The team returned to their residence within the obsidian stronghold—more a fortress than an inn, nestled deep into the heart of the ant city's volcanic bedrock. The air still pulsed faintly with the echo of their latest battle. The weight of Leon's near-defeat hung over them all, even as silence settled in.
Leon lay on his cot, shirtless, chest bandaged. Roselia sat beside him, thodically dabbing a salve onto the worst bruises while the others gave him space.
"How long until you think you can stand again?" she asked quietly.
Leon grimaced as she touched a cracked rib. "A day. Maybe two."
"You're lying," she muttered, not unkindly. "It'll be three."
He didn't argue.
Across the room, Naval was seated cross-legged, ditating. Roman stood like a silent sentinel at the door. Milim paced restlessly, twirling a mana spark between her fingers, occasionally stealing glances at Leon's injuries.
"So," Milim finally asked, breaking the silence. "Who is Rank One?"
Leon's eyes opened slowly. "No na was given. Just that he's undefeated. They call him the Unmoved Will."
"A title like that doesn't sound flashy," Naval said, "but it's always the ones with quiet nas who are the worst."
Roselia frowned. "What did the elder an by choosing flesh, mind, or spirit?"
Leon looked down at his hand, flexing his fingers. "I don't think it's about our opponent. It's about what we stand for. What we bring to the Obsidian Ants."
"Then what will you choose?" she asked.
Leon didn't respond right away.
Finally, he said, "When I first ca here, I thought strength was everything. That if I just pushed harder, fought more, mastered Shell Pulse, I could dominate this place. But I've seen what this climb costs."
He looked around at them.
"You all risked your lives following here. That isn't just muscle. That's spirit. It's loyalty. It's trust. That's what's carried us past every floor. So if I have to represent sothing…"
He closed his fist.
"It's spirit."
Naval opened his eyes and nodded. "Then we'll be right behind you."
Roselia smiled softly and leaned down to kiss his forehead. "Not behind. With you."
Roman gave the faintest of nods, and Milim punched her palm with her other hand. "Then we better prepare. This last fight won't be like the others. If it's a judgnt, then it won't be about beating them down—it'll be about proving you belong."
Leon breathed in deeply. The pain in his ribs had dulled to a manageable throb. He could feel his Shell Reverb pulsing faintly, the combat echoes still lingering from Rank 2.
"I'll rest," he said. "One full day. Then…"
He looked at the glowing orb on the table beside him, its runes flickering like an impatient heart.
"Then I'll walk into that judgnt—and win."
Outside the fortress, the ant city moved on—indifferent to the approaching climax. But within that chamber of warriors and bonds forged in fire, a storm was gathering.
The final rank awaited.
And Leon would et it not alone, not just as a fighter—but as a culmination of every battle, every lesson, every step.
The following day passed slowly. For once, there were no surprise challenges, no sudden alerts. Just rest, repair, and quiet preparation.
Leon remained seated cross-legged for most of it, breathing with the rhythm of the Shell Reverb, letting the aftershocks of his past battles settle. He could feel his body recalibrating. Tier VIII power was potent—dangerously so—and now that he'd reached the threshold of the final rank, he needed control more than ever.
Liliana returned from the forge district late in the evening, her cloak stained with soot. She handed Leon a reinforced bracer lined with volcanic quartz.
"It'll dampen high-impact kinetic force," she explained. "I figured you'd need it for whoever's waiting on the final platform."
Leon nodded and accepted it. "Thanks."
Roselia had spent most of the afternoon weaving glyphs into his combat attire—enhancents for focus, grounding, and mana stability. She said little, but every ti she passed him a piece, it was with a lingering touch. She was worried. They all were.
And by the second morning, as the volcanic winds howled across the upper tiers of the Obsidian arena, the challenge notice arrived.
A single line:
"Ascender Leon. Rank 1 Judgnt Trial — Prepared."
The team gathered without a word. Each of them accompanied Leon to the central lift that led to the arena's apex—a place that no outsider had stood upon for centuries.
The platform rose slowly, through layers of runed stone and glowing magma veins. As it ascended, the pressure thickened—not magical, not physical, but spiritual. As if the very weight of the Obsidian Ants' legacy bore down on him.
Finally, the lift clicked into place.
And Leon stepped forward.
The arena was unlike any of the previous ones. There were no stands, no audience, no walls. Just a flat obsidian platform suspended over a glowing chasm of molten energy, with the vast underground sky arcing endlessly above. The very air shimred with ancient power.
Across from him stood a figure—human in shape, yet motionless as a monunt. Wrapped in armor of silent obsidian, no face visible, no weapon drawn. But there was a presence. A suffocating intensity that suggested this being didn't move because it didn't need to.
A disembodied voice echoed through the void.
"You who stand at the peak—state your truth."
Leon took a step forward, his voice steady.
"I climbed not for power alone. I rose to understand. To master the Shell. To prove that will can be tempered like steel. I represent not only strength, but spirit. I carry those who walk with ."
Silence.
Then—
"Very well. Spirit shall be tested."
The figure raised one hand.
A shockwave detonated from it—not of force, but of presence. Leon gritted his teeth as his Shell Pulse vibrated violently, trying to stabilize against it.
BEGIN.
The armored figure was upon him instantly. Faster than thought, a punch drove toward Leon's chest—but Leon's instincts scread. He twisted, using Shell Reverb to catch the incoming impact and disperse it through his fra, retaliating with a crushing elbow.
It landed—but the figure didn't flinch. Instead, it countered with a knee to Leon's ribs that cracked his enhanced bracer.
Leon staggered back, blood at his lips. This wasn't just physical combat—it was ntal warfare. Every movent the figure made seed to probe Leon's intent, test his conviction.
They clashed again.
Fist t fist. Leon's Shell Pulse against the foe's raw, unfiltered mastery of movent.
Leon tried to draw on Destruction—only for the mana to fizzle. The arena had sealed external laws.
He couldn't rely on Gold Magic, or Aether Blood.
This was a battle of who he was.
His Shell Pulse pulsed. Then Reverb. Then Absolute Return.
He adapted with each strike. Each failed parry beca a data point. Each blow endured was a lesson carved into muscle.
But his opponent was flawless. A mirror without reflection. Every ti Leon evolved, it evolved faster.
After minutes of brutal exchanges, Leon dropped to one knee, coughing blood, his bones screaming.
But he didn't fall.
He pushed up—drenched in sweat and blood, eyes alight with sothing deeper than rage.
Purpose.
The final round ca.
Leon threw everything in. He feinted left, surged forward with a spiraling hook backed by every thread of Shell Pulse mastery. It landed—hard.
The figure staggered.
Leon pressed forward. Uppercut. Spin-kick. Elbow.
And then—
A final punch, driven by every failure, every battle, every lesson.
The obsidian armor shattered.
The figure stilled.
And bowed.
Then disintegrated into light.
Silence.
Then a voice—calm, final, eternal.
"Victory: Leon. Ascender of Spirit. Rank One, achieved."
Above, the obsidian sky cracked—and a single shaft of golden light broke through.
Leon dropped to one knee, exhausted. But smiling.
He had done it.
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