It did not understand ’maybe.’ It did not understand ’gentle.’ "Stop thinking of it as a thing you are building," Alice guided me from the side. "Think of it as a choice you are making. The blossom is not the goal. The state of being that results in a blossom is the goal." I took a breath, centering myself, reaching for the stillness that Julius had taught me. I let go of the image of the blossom. I focused on the concept. A choice, written small. A moment of quiet refusal. I performed the kata, not as a container for my power, but as a conduit for that single, quiet idea. A single, gray plum blossom bloomed in the air before me. It was the color of a storm cloud, and it did not float. It simply hung in the air, as if distance were a suggestion it was politely ignoring. It was perfect. It held for three seconds, and then vanished. It was the first word in a new language. I had a long, long way to go.
