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F Grade Healer Becomes Strongest Biomancer-Chapter 57: Nine Seconds
The Elf
The Dance took everything she had left.
Her body remembered what her arms couldn’t do anymore. Sixteen kicks in four seconds: kidneys, spine, the soft meat behind the knees. The vessel tried to block the third. Elyen spun past her guard like water through fingers.
Ribs cracked under her heel. The girl made a sound that wasn’t quite a scream.
Kicks five through eight lifted her off the ground. Nine caught her in the sternum before she could fall. Ten through fourteen were a blur even to Elyen — muscle memory older than thought, techniques she’d learned before this vessel’s parents were born.
Fifteen took out her right knee.
Sixteen put her in the dirt.
Elyen landed. Her legs nearly buckled. The technique was eating her from the inside now, blood vessels bursting in sequence like a wick burning down.
The vessel lay face-down in the mud, chest barely moving. The obsidian arm was pinned beneath her body at a wrong angle.
One thrust. Dagger still in her teeth. Bite down, drop, drive it through the base of the skull. She’d done it before. Vessels always thought they were special until the blade went in.
She walked closer.
The girl’s face was turned to the side, eyes half-open and unfocused. Blood in her teeth. Black hair matted with dirt and worse.
Elyen stopped.
How old is this one?
The thought came before she could kill it. Seventeen, maybe sixteen. The face hadn’t finished growing into itself yet.
She’d killed the others without looking. That was the trick. You finished them fast, collected what the Church required, and moved on before you had to see anything. Forty-three years on the front lines. She knew the trick.
She was looking now.
The girl’s cheeks still had baby fat, a smear of mud across her forehead, eyelashes clumped with blood and dust. She looked like the children Elyen had walked past in Oa-Renmei’s streets, the ones who’d pointed at her armor and whispered to their mothers.
The ones who stopped whispering when the wards cracked.
The vessel’s breath came in shallow hitches. Ribs broken, lungs filling with something they shouldn’t. The Grievous Wound was still ticking. Nine seconds left before she could heal again, and the girl didn’t seem to know it. Didn’t seem to know anything. Just lying there, bleeding out in a world that wasn’t hers.
She came through a door.
Elyen had seen it; the bone-white frame hanging in the air, the mark of Gaian burned into its edges. The girl had stepped through like she was walking into a market. No armor. No retinue. No veteran to hold her leash and keep her alive long enough to matter. Just a child with a dead man’s arm grafted to her shoulder, stumbling into a war she didn’t understand.
The first champion Elyen killed was thirty-four. A man with scars older than she was, who’d burned six villages before the Church sent her. The water in his lungs came from the river he’d drowned a congregation in.
That one deserved the blade.
The second was twenty-eight. Faster, crueler. She remembered the way he smiled when she cornered him, the way he kept smiling even when she opened his throat.
The third was nineteen. A boy from the outer provinces who’d only been marked for three months. He cried at the end. Asked for his mother. Asked Elyen if it would hurt.
She’d lied. Said no.
That one haunted her.
The fourth and fifth she didn’t let herself remember.
The sixth lay in front of her now, younger than any of them.
Her heart stuttered. The Dance was killing her — she could feel it in the way her pulse skipped, the way her vision kept trying to narrow.
"Breathe."
The word came out muffled, dagger still clenched in her teeth. She spat it into the dirt. Didn’t need it anymore.
"Breathe. You have nine seconds before the wound fades. Then you can heal."
The girl’s eyes focused, just barely. Enough to see Elyen standing over her, armless, bleeding from everywhere.
"I don’t—" Blood bubbled at the corner of her mouth.
"Breathe until then."
Elyen turned away.
The fire was still burning twenty meters back — the wagon, the oil, her own severed forearms somewhere in that mess. The flames had spread to the dry grass, licking at the edges of the road.
She started walking. Her legs didn’t want to cooperate. The Dance had taken more than she’d planned, always did at her age, and blood ran from her nose while something in her chest felt wrong and loose, like a hinge that had come undone. Forty-three years and she still hadn’t learned to hold back.
"Wait—"
The vessel’s voice, weak and confused. Elyen didn’t stop.
Forty-three years. Six champions. Two thresholds held and lost. The floating kingdoms she’d helped bring down, the streets she’d walked through afterward when the screaming stopped. Oa-Renmei fell in nine seconds. She remembered the sound. Not the impact, but the silence after. A civilization’s worth of voices cut off at once.
She’d told herself they were the enemy. She’d told herself the war required it. She’d told herself a lot of things.
"Why?"
The girl again.
Elyen didn’t answer. What would she say? That she’d killed enough children to fill a city and this one — this one with her soft face and her stupid bravery — was the first she’d let herself see?
She reached the fire’s edge. The heat pressed against her face, her chest, the stumps where her forearms used to be. It felt clean. Cleaner than anything she’d done in forty-three years.
Her daughter would have been around this girl’s age. Younger, if you counted in elf years. But the face would have looked the same — soft, unfinished.
"I’m tired."
She stepped forward.
The flames took her without ceremony. No scream. No final prayer to gods she’d stopped believing in. After all, they’d gone silent for centuries anyway.
Her face was greeted by the fire, then her daughter’s face.
Then nothing.







