Regaining consciousness was not something like a sudden shock, but a slow, unwilling wave breaking upon the deserted shore. The first thing Leo knew was the smell, not the sterile, antiseptic smell of a hospital, but a compound odor of dried herbs, ozone and something old, something like sun-baked stone and an old parchment, and so forth. The second one was the light. It was an airy flickering light which was throbbing softly in the eyelids of his closed eyes in cerulean and silver.
He opened his eyes. He was lying on a low cot, and in a blanket of impossibly soft, grey wool. It was a circular room with smooth pale-colored walls which had a certain glow of their own. But it was the atmosphere in which he breathed that took away the breath. Dozen of burning runes, all symbols, intricate and three-dimensional, multiplied slowly around his cot in a sphere. They flicked a gentle, all-rhythmic light on, and as they swiveled gave varying patterns on the walls and the floor. There were some the cool blue of a dark glacier, and some the warm gold of sunshine, and some there was glowing with a worrying, faint criminal. He was having the peculiar, uncomfortable sensation that they were reading him. The alienation was cool and deep. This wasn't his world. A familiar infirmary and its clean lines and fluorescent lights were a distant thing in the past. In this case, even healing was esoteric, alien. He was an impostor, a banal cog, pushed into the mystical machine in which he belonged. "Vital signs have stabilized. Essence leakage contained. The runic lattice is running well enough nomenally. The voice of the Warden was a kind of cold like shiver in his brain. It was called... critical, perceptive, as though he were examining something that was a malfunctioning piece of machinery. Where are we? Leo wondered, the cry that is screaming in the silence of my skull. "The Aethelgard Infirmary. Main medical school of the Mage Academy. The runic array is a Diagnostic and Containment Field of Class-III. Your signature of the essence was swinging here and there on arrival, which caused our quarantine measures to work automatically. Quarantine? Panic, a shiver, javelined into him. Are they going to dissect me? "Unlikely. Their practices imply conservation and analysis, rather than dissection. You are a novelty." Another instant he had to think about the horror of being a novelty, the runes which hung round him were flickering and fading into the wall until the room was no more than a room, though a room with magical lights round it and a circular form. The door, which was a smooth piece of wall which he had not even caught sight of, slid open a few minutes later with a whisper of stone on stone. A man stood there. He was tall and thin, and wore plain, dark grey robes, his hair a shock of unruly white, which stood in a great contrast to a face which looked too young to have it. His eyes were piercing, stormy grey, and they went glaring over the room and came to rest on Leo with an intensity that was disturbing. At his shoulder flew a little crystal-like slate, which was covered with moving writing. "You're awake. Good, man, good, his voice was dry and not warm. He didn't introduce himself. He had moved into the room, and the slate was floating along submissively beside him. "I am Professor Riven. I supervise abnormal admissions. What is your spatial coherence?" Leo only gawked, with his mouth open. "My… what?" The eyes of Riven were narrowed. He lightly touched his fingers, and the crystalline slate has moved nearer to Leo. The effects of an unauthorized portal transit include disorientation. To a coming one, in particular, one who, as it were, had arrived. Your name." It wasn't a question. It was a demand. "Leo," he managed to croak. "Leo Aris." Riven passed his fingers in the air, and writing ran over the slate. He frowned. The system is recording your voice input, but it is failing to match your file. He looked at the slate, then at Leo, and his eyes stayed on the shining brand that was imprinted on the palm of Leo, who lay on the blanket. "Show me your Codex." "My… what?" "The System Interface. The expression of your relationship. Summon it." Leo had no idea how to do that. He looked down and saw his own hands helpless. The Warden did not scruple, however. Obedience to the command of authority. The world before the eyes of Leo broke. Or rather, it was overlaid. The Codex--so it was its name--grew out in his vision, much more elaborate and vivid than in his bedroom. It was no more a pale mist, but a solid, complex fabric of light. His name, LEO ARIS, was rising in gleaming glyphs on the top. The four stats mentioned by the Warden days ago were next below it, now marked plainly, MIND, WILL, ESSENCE, BODY. They also had poor values with most having a low of just a meager 4 or 5. Other sections included SKILLS, which was empty except the one, greyed out glyph of the Lumen Spell and stage, UNBOUND INITIATE. Professor Riven had his own slate to study and the scowl on his face deepened to a frown. "This is… irregular." He tapped the slate sharply. Your name is in the Academy Registry. It recognizes the Warden-summons. But your file student file... it is a ghost. It's blank." His angry eyes pierced Leo as he looked up. "No bloodline listed. No affinity assessment. No pre-enrollment testing. Not even a place of birth outside of Mortal Realm. The system is like it knows you exist