Chapter 560: I’m Getting Somewhere - ShadowBound: The Need For Power - NovelsTime

ShadowBound: The Need For Power

Chapter 560: I’m Getting Somewhere

Author: Jem_Brixon21
updatedAt: 2026-01-19

CHAPTER 560: I’M GETTING SOMEWHERE

After Liam finally shook off the weight of the restriction term, relief didn’t wash over him so much as clarity did. With nothing chaining him down, he no longer had to divide his attention between appeasing kingdoms and protecting his freedoms. He could, at last, devote every hour to sharpening himself into something more than what he had been. That shift alone steadied his focus in a way he hadn’t realized he’d been missing.

The weeks that followed became a quiet crucible. His first priority had been correcting the lingering damage in his Myst circulation, and through relentless discipline—meditation, controlled breathing patterns, and exhausting internal refinement—he forced the energy back into its proper rhythm. Bit by bit, the jagged surges smoothed out. The turbulence vanished. When he finally felt the familiar clarity of Myst flowing cleanly through his core again, it was like regaining a sense he hadn’t noticed was dulled. His strength returned in full, both physically and magically, and he found that everything had grown just a touch sharper, stronger, and more responsive than before.

But restoring himself wasn’t enough. There was still the Unified Flow—his most elusive ambition.

Rather than diving recklessly into advanced techniques, Liam chose to build from the ground up. He decided the first phase would be Observation and Self-Analysis, not because it offered any easy path, but because it tore away the comfort of ignorance. It forced him to examine the cracks in his foundation rather than gloss over them. The Mind Realm had shown him a version of harmony, yet here in the real world there were no illusions to guide him—only his raw instincts and the calculating logic he relied on to stay alive.

Every spar with Mabel became a measured experiment. She never held back, never softened her blows, and never slowed to allow him to catch his breath, which made her the perfect metric. Under her relentless precision, Liam found nothing he could hide behind. Every mistake surfaced plainly. Every hesitation left a mark.

He didn’t simply fight; he studied. Each exchange between them became a sequence he committed to memory, replaying it with an almost surgical eye. The way he stepped in too shallow on certain counters. The slight overextension in his shoulders when his instincts pushed ahead of his thoughts. The split-second stiffness when his rational mind tried to calculate too far into the future. Mabel’s fluid aggression forced him into a state where instinct and reason constantly collided, and afterward—when the adrenaline drained from his limbs—he dissected those collisions in relentless detail.

Night after night, he reviewed his mistakes through the silence of his room. He visualized his body as though he were watching someone else. The tilt of his wrist during a strike. The placement of his heel mid-pivot. The tightening of his expression when he anticipated incoming force. Even the cadence of his breath became a subject of scrutiny. Through this grueling introspection, he slowly catalogued the nature of his instincts—their spontaneity, their rawness, the way they responded to momentum. At the same time, he mapped the workings of his reason—its patience, its precision, its tendency to overthink when urgency spiked.

Little by little, he began identifying where the Unified Flow genuinely faltered.

He discovered that his instincts thrived when his breathing flowed naturally, but faltered when tension crept into his back like a silent parasite. He realized his logic sharpened when he maintained emotional neutrality but dulled whenever the fight demanded explosive power. Certain movements invoked instinct with ease, while others required calculated direction.

There were no dramatic breakthroughs. No sudden epiphanies or instant transformations. It was tedious, frustrating, and occasionally humbling. Yet through this painstaking grind, Liam uncovered layers of himself he had never recognized. He learned the faint imbalance in his stance that made his left side react faster. He caught the barely perceptible pause that appeared anytime Mabel feinted at an angle he disliked. He even began charting the emotional footprints that colored his instincts—moments where confidence made him bold, where caution made him rigid, and where anger sharpened him into something frightening.

Most importantly, he finally understood why the Unified Flow had felt so fluid in the Mind Realm. It wasn’t some mystical phenomenon—it was synchronicity. In that illusionary battleground, instinct and reason had acted in tandem, complementing one another rather than contending for dominance. By examining their discord here in reality, he was slowly reconstructing that harmony piece by piece.

And through every spar, every analysis, every quiet hour spent unraveling his own combat psyche, one lesson grew unmistakably clear:

He could never force the Unified Flow to appear.

