Manaless Mage Chapter 339: A bit shaken

Novel: Manaless Mage Author: Gladstone Updated:
Font Size
15px

"Wait, wait, are you telling he just attacked his own dad?"

"No way—"

"I an... it was the dad that attacked first."

"He still overreacted! They’re his parents!"

"That’s not how you treat your parents, no matter what they did! That’s ssed up."

"He’s too arrogant now. The fa’s gotten to his head."

"Yeah... the power too."

"You’d think soone like him would have more restraint..."

"But seriously though, what kind of person tries to kill their dad in broad daylight?!"

More voices clashed.

"He was right to retaliate."

"No, he wasn’t!"

"He’s beco too cold."

"He should’ve just walked away!"

Harry heard all of it.

The sneers. The gasps. The laughter. The accusations. The attempted justifications. The moral argunts that tossed his na around like it belonged to a stranger.

He sighed.

The air around him grew colder. His expression hardened, a single deep frown settling across his face.

All these people knew nothing.

They didn’t know what had happened years ago.

They didn’t know what he’d been through.

They didn’t know what kind of people his parents truly were, and how they had maltreated him just because he had no talent.

But still... they judged him.

Though hearing them throw blas and critics at him annoyed him, he wasn’t surprised. After all, that was how people were.

Harry’s exhaled, and then, his figure blurred, vanishing into thin air.

Those watching blinked.

One mont, he was there, and the next, he had vanished without a trace.

"Did he just—?"

"He vanished..."

"I didn’t even see him move—"

"Man’s like a ghost..."

The murmurs rose again.

But Harry was already gone.

*

Harry’s body reappeared in a far away forest, and he exhaled, clenching his fists.

He took a slow step forward, his feet sinking slightly into the soft, leafy soil beneath him.

Towering trees surrounded him on all sides, their thick trunks rising like pillars into the sky.

The forest was quiet, save for the occasional rustle of wind through the branches and the distant chirping of birds.

It was a large, dense forest—untouched by man, filled with aged trees, damp moss, and the quiet scent of earth.

It was isolated, peaceful.

Yet not even that was enough to calm him.

His chest kept rising and falling rapidly, each breath shallow and hot.

His hoodie clung slightly to his body, damp with sweat—not from the physical strain of movent, but from the burning heat of his anger.

His hands were clenched tightly, so tightly the veins along his knuckles bulged. His jaw was stiff, his teeth gnashing against each other as he forced himself to breathe slower.

His frown deepened.

’You can’t be letting them rile you up,’ he thought, but even in his mind, the words sounded weak.

He took another breath, and another... but no matter how many tis he tried to calm himself, that shaking, buzzing feeling wouldn’t leave his chest.

Because deep down, no matter how much he denied it—

They had gotten to him.

His parents.

Their sudden appearance, their gall to act like they still had so place in his life—it shook him.

He hated that it shook him.

He wasn’t supposed to care. Not anymore.

Not after everything.

Not after all those years.

He took a few steps forward, walking slowly through the underbrush, his eyes narrowed and face still tense.

Yet no matter how much he walked, no matter how much he told himself to forget about it... the conversation replayed in his mind again and again. Their faces. His father’s rage. His mother’s tears.

The disbelief in their eyes when he turned them away.

The way his father had lunged at him. The way the crowd had murmured.

He hissed and clenched his fists tighter.

The wind whistled between the trees, brushing through the thick canopy above and causing the light to shift around him.

’I shouldn’t be this bothered,’ he told himself. ’I shouldn’t.’

But he was.

Because in truth, a part of him had always wondered what he’d do if they ever showed up again.

A part of him had always pictured screaming at them.

Asking them why.

Why they had abandoned him.

Why they had ignored him all those years, treated him like a stranger once it was clear he’d never awaken a proper talent.

Why they had acted like he didn’t exist the mont his mana test ca back broken.

Why they had never, ever looked for him.

That had been the most painful part of it all.

Even after he left the house—after he moved out with barely anything to his na—he had still hoped, deep down, that one day... one day, maybe they’d co looking for him.

Maybe they’d knock on his door and apologize.

Maybe they’d show up in front of his school.

Maybe they’d try to reach out in so way.

But they never did.

Not once.

Months had passed. Ti moved forward. And they never bothered to check up on him until now.

He knew that even now, the only reason they bothered looking for him was after hearing the news of Tv about his performance in the tournant.

If not for that, they wouldn’t have cared whether he was alive or dead.

The world around him was still quiet.

He stopped walking.

His eyes closed for a mont.

And a tired sigh slipped past his lips.

What annoyed him the most... what frustrated him down to the core... was that even now—even after everything they had done—a small part of him still wanted to go back.

Still wanted to forgive them.

Still wanted to pretend that maybe things could return to how they were.

His brows furrowed, a bitter expression overtaking his face.

Because he rembered.

He rembered the good tis.

He rembered being a kid, laughing in the living room with them during holidays. Eating dinners together at the table. Playing outside in the garden while his mother clapped and his father smiled proudly from the porch.

He rembered the birthdays, and holidays they spent together.

He rembered his mother’s lullabies when he couldn’t sleep.

He rembered his father lifting him high into the air and calling him "champ."

Until they discovered his mana core foundation was broken, and everything changed.

You are reading Manaless Mage Chapter 339: A bit shaken 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

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