At dawn, Arcvale Academy slept.
The towers, carved from pale stone and etched with ancient runes, stood shrouded in mist like monuments to forgotten gods. Soft light filtered through crystalline windows, catching on dust motes drifting silently through the grand halls. Elemental wards hummed faintly in the background — unseen but omnipresent — pulsing with layered enchantments to protect the academy from intrusions both magical and mundane.
But beyond the wards… in the untamed wildwood where Arcvale’s control began to fade… the earth stirred — slowly, unevenly, like a creature still learning to breathe.
A tremor rolled through the roots and moss, more uncertain than violent. And at the center of that fragile disturbance stood Zarek Vonn — barefoot, breathless, and shaking — locked in a clumsy struggle not against an enemy, but against his own weakness. His heel dug into the soil with effort, knees wobbling as he braced himself. He let out a grunt, not of power — but frustration.
A small rise in the ground answered—not a pillar or a spike, but a jagged mound of earth, barely shin-high and crumbling at the edges. Zarek collapsed to one knee, arms limp, chest rising and falling in desperate gasps. Sweat soaked through his shirt, and his skin was smeared with dirt and bruises, the kind earned from countless failed repetitions.
He wiped his brow with a shaky hand. “Again…”
“Feel it. Shape it,” he whispered through gritted teeth.
He forced himself upright, legs unsteady. Both arms extended forward, fingers twitching with strain. A new spike of rock edged upward, crooked and barely formed. It trembled under its own weight — and then, like his balance, it faltered and fell. He winced and doubled over, hands on knees, throat raw and dry.
“That’s… wall number three,” he muttered, half-laughing, half-coughing.
Around him, a ragged ring of broken attempts and unsteady formations marked the training ground he’d carved from the wildwood. The terrain was uneven, scarred with failed efforts — stumps split from misfires, vines blackened by minor magical surges. Moss had peeled away where his tremors had struck, revealing the raw, scraped earth beneath.
This wasn’t a master’s arena. This was a novice’s proving ground. Not built with strength — but with stubbornness. Because Zarek Vonn had no teacher. No bloodline of prestige. No elemental guide but instinct and pain.
Far from Arcvale’s grand towers, in the poorest stretch of the commoner district, his home was a slumped shack of cracked wood and leaking roof tiles. But beneath its rotted floorboards, buried in silence and dust, he had found something that changed everything. A wooden chest—old, damp, and forgotten.
Inside: martial scrolls. Their surfaces cracked and brittle, the parchment yellowed with age and singed around the edges as if they had narrowly escaped a long-forgotten blaze. Each page was densely covered with intricate symbols—flowing diagrams of stances, detailed sequences of breath control, and precise instructions that wove disciplined movement with raw, untamed force. The ink had faded in places, but the weight of generations of training seemed to pulse from the fragile pages, as if the very energy of those who once studied them still lingered within the fibers.
At the bottom of one scroll, scrawled in familiar handwriting:
“Joren Vonn,” — His father.
Zarek stared at the name for a long time. He didn’t remember the man well. Just the scent of smoke and steel. The feeling of being carried under starlight.
On another page:
“Power is useless without control. A strong body anchors a strong will.”
Zarek had whispered the words aloud like a prayer, though they felt strange on his tongue. He barely knew his father—just a tired man who worked the land from dawn till dusk, powerless to shield his family from hunger or harm. No magic, no grand legacy—just grit and quiet suffering. How had this same man left behind scrolls like these? What had he hidden in silence all those years? He shook his head, trying to push the questions away. There was no time for doubt—not now. He needed to focus. To train. To turn weakness into strength.
Now, standing on shaking legs within his crude stone circle, he moved—feet apart, shoulders tense, left palm raised; step, shift, breathe. The motions were clunky. Every strike felt like moving through mud. His balance tipped often. His muscles cramped. But with each repetition, his form sharpened. His body started to remember — or maybe it was just learning for the first time.