but it does not know about what you are. The turn of the blank file came out like a physical blow. He could not fit here even here, in this place of magic and wonder. He was a glitch. A fault in their ideal, mystic system. The sense of being a pretender added to it, hardening into a more sinister state. Riven leaned in, his voice lowered to the whisper of a word that was no more than a hiss to Leo, a foreshadowing that wasn't even sharp enough to pass as such, but which made Leo shiver again. A Warden can not be here... no more. They were decommissioned. Scrapped. How did you come by one?" And before Leo was able to lie, Riven drew himself erect, his face flinty with professionalism again. "No matter. The Registrar will have a fit." He made another gesture, and the slate came flying by, bursting through the open doorway. "Get up. Your physical form is intact. Orientation is in twenty minutes. Try not to cause a scene." And with that he walked off, the stone door closing down after him, and Leo was left alone, in the throbbing light of the infirmary. He shook his legs down at the edge of the cot and the feet came in contact with the cold smooth rock. He felt heavy in his body because of the mere impossibility of his situation. He was in a magic academy. His file was blank. A professor heard about the Warden and apparently believed that it was a relic which belonged to a scrap heap. He glanced down on his branded palm, and about the foreign room. This was his first actual encounter with the environment of the Academy, and one of cold analysis and puzzling mystery. They were not greeted, but evaluated. It was not warm, it was just hierarchical. He was at the very bottom of it. When he stood there full of a great feeling of solitude his own Codex, which had passively hung there, twinkled. The interface was glowing with a steady, yellow light that shivered like a broken neon lamp. The glyphs became indistinct, disorganized and in a moment of dread it seemed that the whole system was going to degenerate right out of sight. Then another window had forced its way to the fore of the UI. It was not like the others, darker, having a border of jagged and obsidian glyphs. There was one piece of writing in the middle of the window, in full-blooded, rude type, as though it were meant to cut his eyes. It was a voice. but it was not cold and regal about the Warden. It was yet another thing, more deeply touching, more sonorous, a noise of shifting tectonic plates and the moaning of a star that was dying. It was the voice of the System himself. "WE ARE UNFINISHED." The words were displayed in his eyes with a shocking, absolute truth. The window then disappeared and his Codex fell to the usual stable presentation as though nothing had occurred. Leo was paralyzed and his blood was ice-cold. The melodramatic suspense was a hole that was opening under his feet. The Warden was another thing--another being, a parasite, a pilot. But this, this was the structure of this world outlawing him, or maybe, realizing something in its own make up which was amiss. The fact that struck him was a crushing one; he was not simply different with the other students whom he had not properly encountered yet. He was a nonconformity to the reality of the Academy itself. It was an internal and immediate conflict. The system of Academy did not know what to do with him. Professor Riven had his suspicions. There were two options, a desperate dilemma: he can keep this anomaly, this incompleteness of his status, and attempt to fit in, to pretend his way out of whatever follows. Or he might tell it, make his submission to a system that viewed him as a ghost in the machine, and a professor who viewed his supreme secret as a scrap of forbidden stuff. He glanced at the door, and then down at the brand on his palm, an emblem of a fate which he had never desired. Hiding it was a risk. It was a higher one to report it. With a trembling breath, Leo Aris, the Unbound Initiate whose file was blank, and whose Codex had not been filled in, approached the door. Surviving at least meant keeping silent. He would hide. He had to. Since the voice of the Codex had not spoken like a malfunction. It had sounded like a promise... and he was appalled at what it was going to complete.Latest Chapter
CHAPTER 52: Freedom Through Annihilation
The consciousness came back to Leo not in the form of some soft dawn, but in the form of a sequence of shocking, out of place perceptions that coalesced themselves into a reality with which he was unfamiliar. It was a throbbing, aching pain, which ran through his whole being, a deep-rooted weariness, but it was not a weariness which cried out To sleep, but rather a weariness like his soul being spread like a long piece of thread over a vast mule and woven back together, in a hit-and-miss fashion. The second was smell--an overwhelming jumble of damp earth and the tang of unwashed bodies and the acrid odor of ozone and rusted machine. It was almost the opposite of the dry, incensed atmosphere of the Academy or the primordial, electric buzz of the Root Terminal. This was a desperate and rotten place.He lay on a pallet of rough and scratchy blankets, and was snuggled into a niche of what seemed to be a great, natural cavern, the roughly-hewn sides thereof artificially swelled and strengt
CHAPTER 51: Leo Descends
