
Khalil Morrison had exactly three rules for surviving Nexus Academy:
One: Keep your head down. Two: Don't make eye contact with anyone above C-Rank. Three: Never, *ever* stand out. For two years, these rules had kept him alive. Alive and invisible, which in a school full of vampires, werewolves, elves, and system users who could level buildings with a thought, was about as good as it got for an F-Rank human with a system so basic it might as well have been a calculator. Kal adjusted his backpack as he navigated the crowded hallway of Nexus Academy, keeping his eyes on the scuffed linoleum floor. Around him, the usual chaos of a Friday afternoon swirled—students laughing, admins floating beside their users like luminous companions, the occasional spark of magic as someone showed off. "Did you see the rankings update?" someone said nearby. "Marcus hit A-Rank. Youngest vampire in the academy to do it." "Of course he did. Voss family probably bought him premium dungeon access." Kal tuned it out. Rankings. Dungeons. Power. None of it mattered when you were at the bottom of the food chain. His system—a pathetic D-Grade support type—had given him exactly one ability in two years: *Enhanced Learning*. Which just meant he absorbed textbook information faster than normal people. Useful for tests. Useless for everything else. His admin, a tiny wisp of pale blue light named Glim, floated beside his shoulder. She didn't talk much. Didn't need to. What was there to say when your user was destined for mediocrity? "Kal! Wait up!" He turned to see Jamal jogging toward him, his own admin—a pixelated sprite called Byte—doing loops around his head. Jay was one of the few people at Nexus who didn't treat Kal like furniture. Probably because Jay was only C-Rank himself, a Tamer whose biggest achievement was contracting with a particularly aggressive squirrel monster. "Yo, you heading to the library?" Jay asked, falling into step beside him. "Yeah. Got that history exam Monday." "Bro, it's Friday. Live a little." Jay grinned, pushing his glasses up. "Some of us are hitting the arcade in Old Town. You should come." Kal shook his head. "Can't afford it." It wasn't entirely true. He had some money saved from his part-time job at a rune shop. But spending it on arcade games felt wasteful when he needed every credit for basic supplies. Potions weren't cheap, and even F-Ranks had to eat. "Your loss, man. But hey—" Jay's expression shifted, becoming more serious. "You good? You've been extra quiet lately." "I'm always quiet." "Yeah, but like... *extra* extra." Kal forced a smile. "I'm fine. Just tired." Jay studied him for a moment, then shrugged. "Alright. But if you change your mind about the arcade, hit me up." They split at the next intersection—Jay heading toward the east exit, Kal continuing to the library. The hallways thinned out as he walked, most students eager to start their weekends. Kal preferred it this way. Fewer people meant fewer chances to accidentally break one of his rules. He was almost to the library when he heard it. "Oh, I'm so sorry!" Kal looked up. A girl stood in front of him, books scattered across the floor. She was human, dark hair pulled into a ponytail, wearing the standard Nexus uniform. Her admin—a soft, motherly light wisp—hovered nearby, radiating concern. "I wasn't watching where I was going," the girl said, kneeling to gather her books. "Are you okay?" Kal blinked. She was talking to *him*. Actually looking at him. "I'm fine," he said automatically, kneeling to help. His hands moved on autopilot, stacking textbooks—Advanced Dungeon Theory, Support Magic Fundamentals, Healing Applications. "You're in the support track?" he asked before he could stop himself. She smiled. It was warm, genuine. "Yeah. B-Rank healer. I know, not very flashy, but someone's gotta keep the fighters alive, right?" "Support's important," Kal said, handing her the last book. "Thank you." She stood, and Kal found himself looking into warm brown eyes that actually *saw* him. Not through him. Not past him. At him. "I'm Sienna, by the way. Sienna Park." "Khalil. Kal." "Nice to meet you, Kal." She adjusted her books, then tilted her head slightly. "Hey, you wouldn't happen to know where Room 3-B is, would you? I'm completely turned around." "It's, uh, down that hall, third door on the left." "You're a lifesaver. Thanks!" She started to walk away, then paused, glancing back. "See you around?" Kal nodded, something warm and unfamiliar settling in his chest. She smiled again—that same genuine smile—and disappeared around the corner. For a moment, Kal just stood there, staring at the empty hallway. Someone had talked to him. Not because they needed homework answers or wanted to copy his notes. Just... talked. Like he was a person. It felt nice. It felt dangerous. Rule three: *Never stand out.