Young Master's Pov: I Am The Game's Villain-Chapter 51: What Fire Reveals

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Chapter 51: What Fire Reveals

The fourth training session with Nihil almost killed Mira Kasun.

Not through malice. Not through negligence. Through the particular cruelty of a body that contained more power than its architecture could hold — a fire core that burned too hot in a vessel that hadn’t been built for the temperature.

It happened at minute forty-three of the group exercise. Veylan had designed a coordinated scenario: Liora, Draven, and Caelen as the assault team, Theron as the mobile barrier, Elara and Kira as detection, Nyx as the disruption element. Mira was the ranged support — channeling fire from behind Theron’s earth walls to provide covering attacks while the assault team engaged my Nihil-amplified combat output.

Standard formation. Practiced seven times. Effective.

On the eighth iteration, Mira’s fire didn’t stop.

Her contribution to the exercise was supposed to be a series of controlled bursts — three-second pulses of fire Aether, channeled through her hands, directed at my position to create approach hazards that I’d need to dodge or negate. Calibrated. Measured. The particular output that Veylan had identified as her safe operational range.

The eighth burst came out differently.

Instead of a three-second pulse, Mira’s fire erupted in a continuous stream that didn’t stop at three seconds. Didn’t stop at five. Didn’t stop at ten. The flame wasn’t red-orange — it was white-blue, the color fire turned when it exceeded the thermal thresholds that normal Aether containment could manage.

Her eyes went wide. Not with concentration — with terror. The expression of someone whose body had decided to do something their mind hadn’t authorized and couldn’t reverse.

"I can’t —" she said, and then the words dissolved into a sound that wasn’t a scream but wanted to be, the particular vocalization of a human being in the process of being consumed by the energy they were supposed to control.

"EVERYONE BACK," Veylan shouted.

The team scattered. Liora and Draven broke left. Caelen wind-sprinted right. Theron raised an earth barrier between himself and the eruption. Elara pulled back with Kira, the fox snarling — not at Mira but at the energy she was producing, the Nature Aether in the spirit beast recoiling from fire that had crossed the line between elemental force and destructive anomaly.

I didn’t move back. I moved forward.

Not heroism. Calculation. My Void Sense — amplified through Nihil to a range and resolution that exceeded anything on the platform — was reading Mira’s energy signature in real-time, and what I saw beneath the eruption wasn’t what anyone expected.

Her fire core wasn’t malfunctioning.

It was breaking open.

The instability that Veylan had noted during her entrance exam — the erratic pulses, the uncontrolled surges, the fire that couldn’t hold a pattern — wasn’t a deficiency. It was a symptom. Inside her core, behind the standard fire Aether that she’d been trained to use, there was something else. A second energy source, sealed behind a barrier that was cracking under the pressure of repeated high-intensity training.

The barrier was artificial. Someone had sealed part of her core deliberately — compressing a secondary energy type behind a wall of standard fire Aether that masked its existence. The seal was degrading because Veylan’s training had pushed her output beyond the range the seal was designed to contain.

I’d seen this pattern before. Not in person — in the game.

Throne of Ruin, DLC 2: The Flame That Remembers. An unreleased expansion that existed only in the supplementary bible’s documentation. One of its key plot points involved a character with a sealed core — a fire user whose true bloodline had been suppressed by a forbidden technique that imprisoned their real Aether type behind a false core.

The technique was called Soul Binding.

The same technique Malcris had used on his student operatives.

The same category of forbidden art practiced by the Cult of the Abyss.

Someone had Soul Bound Mira Kasun’s true core when she was a child and replaced it with a standard fire affinity that was never meant to contain what was actually inside her.

"NIHIL," I said. "Can you suppress the surge?"

"I can negate the excess fire output at the surface. But the source is internal — a sealed secondary core that’s rupturing through its containment. Negating the output without addressing the source is putting a bandage on a hemorrhage."

"How long can you buy me?"

"Thirty seconds. Maybe forty. After that, the energy density exceeds my negation capacity at your current rank."

"Do it."

I raised Nihil. The black blade hummed — the Void Aether extending from the edge not as a cutting force but as a field, a sphere of negation that expanded outward from the blade and wrapped around Mira’s erupting form like a blanket smothering a fire.

The white-blue flames dimmed. Didn’t disappear — the energy was too intense for full negation — but the output dropped from catastrophic to dangerous, from "consuming everything" to "burning very hot in a contained space."

Mira was on her knees. The fire still poured from her hands, her arms, her core — but the Void field was absorbing the excess, converting the most destructive output into energy that Nihil drank with the particular satisfaction of a weapon being fed exactly what it wanted.

"Move," I said to Mira. My voice was steady. Cedric’s voice. The cold authority that cut through panic the way Nihil cut through matter. "Look at me. Not at your hands. At me."

Her eyes — brown, wide, streaming tears that evaporated before they reached her cheeks — found mine.

