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Ascension of the Cursed Healer
Ascension of the Cursed Healer
Author: Stanterry
CHAPTER 1 – The Day the Healer Failed
Author: Stanterry
last update2025-10-27 01:16:35

The smell of burnt mana filled the air, sharp, metallic, and humiliating. Sparks flickered from Terry Williams’ trembling hands as the shattered remains of a healing crystal lay at his feet.

The entire class stood in silence for a heartbeat, then the laughter began. “Did you see that?” someone jeered. “He can’t even stabilize a basic Heal Orb!”

Terry didn’t lift his head. His fingers still twitched from the backlash of failed magic. His body ached, but not as much as his pride.

Around him, dozens of students in silver academy robes glowed faintly with magical aura, the mark of competence. Terry’s aura was invisible, nonexistent.

“Pathetic,” muttered Instructor Vale, striding past him with a cold stare. “Five years at Valoria Academy and not a single advancement. Williams, you’re dismissed from the program.”

The words hit harder than any spell. “Wait, please,” Terry said, his voice cracking. “I can do better. I just”

Vale turned sharply, eyes glowing faint blue. “You’ve wasted enough of our time. A healer without mana is a doctor without medicine. You don’t belong here.”

The room’s laughter erupted again. Terry’s fists clenched. “One day… I’ll prove you wrong.”

A mocking chuckle followed him as he stormed out of the training hall, his robes half-burned from mana recoil. Rain had begun to fall outside, thin, cold, relentless.

He walked aimlessly through Valoria’s lower district, where the glow of neon signs mixed with magical fog. Behind the shimmering towers of the elite, the slums pulsed with desperation and cheap enchantments.

“Need a charm, kid?” a street vendor called out. “Protection spell, love potion, something to make you less useless?”

Terry ignored him, ducking under a half-broken awning. His hands trembled again, not from pain this time, but rage. “Useless healer,” he whispered bitterly. “Maybe they’re right.”

“Maybe,” came a voice behind him, low and rough, like gravel scraping steel. “Or maybe they just don’t see what you really are.”

Terry spun around. An old man leaned against a lamp post, face hidden beneath a tattered hood. His eyes gleamed with strange golden light. “Who are you?” Terry demanded.

The stranger stepped forward, rain sizzling as it touched his cloak. “Someone who once failed the same way you did. They called me useless too.”

Terry frowned. “You… were a healer?”

“I was many things.” The man smiled faintly. “Healer, warrior, sinner. But mostly, I was alive because I stopped caring what they called me.”

He extended a hand. His palm was covered in faint scars that glowed faintly with blue light, magic intertwined with muscle. Terry hesitated. “Why are you telling me this?”

“Because I saw what happened in that hall. The way your hands reacted. You’re no ordinary healer.”

Terry scoffed. “I can’t even form a basic spell.”

The old man chuckled. “You tried to heal… and the crystal exploded outward, didn’t it? That’s not failure. That’s rejection.”

“Rejection?”

“Your energy refuses the passive form of healing. It’s fighting to escape. You’re a restorative emitter, someone whose power restores through force. You can’t heal gently… but you can heal by pain.”

Terry blinked, not sure whether to laugh or run. “You’re insane.”

“Maybe. But I can show you how to turn that curse into a weapon.”

Lightning flashed above, illuminating the man’s face for the first time. Terry’s breath caught. The man’s left eye was gone, replaced by a shimmering rune that pulsed like a heartbeat.

“Who are you?” Terry whispered again.

“They called me Corvin the Butcher once,” the man said quietly. “But you can call me Master.”

Silence hung between them, broken only by the rain and the faint hum of distant mana engines.

Terry’s thoughts churned. Every instinct screamed to walk away, but somewhere deep inside, something darker whispered: This is your chance.

He took the man’s hand. A surge of energy ripped through him, hot, wild, alive. Terry gasped, falling to one knee as light burst from his palms, spiraling with both healing blue and destructive red.

Corvin smiled grimly. “Yes… you’re perfect.”

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