Dawn crept across the Himalayan peaks, painting Kamar-Taj in gold and shadow. Arthur stood among twenty other initiates in the ancient courtyard, the rough fabric of his gray apprentice robes still unfamiliar against his skin. The mountain air carried a biting chill despite the sunlight.
Master Lhakpa moved with fluid precision at the center of their formation. Golden light flowed between his hands like luminous water, forming intricate patterns that seemed both mathematical and organic.
"Focus," he instructed, his voice firm but patient. "The dimensional energies surround us constantly. You need not create power—merely channel what already exists."
Arthur mimicked the circular hand gestures precisely, feeling nothing but the morning breeze against his fingertips. Two days of identical movements had yielded nothing but frustration and sore wrists. His fingers remained stubbornly ordinary—no light, no energy, no magic.
"Your form is perfect," a calm voice observed from behind him. "But your approach remains flawed."
The other students straightened immediately as the Ancient One materialized beside Arthur. Her presence seemed to sharpen the air itself.
"I'm doing exactly what Master Lhakpa demonstrated," Arthur replied, unable to keep a defensive edge from his voice.
"Yes, physically." she observed, studying his movements. "But your instinct is still to draw power from within. You're reaching for your magical core when you should be opening yourself to what exists beyond it."
Arthur's jaw tightened. "I'm trying."
"Yes," she replied with the faintest smile. "That's precisely the problem. Master Lhakpa, continue with the others. Mr. Hayes will join me for specialized instruction."
The master nodded once and returned to instructing the remaining students. Arthur followed the Ancient One to a secluded balcony that offered a breathtaking view of snow-capped mountains stretching to the horizon.
"Wizards struggle significantly with our arts," she explained once they were alone. "Far more than ordinary humans with no magical training."
"Why?"
She created a delicate mandala with casual precision, golden light dancing between her fingertips. "Magic has shaped your very being, Mr. Hayes. Your body is a finely tuned instrument designed to channel internal power." The light pattern collapsed. "When you attempt to connect with dimensional energy, muscle memory betrays you—reaching inward when you should be reaching outward."
"So it's impossible for wizards to learn sorcery?" Arthur frowned.
"I didn't say that." A hint of amusement touched her eyes. "Only that it requires... recalibration. No wizard in my memory has mastered both forms, but that doesn't mean it's impossible."
Arthur considered this. "What if I blocked my magical core completely? Forced myself to use only dimensional energy?"
"That approach might work temporarily," she acknowledged. "But when you eventually removed those blocks, you would face a difficult choice—your body would likely reject one form of magic or the other. The reintegration process could take years, with no guarantee of success."
"And my current condition?" Arthur asked. "My pathways are damaged but intact. Does that help or hurt my chances?"
The Ancient One studied him with unsettling intensity, as if seeing beyond his physical form. "Your situation is unusual. The channels through which magic flows remain in place, though temporarily unusable for your internal power."
She circled around him, her movements deliberate. "This may actually prove advantageous. You can focus on learning dimensional channeling without interference from your own magic flowing through the channels. The process might even strengthen your damaged pathways."
"But then won't I face another problem in the future?," Arthur noted. "Controlling two different energy sources through the same channels."
"True," she stopped before him. "But perhaps it's best to solve one problem at a time. The mountain is climbed step by step, not in a single bound."
Arthur hesitated. "Have you used the Eye of Agamotto to see if I succeed? Do I ever master the mystic arts in any potential future?"
Her expression grew carefully neutral. "You know I won't answer that."
"Can't or won't?"
"Both," she replied without hesitation. "Some knowledge must be earned through experience, not given freely. Whether you master our arts is for you to discover, not for me to reveal."
Arthur sighed. "Fair enough. So how do I stop trying to use my internal magic?"
"Begin with control," she said simply. "Your soul possesses the necessary strength, but your focus wavers. Master Singh teaches meditation techniques that might prove valuable to you."
Without another word, she turned and walked away, leaving Arthur alone with his thoughts and the panoramic view of the Himalayas.
Arthur remained on the balcony long after she'd gone, watching clouds drift between distant peaks. He gripped the stone railing, confronting a truth he'd been avoiding for months.