"Your fire isn’t broken," I said. "Something was done to your core. A seal. It’s cracking. What’s coming out isn’t malfunction — it’s the real you. And the real you is much, much more than anyone told you."

"I can’t control it —"

"You can’t control it because you’ve been controlling the wrong thing. The fire Aether you’ve been using your whole life isn’t yours. It’s a mask. What’s underneath is different. Stronger. And it’s trying to get out."

Nihil’s negation field was straining. Twenty seconds left. Maybe fifteen.

"Elara!" I called.

She was there. Already moving before I called — the detection grid had mapped the energy dynamics the moment Mira’s core cracked, and Elara’s nature-speaker instincts had identified the same thing I had. Something alive inside Mira. Something natural. Something that the seal had imprisoned and the training had freed.

Elara placed her hands on Mira’s shoulders. The contact produced an immediate reaction — Nature Aether flowing from Elara’s palms into Mira’s Aether system, not fighting the fire but guiding it. Redirecting. The way a gardener redirected a river — not by damming it but by giving it a channel to flow through.

The white-blue flames shifted. Dimmed. Turned from destructive chaos to something more structured — still intense, still overwhelming, but following a pattern now. A rhythm. Mira’s breathing synchronized with Elara’s. The fire found a channel. The pressure dropped.

Ten seconds later, the eruption stopped.

Mira collapsed. Not unconscious — exhausted, the way a marathon runner collapsed after crossing a finish line. Her body trembling. Her fire signature — I could see it clearly now through Nihil’s amplification — was fundamentally different. The erratic surface-level fire that had defined her combat assessments was gone. What replaced it was deeper. Hotter. More stable, paradoxically, because it was no longer fighting against its own containment.

Behind the shattered seal, Mira Kasun’s true core burned.

Not fire.

Infernal.

"Well," Nihil said. "That’s unexpected."

Infernal Aether. The same energy type as House Embercrown’s bloodline — the demonic flame that burned at the boundary between fire and corruption, the element that the Church of Radiance classified as "abomination" and the Ducal Houses classified as "political asset."

Mira Kasun — commoner, scholarship student, Eastern Spires native with no documented noble blood — had an Infernal core. A core that someone had sealed and masked with standard fire Aether when she was too young to remember.

The implications cascaded.

Someone had performed a Soul Binding on a child. The technique was forbidden — classified as a crime against the soul in every legal system on the continent. Whoever had done it had either been protecting Mira from the stigma of possessing Infernal Aether or had been hiding evidence of a bloodline connection that shouldn’t exist.

Infernal cores were hereditary. They didn’t appear spontaneously. Mira had Embercrown blood — distant, diluted, but unmistakable. A commoner with a noble house’s forbidden element, sealed away by someone who knew what the discovery would mean.

Veylan was at Mira’s side. His hands — steady, professional, the hands of a man who’d performed field triage on soldiers with worse injuries — were checking her vitals through Aether-diagnostic contact.

"Core restructuring," he said. "The seal broke cleanly — no fragmentation, no corruption. The secondary core is intact." He looked up at me. "You knew."

"I recognized the pattern."

"From what source?"

"A source I can’t disclose." The standard answer. The one that meant "game knowledge that shouldn’t exist" translated into the language of "intelligence operative with classified materials."

Veylan held my gaze for two seconds. Then he returned his attention to Mira.

"The Infernal affinity is genuine," he said. "Pure. Whoever sealed it did clean work — the containment was designed to degrade gradually over time, not collapse suddenly. Intensive training accelerated the timeline."

"My training caused this," Mira said. Her voice was raw. Thin. The voice of someone who’d just been told that everything they understood about themselves was a constructed lie. "The seminar. The exercises. They broke the seal."

"The exercises broke a seal that was already deteriorating," I said. "The timeline was compressed, but the outcome was inevitable. The seal was designed to fail eventually."

"Designed to fail? Who designs a seal to fail?"

"Someone who wanted to hide you until you were old enough to protect yourself."

She looked at her hands. The fire was gone — the surface fire, the false fire. What remained was a warmth that her skin couldn’t fully contain, a heat that came from inside rather than outside. Infernal. The same element that made Valeria Embercrown’s eyes glow scarlet and her family one of the seven most powerful on the continent.

"I’m not a commoner," she said. The words were flat. Processing. The tone of someone whose identity had just been rewritten in real-time.

"You’re whatever you choose to be," I said. "A bloodline is a tool, not a definition."

"Says the Valdrake heir."

"Says a man who woke up in a body that wasn’t his and decided to define himself by his choices rather than his blood."

Another slip. The words were out before the filter caught them — "woke up in a body that wasn’t his." Not the language of a native Aethermere nobleman. The language of a transmigrated soul speaking too honestly under pressure.

Ren’s pen, somewhere behind me, stopped moving for exactly 1.4 seconds.

Then resumed.

Filed. Catalogued. Another entry in the growing list of things Cedric Valdrake said that didn’t quite fit the world he was supposed to come from.

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