“Elemental martial arts,” he murmured. “If I can link it… fuse the movement with the magic…” He didn’t finish the thought. Because right now, he couldn’t even hold the magic for more than a few breaths before it fought back — draining him like it didn’t belong in him yet. But he’d keep trying.
Snap.
A twig cracked.
Zarek flinched, spinning clumsily. His arms jerked forward, and a sputtering sheet of earth shot up as a flimsy shield — barely knee-high.
A voice followed—smooth, cool, irritated: “You really are hiding something.”
Aven stepped from the trees, her robes untouched by sweat or mud. The wind moved around her like it obeyed her without question. She looked across the scarred clearing, her pale blue eyes narrowing with subtle disapproval.
Zarek’s shield crumbled instantly. His body sagged with exhaustion. “I don’t want trouble,” he said hoarsely.
“Too late,” she replied, walking slowly around one of the half-formed stone pillars. “You’re training with earth magic… alone. That’s illegal.”
The breeze lifted her hair slightly. She didn’t raise her voice. “You know what they do to unlicensed mages in this kingdom.”
Zarek’s fists clenched, more from shame than anger. “I didn’t steal this power,” he said. “It just… came.”
Aven gave a tired sigh. “They all say that.”
“I’m not one of them.”
She looked at him for a long time, face unreadable, but her eyes—sharp and glinting—didn’t soften. “We’ll see,” she said at last. “I’m watching you, Vonn. But don’t go hard on yourself—Ren told me you’ve been training like crazy since you got the powers. Your body’s too weak to handle this. Rest, or the magic will kill you.”
Then—a whisper of wind, a blur of movement—and she was gone. Zarek stood in silence, the weight of her words like stone on his shoulders. He turned back to his half-formed wall. The one that had taken more energy than it was worth. His body felt like it might collapse with one more breath.
But his eyes still burned. “I don’t care if they watch me or if I die,” he said quietly.
He stepped back into stance—trembling, slow—but determined: left foot grounded, right hand pulled back; his father’s scrolls echoed in his mind. The stone cracked—barely—dust puffed upward, his knuckles split, weak arms, unsteady magic, pain with every breath, but still he moved.
Fist to rock, blood to earth, strength to will—from weakness, he would rise. Zarek would make the magic obey him—not because he was born to it, but because he earned it.
Not even the gods would deny him that.

Latest Chapter
Chapter 015 – Serpent's Path
The serpent’s tunnel narrowed into a throat of stone, the walls pressing close like clenched jaws. The air grew blistering hot, thick with the stench of sulfur and scorched minerals, each breath clawing at Zarek’s lungs. Smoke clung to the rock like damp cobwebs, curling in slow, choking tendrils. He pressed forward, each step a battle against the heat that wrapped around him like a living thing. The walls pulsed with a dull, ominous glow—veins of magma threading through the stone like arteries, casting flickering shadows that danced like phantoms.It was as if he were walking deeper into the belly of a beast. The mountain breathed—a slow, rumbling exhale that vibrated beneath his boots. It growled in its depths, a constant, guttural sound that echoed through the tunnel, broken only by the sharp hiss of escaping steam. Zarek wiped the sweat from his brow, though it did little good; his skin was already slick, his armor burning hot against his back.Then he heard it.Not the groan of s
Chapter 014 – Ulmfang Mountains
The Ulmfang Mountains rose out of the void like the jagged ribs of some ancient titan, their peaks black and sharp, lost in storm clouds that never parted. No sun ever touched this place. The world here was stone, storm, and silence. Lightning arced across the cliffs in eerie silence, and the growl of thunder rumbled low in the mist, like the beastly breath of the mountain itself. The air was heavy with heat, as though the bones of the world burned beneath the rock. Each gust of wind carried with it the scent of scorched earth and ozone, mingling with the faint, metallic tang of distant ash. The sky above was a churning, bruised canvas of slate and smoke, crackling with energy that never released its fury fully—only hints like whispers. The mountains did not merely loom—they loathed. There was something in the silence that smothered sound, a weight that pressed into the chest and curled cold fingers around the heart. Every stone seemed placed with purpose, like pieces of a vast monume
