The Villain Professor's Second Chance-Chapter 815: The Trio’s Turn (2)

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<Too many eyes,> he complained.

"Don't start," Amberine whispered.

Aetherion did another subtle pulse—defense synchronization. A shimmer rippled through the amphitheater and even the corridor glass caught it like a wave passing through a reef. New conduit patterns glowed briefly under the floor. Disguised constructs shifted posture in alcoves. The air itself tightened, dampening fields pulling in like a net.

Two months ago, the "safest place" had bled.

Now it was flexing.

Not to impress.

To warn.

Astrid tried to look calm and failed slightly. Her hand adjusted her glasses again. "We stay together," she murmured. "No wandering. No side conversations."

Amberine opened her mouth to joke.

Maris gave her a look that said please don't.

So Amberine swallowed it.

They moved toward their staging pocket, but the corridor had narrowed into a social gauntlet.

A cluster of aides in black and silver approached. Their leader wore a polite smile that felt like a knife wrapped in silk.

"Miss Polime?" the aide asked.

Amberine's heart slammed into her throat. "Yes?"

"I'm tasked with gathering presentation follow-ups. For scheduling. For… potential funding interest." The smile sharpened. "May I ask who sponsors your research?"

Amberine's mouth went dry.

Because the honest answer was ridiculous.

"I… uh," she started.

Elara's gaze snapped to the aide—cold, quiet warning.

Maris stepped half a pace closer, gentle smile on her face, but her tone was steady. "We're under university sponsorship protocol," she said. "All sponsor disclosures go through faculty."

Professor Astrid immediately lifted her badge. "Correct. Official channels only."

The aide's smile didn't falter. "Of course. I simply—"

Amberine blurted anyway, because she was Amberine. "I'll make them proud," she said too brightly, too fast. "Even if I don't know who they are."

Silence.

Maris made a sound that might have been a cough hiding laughter.

Elara's eyes closed for one long blink.

Astrid looked like she wanted to faint and also scold Amberine into another dimension.

The aide's smile shifted into something almost amused. "How… honest."

Then they slid away, polite as sharks.

Amberine's cheeks burned. "Okay," she muttered, "that was—"

"Bad," Elara finished.

"Courageous," Maris corrected gently.

"Stupid," Ifrit added.

Amberine glared at nothing. "Everyone shut up."

A few paces later she nearly collided with a small group in Icevern colors.

Sophie von Icevern herself stepped aside with a reflex that looked like training. She had kind eyes, but she held herself like someone who expected the world to try to hurt her anyway.

"Oh—sorry," Amberine blurted.

Sophie smiled, genuine and apologetic. "No, it's my fault. These corridors are crowded."

A fiery voice barked behind Sophie. "My Lady, you shouldn't apologize to strangers!"

Sharon—Sophie's adjutant—looked like she wanted to bite someone. The glare she gave Amberine could have curdled tea.

Sophie sighed, fond and weary. "Sharon. Please."

Sharon huffed. "Yes, My Lady."

Annalise leaned forward from Sophie's side, eyes bright, smile sweet in a way that made Amberine's instincts itch. "Big sis is too nice," she said, voice light. Then her gaze flicked to Amberine's face like she was taking notes. "Who are you?"

Amberine's brain short-circuited. "Amberine. Amberine Polime. Student."

Annalise's smile widened. "Student." She said it like she tasted the word. "Cute."

Sophie's hand rested briefly on Annalise's shoulder. "Be polite."

Annalise tilted her head. "I am polite. I'm just curious."

Sharon glared harder. "Stop being weird, Annalise."

Annalise's eyes snapped to Sharon for a heartbeat, sharp as a blade, then softened instantly as she turned back to Sophie. "Sorry, big sis."

Amberine swallowed.

Maris moved between them subtly. "We should go," she whispered.

Elara nodded. "Now."

Sophie offered Amberine another small smile. "Good luck on your presentation."

Amberine managed a nod. "Thanks. You too—" Then she realized Sophie wasn't presenting. "I mean. Um. Thanks."

Sophie's smile warmed. "You'll do fine."

And for some reason, that simple sincerity steadied Amberine more than any official speech.

They escaped into their staging pocket—crystal panels shimmering one-way, muffling the corridor noise.

Amberine leaned back against a wall and exhaled like she'd been underwater.

Elara immediately opened their notes. "Okay. Revised order."