The Ravenclaw Diadem. Since acquiring it, he had grown steadily dependent on its effects. What had begun as an occasional enhancement had become a crutch he could barely function without. The diadem's gift of mental clarity and focus had slowly eroded his natural abilities until, without it, he felt almost helpless.
This explained his continued difficulties with his transformed magic. If he had learned to control magic properly from the beginning—mastering each complex spell through discipline rather than relying on the diadem's enhancement—he wouldn't face such challenges now.
He knew with certainty that if he used the diadem, he could master the mystic arts in a fraction of the time. The artifact would grant him the perfect focus and mental clarity needed to channel dimensional energy. But then what? He would remain forever dependent on it, helpless without its power.
No. The only viable solution was to forget about the diadem entirely and rebuild his own strength from the foundation up. As he turned from the balcony, he made a silent promise: in the future, he would use the artifact only for acquiring new knowledge, never for practice or implementation.
It was time to rediscover his own capabilities.
—
"Empty your cup," Master Singh instructed the following morning.
The elderly sorcerer sat cross-legged on a worn mat, his leathery face as serene as if he'd been carved from the mountains themselves. Arthur mirrored his pose, already feeling discomfort in his hips and lower back.
"What does that mean?" Arthur asked. "Empty my cup?"
"A cup already filled cannot receive new tea," Singh replied, his English accented but precise. "A mind filled with knowledge cannot receive wisdom. A body tense with effort cannot channel energy."
"So I need to... forget what I know?"
Singh's eyes remained closed. "Knowledge is not the problem. Attachment to knowledge is the problem. Technique is not the obstacle. Clinging to technique is the obstacle."
Arthur closed his eyes, attempting to follow instructions that seemed deliberately paradoxical. The mental discipline he'd once possessed felt like a distant memory, his thoughts darting in countless directions simultaneously.
"Begin with your breath," Singh murmured. "Not controlling it. Not changing it. Simply observing."
Days stretched into a week as Arthur devoted himself entirely to meditation. He abandoned his daily magical exercises, focusing solely on regaining what he had lost—control of his own mind.
At first, he could maintain focus for only minutes before hunger, discomfort, or random thoughts intruded. Each time his concentration broke, Singh would simply say, "Notice, and return," neither praising nor criticizing.
Gradually, the intervals extended. Arthur learned to acknowledge distractions without following them, to return his awareness to his breath with calm persistence rather than frustration.
Master Singh proved a demanding but patient teacher. When Arthur could maintain basic meditation near the tranquil reflection pool, Singh moved their practice beside the sparring grounds. The clash of staffs, grunts of exertion, and occasional cries of pain tested Arthur's newfound concentration.
"The world will not become peaceful for your convenience," Singh remarked when Arthur's concentration broke during a particularly loud training session. "Your mind must find stillness amid chaos."
By the second week, Arthur could maintain meditative stillness from dawn until dusk, eating only a simple meal before sleep. The inward focus began revealing subtle sensations he'd never noticed—the flow of blood through his veins, the electrical impulses of his nervous system, and eventually, something deeper.
He began sensing something vast. Oceans of energy existing just beyond ordinary perception.
One morning, as sunlight crept across the meditation chamber, the Ancient One appeared silently beside him. Arthur remained motionless, not even noticing her presence.
After observing him for several minutes, she reached out with one finger, its tip glowing with golden energy, and lightly touched his forehead.
The contact broke his trance with gentle precision.
"Impressive," she noted as his eyes opened. "Master Singh tells me you've maintained continuous meditation for sixteen hours."
Arthur blinked, reorienting himself to ordinary awareness. "The time passes differently now. It's hard to describe."
"You seem changed," she observed.
"I feel..." Arthur searched for words. "Clearer. Like I've been looking through dirty glass my entire life without realizing it."
"That clarity is essential for what comes next." She rose to her feet in a fluid motion. "Are you ready to try again?"
Arthur followed her to a private courtyard where morning shadows created intricate patterns across weathered stones.
"Close your eyes," she instructed. "Return to the meditative state, but maintain awareness of your physical form."
Arthur settled easily into the familiar stillness, his breath becoming shallow and unhurried.
"Now extend your awareness outward," her voice continued, seeming to bypass his ears and flow directly into his consciousness. "Feel the energies surrounding you—currents flowing from dimensions beyond ordinary perception."
