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# Chapter 4: Lessons in Frost
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The silver key froze to Dorian’s palm, the metal hungry for his heat, but he didn’t pull away; he simply watched Mira’s reflection in the obsidian glass of the Great Hall’s doors, waiting for her to realize he wasn’t going to let her in first.
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She stood three inches behind him, her presence a physical pressure against his spine. The air around her shimmered, a localized distortion of kinetic heat that made the heavy winter tapestries along the corridor twitch. He could feel her indignation like a sparking current, smelling of ozone and dried cedar—a scent that had begun to haunt his private quarters since her arrival.
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"The lock is enchanted, Dorian," Mira said, her voice taut with the effort of not snapping. "It requires a dual resonance. You turning the key while I stand here as a spectator is only going to result in you losing a finger to frostbite."
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"I am well aware of the mechanics of my own ancestral hall," Dorian replied, his voice a cool glide of silk. He didn't turn around. He focused on the way her reflection tightened—the slight flare of her nostrils, the way her hand moved toward the hilt of the wand strapped to her thigh like an outlaw’s pistol. "I was merely waiting for you to stop radiating enough thermal energy to distract the tumblers. You’re melting the internal lubricant."
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"I am standing still."
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"You are a kiln with a pulse. Step back."
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Mira took a step forward instead, invading the sliver of space between them. The contact of her arm brushing his sleeve was a jolt—a sudden, violent reconciliation of extremes. Where silk met wool, a puff of white steam hissed into existence, a micro-climate of friction that made Dorian’s pulse skip a beat.
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"Together," she commanded, her fingers closing over his on the frozen key.
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The sensation was agonizing and electric. Her skin was a fever; his was the grave. As their combined magic hummed into the metal, the key didn’t just turn—it sang. A low, resonant chime echoed through the floorboards, and the obsidian doors groaned inward, revealing the Great Hall of the Northstar Academy.
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It was a cathedral of ice. Gigantic ribs of translucent quartz arched overhead, shimmering with the pale blue light of the morning sun. The floor was a single, seamless sheet of enchanted permafrost. Mira stepped onto the ice, and her boots—designed for the marble of her sun-palace—found no purchase. She slid, her arms windmilling until she slammed her heels down, scorching two blackened divots into the floor to anchor herself.
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"You’ve ruined the lacquer," Dorian noted, stepping onto the ice with the practiced grace of a predator.
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"You’ve turned a school into a walk-in larder," she shot back. "How do the students stay warm enough to hold a quill? Or is the curriculum strictly limited to shivering and stoicism?"
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Dorian walked toward the central crystalline dais. "Physical discomfort is the first filter of the mind. Today, however, is about the Board’s ultimatum. They expect a demonstration of unified wards by sunset, or they will petition the Emperor to rescind the merger on the grounds of elemental volatility."
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Mira followed him, her steps heavy and rhythmic, each one accompanied by a faint *hiss* of melting frost. She stopped five feet away, her orange-red robes a violent bruise against the monochromatic blue. "Then let’s find the fulcrum."
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She held out her hands. A small, perfect sphere of flame blossomed—white-hot and perfectly spherical. It was a display of sheer, terrifying control that Dorian couldn't help but admire. He mirrored her, weaving a lattice of frost, a delicate snowflake that pulsed with a steady light.
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As the two spells drew near, the air between them began to scream. The frost grew jagged, spikes lengthening to ward off the heat.
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"Steady," Mira whispered. A bead of sweat rolled down her temple.
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"I am steady," Dorian said, his jaw tight. "You’re pushing. You always push."
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"Because you retreat! Stop trying to isolate the magic. We have to overlap."
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"If we overlap without a bridge, it detonates."
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"Then be the bridge!"
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Mira lunged forward, grabbing his wrists.
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The world turned white. Dorian felt the impact in his marrow—a total sensory override. He was falling through a volcano; he was drowning in an arctic sea. Through the link, he saw flashes of her: the smell of rain on hot stone, the terrifying vertigo of her childhood balcony. And she saw his silence—the crushing weight of the centuries of tradition he carried, the cold, lonely peaks of his ambition.
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They weren't just sharing magic; they were hemorrhaging identity.
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"Let go!" she gasped, but her grip only tightened.
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Dorian realized the Board was right; they were opposite ends of a broken world. *Trust me,* he thought, projecting the intent. He opened himself, letting her searing energy pour into his veins. It felt like dying; it felt like being born. Mira didn't pull back. She leaned in, her magic softening into a shroud, shepherding his jagged power into a circle.
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The vortex slowed. The screaming stopped.
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In the center of the hall, the lavender light collapsed into a solid object. It hit the ice with a soft *clink*. Lying there was a rose. It was made of glass, but within the petals, a flickering flame pulsed like a heartbeat, while the leaves were coated in frost that stayed frozen despite the heat.
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Mira knelt, her fingers trembling. "We did it. Look at it, Dorian. It’s balanced."
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"A beautiful aberration," Dorian said, his voice raspy. He looked at her—really looked at her—and for the first time, he didn't see a rival. He saw a woman just as terrified as he was.
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He reached out, his hand hovering near her cheek, the air between them thick with a tension that had nothing to do with magic. For ten years, they had been poles on a map. Now, the space between them felt like the only place worth standing. He leaned down, his breath hitching as his lips finally met hers.
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It was a collision of seasons. The taste of mint and woodsmoke. He caught her waist, pulling her flush against him, and for a moment, the Great Hall was the only warm place in a frozen world.
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He pulled back, his forehead resting against hers. "This changes the curriculum."
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"Dorian," she breathed, her eyes glowing gold. "The rose."
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He looked down. The glass rose was vibrating. A hairline fracture appeared on the stem.
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"The Board," Dorian realized, his blood turning to lead. "They didn't want a demonstration. They wanted a baseline."
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"What do you mean?"
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"The ward-stones... they aren't just measuring us, Mira. They’re feeding."
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A sudden, sharp crack echoed through the hall. Standing in the doorway was a messenger, his face pale, holding a scroll sealed with the black wax of the High Council.
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"Chancellors," the messenger stammered. "I... I have word from the border. The Southern Wastes have crossed the Cinder Pass. They say the merger is an act of war."
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Mira’s hand tightened on the glass rose, and a second petal cracked. A drop of liquid fire leaked out, hissing as it hit the ice.
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"The spell," Dorian whispered, the romantic haze vanishing as the technical reality of the trap set in. "It wasn't a manifestation of peace. It was a catalyst for the siphon. The Council isn't trying to merge the schools, Mira. They’re trying to bait us into creating enough power to fuel the war transition—even if it burns the academy to the ground."
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Mira stood, her copper hair whipping around her face as the heat returned with a vengeance. "Let them come. If the Council wants a war, we’ll give them one they can't survive."
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Dorian looked at the leaking rose, then at the fire in her eyes. "The flower won't be enough. We’re going to need to learn how to kill together."
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She held the breaking rose toward him. "Then let's finish the lesson."
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