Amberine raised a hand. "Before the revised order, I want to say one thing."

Elara's eyes narrowed. "If it's a joke—"

"It's not," Amberine said, surprising herself with how serious she sounded. "We can't be small after that."

Maris's expression softened. "After Draven?"

Amberine nodded. "He just… he didn't defend himself. He made the whole room feel guilty for being lazy."

Elara's lips twitched—almost a smile, more like approval. "Then don't be small."

Maris clasped Amberine's hand briefly. "We still have our own contribution. Don't let his shadow erase you."

Astrid exhaled like she'd been holding her breath since the breach two months ago. "Good," she said quietly. "Hold that. Now—process. Precision. Limitations."

Amberine grinned weakly. "If I freeze, kick me."

Elara didn't look up. "I'll kick you twice."

Maris raised her brows. "No kicking. We breathe. Then we burn them with competence."

Ifrit snorted. <Finally, a sentence I respect.>

Amberine's nerves twitched into something sharper and cleaner. She rolled her shoulders. "Okay," she whispered. "Okay. Let's go."

The usher's signal arrived—soft chime, a glowing line on the floor pulsing toward the stage.

They stepped out.

The amphitheater felt larger now that the keynote had opened the world like a wound. Floating crystal platforms hovered in tiers like islands. Ocean light streamed through the dome, refracted into prismatic bands that made every robe look like stained glass.

Amberine walked toward the dais and tried not to trip on her own feet.

Ifrit pressed heat against her ribs like a steady hand. <Breathe.>

She breathed.

Maris's illusion anchors clicked into place—small, invisible markers that only Amberine could sense because she'd practiced with Maris for months. Elara's golden mana settled into a controlled hum beneath her stoic exterior, a third-layer stabilizer waiting to be called.

Astrid followed them to the edge of the platform and stopped, hands clasped, expression composed—but Amberine saw the restless little tap of her thumb against her badge.

Amberine stepped to the center.

Her heart tried to escape.

Then she saw the constellation sphere overhead, still glowing with seat clusters. She saw Queen Aurelia's red hair like a flame in an ocean. She saw Prince Caelum's gaze scanning. She saw Duchess Malesya's polite predator smile. She saw Sophie sitting upright, hands folded, watching like she wanted justice to survive scholarship.

And she thought, absurdly, if I die from embarrassment, that'll be a historical event.

She swallowed and spoke.

"Good afternoon," Amberine said, voice too bright at first. "I'm Amberine Polime. This is Elara Valen and Maris Everen. We're presenting a hybrid elemental model titled—"

She forced her hands not to shake.

"—The Hybrid Elemental Orb of Emotions: A Measurable Resonance Framework for Fire–Water Coexistence."

A few heads tilted.

Emotion.

Some scholars leaned forward with interest.

Some nobles stiffened like she'd said curse.

Amberine refused to apologize for the title.

"Before you roll your eyes," she added quickly, then immediately regretted sounding like herself, "we're not here to talk about feelings like poetry. We're here to show a measurable stabilizing layer that behaves like a resonance field—one that can be modeled, tuned, and replicated."

Elara's voice cut in, crisp and calm. "We define 'emotion' operationally as a patterned mana response arising from cognitive stimulus—measured through phase drift, amplitude variance, and stability retention under load."

Amberine almost sighed in relief. Elara always sounded like she was born holding a thesis.

Maris smiled gently at the audience. "And we visualized the patterns so the mechanism is not hidden behind jargon."

Amberine lifted her hand.

A small orb formed above the dais—no larger than a fist. It glowed softly, half crimson, half azure, but the colors didn't collide. They rotated, hesitant, like two cats forced into the same box.

Ifrit grumbled inside her robe.

"Focus," Amberine whispered through her teeth.

She fed fire mana into the crimson half—carefully, through her own channels, not through Ifrit's raw hunger. The orb brightened. The azure half threatened to push back.

Normally, fire and water would fight.

Today, Amberine forced them to listen.

Maris lifted two fingers.

An illusion field bloomed around the orb—not flashy, not pretty. It was a transparent overlay of lines, vectors, and color-coded phase angles. The audience could see the instability—tiny spikes, jittering patterns where the elements wanted to annihilate.

A murmur rose.

Amberine's nerves turned into fuel.

"Here's the problem," she said, voice steadier now that she had something to point at. "Fire and water are not enemies. They're just incompatible under default conditions. So people call coexistence 'impossible' and stop trying."

