Chapter 124: Rival's Respect
Jonah's win against Cassian shook the Academy in a new and different way. His first victory puzzled everyone. This one was deeply meaningful. He hadn't just beaten a skilled fighter; he had disarmed a true believer with a weapon of peace. Now, people whispered about him with awe, respect, and fear.
He sat in the meditation garden, the same quiet place where he'd first met Ariana. He had come here to try and find some peace from the storm of his new fame. He needed to clear his head, to think about the upcoming semi-finals, and to think about the decaying serum that was his nation's dark secret. He wanted to think about anything but the crushing pressure of being called a "Saint."
"That was a contradiction."
The voice was calm and clear, cutting through his thoughts. He looked up. Ariana stood at the entrance to the garden. Her face showed nothing, but her eyes were sharp and focused. She wasn't here for a casual chat. She was here for answers.
"What was?" Jonah asked, though he already knew.
"Your victory," she said, walking slowly towards his bench. She didn't sit, but stood before him. "Your nation's belief, from what I have gathered, is built upon the idea of binding a beast's power to a human soul. It is a philosophy of conflict, of using a weaker creature's strength to overcome a greater one."
She gestured vaguely in the direction of the distant arena. "Yet, you won your match not with conflict, but with its complete absence. You defeated a warrior whose entire power was based on pure, focused aggression by simply… taking his aggression away. It is a complete contradiction to everything your Elites are supposed to stand for."
Jonah looked up at her, at this serious, intelligent girl from another world, and felt a strange sense of relief. She was the only one who seemed to see the full, complicated picture. The Headmaster saw a political tool to be used. The crowd saw a Saint to be worshipped. Ariana saw a puzzle that didn't make sense.
"My power isn't from the serum," he said again, and the words felt more true and more real each time he said them. "My path is different."
"I am beginning to see that," she replied, her eyes narrowing slightly, not with suspicion, but with deep concentration. "My people believe that all true power must be earned through discipline and inner harmony. Your people believe that it can be taken, borrowed from a beast to make one stronger. But you… you seem to believe that power must be… created. And then, it must be understood."
It was the most accurate description of his own philosophy he had ever heard.
"Is that not a dangerous path?" she asked, her voice sharp but genuinely curious. "To create life? To weave together the souls of other beings? It is the power of a god, wielded by a boy. How do you ensure that what you create does not become a monster?"
"By not treating it like one," Jonah answered simply. He thought of Maul's loyalty, of Specter's companionship, of the promise he had made to the Broodmother. "You said power without wisdom leads to corruption. You're right. But my power is wisdom. It's the wisdom of understanding, of partnership. I don't just command my Progeny. I feel what they feel. They are a part of me."
He met her gaze, his own conviction solidifying as he spoke. "Your path is one of perfecting the self. My nation's path is one of controlling the other. My path is one of creating a balance between the two."
Ariana was silent for a long moment, processing his words. She looked from Jonah to the peaceful garden around them, as if weighing his philosophy against the evidence of his actions.
"A balance," she finally said, the word tasting strange on her tongue. "A noble goal. But I must warn you, Jonah."
She leaned forward slightly, her calm expression turning serious, almost grim. "You live in a world of conflict. Your nation is at war. My own is not without its threats. You have just demonstrated a power that can neutralize a fighter without harming him. Do not think for a moment that the leaders of this world will see that as a tool for peace."
Her eyes, clear and sharp, held a chilling warning. "They will see it as the ultimate weapon."
The truth of her words hit Jonah with the force of a physical blow. He had been so focused on proving his path was one of peace that he hadn't considered how a world built on war would interpret that peace. A power that could disarm a soldier, that could soothe the will to fight… to a general, that was more terrifying than any sword or spell.
"Your path may be one of balance," Ariana concluded, straightening up. "But it may also be the most dangerous one of all. Be careful who you show it to."
With that, she gave him another respectful bow. Their rivalry, the simple challenge she had issued in the arena, had transformed into something far more complicated. They were not just competitors anymore. They were two opposing schools of thought, two different answers to the same fundamental question of power.
She turned to leave, but stopped at the garden's edge. "I still want to face you in the finals," she said over her shoulder, a slight smile on her lips. "You are the most interesting puzzle I've ever seen. I want to see what other surprises you have."
She disappeared down the corridor, leaving Jonah alone once more. The quiet garden no longer felt peaceful. It felt like the calm before a storm. Ariana hadn't just acknowledged his power; she had shown him the true danger of it. He was a creator of life in a world that only understood the language of death. And every victory, no matter how peaceful, would only make him a bigger target.