Chapter 013 – The Serpent Sigil
The wheels of the carriage groaned beneath Zarek as it pulled away from the spires of Arcvale Academy, grinding over weatherworn stones slick with dew and old magic. The sound was rhythmic, almost hypnotic, like a chant murmured by the bones of the road itself. Morning mist clung to the ground in gauzy layers, curling around the base of the trees like fingers reluctant to let go. Behind him, the sunrise painted the sky in hues of gold and crimson, as though the world itself bled light across the horizon. But Zarek did not look back. He couldn't afford to. If he looked, he might see his mother still whispering his name under her breath, might see Ren’s half-hearted grin faltering, or Aven’s eyes burning with all the words she hadn't yet spoken.And if he saw them, he might not keep walking.He clenched his jaw and pressed his palm harder against the worn seat, willing the ache behind his ribs to stay silent. This was not the time for doubt, or for mourning, or for anything soft.The Ac
Chapter 012 – I’ll Be Your Damnation
The iron doors slammed shut behind him like a judge’s final decree, sealing Zarek inside a chamber of nightmares. The sudden darkness pressed against his skin like a second, colder flesh, an invasive presence that seeped into his bones. His boots dragged across the tiles, slick with old blood, blackened chemicals, and something far fouler, a viscous slime that spoke of unspeakable experiments. Each step left red trails that vanished into the oppressive gloom of the maze of horrors around him. The silence was not empty. It breathed with the low hum of dormant machinery. It watched with the palpable weight of a thousand unseen eyes. It judged him for the sin of being alive within its profane grasp.Malrik’s private lab was no place for mortals. It was a cathedral of twisted science and desecrated magic, a perverse sanctuary where the boundaries of life were not just crossed but obliterated. Towering vats filled with churning blue ichor lined the walls, each one a prison for atrocities i
Chapter 011 – Cryo Wing Three
The double doors hissed open with a burst of steam and a hollow clang, like the exhale of a dying machine. Two armored guards shoved Zarek forward, their grip iron and merciless. He stumbled into the chamber beyond, his boots hitting the frostbitten floor with a loud crunch that echoed through the silent, frozen air. The doors sealed shut behind him with a metallic slam that sounded far too final. He was alone.The cold struck him like a weapon. Not the kind of cold that numbed the skin — this cold reached inside him, stabbing into his bones, sinking its claws into his spine. The walls were wrapped in creeping frost, spidering across the steel in patterns that pulsed with dim blue light. It felt less like a room and more like a tomb—ancient, sterile, and merciless. In the middle stood a towering cryo-tank, massive and cylindrical, humming with a low, almost mournful energy. Tubes slithered out from its base, burrowing into the floor like roots from a mechanical tree.Inside the tank,
Chapter 010 – The Steel Door
The heavy steel door slammed shut behind Zarek. The loud, metal sound broke the silence like a scream trapped in iron, echoing down the dark, narrow halls underground. This wasn’t just a door closing—it felt like his fate was being sealed. The air smelled of rust and old wet stone, the kind of smell that clings to your skin and reminds you of death. Zarek didn’t move. He leaned against the freezing concrete wall, the cold sinking into his bones like something alive, slowly eating at him. He breathed through clenched teeth, each breath tasting of mold, metal, and something sharp and strange—a scent he feared without knowing why. Even in the darkness, small flames danced around his knuckles. They gave off no warmth and brought no comfort. They flickered silently, like they were feeding on old memories, refusing to disappear—just like the past he couldn’t forget.The visions came back, as they always did—unwanted and cruel. He saw the villagers again. Their faces were frozen, lifeless an
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