Chapter 256: Victor Writes the Rules after the Battle
Chapter 256: Victor Writes the Rules after the Battle
Eleanor forced her trembling legs to obey, pushing herself upright. Every muscle screamed in protest, a
symphony of agony conducted by Annabeth Chase. She staggered towards the table, the scent of roasted meat
and herbs almost painful in its temptation against the frozen air. She lowered herself into the chair with a barely
suppressed groan.
Annabeth said nothing at first. She carved two generous slices from the roast cow and laid them neatly onto
plates. With a soft pop, she uncorked a bottle of wine, filled two glasses with the dark, ruby liquid, and slid one
across the table towards Eleanor. Against the pale wood, the wine gleamed like blood.
"Eat," Annabeth commanded... not unkindly, but with the sinexorable authority as her strikes. "Your body is
broken. It requires fuel to mend itself."
Eleanor did not hesitate. She gripped the knife and fork, her raw hands aching at the pressure, and cut into the
meat. The first bite was revelation. It was not merely food, but life itself flooding into her battered frame. She ate
with desperate focus, as only those who have been driven to the edge of endurance can eat.
The coliseum was quiet but for the scrape of cutlery and Eleanor’s steady chewing. Minutes passed in silence
before Annabeth finally took a measured sip of wine and spoke.
"You could barely defend yourself by the end," she said flatly. "At least you stopped flying across the floor. That is
the first step. Still, you are thinking like a cadet in a sparring ring. You treat this as an examination of defensive
forms... as if | were grading how well you absorb my blows."
Eleanor paused mid-chew, her eyes fixed on Annabeth.
"But the real world is not a test," Annabeth went on. "It is a hunt. And in a hunt, there are only two roles... hunter
and prey. Your aim should never be to defend yourself adequately. Your aim must be to win... to walk away alive
while your opponent does not. You may choose to spare them once victory is yours, but do not delude yourself. If
the roles were reversed, they would not spare you."
She leaned forward slightly, the wooden chair creaking under the shift of her weight. "Your determination is a
flickering candle when it must be a raging fire. You are resolved to survive this training... but I need you to be
resolved to defeat me."
Eleanor swallowed hard, confusion etched across her bruised face. "But... you're only using ten percent of your
strength. You're far beyond me. How could | possibly defeat you?"
"And that," Annabeth said flatly, "is the only reason you are still breathing. | was not striking with the intent to
kill. But if you continue to seeas an instructor, you will always hold back. You will imagine boundaries that do
not exist. In battle, there are no boundaries. No rules. No restraints. Your opponent will use every advantage,
every deceit, every fraction of hesitation to bury you."
She gestured with her knife at the coliseum around them. "You saw the snow, the stone, the vastness of this
place... and you felt awe. That is a luxury for spectators. A warrior sees terrain and asks... how can | use it? Can |
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇtblind her with a handful of snow? Can | kick marble shards into her eyes? Can | drive her against the wall, or
rebound from it myself? You possess abilities beyond the physical... why did you not use them? Because in your
mind this was fixed as training. But in battle, there is no such category. There is only what works, and what does
not."
The words struck Eleanor as hard as any punch. She had been so intent on enduring, on proving she could
weather every blow, that it had never once occurred to her how to return one.
"Your view of training is flawed," Annabeth pressed on, her tone unyielding. "You treat it as a means to an end...
to pass a class, to please the Empress, to becstronger. That is too abstract. Training is not preparation.
Training is transformation. It is the act of carving a new version of yourself out of the weak stone of the old.
Every block, every dodge, every scream of pain is a chisel strike. You do not merely pass through training... you
must absorb it. Let it reach down into your marrow. Let it rewrite your instincts."
She pointed the tip of her knife toward Eleanor’s bruised forearms. "In the past hours you learned how to block
my punch. You noticed | was repeating the smotion. I let your instincts kick in. But | am not a machine
throwing identical attacks. From now on | will fight in my true style. | am a fighter... and every fighter has a
rhythm, a pattern, a tell. Find mine. Then break it."
Eleanor set her fork down; her hunger evaporated in the face of this new, mental onslaught. "How?" she rasped.
