~Laurent
Weeks had passed since I first touched that obelisk. Weeks, and still nothing had changed in my life. I had hoped that after the awakening ceremony, my life would change. I hoped that I’ll get strong enough to become respected but right now, even though I got stronger, it feels like I became weaker. I spent all of my mornings avoiding potential bullies and keeping my head down. I hoped that if I was not known I wouldn’t be picked on as much. I was wrong. Hiding only made them search harder and every time they came around, Ciela–the girl who saved me from them the first time–always seemed to be lurking. I didn’t dislike her but I hated having to be saved by her every day. She was strong, sharp, untouchable. Everything I wasn’t and being around her always reminded me of that. One morning, I went to class expecting the usual routine: lectures about mana systems, doodles in my notebook, another long day of invisibility. Instead, the Director himself stood at the front of the hall, tall and severe, his robes whispering across the marble floor. His voice carried like rolling thunder. “Students. Today, we announce your first field excursion.” The chatter in the room swelled instantly—gasps, cheers, murmurs. Even I sat up straighter. Field excursions were carried out around four to five times a year with different people. The goal was to familiarise us with monsters and get us accustomed to fighting battles. The Director raised his hand, and silence fell. “Fifty of you will accompany us into the Verdant Forest. There, you will experience firsthand what it means to face monsters—not illusions, not sparring partners. Real creatures. The world beyond these walls is dangerous, and this Academy exists to prepare you for it. Consider this your first step.” The Director gestured toward the line of instructors stepping onto the stage beside him. “These are the ones who will accompany you.” First came a tall man with silver hair bound in a warrior’s knot. His very presence pressed on the room like a mountain. “Instructor Kael. S-rank. I will lead this expedition.” A ripple went through the hall—half awe, half fear. An S-rank, walking power incarnate. Beside him stood two women, their gazes sharp as blades. One wore crimson robes, a faint heat shimmering around her; the other had a longbow slung casually across her shoulder. “Instructors Vale and Seris. A-ranks.” Then a broad-shouldered man with skin like weathered stone. “Instructor Doran. B-rank.” Finally, a wiry woman whose eyes darted like a hawk’s. “Instructor Lira. C-rank.” The Director’s voice boomed again. “Between them, no harm shall come to you. The forest we picked for your expedition today holds only weak beasts—C-rank monsters at worst. This is not meant to endanger you, but to teach you. Remember: your true enemy is not each other, but what lurks beyond humanity’s walls. We need only fifty students for this field experience. If you’re interested, step up to sign up. We leave by morning.” The hall buzzed with excitement. Some students practically jumped from their seats to sign up. I sat frozen, heart hammering. A field trip… monsters… real monsters. I should’ve looked away, buried myself in my notebook, accepted my role as background character in everyone else’s adventure. But something inside me burned. Something ugly and stubborn. I was tired. Tired of their laughter, tired of being the helpless weakling everyone expected me to be. If I stayed behind, nothing would change. But if I went… maybe I’d prove I wasn’t worthless. My hand rose before I could stop it. “I’m going too.” A hush fell over the nearest students, then a snicker. “The E-rank? He’ll be monster chow before noon.” I signed my name anyway. The contract shimmered with mana as I pressed my mark upon it. My throat went dry as I read the fine print: The Academy shall not be held responsible for the injury or death of any participant. I gasped, wasn’t this a safe outing? Was all that talk about there only being low ranked monsters just talk to give us a false sense of safety? A sharp voice cut through my thoughts. “Are you insane?” Ciela. Of course. Her brown eyes blazed as she grabbed my arm. “You can’t go. You’ll get yourself killed. Do you even understand what you just signed?” “I understand perfectly,” I muttered, pulling away. “I’m tired of hiding. I want to do something that matters.” “Being alive matters. If you go out there you could die. Even D rank monsters are capable of killing you. What were you even thinking? Don’t you feel fear?” I didn’t answer. I couldn’t. Because if I admitted how much fear churned inside