"Now," Quen said, floating back to the center of the stone platform, "you've heard the story. You know why it matters."
They hovered a few inches above the ground again, arms folded behind their back, gaze sweeping over the students like they were taking mental notes.
"So let's talk how it works."
The floating island had gone still. Even the air seemed to pause, waiting for the lesson to unfold.
"Anchoring Step isn't a flashy spell. It doesn't burn, or flash, or explode. It's quiet. Subtle. It begins in your body—but it's controlled by your mind."
They landed gently, their boots making a whisper of contact with the stone.
"To anchor yourself, you need to do three things," they said, raising one long, graceful finger. "First—manifest your mana. Let it flow. Don't shape it, don't force it. Just let it exist."
A second finger rose.
"Second—direct it downward. Through your body, into the soles of your feet, until it presses against the surface beneath you. Doesn't matter if that surface is stone or air—you make it real by willing it to be."
And the third:
"Lastly—will yourself not to move. Not just your body, but your presence. Your momentum. Your everything."
They stepped forward again, walking in slow, deliberate strides.
"You aren't casting a spell on the world," they said. "You're casting a spell on yourself. You are telling the universe: I stay here. I am rooted. I do not fall."
They stopped at the edge of the platform.
And then, without any chant, sigil, or flourish—they stepped off the side.
Gasps echoed across the group.
Quen didn't fall.
Their foot found air like it was stone. They stood perfectly still, one leg forward, hovering over the clouds.
"No wings," they said. "No tricks. No enchantments. Just focus."
They stepped back onto the platform, their robes flowing around them like rippling silk.
"Now it's your turn."
A low ripple of murmurs spread as students began standing, glancing nervously at the edges of the training circle where the mana bridges and sub-platforms floated just far enough to feel unsafe.
Quen gestured to the space. "Don't worry—we've buffered the air currents for now. You fall, you'll get caught. Probably. But I'd rather not test that more than once."
That didn't exactly reassure anyone.
Ethan stood with the rest, watching the others prepare. He saw Aiden roll his shoulders and close his eyes. Kai tapped his boot on the stone, muttering something under his breath.
Manifest. Flow downward. Will yourself to stay.
He took a deep breath and tried to feel the mana. That was the key. Not brute force. Not overpowering energy. Threading it. Guiding it. Trusting it.
His eyes narrowed.
Across from him, Kai stepped toward the edge of the stone, lifting one foot slightly. His mana flared for just a moment—but then he wobbled, lost his nerve, and stepped back.
"Damn," he muttered. "It slipped."
Aiden tried next, stepping forward in a more controlled motion. For a second—just a breath—he hovered, foot pressing down on air. But the spell faltered, and he had to jump back quickly before the anchor collapsed.
Ethan's turn.
He stepped to the edge. Let the wind kiss his face.
Closed his eyes.
He remembered what Quen had said. The difference between support and combat. The illusion of categories. And the story. Of stopping mid-fall. Of saying I won't move.
He focused. Mana Threading. The skill he'd begun to rely on more than anything.
He released his mana—not violently, but as a steady flow, threading it down through his core, through his legs, through his feet.
And when it reached the ground, he didn't force it. He simply told it: Hold me here.
He lifted one foot.
And it stayed.
There was a strange, glassy resistance. Like pressing down on dense fog that had forgotten how to be air.
He opened his eyes.
He was standing on nothing.
No platform. No bridge.
Just sky.
But his foot held.
Then the other.
He was standing above the edge, balanced in midair.
The spell held.
"Very good."
Quen's voice rang out, crisp and clear.
Ethan turned his head—and found them floating just behind him, smiling faintly.
He blinked. "I... it worked?"
Quen nodded. "Impressively so. Most students take days to even form a stable hold."
And then the System pinged.
[Skill Learned: Anchoring Step (Basic)]
Temporarily affix your presence to a surface using directed mana and focused willpower. Duration: 2.5 seconds (base).
Ethan felt his breath catch. He stepped back onto the platform, feet landing with a solid thud.
The other students were watching now. Some surprised. Some impressed.
And others... less pleased.
He caught a few glances. Narrowed eyes. Frowns.
Quen, however, didn't seem fazed. They stepped forward, eyes still on Ethan.
"You know," they said, "only one other first-year—outside this group—has managed that on the first day."
Their head tilted. "Seems you're just as skilled."
They extended a hand.
"Name?"
Ethan hesitated. Then he remembered who he was now.
"Darius," he said. "Darius Wycliffe."
Quen smiled.
"Well then, Darius—I'll remember that. I expect great things from you at the First-Year Spellcraft Examination. It's only a few weeks away, after all."
A few gasps and whispers stirred through the crowd. Eyes locked on him—some wary, some curious, others plainly resentful.
Ethan swallowed, then managed a nod.
"I'll do my best," he said. "I'll make you proud."
There was a moment of stillness.
And in that silence, something... shifted.
Some of the frowns softened. Some of the envy melted into something quieter. Confused, maybe. Even respectful.
But not all.
Not yet.
Quen turned back to the group, as though nothing had happened, and clapped once.
"Now, now. Jealousy won't teach you spells. Back to it. Let's see some bold steps—and try not to fall too dramatically, if you please."
They floated away, slipping among the students, offering subtle corrections and humming softly as they moved.
Ethan stood in place, heart still racing.
He'd done it.
And they knew his name.