Vane handed her the star-metal spear.
When her fingers closed around the leather-wrapped shaft, the air in the triage ward seemed to sharpen. She did not test the weight. She did not spin it. She just held it and suddenly the spear was not an object anymore. It was an extension of her reach.
"Outside," Senna ordered. Her voice was no longer a rasp. It was the clear resonant tone of command that had once directed battalions.
They moved to the roof of the triage center. The fog was thick, a churning grey sea that obscured the drop below. Vane stood ten paces from her. His heart hammered against ribs that felt too fragile. His Usurper interface was practically screaming, painting Senna in pulsating crimson warning overlays. She was a walking catastrophe event.
She was magnificent.
She wore the too-small hospital gown like battle armor. She rolled her neck, cracked her knuckles, and took a deep breath of the damp air, savoring it without a wheeze.
"For two years," Senna murmured, looking at her own free hand as she flexed the fingers. "Every movement was a negotiation with pain. Every breath was a tax."
She looked up at Vane and a grin split her face. It was not Cynical Senna or Dying General Senna. It was a look of pure terrifying predation.
"Run, rat."
She moved.
It was not teleportation. It was pure explosive acceleration. One millisecond she was standing still and the next she had crossed the gap with a single step that cracked the gravel beneath her boot.
Vane did not think. The Argent Horizon forms she had beaten into him over weeks of abuse overrode his terror. He dropped his hips, grounded his heels, and initiated a high-speed Spiral Circulation. He pumped every ounce of his borrowed mana into reinforcing the spear shaft.
CLANG.
It felt like trying to block a falling meteorite with a twig. Vane was lifted off his feet. He flew backward twenty feet, his boots unable to find purchase on the gravel roof. He slammed into a rusted ventilation housing, denting the steel casing with his back.
He slid to the ground gasping for air, his arms completely numb from the fingertips to the shoulders. Senna stood where she had struck him. She was not winded. She was laughing.
It was a glorious terrifying sound. It was a full-throated peal of genuine unadulterated joy that echoed across the rooftops. She began the Spiral Circulation, spinning the spear until the heavy star-metal tip became a shimmering silver disc in the grey light. The air hissed as the Frictionless Sleeve took hold.
"Again!" she roared, drunk on her own restored vitality.
Vane scrambled to his feet, forcing mana into his bruised limbs. He did not have time to recover. The next hour was not training. It was survival.
Vane burned through his mana reserves using [Flash Step] just to keep the distance open. He was the rat again in the Oakhaven alley, dodging a predator way outside his weight class. Senna was a storm. She moved with a fluidity that terrified him. She used the spear to dictate where he could stand. She swept the air and the wind pressure from the supersonic rotation knocked him off balance.
She executed the Lunar Deflection not as a desperate defensive measure, but as a trap. She used the slippery mana sleeve to lure him in before snapping the spearhead back with bone-crushing force. Through it all, Senna's laughter rang out.
She stopped attacking him for a moment and turned her attention to the environment. She saw a derelict water tower structure on an adjacent roof twenty feet away across a gap of open air. She did not jump. She just ran. Her stride was powerful, eating up the distance until she launched herself across the gap and landed with a heavy metallic thud on the other side.
She reached the water tower. It was a massive structure of rusted iron legs as thick as tree trunks.
"Watch the Killing Floor, Vane!" she yelled over the wind.
She did not brace herself. She did not wind up. She just placed the tip of the spear against the thickest iron leg. Then she engaged the Authority.
It was heartbreakingly beautiful. Liquid silver light poured from her hands, coating the spear shaft. It was not jagged or electric. It was smooth and heavy. It looked like the wood had been dipped in glowing mercury. It was silent. There was no hum and no crackle. There was only the oppressive weight of a concept that said anything touching this edge is already cut.
This was the Silver Fang. It was the bullet.
She did not thrust hard. She just pushed.
Hiss.
There was no screech of tearing metal. There was only a soft hiss. The spear tip sank into the structural support like it was made of wet clay. The Absolute Severance did not break the iron. It ignored the iron's durability entirely. It bored a clean impossibly smooth hole through the leg and exited the other side without slowing down.
The edges of the hole glowed faintly red but there were no cracks. The metal had simply been deleted from the path of the spear. The entire water tower groaned and tilted as its support was severed.
Senna stood amidst the falling rust, her chest heaving not from exhaustion but from exhilaration. Tears were streaming down her face, mixing with the sweat of exertion. She had broken herself in that corridor to gain this power. For two years her only reward had been agony. Today, finally, she got to feel what she had bought with her life. She was strong. She was unbroken.
Vane watched her, awe overriding his fear. His Usurper was feasting. It recorded every impossible micro-movement and every shift of weight that generated that force.
Senna wiped the tears from her face with the back of her hand and turned back to him. The joy settled down into a razor-sharp focus.
"Get up, rat," she commanded, leaping back across the gap to land in front of him. "The sun is moving. We are burning daylight."
Vane dragged himself up. He was bleeding from three different cuts, his uniform was in shreds, and his mana was critically low.
"Come on then," Vane gasped, dropping into a shaky guard. "Finish the job."
She came at him. This time there was no laughter. It was pure execution. She drove a thrust at his chest. It was too fast to dodge and too heavy to block.
Vane did not think. He surrendered to the instinct he had stolen. He did not try to stop the force. He tried to redirect it.
He shifted his weight. His hips snapped back in a micro-second adjustment that pulled his center mass off the line of attack by two inches. Simultaneously, his lead hand dropped, catching her spear shaft with the rotating momentum of his own.
Second Form: Lunar Deflection.
CRACK.
The shafts collided. Vane felt the impact rattle his teeth but he did not break. He did not try to stop her spear. He used the Spiral Circulation of his own shaft to vent her kinetic energy down into the ground. He spun with the impact, dropping to one knee. Her spear tip hissed past his ear, missing his neck by a hairsbreadth because he had successfully guided it off-course.
He knelt there gasping for air, alive only because his stolen reflexes had worked perfectly. The silence returned to the roof, heavy and damp.
Vane looked up. Senna was standing over him with the spear tip hovering inches from his face. She was not attacking. She was staring at him, her chest heaving slightly. Slowly she pulled the spear back and leaned on it. A strange expression crossed her face. It was pride mixed with a profound aching sadness.
"You didn't just learn that," she murmured. "You took it."
Vane swallowed hard and nodded. "I told you what I was."
Senna shook her head slowly. "No. A parasite just takes the shape. A mimic copies the move."
She reached down and gripped his shoulder, her fingers digging in with bruising strength.
"You took the intent, Vane. You didn't just dodge. You understood the leverage. You understood that you couldn't stop the force so you had to give it somewhere to go."
She pulled him to his feet. They stood eye-to-eye, the dying general at her absolute peak and the slum rat who wanted her legacy.
"You are not just a thief anymore," Senna said. Her voice was thick with emotion. "You are a martial artist. A ruthless corner-cutting cheating bastard of a martial artist."
She smiled and it was the most beautiful thing he had ever seen in the grey world of Zenith.
"You are worthy of the spear."
Vane could not speak. The validation hit him harder than any of her physical strikes. Senna looked past him toward the west. The eternal grey of the fog was beginning to bruise with purple and deep red. The day was ending. The miracle was running out of time.
The manic energy drained out of her, replaced by a heavy quiet realization.
"The sun is going down," she whispered. She dropped the spear, letting it clang on the gravel, and reached for his hand. "Enough fighting, Vane. Sit with me before the dark comes back."
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