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Chapter 142: Chapter 141: The Academy Team

The seventh day arrived beneath a sky so clear it felt almost intentional, as though the heavens themselves had stripped away every cloud to ensure nothing distracted from what was about to unfold.

No bells rang that morning.

No deep tallic chis rolled across the academy grounds to tear students from sleep. No instructors stord through dormitory corridors, barking orders and dragging exhausted bodies into yet another relentless cycle of training. The courtyards remained still, the pathways quiet, and the usual rhythm of discipline—so harshly enforced over the past week—simply did not co.

For the first ti in days, the academy was silent.

But it was not the silence of rest.

It was the silence of anticipation.

A tension stretched invisibly through every tower, every training field, every stone corridor. It pressed against the air itself, coiling tightly like a drawn bowstring waiting for release.

Every student knew what day it was.

There was no need for announcent, no need for reminders. The knowledge had settled into them long before dawn, carried by rumor, expectation, and quiet fear.

The National Championship team would be nad.

And once nad, there would be no revision.

No reconsideration.

No second chance.

Only those chosen would move forward, stepping onto a stage watched by kingdoms and powers far beyond the academy walls.

Those left behind would remain exactly where they stood now—forced to watch, to rember, and to endure the knowledge that they had not been enough.

---

By the ti the sun had fully risen, the central assembly plaza had transford into sothing almost unrecognizable.

Thousands gathered across the wide expanse of stone, their presence turning the open space into a sea of restless bodies and shifting tension. Students filled every available step, packed tightly along the stairways, clustered beneath arches, and even crowded the edges of balconies above, leaning forward for a better view.

Instructors stood in disciplined rows closer to the front, their expressions controlled but their eyes sharp. So watched the students, asuring reactions before they occurred. Others watched the platform, as though anticipating sothing more than a simple announcent.

Even the elders had co.

Figures rarely seen outside secluded chambers now stood upon upper balconies, observing quietly from above. Their presence alone carried weight, a silent acknowledgnt that what would happen here mattered.

Above them all, the academy banner stirred in the morning wind, its fabric catching the light in slow, deliberate movents that gave it an almost living presence.

Then—

At the center of it all—

The Headmaster stepped forward.

And the world fell silent.

It was not gradual.

It was not forced.

It simply happened, as though the very act of his movent erased sound itself.

Thousands of voices vanished in an instant.

Breaths were held.

Thoughts sharpened.

Attention locked.

He stood as he always did—hands behind his back, posture unyielding, gaze calm yet impossibly deep. His white hair shifted faintly in the breeze, but the rest of him remained completely still, untouched by the restless energy surrounding him.

When he spoke, his voice carried without effort, reaching every corner of the plaza.

"Our academy will send three primary representatives."

The words settled heavily, imdiate and undeniable.

"Two reserve fighters. One support logistics unit."

A brief pause followed, just long enough for the structure to sink into every mind present.

Then, without change in tone—

"Only the first three matter."

The statent struck harder than any insult.

So students stiffened. Others lowered their eyes. A few clenched their fists tightly, frustration flashing across their expressions before being suppressed.

But no one spoke.

Because no one dared.

The Headmaster did not acknowledge the reaction.

Instead, his gaze shifted slightly, settling sowhere within the vast crowd.

"Captain," he said simply.

"Aether."

The reaction ca instantly.

The plaza erupted.

Voices surged upward in a chaotic wave, crashing against the silence that had held them monts before. Cheers mixed with shouts, admiration with disbelief, excitent with resentnt. So called his na, others questioned it loudly, and many simply stared toward the rear where he stood.

Aether did not move.

He remained where he was, arms loosely folded, expression unchanged.

To him, the noise felt distant.

Irrelevant.

Just another layer of distraction to be ignored.

Beside him, unseen by all others, the Fallen Succubus leaned slightly closer, her lips curving in amusent.

"You could at least acknowledge them," she murmured, her tone soft but filled with mockery. "A small gesture, perhaps. A wave. A nod. Sothing to reward their devotion."

Aether didn’t look at her.

"I don’t need it."

"How tragic," she replied with a quiet laugh. "Adoration wasted on soone so thoroughly uninterested."

The Headmaster did not wait for the noise to fully settle.

"Second Representative."

The words cut through the fading roar.

"Valen."

The reaction this ti was different.

Less explosive, but heavier.

More focused.

Valen stepped forward from the left side of the formation, his movent steady and unhurried. His presence carried weight—not overwhelming, not oppressive, but undeniably solid. The kind of presence that did not need to announce itself because it was already understood.

His training gear bore marks of use, not decoration. His posture was relaxed, but his eyes were sharp, alive with restrained intensity.

As he reached the front, his gaze flicked briefly toward Aether.

Just once.

There was no hostility in it.

No challenge.

Only recognition.

A silent acknowledgnt between two individuals who had already asured one another.

Then the Headmaster spoke again.

"Third Representative."

This ti, his gaze shifted beyond the academy grounds, toward the distant road leading back to the Imperial City.

