Primordial Villain With A Slave Harem - Chapter 1497 Science!

Chapter 1497 Science!
Then he called upon his mana.
Earth answered first. The heaviest element, the most eager to settle into form. Mana flooded his channels and the ground far below trembled in response, ready to obey.
Quinlan held it there. He didn’t shape it, didn’t release it.
He ran the simulation in his head instead.
An earth dome over Whisperfield. He’d built structures before. Walls, platforms, pillars, entire hillsides reshaped in seconds. Small mountains of compressed stone rose from flat ground when the situation demanded it.
But this city was wide. Kilometers of perimeter. A dome at that scale would require continuous mana input to hold its shape, because earth had no internal lattice. No self-reinforcing geometry. Every square meter was dead weight fighting gravity, held together by nothing but his willpower and a constant stream of mana.
He couldn’t build and sustain it while being shot at by every archer and battlemage on the walls below. The concentration required for a structure that size would leave him exposed, and the moment his focus split, sections would sag, crack, and collapse onto the city he was trying to claim.
The math didn’t work. Not at this scale. Not under fire.
He let the earth settle. The trembling stopped. The mana stayed in his channels, unspent.
‘Need something lighter. Something that holds itself together.’
Below, the defenders had reacted. Within moments of him breaking the barrier, officers screamed orders. Archers angled upward, bowstrings drawn. Battlemages raised their staffs toward the sky, spells crackling at their gemstones. They certainly weren’t going to wait politely to find out what Quinlan planned to do next.
The first volley launched. Arrows climbed. Mage fire followed.
Lightning surged through his legs. Wind caught his back. The two elements fired in tandem and Quinlan snapped sideways across the sky, relocating above the western quarter of the city in the time it took the arrows to reach where he’d been.
The volley sailed through empty air.
From up here, he watched the defenders scramble to reorient. Archers pivoted. Officers pointed. Battlemages adjusted their aim, tracking his new position, but the channeling took time. Spells needed to be reformed. Trajectories recalculated.
A few moments gained.
That was all he really needed.
Quinlan closed his eyes.
Lightning had been Wind, Water, and Earth in friction. Three elements generating a fourth through their interaction. The unlock had come from understanding that deviant elements weren’t separate forces. They were byproducts of the basics operating in specific configurations.
Ice was simpler.
Ice was the absence of heat.
Quinlan grinned behind the helmet.
‘Let’s try, shall we?’
Wind and Water were already running. They’d been active since the lightning unlock, humming through his expanded pathways like background noise. He didn’t need to start them. He needed to reconfigure them.
He shifted Wind inward. Drew it tight around a pocket of air directly above his left palm.
Compressed.
The air resisted. Molecules packed closer, vibrating faster, colliding with increasing violence. Heat bloomed from his palm, radiating outward through his fingers like he’d closed his hand around a coal.
He let it go, not fighting it.
Heat was motion. Temperature, at the most fundamental level, was molecular vibration. Hot meant fast. Cold meant slow. The heat escaping from his hand was waste product. Excess energy generated by compression, bleeding away into the atmosphere where it could do no harm.
Let it leave.
Then he released the compression.
The air expanded. The molecules flew apart, and as they did, they pulled. Energy ripped out of the surrounding moisture as the expanding gas stole thermal momentum from everything nearby. Water vapor in the immediate vicinity slowed, decelerated.
Then, it outright stopped.
A crystal formed on his palm.
Small. Imperfect. A jagged shard of ice no larger than his thumbnail, cloudy and rough, sitting in his open hand.
Quinlan stared at it.
The same process that made mountaintops cold. Air rises, expands, loses heat, and the moisture in it freezes. Nature had been doing this for billions of years. He’d just compressed the cycle into a single breath.
Wind for the compression and expansion. Water as the medium. Two elements, configured to subtract heat rather than generate it. Simpler than lightning, which had needed three.
His pathways hadn’t even strained.
The entire process, from first thought to frozen crystal, had taken less than three seconds. To the defenders scrambling to track his new position, he’d been hovering motionlessly above the western quarter. To the dwarves on the field, he was a dark shape in the sky doing nothing interesting.
Quinlan opened his eyes.
[Ding!]
[Deviant Element Evolution: Ice has been promoted from Elemental Stage to Manipulation Stage.]
[Ice Manipulation Unlocked.]
[Note: Ice Manipulation encompasses control over thermal subtraction, crystalline formation, and phase-state alteration of moisture at scale. The element is no longer restricted to predetermined spell shapes. Output, cost, and form are now limited only by the user’s mana reserves, Magic stat, and imagination.]
Quinlan stared at the crystal in his palm.
Cold crept through his fingers. It spread inward, slow and unfamiliar, traveling from the shard through his skin and into the mana pathways beneath. A chill that seeped into his veins, his muscles, his bones. It moved the opposite direction from fire, which always burned outward, always pushed, always expanded.
This pulled inward. Contracted. Settled.
‘Strange…’
Fire had been his element for as long as he could remember. His most used, his most destructive, his most comfortable. The element he reached for first in every fight, the one that answered before he finished calling. Heat was momentum. Heat was aggression. Heat was the part of him that Ayame liked to describe, with that cheeky delivery of hers, as a greedy, arrogant man who needed to move forward at all times. Evolve. Grow. Consume. Burn brighter. Burn faster. Burn everything in his path until nothing was left standing.
She wasn’t wrong.
But he also liked the quiet nights. The ones where the fire went out and the world slowed down. Lying in bed with his girls pressed against him, listening to their breathing, feeling their warmth, and not thinking about levels or stats or the next fight. Those still, unhurried. The opposite of everything he chased during the day.
He’d always thought of those two sides as separate. The man who burned and the man who rested.
Maybe they weren’t.
Maybe appreciating both was the reason the elements came so naturally to him. Fire and ice. Motion and stillness. Expansion and contraction. A man who could welcome heat into his veins with the same ease as cold, because he understood both. Lived both.
‘Is that it?’ he wondered. ‘Is that why I have such a high affinity for the elements?’
The crystal sat on his palm, fogging the air around it.
‘An interesting thought.’ But it was not the time nor the place for such philosophical theories.
He closed his fist and crushed the crystal.
The fragments hung in the air around his gauntlet, tiny shards of cloudy, imperfect ice suspended by nothing but his will. The first ice he’d ever made on his own. Crude. Rough. Born from compressed air and stolen heat, a prototype built from spare parts.
Quinlan looked at them.
Then he let go.
Ice answered. True ice.


