Leo sat up slowly as morning light stread through the window. The estate was quiet. Most delegates were probably still recovering from last night’s dinner or preparing for the remaining days of celebration.
But Leo had sothing more pressing.
No more delaying. No more pushing it aside. He had promised himself he would deal with this today, and he would.
The talk.
The challenge. The stakes. Everything Iori had laid out at the mountain overlook felt both distant and imdiate. It was as if it had happened to soone else, yet it was also the only thing that mattered.
He washed, dressed, and settled into the chair by the window. Sowhere private. Sowhere he could think clearly.
He took a breath.
"Axiom."
The response ca imdiately, familiar and flat.
"Yes."
"We need to talk."
"I assud as much. I was expecting you to call much earlier though"
Leo didn’t deny it. "I needed ti to process things. And now I need answers."
"Go ahead and ask your questions"
Leo leaned forward, hands clasped.
"And please I need you to give proper answers."
" I always do, Leo. I just simply choose what to reveal, or that you can handle at this point."
"Fine. Then."
He gathered his thoughts, organizing what had been bothering him since the overlook.
"Iori said she was at her sacred grounds, praying for her desires to be answered. For soone she could belong to."
He paused.
"At that exact mont, in that exact place, you brought into this world."
Another pause.
"That is not a coincidence, is it?."
Axiom said nothing.
"You placed there intentionally," Leo continued. "Didn’t you?"
The silence stretched longer than usual, long enough for Leo to wonder if Axiom would answer at all.
Then finally.
"That is correct "
Sothing tightened in Leo’s chest, getting the confirmation.
"Why?"
"Does the answer change your current situation?"
"It matters," Leo pressed. "If you put there on purpose, I need to know why. Was I supposed to et her? Was all of this planned?"
"So questions have answers you are not ready to understand."
Frustration flared. "That is not an answer."
"It is the only answer I will give."
Axiom’s tone did not shift, but the finality in it made it clear the line of questioning was closed.
"So you will not tell ."
"Focus on what you can control. The challenge. Your choice. The path ahead."
Leo exhaled slowly. He could push further, demand more, but he knew Axiom well enough. If it refused, nothing he said would change that.
He filed it away. Another mystery. Another question hanging over his existence in this world.
But not the most pressing one.
"Fine," Leo said. "Then let’s talk about the challenge."
"Yes. That is more relevant."
Leo leaned back, gathering his thoughts.
"Can I actually do this? Beat her in two years?"
"With normal growth?"
"Yes."
"No. You would fail. Forget fighting, it would be a beat down, Keeping in mind that there’s still the issue of getting a higher standing socially."
The bluntness hit like cold water.
"She has been eight-star since she was seventeen, already a fighting prodigy, a genius among geniuses," Axiom continued. "Combat-trained. Experienced. Politically sharp. The gap to cover is significant."
Leo had known that, but hearing it stated so plainly made it real.
"But," Axiom added, your growth has never been normal.
Leo looked up. "What do you an?"
"Consider your progress since arrival. Near-death against the wolf. Recovery and rebuilding in days instead of months. Survival during the hunt when you should have died. Tournant performance against opponents with years more experience, even with the absence of adaptation."
Axiom paused.
"That is not standard developnt."
Leo thought about the training with the maids. The brutal, relentless push. How quickly his body had adapted. How the pain beca manageable, then normal, and finally just background noise.
"My adaptation," he said slowly.
"Your adaptation is not only physical," Axiom corrected. "It is strategic. You learn faster than expected. Pattern recognition, combat instinct, and decision-making under pressure, although we didn’t focus on ntal optimization previous, there was still so gains."
Sothing shifted in Leo’s understanding.
"So it is possible."
"Possibly, yes." Axiom corrected. "Not guaranteed. The odds are not in your favor, but they are not zero."
"What would it take to make it happen then?"
"Everything. Complete commitnt. Training that breaks you repeatedly so you can rebuild stronger. Political maneuvering you do not yet understand. Strategic thinking beyond imdiate survival."
Axiom’s tone remained flat, but the weight was clear.
"It depends entirely on how much you are willing to sacrifice. Keep in mind that Adaptation is still far from fully incorporated with your body, so not only would you be getting stronger as ti goes on but the rate at which you get stronger can increase with your growth."
Leo sat with that.
"And there is you," he said. "Still restricting it."
"Correct."
"What happens when the restriction lifts?"
"That depends on your foundation. If you build sothing worth enhancing, the results will be significant. If you remain weak, the enhancent will be limited."
Leo frowned. "You have ntioned that before. Building a foundation. What does that actually an?"
"Your body is adapting constantly. Small optimizations. Efficiency gains. I am holding back the more dramatic changes because your structure cannot support them yet."
