TORTURED ME, TO AWAKEN AS AN SSS DRAGON
TORTURED ME, TO AWAKEN AS AN SSS DRAGON
Author: Kashish
Chapter 1
Author: Kashish
last update2026-05-24 17:29:50

"Moretti. Dante Moretti."

The examiner called his name without looking up. Dante walked to the front of the hall, past rows of students who didn't bother turning their heads. The Awakening Stone sat on the altar, pale and smooth, glowing faint blue from the last student who'd touched it. That student, a girl named Chiara, had scored a B-rank affinity. The whole room had clapped for her.

Dante placed his palm flat against the stone.

Nothing happened.

The glow didn't change. Didn't flicker. The stone sat under his hand like a dead thing, cold and ordinary, and the silence that followed was the kind that crawled under your skin and stayed there.

"Unranked," the examiner read from the display. He finally looked up. "No measurable affinity. No latent core. You may step down."

Laughter started somewhere near the back. Not loud. Not yet.

"Move it, Moretti. You're holding up the line."

That was Renzo Cavalli, leaning back in his seat with his arms crossed and a grin splitting his face like he'd been waiting for this all morning. The boys around him were already shaking with it, biting their lips, elbowing each other.

"Unranked," Renzo repeated, loud enough for the entire hall. "They should make a new category for you. Z-rank. Below the insects. Below the worms that eat the insects."

Dante pulled his hand off the stone. His fingers were steady. That surprised him.

"At least worms serve a purpose," another voice called out. Matteo Ferraro, Renzo's shadow, never far behind. "They break down dead things. What do you break down, Moretti? Air?"

More laughter. Louder now.

"Enough," the examiner cut in, but his voice carried no real force behind it. He was already writing Dante's result into the ledger, already moving on.

Dante walked back to his seat. He didn't look at anyone. His jaw was tight and his chest burned like someone had poured something hot into the space between his lungs, but his face gave away nothing. He had learned that much. You give them your face and they eat it. You keep it blank and they get bored. Eventually.

The rest of the ceremony blurred past him. Names he didn't care about. Ranks he would never hold. B. C. One more B. An A-rank that made the whole room gasp. He sat through all of it with his hands flat on his knees and his eyes on the floor.

Talentless.

The word had a taste. Flat and metallic, like biting down on something that shouldn't be in your mouth.

After the ceremony, the hallway was worse. Renzo found him again near the east corridor, this time with four others. They blocked the path like it was something they'd practiced.

"Hey, Moretti." Renzo tilted his head, smiling that same loose smile. "I've been thinking about it. You know what you remind me of? A snake with no fangs. Just a belly dragging through the dirt, hoping nobody steps on it."

"A snake's still too generous," Matteo added. "Snakes can at least squeeze something to death. This one can't even squeeze a passing grade."

"You done?" Dante's voice came out flat.

Renzo stepped closer. "No, actually. I want to understand something. Why do you come here every day? What do you think is going to happen? You think one morning you'll wake up and the stone will light up for you?" He leaned in, dropping his voice to something almost gentle, which made it worse. "It won't. You know that, right? You're nothing. You were born nothing and you'll die nothing, and every day you walk through these doors, you're just reminding everyone what failure looks like."

Dante stared at him. The burn in his chest had spread up into his throat, pressing against the back of his teeth. He swallowed it down.

"My sister's waiting," he said, and pushed past Renzo's shoulder.

Nobody stopped him. They just laughed.

Lucia was standing by the car when he got outside, and the sight of her loosened something inside his ribs that had been clenched all day. She was leaning against the passenger door, her school bag slung over one shoulder, and her whole body was practically vibrating.

"Dante!" She grabbed his arm before he could even reach for his keys. "You won't believe it. Fallen Sun sent a recruiter. To the academy. For me."

"Fallen Sun?" He stopped walking. "That's top five."

"Top three, actually. They moved up after the Valterra campaign." She was grinning so wide it almost looked painful. "They want to meet with me next week. A formal sit down. The recruiter told Professoressa Rinaldi that my combat aptitude scores are the highest they've seen in six years."

Something warm spread through his chest, and for a second it pushed out everything else. The ceremony. Renzo. The dead stone under his palm.

"Lu, that's incredible."

"I know!" She bounced on her heels like she was twelve again, not sixteen. "Mamma is going to lose her mind. Can you imagine her face?"