me, I’d tear up the contract on the spot. Minutes later, the hall erupted again as she stalked forward and slammed her name onto the parchment. She walked back and stood next to me. “Why did you do that?” I asked. “I thought you didn’t want to go.” “I don’t.” She sighed. “But I can’t sit and let you kill yourself just to prove a point.” I exhaled, unable to say anything else. Before long, the morning of the excursion arrived. We gathered at the Academy gates, fifty students in gleaming robes, chatter echoing across the courtyard. Mana shimmered faintly around some of them—the stronger ones. The rest, like me, clutched weapons or notebooks, trying to look braver than we felt. “Instructors!” the Director called. The five assembled in front, their presence silencing the crowd. Kael’s voice cut like steel. “Remember: this is not play. Stay within sight. Do not wander. Obey orders instantly. Fail, and you may not return.” “But I thought only low ranked monsters were in this forest.” Someone said from the crowd. “Low ranked monsters are not harmless. If you are not careful around them, they are capable of killing you.” Kael replied. “Stay alert, stay sharp and stay with the group. We’ll protect you if the need arises.” The gates creaked open. Beyond lay the Verdant Forest—trees rising like spears, shadows curling thick between them. The air smelled of moss and wet earth. We marched. The forest rang with birdsong, shafts of sunlight spilling through leaves. Then came the first monster. A boar the size of a carriage barreled from the underbrush, tusks glinting like ivory swords. Kael looked at us and A B-rank student understood the assignment immediately, he stepped forward, and with a single fiery spell, dropped the beast in a smoking heap. Cheers erupted. “Too easy!” someone laughed. Another beast lunged minutes later—a scaled wolf. A spear through the eye silenced it instantly. More laughter. More cheers. The hunt felt like sport, a game to prove who was strongest. More monsters showed up and the teachers did not even have to lift a finger. The students took care of all of them. I scribbled notes furiously. Boar: weak to fire. Wolf: aim for the eyes. Stay behind the confident ones. Don’t die. Ciela walked beside me, arms crossed, unimpressed. “Enjoying yourself?” I didn’t answer. If I opened my mouth, I’d reveal the quiver in my bones. But the forest changed. The air grew heavier. The birdsong faded. Branches twisted above, blotting out the light. Then came the sound. A low rumble. A thousand feet moving in unison. I froze. My pen slipped from my fingers. The trees ahead rippled—then split apart as a wave of creatures poured forth. Dozens. Hundreds. No, thousands. The same scaled wolves we had mocked earlier, but multiplied into a living tide. Eyes glowing, teeth bared, voices blending into a deafening roar. The cheers died in our throats. Even the instructors tensed. My heart hammered against my ribs. My knees shook. For the first time that afternoon, I felt real fear.Latest Chapter
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~Laurent The Monarch tore through my soldiers again. And again. And again. His claws sliced shadow. His blasts burned holes through the dark. His roars shook the hall until dust rained from the rafters. But every time he ripped one apart, another rose. Every time he disintegrated a dozen, a dozen more reformed. He yelled something — I didn’t care enough to listen. I was watching him too closely. The way his shoulders twitched before he attacked. The micro-hesitation in his left step. The way his breathing tightened with every new swing. He was slowing down. Not visibly. Not to anyone normal. But to me? It was obvious. His aura flickered at the edges. His strikes lacked the perfect sharpness they had minutes ago. And his roars? They were starting to sound frustrated. Good. Let him drown in it. I just stood there, arms at my sides, letting the shadows crawl lazily around my ankles. My army shielded me completely, a living barricade of memory-made flesh that reg
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~Omniscient The Monster Monarch’s claws carved through the air, tearing reality open in their wake. Laurent didn’t have time to move. He didn’t have time to think. Just a single heartbeat — a single, sharp moment of awareness — and then the world went white. A soundless impact. Then nothing. No breath. No thought. No pain. Just a cold, fading fall into darkness. Laurent’s body collapsed onto the warped stone floor with a heavy, final thud. Blood pooled beneath him in a dark spreading circle. His limbs twitched once, then stilled. The Monster Monarch stood over him, panting lightly, chest rising and falling with a predator’s exhilaration. And then the creature smiled. A slow, curling, triumphant smile. “At last…” the Monarch whispered, voice swelling with victory. “At long last… now I will get my kingdom just as master promised.” The hall trembled with the words. He lifted his head and stretched his arms wide, reveling in the moment. “No more prophecies. No more cho