* Kal shook his head and continued toward the library. It was nothing. A random encounter. She probably wouldn't even remember his name by Monday. He made it another twenty feet before a voice stopped him cold. "Well, well. What do we have here?" Kal's blood turned to ice. Marcus Voss leaned against the lockers ahead, arms crossed. The vampire was everything Kal wasn't—tall, confident, powerful. His platinum blond hair was perfectly styled, his uniform tailored to fit like it cost more than Kal made in a month. His admin, a sleek blood-red wisp, coiled around his shoulders like a serpent. Behind Marcus stood his usual crew: Trey, a hulking werewolf with a perpetual scowl; Celeste, an elf girl whose beauty was matched only by her cruelty; and some human hanger-on whose name Kal never bothered learning. "Morrison," Marcus said, pushing off the lockers. "Interesting seeing you here." Kal's throat went dry. "Just heading to the library." "Is that so?" Marcus's smile didn't reach his eyes. They were cold, predatory. "You know what I just saw? I saw my girlfriend having a very friendly conversation with you." "It was nothing," Kal said quickly. "She dropped her books. I helped her pick them up." "She *dropped* her books." Marcus took a step closer. "And you, being the *gentleman* you are, just *had* to help." "It wasn't like that—" "Do you know what it looked like to me?" Marcus's voice dropped, losing its casual tone. "It looked like some F-Rank *nobody* was getting a little too comfortable with what's *mine*." "I wasn't—" Kal started backing up. "Look, I don't want any trouble." "Too late for that." Marcus nodded to Trey. "Grab him." Kal ran. He didn't think, didn't plan—just turned and bolted down the hallway. Behind him, he heard laughter and the pounding of footsteps. His heart hammered against his ribs as he took a corner too fast, nearly slamming into the wall. *Stupid. So stupid. Should've just apologized. Should've—* The back exit. If he could make it outside, into the streets, maybe they'd give up. Too many witnesses. Too public. Kal burst through the doors into the late afternoon sun, into the alley behind the academy where students sometimes came to smoke or skip class. Empty. Of course it was empty. He made it five more steps before something slammed into his back. Kal hit the ground hard, asphalt scraping his palms. Before he could recover, rough hands grabbed him, hauling him upright. Trey's grip was iron, pinning his arms behind his back. "Going somewhere?" Marcus walked into the alley, Celeste beside him. The elf's hands glowed with soft violet light—a barrier spell, shimmering into existence around them. Soundproof. Invisible from outside. "Please," Kal gasped. "I didn't do anything. I swear—" "You talked to her." Marcus's fist caught him in the stomach. The air exploded from Kal's lungs. "You *looked* at her." Another punch. Then another. "You think you're someone?" Marcus's voice was almost conversational now, detached. "You think because you exist in the same school as us, that makes you *equal*?" Kal tried to speak, tried to explain, but pain was all there was now. His ribs screamed. Something warm and wet trickled down his chin—blood from his split lip. "You're nothing," Marcus continued. "An F-Rank *human* with a trash system. You should be grateful we even *notice* you." Trey let him drop. Kal crumpled to the ground, curling instinctively around his broken ribs. Through blurred vision, he saw Marcus kneel down, saw the flash of fangs. "Let me make this clear," the vampire said softly. Then he bit down. The pain was liquid fire, flooding through Kal's veins. He tried to scream, but nothing came out. Marcus drank deep, pulling life itself from Kal's body, and when he finally pulled back, his lips were stained red. "Stay away from her," Marcus whispered. "Stay in your lane. Or next time, I won't stop." Footsteps retreated. The barrier dissolved. Kal lay on the cold asphalt, staring up at the darkening sky. His body felt wrong—too light, too empty. Blood pooled beneath him, mixing with the dirt and grime of the alley. *This is it,* he thought distantly. *This is how I die.* Not in a dungeon. Not fighting monsters. Not for anything that mattered. Just because a girl smiled at him. The sky above blurred, colors bleeding together. Kal's breathing came in shallow, painful gasps. Each one weaker than the last. *I just wanted to live.* That was all. Just... live. Maybe make a friend or two. Maybe find something worth existing for. *I just wanted to matter.* But he didn't. He was F-Rank. Nobody. Nothing. The world faded, darkness creeping in from the edges of his vision. And then, in that space between life and death, Kal heard a voice. Smooth. Amused. Impossibly familiar. "Well," it said, "this wasn't supposed to happen." A figure appeared above him—golden, radiant, wearing a crown that seemed both ancient and modern. The face was sharper, older, but undeniably *his*. The figure smiled Kal's smile. "Apologies for the intrusion," it said, kneeling beside his broken body. "But we have work to do. You wanted to live, didn't you?" Kal tried to respond. Couldn't. Everything hurt and felt nothing all at once. "Perfect." The figure reached out, pressing a hand to Kal's chest. Golden light erupted from the touch, warm and terrible. "Let's make sure you get that chance. And this time..." The smile widened. "...let's make it *interesting*." The light consumed everything. Khalil Morrison died on a Friday afternoon, beaten and drained in a dirty alley behind Nexus Academy. And in that death, something far more dangerous was born.Latest Chapter
The Observer
The café was called Grounds for Concern. Kal had never figured out if that was supposed to be funny. It had mismatched chairs, the lighting was that amber color that made everything look slightly expired, and the coffee tasted like the machine hadn't been cleaned since the Integration Accords.Sienna had ordered anyway. She held the cup with both hands and didn't drink it."Start wherever," she said.So he started with the alley.He kept it factual. What Marcus did. What happened after. Waking up with a tiny version of himself floating above him wearing a gold crown and looking extremely pleased about it.Sienna listened. Didn't say anything. At some point her coffee stopped steaming.She looked at his hair. "How long have you had the gold?""Since the dungeon. Glim says it's a marking. Concept integration.""Glim being your original admin. The one who evolved.""Yeah." He turned his cup on the table. "She's different now. Knows too much, tells you about it the way a doctor reads scan