He could. Gianna Moretti, who worked double shifts at the textile mill and came home smelling like chemical dye, who never once complained about it, whose only extravagance was the small glass of wine she poured herself on Friday nights. She would cry. She would try not to, and then she would.

"She'll say something about Papa," Lucia added, quieter now. She glanced at him sideways. "She always does when something big happens. That thing about how he was special."

"Special," Dante repeated. The word meant nothing. Their mother had given them that single word like a locked box with no key, and every time they tried to ask more, she sealed the conversation shut with a look that said the subject was not a door but a wall.

"Get in," he told Lucia. "Let's go tell her."

They pulled onto the main road, Lucia talking nonstop about Fallen Sun's training compound, their sponsorship contracts, the legendary S-rank awakener who founded the guild forty years ago. Dante let her voice fill the car. It was the only sound in the world he never wanted to turn down.

Then the sky broke.

It didn't darken. It split, like fabric pulled too tight across something massive underneath. Red bled through the cracks, not sunset red but wrong red, the color of old wounds reopened. The wind that had been pushing through the open windows just stopped, and the air turned thick and still.

"Dante." Lucia's voice changed completely.

He pulled the car to the shoulder. Through the windshield, the horizon was coming apart. Black shapes pushed through the red tears in the sky, pouring down like smoke given weight and hunger. Blightbearers. He'd seen them in textbooks, in grainy combat footage shown during safety drills. D-rank creatures. The kind that required trained squads with proper gear.

"Stay in the car," he told her.

"Are you insane?" She was already unbuckling her seatbelt. Silver light gathered around her right hand, bright and liquid, forming into the shape of a blade. Her awakened ability, raw and untrained but real. "There are people on the road, Dante. I can see them running."

"You don't have armor. You don't have backup."

"And they don't have time." She kicked the door open and ran toward the nearest cluster of shadows.

He went after her. Of course he did. What else was there? She was the only person in his life who looked at him and saw someone worth knowing, and she was sprinting toward a pack of creatures that could tear through soldiers.

He had nothing. No power. No weapon. Nothing but his legs and the stupid, burning refusal to stand still while she fought alone.

Lucia cut through the first Blightbearer with a sweep of her silver blade, and the thing shrieked and dissolved into black ash. Two more came from the left. She spun, caught one across its jaw, ducked under the claw of another. She was fast. Gifted. Everything the stone had promised she would be.

The largest one came from behind.

Dante saw it before she did. A shape twice the size of the others, low to the ground, moving with a speed that didn't match its bulk. Its mouth opened and black rot dripped from teeth that looked like they were made from the same darkness as the sky.

"Lucia, behind you!"

She turned, but too late. The thing was already lunging, claw extended, aimed at her chest.

Dante didn't think. His body moved on its own, covering the distance between them in three steps that felt like falling forward, and he threw himself into the space between his sister and the claw.

It went through his ribs like they weren't there.

Pain swallowed everything. White, then nothing, then white again. He felt his knees hit the ground. He felt Lucia screaming his name from somewhere far above him. He felt the warmth leaving his body in a rush, pouring out of the hole in his chest where something important used to be.

So this is what it's like.

His blood didn't fall.

It hung in the air around him, suspended, each drop catching light that wasn't coming from anywhere. Crimson glass, floating, spinning slowly, and the world went quiet in a way that had nothing to do with silence. Something was in that quiet. Not a voice. Something older than voices, bigger than language, pressing against the inside of his skull with a question he could feel but not hear.

[Mother System activated. Reawakening initiated.]

The red sky, the monsters, Lucia's screams, his own dying body. All of it folded inward, collapsing into a point of light so bright it burned through the back of his closed eyes.

The last thing Dante Moretti knew was the feeling of being unmade, and somewhere beneath the nothing, the faintest pulse of something waiting to begin.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app
Next Chapter

Latest Chapter

  • chapter 98: part-2

    He failed differently.He adjusted again.About an hour in, Vorak's head came up from his forepaws."He's doing it," Vorak said.Pride unfolded his arms.Azark opened his eyes.Dante was floating. One meter off the floor, both feet clear, his body holding a reasonable approximation of vertical with the skin-flow running in the continuous circuit Pride had described. The distribution wasn't perfect, a slight excess at the left shoulder, a thin spot at the right hip, but the overall system was holding and he wasn't falling.He stayed up.He moved.Not far, not fast, not with any confidence about what he was doing or where he was going, but he crossed three meters of the training room floor without touching it, and then another two, and then he tried to turn left and the turn destroyed the hip distribution and he came down again.Clean landing this time. He'd learned what was coming.He went back up.An hour after that he could move in a straight line at walking pace, hold altitude withi