"Liora."

The reaction exploded.

Louder than before.

More chaotic.

"She’s not even here!"

"That’s not fair!"

"She’s from the imperial side!"

"Is she joining later?"

Voices overlapped, questions collided, frustration surfaced openly.

But it lasted only a mont.

The Headmaster raised a single finger.

Silence returned instantly.

"She will join at the Imperial City tournant grounds," he said calmly.

His gaze swept across the crowd.

"Complain privately."

No one spoke again.

And just like that—

The team was decided.

Aether stood at the center of it.

Valen stood beside him.

And Liora, though absent, completed the structure.

Strength.

Power.

Control.

Balance.

It was not rely a team.

It was a formation.

A deliberate combination of forces designed not just to compete—

But to dominate.

As the assembly began to dissolve, voices returned in scattered waves. Conversations sparked instantly, speculation spreading faster than truth.

So spoke with admiration.

Others with resentnt.

A noble heir muttered bitterly under his breath, "That lineup is ridiculous."

The student beside him responded quietly, "Not for us."

Aether had already turned away.

The announcent ant nothing now.

It was done.

Only what ca next mattered.

He walked toward the western training grounds without hesitation.

Footsteps followed.

Heavy, steady, confident.

Valen caught up beside him, matching pace easily.

"You expected it," Valen said.

It wasn’t a question.

"Yes," Aether replied.

Valen exhaled sharply, half amused, half irritated. "That’s incredibly annoying."

Aether glanced at him briefly.

"You improved."

Valen’s grin appeared instantly.

"So you noticed."

There was a pause, and then Valen continued, his tone carrying a hint of pride beneath its casual edge.

"I didn’t waste those seven days. While everyone else was collapsing in group drills, I took a different path."

Aether didn’t respond imdiately, but his silence invited continuation.

"My primary beast evolved," Valen said quietly. "Not publicly. Not officially. But it happened."

He rolled his shoulders slightly, as though testing his own strength.

"And my second one is starting to wake up."

Only the Headmaster knew.

And now—

Aether.

"I’m saving it," Valen added. "For the tournant."

Aether nodded once.

"Shock has value."

Valen laughed, sharp and satisfied.

"That might be the nicest thing you’ve ever said to ."

"It wasn’t praise."

"Still counts."

They walked in silence for a few more steps before Valen spoke again, his voice lower this ti.

"I still want to beat you."

Aether didn’t slow.

"Train harder."

Valen’s grin widened.

"Good answer."

---

By midday, a silver-winged ssenger bird landed on Aether’s balcony.

He opened the letter without hesitation.

Liora’s handwriting was as precise as ever.

Direct.

Efficient.

**I received the roster.**

**Being placed on the sa team as you is a risk to my reputation.**

**Try not to lose before I arrive.**

Aether read it once.

Then again.

Behind him, the Succubus leaned over his shoulder, reading openly.

"She misses you," she said lightly.

"She repeats herself," Aether replied.

"And yet," the Succubus smiled, "you keep her words."

He didn’t answer.

But he placed the letter beside the first one.

Carefully.

---

By evening, Aether stood once more in the sealed western training field.

The land still bore the scars of previous attempts—cratered earth, blackened stone, broken trees. The air carried a faint lingering heat, as though the ground itself rembered what had been done to it.

Failure lingered here.

So did potential.

The Spirit Fairy hovered above him, its glow steady but tired.

The Fla Sovereign Pup crouched low, its body coiled with restrained energy.

The Succubus sat atop a broken pillar, watching with quiet interest.

Aether inhaled slowly.

Then spoke.

"Spirit shell."

Golden light expanded outward, forming a flexible sphere around the Pup. It wasn’t rigid. It wasn’t fragile. It responded, adjusted, adapted.

"Condense internally."

The Pup inhaled.

Flas drew inward, compressing into a single core.

The sphere trembled.

Pressure built.

Threatened collapse.

"Hold."

The Fairy strained, its light flickering but refusing to break.

Aether raised his hand.

Pointed toward the distant cliff.

"Release."

The beam erupted.

White-gold fire surged forward in a single, focused line.

For one instant—

There was no sound.

Only motion.

Only light.

Then—

The impact ca.

The distant cliff held for a fraction of a second before shattering violently. Stone exploded outward, trees were torn from the earth, and a wave of heat rolled back across the field.

Silence followed.

Deep.

Complete.

Even the Succubus stood slowly.

"...Now that," she said softly, "is beautiful."

Aether watched the burning crater.

asured the destruction.

Understood it.

Then spoke.

"Soulflare Breaker."

The na settled into the air, as solid as the attack itself.

High output.

High cost.

Limited use.

But decisive.

---

That night, Aether packed quietly.

The Pup slept.

The Fairy rested.

The Succubus watched.

On the table lay the roster, the letters, and the book that had started it all.

Tomorrow—

He would leave again.

Not as prey.

Not as target.

But as sothing far more dangerous.

Because this ti—

He carried a weapon forged from failure.

And it was real.

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