Absolute Cheater - Chapter 483
Chapter 483: Averin Academy VII
He opened his eyes again, exhaling a thin, measured breath. The courtyard had gone quiet, save for the soft rustle of wind through the mist. Asher rested his palm on the hilt of his sword and began tracing invisible cuts through the air—slow, deliberate, each motion a correction to something he’d seen in their earlier sparring.
“Too wide,” he murmured, adjusting his stance, recalling Maxwell’s overreaching lunge. He stepped into the strike, shortening the swing until it became efficient—sharp, controlled, no wasted motion.”Don’t chase the opening,” he said under his breath, as though his cousin stood before him again. “Create it.”
He turned, his movements shifting—his blade flicking out in quick, precise arcs. Amanda’s whip technique flashed in his mind. She favored aggression, her strikes fast but predictable when forced into rhythm. Asher mimicked her motion with his blade, snapping through the air, then broke it—turning it into something unpredictable, a counter-movement layered within the rhythm itself.”Flow,” he said softly. “Not repetition. Flow.”
Then, he stilled his breathing, letting his focus drift to Sophia and Lia—the twins’ coordination was good, but their reliance on pattern was a flaw. He picked up a stone, tossed it in the air, and struck it cleanly mid-fall. The blade moved again before the fragment hit the ground, slicing another invisible projectile.”Never look where the arrow will go,” he said quietly. “Look where the intent begins.”
His final motions slowed, centered around the calm grace Sylens had shown—the small stillness before attack.That, Asher thought, was what he wanted all of them to learn. Not strength. Not speed. Stillness before action. The silent control that let movement emerge naturally, without hesitation or waste.
He exhaled and lowered his sword. The faint hum of his energy rose—not powerful, but perfectly contained. The courtyard shimmered faintly around him, each tile reflecting the rhythm of his breathing.
Tomorrow would test them again, and this time, they would have their energy back. One-tenth, but enough to expose every weakness, every crack in their control.
He turned toward the distant dormitory towers where the cousins were resting.”They’ll struggle tomorrow,” he said quietly, a faint smile touching his lips. “But that’s good. Struggle shows the edge. Once you find the edge, you can sharpen it.”
He looked up, the faint light of the moons washing over him.Then, with quiet precision, he returned to his stance once more.The blade rose, fell, and rose again—each motion silent as thought, cutting through the air with the perfection of habit.
By the time dawn broke again, the courtyard would bear the marks of his training once more.But unlike before, the damage wasn’t from force—it was from refinement. Every mark, every scuff, every line a testament to the discipline that came after power.
When dawn returned, it came quietly—soft light spilling across the Magnus courtyard, catching on the faint lines and indentations Asher had carved into the ground during the night. Each mark carried purpose: a correction of angle, a test of timing, or a shift in stance. The courtyard no longer looked pristine, but alive, as though it had absorbed the memory of movement itself.
Asher stood at the center again when the cousins arrived, each carrying the calm determination of those who had trained until their bodies ached. Their eyes were sharper this time, their steps measured. The fatigue from yesterday had been replaced by focus.
He didn’t greet them with words this time. Instead, he drew his sword slowly and pointed it at the ground. “One-tenth of your strength,” he reminded them. “No more.”
They nodded and activated their auras carefully—thin, flickering glows forming around their bodies. The air stirred faintly, the faint hum of power threading through the morning mist. It wasn’t much, but after days of restraint, it felt heavier, more dangerous.
“Begin.”
Maxwell went first again, his movements tighter this time. His golden aura rippled faintly around his sword, but he didn’t let it flare. He struck with discipline—no wasted strength, no wild swings. Asher parried easily, but his nod was approving. “Better.”
Amanda’s whip followed, this time laced with barely visible sparks. She moved with focus, not aggression, testing her control. Her strikes weaved around Asher, coordinated and sharp—but he deflected them without a sound, each counter perfectly timed. “Don’t let the weapon lead you,” he said calmly. “You lead it.”
Sophia and Lia worked in unison—one advancing, one covering. The twin rhythm was there, but leaner, stripped of excess motion. Lia’s arrows didn’t flare with power now—they were quiet, precise, slipping through gaps like whispers. Sophia’s shield followed in perfect response, deflecting Asher’s test strikes with surprising precision.
Sylens was the last to move. He didn’t summon his beasts this time, just his own strength, channeling his faint aura into his blade. His attack came low and steady, the rhythm nearly seamless. Asher’s eyes narrowed slightly—Sylens was beginning to grasp it. He turned his sword aside and parried with the flat of his blade, guiding the attack harmlessly away.
The exchange went on longer this time. Every strike had weight now, every mistake small but visible. Their energy wanted to surge, to break free, but each of them fought to contain it. That was the real battle—against themselves.
Minutes turned into hours. Sweat streaked their faces, their breath came sharp and controlled. They didn’t dare let their strength flare beyond the limit Asher set.
Finally, Asher stepped back, lowering his sword. “Stop.”
They froze instantly, breathing hard but standing firm.
“You’re learning restraint,” he said after a moment. “That’s harder than learning strength. Power tempts you—it always will. But if you can hold it back, shape it, and release it with intent… you’re already above most cultivators.”
Maxwell wiped the sweat from his brow, his tone steady despite his exhaustion. “It feels harder than fighting full force.”
“Good,” Asher replied simply. “That’s how it should feel. Mastery isn’t freedom—it’s control.”
Amanda rested her whip against her shoulder, nodding slowly. “And when we can hold it perfectly?”
“Then,” Asher said, sheathing his sword, “you won’t need to hold it anymore. It’ll move as you move. Flow as you flow.”