Font Size
15px

Carlo looked as though he still didn’t understand what had happened to him.

But the fact that he was down on the ground, and that Ludger was pointing his staff at him, was unmistakable.

Gritting his teeth, Carlo swatted Ludger’s staff aside with his hand.

In his palm, fiercely burning flas gathered.

Using the recoil from knocking the staff away to push himself upright, Carlo ignited flas around his legs and used them as propulsion as he charged at Ludger.

But Ludger was already gone from that spot.

Using mana while shaping elental forms directly around the body... That really is a primitive way of fighting.

It was a style of combat you’d expect from street vagrants brawling on the roadside.

It plainly showed the kind of environnt Carlo had grown up in.

To take the refined art of magic and apply it like a back-alley fighting technique.

It should have been like water and oil—things that could never mix—but Carlo had fused the two together with astonishing talent.

Fwoosh!

Carlo’s leg swung toward Ludger’s jaw.

Along its trajectory, vivid crimson flas spread outward, leaving residual heat lingering in the air.

The heat is fixed in place.

Within the heat left behind where the flas passed, mana flickered and triggered a succession of small explosions.

The raw power was barely enough to cause mild burns, but visually, the explosions were anything but subtle.

His intention was obvious. He was trying to block his opponent’s vision. And naturally, this tactic was no different in nature from thugs throwing sand into soone’s eyes in a back alley fight.

Amid the flashy explosions obscuring Ludger’s sight, Carlo slipped into a blind spot and threw a punch.

“For a freshman, you’re not bad.”

Without even looking at Carlo’s fist, Ludger raised his staff and blocked it.

Through the scattering sparks of fla, Carlo’s eyes widened.

The look clearly said, How did you know?

As his instructor, Ludger decided to kindly explain.

“A skilled mage doesn’t rely solely on vision. They also perceive the mana wavelengths their opponent carries. Once you grasp that, responding to ambushes like this becos possible, to a certain extent.”

Of course, raising one’s senses to that level required trendous effort and real combat experience—but Carlo had no way of knowing that yet.

Carlo tried to throw another punch, but Ludger moved first.

His staff traced efficient arcs, striking Carlo’s forearm, waist, and shin in quick succession.

“Ghk!”

It wasn’t enough to break bones, but it must have caused considerable pain. Carlo swallowed his scream and staggered backward.

The fighting spirit blazing in his eyes still hadn’t gone out.

“Will you continue? Or would you prefer to accept the outco peacefully?”

“Shut up!”

Carlo’s gaze sharpened even further. His expression had already been intense to begin with, but now it almost looked beast-like.

His muscles twitched—and then his movents beca noticeably faster.

A strange glint gathered in Ludger’s eyes.

“Oh?”

As Ludger tilted his head, Carlo’s claws tore through the space where his face had just been.

Along the arc of those claws, scarlet flas left afterimages like the tail of a teor.

They were compressed far more sharply than when he threw punches.

Ludger raised several condensed spheres of mana around himself and fired them toward Carlo.

They carried enough power to subdue the opponent—but getting hit would hurt badly.

Yet Carlo blasted flas from his legs and perford all kinds of bizarre, three-dinsional maneuvers in midair, evading every single attack.

Almost like an animal’s movents.

Rather than acting through rational judgnt, it was closer to instinctive evasion.

For a human, his senses were extraordinarily sharpened.

“Good. Then show more of what you’re hiding.”

As Ludger lightly stomped his foot, a stone wall abruptly erupted from the training ground floor and slamd into Carlo.

Carlo crossed both arms to block, but his body was sent flying high into the air.

Ludger extended his staff toward the floating Carlo.

A blue mana projectile shot out, tracing an intricate trajectory like a chanical circuit.

Carlo clenched his teeth and wrapped his body in stone. He had activated an earth-attribute defensive spell.

But if that had been the extent of his response, calling him a genius would have been a waste.

Fwoosh!

From the gaps in the rocky armor encasing his body, blazing flas burst forth.

Like crimson fire racing across the surface of the sun, the stone armor glowed red-hot, and Carlo himself beca living magma.

Bam-bam-bam-bam!