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~Laurent Our collision wasn’t loud — it was violent in a way sound couldn’t contain. His claws met my forearm. My fist met his ribs. The impact sent a shockwave rippling through the hall, rattling stone pillars and sending dust spiraling. He slid back two steps. I slid back five. I steadied myself. “So you’re not completely useless,” he said. “And you’re not as big as I remember,” I replied without meaning to. He blurred. One moment his body was still. The next — it was a streak of shadow and gold, carving through the air. His claw slashed toward my throat— I dashed out of the way with inhuman speed. Instinct saving my neck. I dashed back to counter. I reappeared behind him, breath easy. But he was already turning. His backhand slammed into my face. Pain exploded across my jaw as I flew backward, crashing into a stone pillar hard enough to split it. Dust rained down around me. My vision swam. “You’re too predictable,” he said. I staggered out of the rubble, fle
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~Laurent The creature stepped fully into my view and the world seemed to shrink around him. His presence pressed against my skin like a heavy hand, thick and suffocating — not from size, but from authority. Shadows bent around his form. The pulsing walls dimmed. Even the air tasted darker. He stopped just a few feet from me. Then he spoke. His voice rumbled like something ancient clawing its way out of the earth. “I am the Monster Monarch. You may not remember me… but I definitely remember you.” A chill ran through my veins — not fear, just recognition without memory. A hollow familiarity. I narrowed my eyes. “Why should I remember you?” His smile stretched, long and sharp. “Because you’re the one who killed me,” he said. “And ruined my plans to take Elarion for the monsters, as it was always meant to be.” My breath hitched for a second. I killed him? Me? I squared my shoulders. “So why are you here now? Who sent you?” “The current ruler of Elarion.” The Monarch’s mo
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~Laurent The first scream sliced through the night before my feet even touched the enemy village. I didn’t remember running. One second, I was standing beside Calista on the ridge. The next, I was at the heart of the chaos — fists already blood-soaked, breath steady, mind frighteningly calm. Firelight flickered across shattered huts and broken fences. Shadows twisted violently as the battle raged. The air tasted like metal and dust. And I was leading the charge. Elves from Eldoria stormed past me, shouting war cries, releasing arrows, swinging blades — but most of the enemies fell before they even reached the ground. Because my hands had already touched them. ⸻ A creature lunged at me, jaws split in a glowing snarl. Its skin was scaled, flecked with deep red veins. I didn’t think. I didn’t brace. My body simply moved. A simple step to the side. A palm to its throat. A flick of my wrist. The creature snapped backward like a broken puppet, spine bending
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~Laurent The silence after the last Howler fled was thick enough to choke on. Even the wind seemed unsure if it should keep blowing. Sand drifted lazily instead of violently. The sky brightened. The village held its breath. And all of them… every single elf… stared at me like I’d grown another head. Or lost one. Calista didn’t move at first. Her eyes were glossy with shock. Her fingers trembled even as she tried to hide it behind her clenched fists. Slowly — carefully — she stepped toward me. One foot. Pause. Another. Pause. Her voice came out quiet, almost fragile. “…Laurent? Are you still… there?” I blinked. “Where else would I be?” She swallowed hard. That wasn’t the answer she was afraid of. And both of us knew it. Before she could say anything else— A blur burst through the settling dust. “MY SECRET WEAPON!” The chief. He sprinted toward me with the energy of a man who had forgotten he was supposed to be terrified. His grin stretched ear to ear. His a
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