Ashvale – Sector 5
Outer Streets
Lucian stepped out into the street as the sun cracked fully over the skyline. The early morning haze still clung to the buildings, painting the world in orange and gold. Airships humd in the distance, sleek and wide like steel dragons drifting between towers.
Mana conduits pulsed gently through the city walls, the faint glow of runes keeping the outer shield intact. Students in Academy uniforms walked ahead, laughing, so nervous, so cocky.
Lucian’s eyes drifted up to the tower beyond the horizon. He could just barely see the peak of the Barrier Core, the pulsating engine that kept Sector 5 standing.
He sighed.
This was the calm.
But it hadn’t always been this way.
Twenty Years Ago – The Collapse
The skies cracked first.
Like glass under a giant’s fist, the ozone tore open across the planet.
From those tears ca beasts—not aliens, not animals, but monsters.
Creatures that didn’t belong to this world. So walked. So crawled. So flew. All of them fed on human life like it was currency. Cities fell in days. Nations in weeks.
They weren’t organized. Just endless. Driven by sothing no one could understand. They didn’t stop to eat. They didn’t build. They only destroyed.
They were called the Voidspawn.
And the Earth beca their feeding ground.
Within the first year, eighty percent of the global population vanished.
Skyscrapers turned into nests. Oceans boiled from leviathans that slithered beneath the waves. The sky was torn apart by flying wraiths that scread so loud they shattered aircraft mid-flight.
People ran. Died. Hid.
And then—
Humanity changed.
The Birth of Awakeners
No one saw it coming.
The first Awakening was a girl nad Aima, a teenager hiding in a flooded subway tunnel in old Japan. Cornered by a beast with three skulls and a dozen arms, she scread—not in fear, but in rage.
The world answered.
She didn’t cast magic.
She beca it.
Light tore out from her body, forming spears of pure energy that danced like lightning. She tore the beast in half without knowing how. It was as if her soul rembered sothing her body didn’t.
Others followed.
So awakened in fire. So in frost. So could bend space, slow ti, call beasts, or manipulate their own biology. The Awakening didn’t follow science or bloodline.
It followed will.
The will to fight. To survive.
Within a year, a new species was born—Awakeners.
The Counter-Offensive
With powers awakened, the survivors stopped running.
A man nad Ragnar Thorn led the first organized resistance. A warlord turned savior, he awakened a power that let him channel the emotions of those around him into pure destructive force. His battlecry could level mountains. His rage cracked continents.
He ford the first battalion—The Crimson Banner—and reclaid ground from the monsters inch by inch.
Not far behind him ca Zara Myne, who could control blood like a conductor commanding an orchestra. In one battle, she turned an entire city’s fallen population into spectral blades that decimated a leviathan swarm.
As more Awakeners erged, they began to group—by city, by cause, by power type. Soon they created a unified force.
And then—
The Hunter Association was born.
The Hunters and the Families
At first, they were just soldiers. Volunteers.
But as powers grew, so did influence. Those with higher-tier abilities stood above the rest. So could destroy monsters by the dozens. So were immortal. So... changed reality itself.
These elites beca legends.
And legends drew followers.
So they built their own Families.
Ragnar founded House Thorn, built on strength and fearlessness.
Zara led House Myne, known for bloodline magic and brutal precision.
Others rose too. House Caelum, for aerial dominion. House Verdant, who could command nature and beasts. House Yurei, born from shadow, infamous for assassination and scouting.
Each Family guarded a piece of the reclaid Earth, carving out strongholds and naming themselves not just survivors—but kings.
But raw strength wasn’t enough.
The Academy and the Sectors
Ten years after the Collapse, as the world began to stabilize, a unified plan ford: train the next generation. Not just to fight—but to lead.
Thus ca the Hunter Academies.
Institutions built in the strongest sectors of the world, each protected by layers of rune towers, automated barriers, and elite families. Students would enter at sixteen. By twenty, they would either graduate—or die trying.
The Academies didn’t just test for strength.
They broke students down.
Trained them for real-world battle.
Simulated dungeon gates. Constructed beast arenas. Created ranking systems. Pushed them to awaken their true power potential.
Only the best survived.
And among them, those who awakened abilities classified beyond the standard rankings—A, S, even SSS—were scouted for elite tasks.
But beyond them all...
There was one rank feared and revered.
XXX.
Only one person had ever awakened it.
Lucian Black.
Present Day – Ashvale Academy
Lucian walked down the paved lane leading toward the main gates, flanked by mana-fused walls humming faintly with defensive wards. The city curved behind him, buildings tall but old. Magic lights flickered beside cracked bricks. Tech was limited—monsters destroyed the internet, satellites, even spaceflight.
Now everything ran on mana cores and short-range systems.
Ahead, the towering gates of Ashvale Academy glead in polished obsidian. Guards stood outside in black armor—Veteran Hunters. Above the gates, etched in silver:
"Through Trial, Purpose. Through Pain, Power."
Lucian passed through the entrance scanner. It pulsed, scanning his mana signature.
[Subject: Lucian Black – 1st-Year Cadet]
[Status: Approved]
He stepped through.
The plaza opened like a stadium. Dozens of students filled it already—standing in lines near the Awakening Crystal.
A massive stone pulsing with life. It floated above a ring of golden runes, circling slow, almost breathing. The crystal wasn’t just magic.
It was alive.
Forged from the body of a dead god-beast. One of the first Voidspawn kings. It could peer into a soul—and pull out its truth.
Lucian rembered it well.
The heat of it. The cold after. The burning pain of his ability taking root.
He’d scread that day.
Today, he wouldn’t.
He moved toward the front line.
Eyes glanced his way. He didn’t care.
He had already lived this day once.
Reviews
All reviews (0)