The sester might have changed, the rankings might have shifted, but I hadn't. Improvent wasn't a matter of sudden bursts; it was built on consistency, on maintaining routines that grounded progress. And so, as usual, I found myself heading to the training grounds.
The walk there was quiet, the crisp morning air carrying the faint hum of mana that always seed to perate the academy. The training hall lood ahead, its tall, clean structure reflecting the subtle glow of the rising sun. As I stepped inside, the familiar scent of polished wood and faint mana traces greeted .
The hall wasn't crowded, just as I'd expected. At most, around ten percent of the stations were occupied. A few students sparred in the central ring, their strikes ringing out as their weapons clashed. Others worked with dummies or practiced channeling their mana into controlled bursts. The air was alive with muted focus, but it lacked the intensity it should have had.
I paused near the entrance, surveying the scene. The ratio was too low for what the academy expected of its students. A faint frown tugged at the corner of my mouth as the realization set in.
"They still didn't get the seriousness back," I murmured to myself, my voice barely above a whisper. "It appears the academy still hasn't managed to instill that sense of urgency."
In a way, it wasn't surprising. For many students, the stakes didn't yet feel real. The rankings, the lessons, the spars—it was all part of a system that felt distant from the harsher realities beyond the academy's walls. They weren't truly feeling the weight of what awaited them outside—monsters, demons, the unpredictable chaos of the world.
But for those who understood, for those who could see the storm brewing, there was no room for complacency. Every minute here mattered. Every ounce of effort was a step closer to survival.
I stepped further inside, heading toward an empty station near the far corner. The familiar hum of mana resonated faintly from the training equipnt, a steady rhythm that always seed to settle my focus. I set my things down, stretching briefly before moving into my routine.
First, warm-ups—focused strikes on a dummy, each one calculated to build precision and fluidity. My movents were deliberate, each punch and kick driving mana in controlled bursts, reinforcing the habits I'd drilled into myself.
Next ca mana control. I stood still, centering my focus as I channeled mana into my hands, weaving it into fine, stable threads. The energy coiled and uncoiled with each motion, the faint glow reflecting off my palms. This part wasn't about strength; it was about finesse. Control was the foundation of every technique, and without it, power ant nothing.
As I worked through the exercises, I noticed a few students glancing in my direction. So watched with curiosity, others with mild recognition. It didn't matter. My focus stayed inward, on the rhythm of my movents, the feel of mana flowing through .
'Routine,' I thought, the word steadying as I shifted into the next sequence. It was the backbone of progress. No shortcuts, no sudden bursts—just the quiet, relentless march forward. And as the training hall echoed softly with the sound of effort, I imrsed myself in the familiar, the steady, the constant.
******
The room was cloaked in darkness, the faint hum of the city outside muffled by heavy curtains drawn tight over the lone window. In the stillness, the air felt heavy, stagnant, as though ti itself hesitated to move forward within these walls.
A single light, dim and weak, spilled out from a desk lamp tilted upward. Its glow stretched across the room, barely reaching the corners, but enough to illuminate the wall in front of it. Enough to reveal the shrine.
Pictures. Countless pictures. The wall was a chaotic mosaic of monts frozen in ti, all centered around one person. A young girl. Her long purple hair cascaded like silk in every shot, a perfect fra for her expressive face. So pictures showed her smiling, her lavender eyes glowing with warmth; others captured her in motion, walking down busy streets, her steps confident, purposeful. One photo showed her at a desk, lost in study, her brow furrowed in quiet determination. Another showed her seated cross-legged, ditating amidst an ethereal landscape—a place where air, water, earth, and fire seed to converge.
The images, ticulously arranged yet unnervingly obsessive, ford a collage of her existence. Her presence dominated the room, her likeness etched into every fra and every shadow.
And then, there was him.