"By wanting to win more than you want to breathe," Annabeth replied, eyes burning. "When you are thrown now,
your first instinct is to recover your stance, to reset to a textbook position. That is the instinct of a student. The
instinct of a warrior is to use the fall... to roll and cup with a handful of snow and marble to hurl. To use the
momentum to create distance for an entirely different attack. Your determination for victory must be absolute;
every single action, even your failures, must be weaponised."
She leaned back at last, took another measured sip of wine, then continued. "You cling to rules for a fight that
does not exist in the real world. In a real battle there are no rules... only victory. Kill or be killed. Remember... the
victor writes the rules after the battle."
She indicated the roast with a casual flick. "Now finish eating. Your body needs it. When we begin again, | want
you to forget everything you have learned so far. Fightas if | mean to kill you. Use every ability you possess.
Use the snow. Use the walls. Use your pain. Use every dirty trick you can conceive. Your only objective is to force
ork
Five days later, Eleanor followed Annabeth out of the coliseum. They descended a rocky path carved between
snowbound peaks, the trail whitened with frost and treacherous ice. Each step demanded care; a single slip
would send them tumbling into the abyss of the valley below.
At last, the mountains were behind them, and in the distance, Eleanor glimpsed the dark silhouette of the castle.
A sigh of relief escaped her lips, though her thoughts immediately turned inward.
Two days of relentless lightning strikes had once been the worst pain she had ever known... but that agony paled
beside the last five days of one-sided beating under Annabeth’s might. If the lightning had been torment,
Annabeth’s training was annihilation. And yet, from this crucible of suffering, Eleanor had emerged changed.
Her instincts had sharpened into weapons of their own, honed to an edge no academy drill could match. Her
bloodline abilities no longer felt like foreign powers to be summoned; they had bled seamlessly into her fighting
style. They rose with her breath, pulsed with her heartbeat, answered her will without conscious thought.
Mind Acceleration ignited the instant her body prepared for combat. Bloodlust Instinct coiled beneath her skin
even when her bloodline lay dormant. Tactical Foresight and Killing Precision no longer waited to be called
upon... they whispered silently at every opening, every flaw. Predator’s Awareness awoke unbidden whenever
danger stirred, and, surprisingly, her Mental Lock latched onto opponents without her command, as though her
will had grown teeth of its own.
Her martial strikes crackled with Voltaic power, the lightning woven into every blow until her speed and strength
becsomething beyond human. Her Storm Heart revealed itself in battle... her heartbeat quickened, and with
it the electric current surged through her veins, fuelling her stamina, sharpening her regeneration.
)
She had not yet broken Annabeth'’s
ten per cent strength... but for the
last ten hours she had stood her
ground. She had dodged oBumteled,
eyen fotsed Annabeth to adjust her
rhythm. Her ambushes, her
underhanded tricks, her so-called
dishonourable tactics... all had failed,
but failure itself had sharpened her.
She was no longer simply enduring.
She was fighting. The content is on
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After nearly half an hour of walking,
: )
they slipped through the castle's
back gate. Two RYE dited
HEenve gUést'room, where a
fresh academy uniform awaited. As
she entered the bathroom, she found
a steaming tub filled with the
fragrance of medicinal herbs. The
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the latest chapter there!
Though every nerve in her body screamed to plunge into the bath at once, she restrained herself, opening the
door to address the maids.
"This bath... is it prepared for me?" she asked.
The older maid bowed slightly. "It is standard practice, my lady. Whenever the Empress or Lady Chase return
from training, we are instructed to prepare a medicinal soak. We have followed the sprotocol for you."
Eleanor’s shoulders loosened at the explanation. "And how long do they usually remain in the water?"
"It varies. Sometimes half an hour, sometimes two or three. If they remain longer, we replenish the herbs."
"| see. Thank you." She closed the door softly.
Her fingers tugged at the tatters of
her uniform, letting the ruined clgth
fall. Her body, though Grassy bore
it5 cBtal Ie of bruises... marks in
shades of purple, red, and yellow,
each a silent testament to her ordeal.
She moved slowly toward the tub, her hips swaying seductively with her measured steps. Lowering herself into
the steaming water, she submerged fully. The heat sank into her wounds, the herbs stung and soothed at once.
Her whole body loosened in surrender, and Eleanor closed her eyes, breathing out a sound that was almost a
sigh of bliss.
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