Darkness.
It wasnât cold.It wasnât suffocating.It just⦠was.Still and suspended, like the world had taken a breath and forgotten to exhale.
Kael drifted in that silence.Weightless. Unmoving.His heartbeat echoed faintlyâlike a distant drum lost in a dream.
There was no pain.No fear.No sound.
Just void.
Thenâsomething cracked.
A voice broke through, muffled at first, like it traveled through layers of water and glass.
> â...Heâs alive!â
The darkness shattered.
A flood of light.A rush of breath.Kael gaspedâviolently.
His eyes snapped open.
He was staring at a ceiling embedded with glowing blue linesâsoft pulses of mana flowing through metallic veins. The ceiling curved with sleek elegance, unfamiliar and sterile. He was lying on a raised medical bed that hummed with energy beneath him, slowly knitting torn muscle and broken mana channels.
Pain returned. Not sharpâbut dull and ever-present.
He tried to sit up and groaned.
> âEasy,â said a calm, clipped voice.
An instructor in silver-trimmed robes stepped forward, holding a glowing clipboard. A mana HUD floated above it, pulsing in rhythm with Kaelâs vitals.
> âYouâve been unconscious for seven hours. The healing wards have stabilized your core and mended most of the physical damage. Butâ¦â The instructorâs eyes narrowed, â...you pushed your body far beyond safe thresholds.â
Kael blinked, groggy. His voice rasped.
> âReks? Laziel?â
> âBoth alive. Theyâre in recovery pods across the hall. Youâll be allowed to visit them shortly.â
Relief crashed over him like a tide. Kael slumped back into the bed, exhaling deeply.
They'd survived.
Noâtheyâd won.
They took down an evolved, high-tier Veyrith.
Not by luck aloneâby working together. A perfect storm of timing, instinct, and desperation.
> âWe got lucky,â Kael muttered, more to himself than anyone else. âIf we hadnât injured it before the full mutation, weâd be dead.â
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Observation Hall
The Council Hall sat high above the central spire of Arcanis Academyâa glass-paneled chamber laced with pulsing mana runes. It overlooked the vast training grounds, dormitories, and the distant shimmer of the Verdant Mana Forest, but no one inside was admiring the view.
They were all watching the same replay.
Kael Ardynâs strike.The evolved Veyrithâs collapse.Three battered Spark-ranked students, barely standing.
The final frame lingered on screen.
Silence followed.
âTheyâre Spark-ranked,â said a woman in crimson and gold robes, her voice crisp with disbelief. âFirst-years. With no formal squad certification.â
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âThey coordinated like Ascendants,â murmured another. âReks Valorinâconfirmed triple-mana user. Laziel, tactical command and support. Kael Ardyn⦠raw combat instinct beyond classification.â
âEspecially him,â Overseer Varn said at last, his voice low and thoughtful. The eldest present, his gaze was fixed on Kaelâs every movement in the recording. âThat kind of control at his levelâitâs unnatural.â
The air tightened around those words.
âBut he's still Spark-ranked,â said a younger member, tone skeptical. âTalent means nothing if it isn't backed by cultivation.â
âHe has that too,â Varn replied firmly. âWatch the way he reads the battlefieldâpredicts, redirects, conserves mana mid-strike while maximizing fatal intent. That isnât luck. Thatâs talent⦠forged through something we havenât seen.â
The crimson-robed woman folded her arms. âWeâve seen flashes of brilliance in prodigies before. But not like this. Not this calm. This refined.â
âSo what now?â another councilor asked. âDo we reward them? Promote them?â
âWe can't ignore it,â said Varn. âBut rewarding freshmen like upper-years will break precedent.â
A second voice cut in, firm and frustrated. âThey saved hundreds of studentsâ lives. That Veyrith breached our defenses. If they hadn't acted, we'd be counting bodies. Is precedent worth more than that?â
Suggestions filled the chamber.
Restricted training clearance.Mentorship under elite instructors.A rank skip in internal assessments.Even a formal audience with the Headmaster.
But one stood outâsymbolic. Personal.
âWe could forge a token,â Varn proposed, âfrom the Veyrithâs core. A single piece for each of them. Custom, inscribed. No elevation of rank, no academy privileges, just something meaningful. A mark of survivalâand excellence.â
âAnd what about their Arena Ranking?â someone asked.
Varn smiled faintly. âWe raise it. Slightly. Platinum Tier. Enough to turn heads, not break order.â
The vote passedâunanimous.
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ACADEMY DORMITORY â EVENING
Laziel floated above his bed, hands tucked behind his head, his hoverboard humming beneath him with soft levitation.
The door creaked open.
Kael stepped in slowly, half-buttoned academy coat slung over his shoulders. He looked pale, bruised, but awake.
Laziel smirked. âWell, well. Look who decided to rise from the dead.â
Kael managed a faint smile. âCanât let you hog all the dramatic flair.â
Laziel drifted down and stood. âReks is still out. But heâs stable. Crashed so hard he broke a reinforced pillar.â He chuckled. âSwears he meant to do it. I give him a week before he starts calling it a heroic sacrifice.â
Kael sat on the edge of his bed, rubbing his eyes. His mind was still spinning from everything.
> âWe werenât supposed to survive that,â he said quietly.
Lazielâs smile faded.
> âNo. We werenât.â
A long pause stretched between them.
Then Laziel said, with rare softnessâ
> âBut we did.â
Kael looked down at his handâthe same hand that had ended a high-tier monster just hours ago.
> âIf the fight had started with it fully evolved,â he asked, âdo you think we couldâve won?â
Laziel laughed. âWe barely made it out alive. If it had been at full strength from the beginning?â
He shook his head.
> âToasted. Extra crispy.â
Kael exhaled through his nose.
> Then I have to change. I have to become far more than I am nowâ¦
Before the thought could settle, Laziel grinned again.
> âI know that look, Kael.â He extended a fist. âLetâs become stronger. Together.â
Kael looked at himâand this time, truly smiled.
He bumped the fist. âTogether.â
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The next morning
The dorm door slammed open.
> âIâm back, baby!â shouted a very alive, very loud Reks, arms flung wide like he just conquered death.
He posed dramatically in the doorway, wrapped in bandages with one arm in a sling.
> âDid you two miss me, or did you already start crying?â
Laziel groaned. âWe were actually hoping youâd stay asleep. It was so peaceful.â
Kael raised an eyebrow. âI was more worried the Academy would rebuild the pillar you broke and name it after you.â
Reks grinned proudly. âHey, I softened the landing for that pillar.â
Laziel blinked. â...The pillar?â
Reks shrugged with a lopsided grin. âYeah, well. It broke my fall too. Mutual destruction.â
Kael shook his head. âWe save the academy from a high-tier Veyrith, and this is our reward.â
Reks flopped onto his bed with a wince and a sigh. âNo regrets.â
Laziel stretched his arms. âIâm giving it three days before he claims the Veyrith died from sheer intimidation.â
Reks grinned. âI was the first one it tried to kill. Maybe it knew I was the real threat.â
Kael smirked. âOr maybe it just liked the idea of peace and quiet.â
They all laughed.
The war outside could wait.For now, in this small room of half-bandaged, overachieving first-yearsâthere was nothing but warmth.
And silence, finally earned.