Combining two elental magics, Carlo smashed aside every one of Ludger’s mana projectiles with his fists.

With his innate physical ability and reflexes added in, he was practically a War Mage incarnate.

Landing back on the ground, Carlo lifted his head and stared at Ludger.

Wrapped in magma, his appearance was undeniably nacing—but regrettably, it stirred nothing in Ludger beyond mild interest.

For soone who had once fought an elental lord of fire, Carlo’s magic was no more than a child’s attempt to light a match.

“Since you’re coming at seriously, I’ll raise the intensity a little as well.”

Having seen Carlo’s skill, Ludger decided to adjust his own output accordingly.

Purple lightning gathered around Ludger.

It pulsed and writhed in midair—then shot toward Carlo like a spear.

If he waited to see it with his eyes, it would have been too late, but astonishingly, Carlo had already kicked off the ground and was moving to evade it.

However, his body abruptly jerked to a halt.

From beneath his feet, shadows rose up and wrapped around him with countless tentacles.

At the sa ti, a massive tallic cube ford above his head.

A perfect cube roughly two ters in height, width, and depth dropped straight down.

With his feet bound by shadows, escape was impossible.

Watching this unfold, the Special Class students began to seriously wonder if they should intervene.

A creeping fear rose among them that this might end with soone seriously injured.

BOOM!

The cube shattered into pieces in a violent explosion.

The one who broke it was Carlo—or rather, the translucent human-shaped figure floating behind him.

“As expected. You were hiding a trump card.”

The human figure hovering behind Carlo stared straight at Ludger.

It raised what appeared to be a spear—the very weapon that had likely shattered the cube—and hurled it toward him.

Ludger raised shadows, swallowed the spear, and sent it right back.

But the opponent was no pushover. With ghostlike reflexes, it caught the returning spear midair.

No. Calling it a ghost isn’t even taphorical.

And that thing was no ordinary ghost.

“A hero from history.”

That’s right. It wasn’t the soul of an ordinary human, but the soul of soone who had achieved great deeds and elevated the very rank of their spirit.

And there was only one kind of magic that could borrow the power of such heroes.

One of the special-type magics.

Origin.

That magic, which allowed its user to connect to the Great Flow and inherit the power of those within it, was also used by the Iron Mask knight, Lotheron.

It can’t be directly related to Lotheron. Special-type magic isn’t sothing you can just teach soone.

If soone with innate talent was discovered, it could be passed on—but it rarely ford an ideal ntor-student relationship like Mandelina and Aidan.

More often, special-type mages failed to find teachers and learned on their own.

Carlo was one such case.

Especially Origin magic—it didn’t even require instruction. As long as one could connect to the Great Flow, it could be learned naturally.

Normally, hardly anyone can connect to the Great Flow itself.

Among mages, only an extrely rare few—those born with brains of a peculiar nature—were capable of it.

An expansion of the spiritual perception tied to the mana their brain could process.

“You were hiding quite an impressive magic.”

At Ludger’s words, Carlo made a troubled expression.

His hidden ace—kept secret even from Seorn’s Headmaster—had been exposed far too easily.

What confused Carlo even more was that Ludger seed to have known from the very beginning that he was hiding this magic.

That was inevitable.

No matter how exceptional Carlo’s talent was, he was still immature.

No matter how hard he tried to conceal it, he couldn’t escape the eyes of Ludger, who had reached the standards of the 8th-Circle.

If anything, managing to hide it from the Headmaster was impressive in its own right.

“Since you’ve already brought it out, why not use it properly?”

“...Can you handle it?”

Carlo asked, his voice noticeably calr than before.

“If I couldn’t handle it, I wouldn’t have started in the first place.”

“....”

Carlo didn’t respond. Instead, he quietly stirred his mana.

A new figure appeared behind him. This ti, it was a hunter cloaked in a hood.

That, too, must have been the body of a legendary archer and hero.

Wearing his magma armor, Carlo charged at Ludger with the hero providing rear support.

* * *

The fight itself ended anticlimactically.

After giving it his all, Carlo failed to so much as touch a speck of dust on Ludger, and collapsed flat on the training ground.