He had to know himself so thoroughly that the harmony happened on its own.

Observation became the mirror showing him who he truly was.

Self-analysis became the compass pointing toward who he needed to become.

And with that, Liam finally felt—solidly, undeniably—that he had taken his first true step toward mastering the Unified Flow.

***

Back inside his room, Liam sat alone at the small study table tucked into the far corner, the dim glow of the lantern casting a soft, amber halo over his shoulders. He leaned forward with his usual intensity, hunched over the thick tome where he had been recording every observation and analysis tied to the Unified Flow. The pages were already dense with diagrams, notes, cross-outs, and the kind of precision only someone obsessed with improvement could maintain.

’With all of this written down, the path is finally starting to lose its haze,’ he thought, his left elbow propped on the table while that hand partially covered his mouth. His other hand held the quill loosely, tapping its feathered tip along the tome’s spine in a slow, rhythmic beat. His eyes absorbed everything he had penned—every sketch, every phrase, every detail of how his body worked and where it failed him.

’If I follow these steps well enough, I should make decent progress within a month—maybe even less,’ he considered carefully. ’It won’t be anything monumental at first, but it’ll be something. And if things unfold like I hope, I should hit a bottleneck... something I can push against, break through, and use to force an Ascension.’

His finger slid down the edge of the tome as a faint exhale escaped him. ’Easier said than done. But still... I need that Ascension. One way or another, I have to reach it.’

As his thoughts spiraled deeper into determination, a voice pulled him back to reality—calm, familiar, and utterly unhurried.

"You know, tomorrow is the reopening of the academies, and it’s almost midnight," Mabel said from behind him. "Don’t you think you should rest if you want to be at your best? Even if you’re just settling back into your dorm, you shouldn’t walk around half-asleep."

Liam froze mid-tap, then slowly turned his gaze toward the clock on the wall. She was right—it was nearly midnight, and tomorrow marked the return to school for him and countless other students across the realm. He’d gotten so absorbed that time slipped by without him noticing.

’She’s right—I drifted a bit too far,’ he admitted inwardly. With a small sigh, he set the quill down and closed the tome. Rising from the chair, he stretched his shoulders, then flicked his fingers. Instantly, black tendrils of shadow curled around the tome, swallowing it whole as it vanished from sight.

He started toward his bed, but as he did, his eyes naturally found Mabel standing near the door—exactly where she always positioned herself when keeping watch.

"Thanks for the reminder," he said quietly, moving past her toward the bed.

"No problem," she replied, matching his calm tone.

Liam settled onto the edge of the mattress and paused, glancing back at her with a faint shift in expression. "By the way... about you guarding me and all—"

"Yes, I know," Mabel interjected smoothly before he could finish. "I won’t stay close to you. I’ll just keep an eye on you from a distance. So there’s no reason for you to explain anything—I’m already aware of what you want."

He studied her for a long second, reading the finality in her posture, then quietly lay back on the bed. "Alright. I guess I’ll see you tomorrow."

"Of course," she answered, softer this time. "Sleep well."

As Liam lay back against the sheets, slowly letting his breathing settle in the hope that sleep would eventually claim him, Mabel remained exactly where she stood. She watched him quietly, her expression unreadable, her posture relaxed yet alert in the disciplined way she always carried herself. For a brief moment, she simply observed him, noting the way the tension in his shoulders gradually eased as exhaustion began to win.

’I’m really curious about what his life at the academy is actually like,’ she found herself thinking. ’And more than that... I wonder if there’s something going on between him and the Crescent princess.’

The thought had crept into her mind before she even realized it. Back during the gathering in the Crescent Kingdom, she had caught the way the two had looked at each other—the silent understanding, the strangely natural familiarity. Or at least, she had seen the way Sheila looked at Liam; from her angle, she’d only had a clear view of the back of his head. Even so, the air between them had been unmistakably charged with something she couldn’t quite identify.

Her thoughts drifted deeper into that memory, lingering longer than she intended. Then, abruptly, awareness jolted through her, and she straightened slightly as if catching herself doing something improper.

’Really, Mabel? Why should you even care what’s going on between two teenagers?’ she scolded herself, giving her head a small, firm shake to dispel the lingering curiosity. ’This is ridiculous.’

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