The crystal in Leo’s palm was no longer inert data; it had become a lodestone, its pull an undeniable physical force drawing him downward. It was a sinkhole in his consciousness, and he was letting himself fall. He left Riven standing amidst the ashes of knowledge, a solitary sentinel at the gate of a past that no longer mattered. No farewells were exchanged. The time for teachers and teachings had reached its bitter end.His descent was a harrowing journey through layered realities, each step downward amplifying a profound and chilling dread. He navigated the Academy's deepest underbelly, a claustrophobic world of shrieking mana-conduits and grinding arcane machinery that pulsed like a diseased heart. Lethal security wards, designed to atomize any intruder, flared with malevolent light at his approach. A single, focused glance from his void-eye was enough, a subtle mental command editing their core `[TARGETING_PARAMETERS]` from `[INTRUDER: TERMINATE]` to `[ENTITY: NULL_STATUS]`. He d
CHAPTER 50
The silence in the wake of Aria’s vacant gaze was a physical weight, a suffocating blanket that smothered sound and hope in equal measure. Leo stood paralyzed before her cell door, the cold of the white alloy seeping through his palms and into his bones, a chill that had nothing to do with temperature and everything to do with the void opening inside his own chest. The two wardens were recovering their footing, their focus shifting from the unstable energy field back to him, the primary anomaly. He could feel their intent to apprehend him hardening, a palpable shift in the `[THREAT_ASSESSMENT]` variable hovering around them like a targeting reticle.He couldn't stay. He was unable to battle them without inflicting irreversible harm to the fragile stabilizer field, to her. And he was not able to take one more minute to stare into those eyes and not see a face he knew looking out of them.His last desperate glance at the covered slit, a last, hopeless effort to revive her memory, with,
CHAPTER 49: The Anchor
Leo had been scalped open with the realization of his father, the reality a fresh and bleeding cut. The great office, the man on his knees, the power offered all seemed to be the scene in the life of another, some play where he had been thrust on the stage without knowing his part. But the philosophical agonies of that discovery were immediately replaced by a chillier, more animal and more desperate terror: ‘Aria’. His father would be unconditional in his anger after his devastating rejection and she was the most susceptible, the most prized chess piece in this heavenly game. It was she that his father could still use to checkmate him.He was a ghost in the Academy, pursued by his new, ungrounded presence, in some measure deforming the reality behind him. A wall sconce flickering would, becoming, a moment of a heart beat, a bunch of burning mushrooms. A strip of passage suddenly smelled not of polished stone and ozone, but of rain-laden earth and the smell of diesel smoke of the Morta
CHAPTER 48: The Keeper's Son
The world had narrowed, compressed, and then shattered, all in the space between one heartbeat and the next. The ornate office, with its soaring shelves of forbidden knowledge and the imposing desk that was the nerve center of an empire, fell away. The only things that existed were the kneeled form of the most powerful man Leo had ever known, and the two words that had just detonated the foundation of his reality.‘My son.’Silence, thick and heavy as a burial shroud, filled the room. Leo could hear the frantic, rabbit-pulse of his own heart, a frantic drumbeat against the stillness. The dual vision from his mismatched eyes made the moment surreal, a fractured nightmare. His right eye saw his father—’his father’—head bowed, a picture of submission. His left eye saw the cold, intricate code of the man’s aura, a complex tapestry of `[AUTHORITY: MAX]`, `[DECEPTION: 94%]`, and a flickering, almost hidden variable he’d never seen before: `[AFFECTION: CONFLICTED]`.“Get up.” His voice was a
CHAPTER 47: A Legacy of Blood and Code
The recognition was not a surrender. It was a catalyst.As Eryndor’s void-blade touched his soul, Leo did not see a future of darkness. He saw the root of it. He felt the exact, agonizing moment, repeated across a hundred cycles, where the weight of love and loss became too much to bear. He felt the seductive whisper of the System, not as an enemy, but as a grieving friend offering the only solace it knew: the end of feeling. And in that shared, horrific understanding, Leo found his weapon.It was not a blade of light or will. It was a single, defiant memory, polished to a brilliant, unassailable point. The memory of Aria, not as the Academy’s Vessel, but as herself. The feel of her hand in his in the Astral Gardens. The fierce, protective light in her eyes when she stood by him. The promise they had made. A memory untouched by the System’s logic, untainted by the despair of cycles. A variable it could not compute.He did not push the void away. He embraced it, and in that embrace, he
You may also like

System for you Darling!
CrazeNovel20.8K views
Divine Farming System Vol. 2: Searching for Way to Revival
K. C. Oiranar19.3K views
Crash-landed On An Island With Nine Beauties
Zuxian202.0K views
My Sniper System
kuhaku_sora22.6K views
A World on Endless System
Richivest3.1K views
Rise Of The Powerful Husband
Dark Crafter24.4K views
The Game Master’s Apocalypse
Alia Writes 299 views
Earth God System
Dark Lec4.6K views