“I, I—”

Panting heavily, Carlo staggered to his feet.

He quietly closed his eyes, then bent at the waist toward Ludger at a perfect ninety-degree angle.

“I lost, Professor.”

It was a sincere apology, containing all the rudeness he had shown until now.

“I’ve seen your skill. But it’s far too unrefined—there are many rough edges. You may think you don’t need guidance, but if you keep going like this, your magic will eventually go astray. So don’t think of instruction as interference. Think of it as a process of refinent.”

“...Understood.”

Carlo stepped back, and Ludger turned his gaze to the remaining Special Class students.

“Next.”

Having witnessed the previous fight, Hermoa—who had been ready to step forward as soon as Carlo finished—shrunk her shoulders.

As everyone hesitated, exchanging looks, Ludger called her out directly.

“Hermoa Entiro.”

“Y-Yes.”

Hermoa squeezed her eyes shut. Her shoulders sagged as she stepped onto the training ground.

“You’ve already seen Carlo fight. Use everything you’ve learned.”

“I, I—”

“Don’t worry. I’ll adjust my strength accordingly.”

In Carlo’s case, he needed his bad habits corrected, so Ludger had gone a bit harder. There was no need to do the sa to Hermoa, who was earnest about his class.

At Ludger’s words, Hermoa felt relieved.

If he’s going easy on , at least it won’t be like when he fought Carlo!

And three minutes later, Hermoa scread.

“You said you’d go easy! You said you’d go easy!”

Tears welling in her eyes, Hermoa ran across the training ground as all kinds of magic rained down on her.

If there was anything praiseworthy, it was that she never let go of her staff until the very end.

“I am using magic matched to your level, Hermoa Entiro. Make proper use of that sensory ability you possess.”

“I-I don’t even know how!”

In the end, Hermoa was shot down by Ludger’s mana projectile and collapsed.

At least, unlike Carlo, she wasn’t completely wrecked—it ended at a moderate point.

Of course, from Hermoa’s perspective, it wasn’t moderate at all.

Unleashing and chaining countless spells by the second was sothing you could never truly understand unless you experienced it firsthand.

“Next.”

Ludger called the next ✧ NоvеIight ✧ (Original source) student.

Thus, the tests of the elf Elmarra and Robert were concluded.

In Elmarra’s case, her laid-back and lazy personality led her to not take things seriously, which annoyed Ludger enough that he treated her a bit harshly.

Robert’s case, however, was serious in a different sense.

To think he can’t even properly use magic.

More precisely, this format of sparring itself placed imnse pressure on him.

Robert couldn’t properly cast magic—he couldn’t even et Ludger’s eyes.

His talent was undoubtedly exceptional, but his inability to utilize it left Ludger feeling deeply regretful.

At least he hadn’t run away. Perhaps that was sothing to be thankful for.

Ludger’s gaze then turned toward Eric Willow.

As if he had already sensed it, Eric had stepped onto the training ground without being called.

“Eric Willow. Use everything you have to push . You don’t need to worry about putting in danger.”

“...Yes. Understood.”

He had already watched Special Class students on a similar level to himself get thoroughly crushed by Ludger.

Seeing that, Eric discarded any thoughts of worrying about his opponent or holding back.

He adapts quickly. I thought refusing class ant he’d be emotionally unstable, but he’s more resilient than expected.

With slightly hesitant hands, Eric removed the glasses from his face.

Then he brushed his thick bangs up and back.

“Oh.”

As Eric’s face was revealed, Hermoa let out an unconscious gasp.

She hadn’t realized it before because he always kept himself hidden, but Eric was far more handso than expected.

Contrary to his timid image, his gaze was sharp—like a finely honed blade.

“I’m going in.”

The mont Eric said that—

From both his eyes, terrifying beams of light erupted and shot straight toward Ludger.

You are reading Academy’s Undercover Professor Vol 2. Chapter 56: Side Story. Special Lesson (2) on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Death Notice cover
Trending now

Death Notice

Gluttonous Monk ·Horror

Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoysthebloodshed.He...Readmore Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoystheblo...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.