She glanced at the front tiers, just once.

Queen Aurelia looked bored.

Amberine felt a stab of panic.

Then Aurelia's eyes narrowed—interested.

Amberine kept going.

"We introduced a third-layer stabilizer," Amberine said. "Not by forcing suppression—suppression causes rebound—but by tuning a resonance envelope that both elements can interpret."

Elara stepped forward.

Her hands moved in small, precise mudras.

Golden mana flickered into existence—subtle, controlled, like sunlight filtered through deep water. It didn't shout. It didn't flare. It simply existed with authority.

Amberine heard several people inhale.

Valen.

Origin.

Elara didn't look at the nobles while she worked. She looked at the orb as if it was a math problem that needed discipline.

The golden layer wrapped around the red-blue core, not like a cage, but like a calibration ring.

Maris's illusion overlay shifted.

The jittering spikes softened.

The phase lines began to align.

The orb rotated smoother.

Amberine felt the air in the hall change—subtle, like the moment a crowd realizes a trick is real.

Ifrit made a small unhappy noise.

<Golden's annoying,> he muttered.

"Shut up," Amberine whispered.

Then she spoke louder, to the hall.

"We call it 'emotion' because the stabilizer responds to cognitive stimulus," Amberine said. "Not because it's romantic. The field is influenced by intent. By attention. By the operator's internal coherence."

She pointed at the illusion overlay, where a thin band of warm white lines pulsed.

"See that?" she said. "That's the response layer. It's not arbitrary. It's consistent across trials when we standardize stimulus. It behaves like a measurable signal."

Maris took over smoothly. "We built a calibration protocol," she said, and the illusion shifted to show three anchor points. "We can reproduce the field using standardized prompts, memory anchors, and controlled mana dosage."

Elara added, "We tested under pressure variance. The envelope retains stability up to a threshold. Beyond that, phase drift returns."

Amberine swallowed. "And we're not claiming this is a universal cure," she said. "We're claiming it's a tool—one that could apply to ward stabilization, field triage, and elemental coexistence scenarios."

A few scholars nodded.

A few nobles whispered.

Sophie von Icevern leaned forward slightly, eyes bright with honest interest.

Sharon whispered too loudly near her, "My Lady, that's impressive," as if volume could protect Sophie's reputation.

Sophie's cheeks tinted faintly. She didn't shush Sharon. She just kept watching.

Annalise watched Sophie watching.

Amberine tried not to think about that.

The orb now rotated with a soft, steady glow—crimson and azure braided without violence. Maris's illusion showed the stability metrics settling into a clean band.

Amberine felt something like pride rise up and punch her fear in the face.

"We didn't do this alone," Amberine said, then caught herself before she said Draven's name like a prayer. "We refined the math with faculty oversight and peer review."

Astrid stood at the side like a proud, terrified parent.

The audience's questions came faster than Amberine expected.

A dignitary asked, "Can this stabilize wards under stress?"

Amberine answered honestly: "In theory, yes. We have limited data. We propose a next-phase trial with controlled ward lattices."

Elara added limitations and corrected terminology like a surgeon.

Maris answered an ethics question about illusion with quiet bravery. "Illusion isn't truth," she said. "It's a lens. We label every layer. We don't fabricate outcomes."

Amberine was starting to believe they might survive this.

Then Elara got the question.

It came from the noble tiers—not shouted, not rude, but weighted.

"If golden mana acts as a stabilizer," a man asked, voice smooth, "is it replicable outside Valen lineage?" 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦

Amberine's skin prickled.

Elara's face didn't change. "The ring is replicable as a function," she answered. "The origin attribute is not required to understand the model. But the material used to generate the layer affects efficiency. We are investigating alternatives."

The man's gaze lingered.

Count Ken von Valen's hands were too clean.

Amberine's protective anger flared.

Ifrit perked up, pleased by anger. <Now that's flame.>

Amberine wanted to say something sharp.

Maris touched her sleeve lightly.

Don't.

Amberine swallowed it.

Their Q&A ended with polite applause—real applause, not pity.

Amberine's knees almost buckled from relief.

She turned, ready to step back.

But suddenly-

"I have a question,"

It's the same cold piercing voice that she just heard previously.

The same precise and emotionless voice that has brought the whole hall onto silence.

Draven.