Below the girl's photos, tucked in the center of the display like a venomous parasite, hung a single image of a young man. His black hair frad a face both sharp and composed, his purple eyes glinting with an intensity that matched the girl's own. His arm rested lightly on her shoulder in the photograph, as though their closeness were natural, effortless.
But the serene mont captured in the photo had been desecrated.
A massive, angry X had been slashed across his face, cutting through his features with jagged fury. Scrawled around the edges of the photo, as though etched into the paper by a trembling, obsessive hand, were the sa word over and over again:
DIE.
DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE. DIE.
The repetition spiraled out from the image, the letters scratched deep into the paper's surface, overlapping and chaotic, as though the writer couldn't stop.
In the dim light, Trevor Philips sat hunched in a worn-out chair. His elbows rested on his knees, his hands clasped tightly together as though trying to anchor himself. The faint illumination of the desk lamp flickered, casting sporadic shadows across his face. His expression was unreadable—his jaw clenched tight, his gaze fixed on the wall as though it were the only thing that existed in the universe.
The air around him felt alive with tension, an invisible crackle that vibrated in the stillness. His breathing was shallow, almost inaudible as if the act of drawing breath required more effort than it was worth.
His fingers twitched, curling into fists. The knuckles turned white as he finally broke his silence, a low, guttural whisper escaping his lips:
"They'll see… They'll all see…"
His eyes lingered on the young man in the photo. His lips curled into a small, bitter smile, but his gaze burned with sothing darker. Sothing consuming.
The light flickered again, threatening to plunge the room into total darkness. And for a brief mont, it almost did, leaving nothing behind but the whispered echoes of one man's obsession and the suffocating weight of his hatred.
RING!
The shrill tone of the smartwatch cut through the oppressive silence of the room, pulling Trevor from the depths of his dark musings. His head tilted slightly, his jaw tightening as he glanced down at his wrist. The screen illuminated briefly, casting a cold, blue light that reflected in his hollow eyes.
The na on the screen read: Victor Langley.
Trevor's lips curled into a sneer, the bitter smile of a predator baring its teeth. That bastard, he thought. Victor was an opportunist, a spineless snake who believed himself clever enough to outwit his superior. But Trevor kept him around—not out of trust or camaraderie, but because Victor had his uses. And Trevor, above all, valued utility.
He tapped the screen, accepting the call.
"What?" Trevor's voice was cold, clipped.
"Boss." Victor's voice ca through, laced with a mix of forced confidence and nervous energy. "We've got sothing. That girl… Emma? She made a scene. Big one. Looks like the stage is set."
Trevor's eyes narrowed, the light of the smartwatch reflecting off his face as his mind began to churn. His lips parted, a slow exhale escaping as his sneer deepened.
"What did she do?"
"She got into it with freshn. We have confird."
"Good."
"Should we start it?"
Trevor's gaze drifted back to the wall, to the defaced photograph of the young man with the black hair and purple eyes. His fingers twitched again, curling into fists.
"Start it," Trevor commanded, his voice low and deliberate.
Victor hesitated on the other end. "You want us to—?"
"You know what I want." Trevor's tone turned sharp, slicing through the hesitation. "Make sure to break a bone or two. Make it hurt. Leave the ssage I told you."
There was a pause, the faint sound of Victor swallowing hard. "I'll do it. And the girl? Leave her alone, right?"
Trevor's eyes briefly flicked to the countless photos of Emma on the wall. His obsession burned in his gaze, but it was cold, calculated. She was untouchable for now.
"Yes. Leave her."
Victor exhaled on the other end, his voice regaining a touch of that false confidence. "Consider it done."
The line went dead with a faint click. Trevor leaned back in his chair, the light from the smartwatch fading away, leaving the room in darkness once more.
His lips twisted into a thin smile, the kind that carried no warmth—only malice. He didn't care how many pawns were moved across the board or discarded in the process. His focus, his goal, was as unrelenting as the hate scrawled across the face of the young man in the photo.
"This is just a starting point."
He had not been staying idle in the sester break either.
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