  • Chapter 98: Marco part-1

    Dante stood in the center of the training room and looked at the ceiling and understood immediately that understanding the theory of flight and being able to execute flight were two entirely separate problems with no overlap.He summoned three of the Fallen.Vorak materialized first, sitting on his haunches with his yellow eyes doing a slow sweep of the room. Azark arrived second, the broken armor settling into stillness with the patience of something that had been waiting in a spiritual sea and didn't mind either way. Pride came last, spear at rest, and looked around the training room with the expression of someone arriving somewhere that met their standards."You flew in the Colosseum Dungeon," Dante said to Pride. "Against Argaron.""I did.""Explain how."Pride looked at him with the particular attention he gave things he found genuinely interesting."Mana essence," he said. "Synced with the body to detach weight from natural law. The essence creates a repelling relationship with

  • chapter 97: part-2

    close the physical gap. The Black Swamp was supposed to be the answer, the brutal efficient shortcut that rebuilt the body from the inside in ways that normal training couldn't reach. He'd planned around it. He'd accepted that the ratio of people who came back with their minds intact was uncomfortable and decided the upside was worth the risk.None of that mattered. The ceiling wasn't about the method. The Black Swamp, the River of Dragon's Tears, mana essence absorbed through the skin in a spy-proof room underground, all of it hit the same wall.Rank. The system's fundamental structure, which didn't care about workarounds.He sat with the frustration for thirty seconds and then set it aside in the specific way he had learned to set things aside, not suppressing it, just putting it in the correct location where it could wait without taking up working space.Options.The Tower's second floor required two keys. He had one. The first floor's boss had dropped a single key and his subseque

  • Chapter 97: Ceiling part -1

    Augusto's footsteps faded up the stairs and the door sealed behind him and Dante was alone.He stood in the center of the room and turned slowly, taking the full measure of it. A thousand meters across in every direction, the walls cushioned in dense material that absorbed rather than reflected, the ceiling high enough that looking up produced the mild vertigo of outdoor spaces. No cameras. No recording equipment of any kind, which the Association had apparently learned the hard way was pointless in a space where the energy output during serious training destroyed anything with a sensor.He sat cross-legged on the floor.Pulled up his panel.He hadn't looked at the numbers properly since before the Celestial Domain, and the numbers had a way of being more honest than everything else combined.Spiritual Power: 8,999.He looked at that for a moment. A typical Rank B Awakened sat somewhere between six and nine thousand. He was at the top of that range, above most B-ranks in spiritual ter

  • chapter 96: part-2

    showed his card to the desk, and took the stairs to Augusto's floor.The office door was open.A young man was just walking out of it.Dante clocked him before they made eye contact, the automatic read he'd been doing since the Colosseum and couldn't fully turn off anymore. Tall, composed, the kind of composed that came from being around authority long enough to learn how not to show things. The face was familiar in the specific way of a face that shared structural features with another face he knew.Aron's face. Older, more controlled, but the same jaw line, the same set of the eyes.Dante kept his breathing even and moved to the side of the corridor to let him pass. The young man's eyes moved across him briefly and registered nothing, no recognition, and he walked past and took the stairs down.Dante stood still for two seconds after he'd gone.Then he exhaled and walked into Augusto's office.Augusto was at his desk with a pen in his hand and the expression of someone who had been

  • Chapter 96: Underground part-1

    His own bed.Dante lay in it for thirty seconds before sleep took him completely, no transition, no winding down, just the particular darkness of a body that had run out of argument.Morning came through the curtains the way it always came, gray at first and then deciding. He reached for his phone before he opened his eyes properly, the old habit, and found two messages waiting in the stack.Augusto, four days ago. Training room is ready when you are.Marco, yesterday. Back in Senticchio in two days. Come find me.Two days meant tomorrow.He put the phone down and looked at the ceiling and felt the particular satisfaction of being exactly where he was supposed to be, in his own room, in his own bed, with his mother making sounds in the kitchen below and nothing in the immediate vicinity trying to kill him.He changed out of the Celestial Domain clothes, which had absorbed enough of the last week to earn retirement, and slept for another four hours.Lucia was already at the table when

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App