Arthur reached out with his senses, no longer attempting to draw power but simply perceiving what already existed. Gradually, he became aware of currents flowing around him—invisible tides of energy from realms beyond ordinary perception.
"There," the Ancient One said softly. "You feel it."
Arthur remained silent, focused on the unfamiliar sensation.
"Imagine yourself not as a vessel to be filled, but as a window through which light passes," she continued. "You don't capture this energy—you allow it passage through you, giving it direction and purpose."
Arthur adjusted his mental approach, visualizing the energy flowing through him rather than into him. The sensation intensified, like standing in a stream rather than collecting water in a cup.
"Now, shape it," she instructed. "Not with force, but with gentle direction. Like guiding water with your fingers."
Arthur attempted the circular motion he'd been practicing, maintaining his connection to the dimensional current. For a brief moment, he felt something flow through his fingertips—not the familiar warmth of wizarding magic, but something cooler and more precise.
A tiny spark of golden light flickered between his palms before vanishing.
His eyes snapped open in surprise.
"A beginning," the Ancient One said, looking pleased. "Small, but significant."
"That was... different," Arthur admitted. "Nothing like wizarding magic."
"Of course not. You were channeling energy from another dimension entirely." She gestured for him to try again. "Wizarding magic comes from within—a biological gift passed through bloodlines. Our methods draw upon the vast energies of the multiverse itself."
For the remainder of the morning, Arthur practiced under her guidance. By midday, he could consistently produce small sparks, though nothing approaching the complex patterns other students were already mastering.
"You're making exceptional progress for a wizard," the Ancient One assured him when frustration threatened to derail his practice. "The fact that you've produced any effects at all is remarkable."
Arthur watched her walk away, her words only partially alleviating his disappointment. Two weeks of intensive training to produce mere sparks seemed painfully slow. Most beginners achieved similar results in days, not weeks.
He needed to work harder.
—
The days at Kamar-Taj fell into a rhythm. Morning meditation with Master Singh. Afternoon practice channeling dimensional energy with Master Lhakpa. Evening meditation and reflection. Each day brought incremental improvements—sparks growing brighter, lasting longer, becoming easier to summon.
A week after his first success, Arthur finally managed to form a small, unstable shield of golden energy between his hands. Master Lhakpa nodded approvingly as the light flickered and danced before dissipating.
"Very good," the sorcerer said. "Your progress accelerates. Soon you may attempt gateway creation."
Arthur was about to ask a question when a commotion at the main entrance drew everyone's attention. The Ancient One appeared, leading a man with a haunted expression. He walked with the careful movements of someone whose world had recently shattered.
Arthur recognized him instantly.
Kaecilius.
The future zealot who would betray Kamar-Taj, steal forbidden knowledge, and ultimately lead to the Ancient One's death looked nothing like the dangerous fanatic Arthur remembered. Instead, he appeared broken, desperate, and profoundly lost.
Their gazes met briefly as the Ancient One guided Kaecilius toward the inner sanctum. She gave Arthur a subtle headshake and reassuring smile as they passed.
As they disappeared inside, Arthur returned to his practice with renewed focus. He hadn't expected his training to coincide with Kaecilius's arrival, but this coincidence presented an opportunity.
If the Ancient One was willing to teach the man despite knowing of his eventual betrayal, Arthur would make certain he stayed one step ahead of the future zealot. He would become the opponent Kaecilius could never defeat. Always better than him at everything and someone Kaecilius would always fear before doing anything evil.
He did not plan on doing anything else about Kaecilius. Since the Ancient One with more knowledge and experience than him did not plan on interfering, who was he to intervene?
However, Arthur promised himself he would always remain one step ahead of Kaecilius. It was good to have a genius as an adversary—especially someone like Kaecilius, who was known for his exceptional talent in the mystic arts. Measuring his own progress against such an opponent would greatly aid Arthur on his learning journey.
The goal seemed almost impossible in his current state.
But Arthur knew his limitations were temporary. When he finally overcame them, his true talent would begin to show and Kaecilius would face an adversary beyond his comprehension.
The golden energy between Arthur's palms stabilized, growing brighter as his determination solidified into resolve.