MONDAY MORNING
Monday crept up way too quickly.Kal found himself standing outside Nexus Academy at 7:45 AM, eyeing the building as if it might suddenly lurch at him. Students streamed by in groups—vampires flaunting their designer threads, werewolves decked out in athletic gear, and elves who looked elegant just by being there. Normal humans were scattered about, trying to blend in. System admins of different shapes and shades floated alongside their users like trophies.He'd been away for three days, but it felt more like three years."You know you don't have to go in, right?" Regis chimed in from his shoulder."I made a promise to Professor Cross to stick around," Kal replied."Actually, Diana Foster suggested it," Glim corrected him. "And she's not wrong. Education is like having a backup plan. It's smart.""Plus, if I don't graduate, my caseworker's going to cut off my housing stipend," Kal added."Ah, there it is—the real reason," Regis said with a hint of sarcasm.Kal inhaled deep and made hi
WAREHOUSE MEETING
Building 47 was the kind of place that felt destined for the end.Kal stood outside it at 7:58 PM, his hands tucked into his hoodie pocket as he gazed up at the three grimy stories of rusted metal and shattered windows. The warehouse district was eerily quiet at this hour—no one walking by, no shops open, just the faint buzz of Neo-Chicago thriving somewhere far away from this desolate spot."This is a trap," Jay said, appearing behind him."Jay, I thought you were supposed to be at home.""Yeah, and you're supposed to think things through, but here we are." Jay crossed his arms, Byte flickering nervously next to him. "You really think I was just going to stay home while you waltzed into what's clearly an ambush?"Kal fought the urge to argue but came up short."Just stay behind me," he replied instead."Of course."Just then, Sienna emerged from the shadows to their left, her hood pulled up, with her admin Hana softly glowing at her shoulder. She took a quick look at Jay and let out
GUILD REGISTRY
The Guild Registry occupied a sleek glass tower in the Commercial District—about as far from the Rust District as you could get without leaving Neo-Chicago entirely. The building gleamed in the afternoon sun, all clean lines and magical wards that shimmered like heat waves.Kal stood outside, feeling distinctly out of place in his hoodie and jeans. Around him, professional system users in expensive gear strode past—vampires in tailored suits, elves in enchanted business wear, even a dwarf in what looked like magically reinforced construction equipment that probably cost more than Kal's entire apartment building."You look like you're about to run," Jay observed. He'd insisted on coming along, claiming moral support. Really, Kal suspected Jay just wanted to see inside the Registry."I'm considering it," Kal admitted."Don't," Regis said from his shoulder, invisible to everyone but Kal. "This is an opportunity. Resources, connections, potential contracts. You need these things.""You al
STREET LESSON
The three muggers spread out, forming a loose triangle around Kal. Professional. They'd done this before."Bad decision, kid," the leader said, his enchanted knife glowing brighter. "We were being nice. Now we're taking everything—including those fancy claws."Kal's Absolute Comprehension analyzed them with cold precision:*Leader: C-Rank, Shadow Blade specialist. Speed-focused, low defense. Admin: Serpent-type, poison enhancement likely.**Woman: C-Rank, Beast Transformation. Wolf admin suggests strength build. Close-quarters fighter.**Second Man: C-Rank, Ghost Magic. Spectral admin indicates intangibility or illusion abilities.*Three C-Ranks. Fresh, coordinated, experienced.Against one injured D-Rank who could barely stand."Khalil," Glim said urgently, appearing on his left shoulder. "Your HP is at 89/150. Your shoulder is still healing. You cannot win this fight through conventional means.""So unconventional means?" Regis appeared on his right, crown glinting. "I like where th
RECOVERY AND REVELATION
Kal woke to the smell of antiseptic and the soft hum of healing magic.He was in a recovery room—small, sterile, with white walls and a single window showing the neon-stained night sky of the Rust District. Medical equipment beeped softly beside his bed, monitoring his vitals.His shoulder was wrapped in proper bandages now, glowing faintly with residual healing enchantments. The pain had faded to a dull ache. When he checked his status, his HP read 89/150—still low, but no longer critical."Finally awake," Regis said from his perch on the windowsill. His golden crown caught the neon light. "You've been out for six hours. The healers said you were lucky—another thirty minutes and the blood loss would've been irreversible."Glim floated over, her silver circlet pulsing with concern. "How do you feel?"Kal tested his left arm. Stiff, weak, but functional. "Like I got mauled by a boss monster and survived.""Accurate assessment," Glim said with a small smile.Kal sat up slowly, his body
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