Axiom continued. "Aside your flawed foundation, you lacked the ntal discipline to properly handle getting stronger at that pace."
"So it was your attempt at teaching a philosophical lesson?"
"Yes, and as I expected, Iori did a wonderful job getting you to that realization, and being free of the constant optimization helped with getting that."
Axiom paused.
"So when you are strong enough, I will unlock the next phase. Your mind will sharpen. Learning will accelerate. Pattern recognition will beco instinctive."
Sothing clicked.
"When will I be ready?"
"For now, I plan to lift the current restriction on optimizing your body once the jubilee is over as you have matured more in your view of power. But if you an unlocking more phases then as I said before it depends entirely on you and how much commitnt you have."
Fair enough.
Leo exhaled slowly as the pieces ca together.
"So the challenge is possible. Barely. If I commit everything."
"Yes."
"And you will help when I am ready."
"Yes. It’s my duty to, even with other things outside getting more powerful as a fighter."
"But it is still a massive pursuit."
Yes.
Silence stretched between them.
Leo looked out the window. The estate grounds lay peaceful in the morning light. Everything calm and ordinary.
His life was anything but.
"Why should I do this?" he asked quietly. "What do I actually gain?"
Axiom responded without hesitation.
"As I asked you before. Do you intend to live this life the sa way you lived the last?"
Leo went still.
That question. Weeks ago. Before the hunt. Before everything changed.
"What was your answer?" Axiom continued.
Leo rembered the clarity he had felt then.
"I said I would try to live more selfishly," he replied quietly. "And enjoy it fully."
"Exactly."
Axiom let that settle.
"You already tried living cautiously. Leo. Try to navigate safely, avoiding risks and the chaos of life."
A brief pause.
"And you still died regardless. While not having lived a life you enjoyed"
The truth landed hard.
"Then I ca here," Leo said. "And survived. Barely. Out of necessity."
"Yes. You fought because you had no choice. You trained because you would have died otherwise. Every action driven by survival."
"But surviving is not living," Leo said.
"No. It is not."
Silence lingered.
Then Axiom continued.
"This challenge is the opposite of survival. It is risk. Ambition. Claiming what you want because you want it, not because you need it."
Leo felt sothing shift inside him.
"Selfish," he said.
"Yes. Living for yourself, not just existing."
The idea settled into place.
"What do I gain if I win?" Leo asked.
"Power growth. Two years of focused training with a clear purpose. You would improve regardless, but direction accelerates developnt."
Axiom continued.
"Political standing. Connections, reputation, legitimacy. You are a commoner with no background now. This gives you a path to change that."
"Partnership. If you win, Iori brings House Arakami’s alliance, political knowledge, and networks across the Yokai Nation. Resources you cannot build alone in two years."
"Legacy. The foundation of sothing that lasts beyond you. Not just surviving day to day, but building sothing aningful."
Leo absorbed each point.
" And finally proof that you can live differently. Not just survive, but thrive. Not just react, but choose."
"Belonging. Connection after displacent. Purpose beyond existence."
Axiom’s tone remained unchanged, but the weight of its words lingered.
"You gain the life you actually want, Leo. Not a safe one. A aningful one."
Leo closed his eyes.
"Iori is part of that."
"Yes. But this is not about her. This is about you choosing to live."
The truth settled deep.
This was not just about helping Iori. It was about deciding what kind of life he wanted.
Safe and careful, like before?
Or sothing more.
"I understand," Leo said quietly.
---
He sat in silence, processing.
Then another question surfaced.
"Iori ntioned the rge. Missing history. What actually happened?"
You want the full explanation?
"Yes."
Axiom paused, then began.
"Approximately six hundred years ago, multiple worlds were forced together spatially. Different planets and dinsions collapsed into a single rged reality."
Leo listened carefully.
"The entity responsible was a higher-dinsional being beyond your current understanding."
"Why?"
"Salvation. Each world was being consud by Chaos, a fundantal entropy eroding reality from the edges. Separately, every race would have been destroyed within generations."
Axiom continued.
"By rging the worlds, the being concentrated their collective strength. It created a unified front against Chaos and gave them a chance to survive."
"And it worked?"
"Partially. The rge was violent. Millions died. Civilizations collapsed. Geography was rewritten. But the races survived."
Leo processed that.
"The Chaos War."
"Yes. It began imdiately at dinsional weak points, where reality was thinnest. Demons, entities born from Chaos, began to erge."
"The piece seemingly missing from history?."
"Seven pieces, created through the combined effort of major nations. Placed at critical weak points to link and stabilize reality. Helping the war reached a stalemate."
"And then the records were erased."
"Yes but for what happened after the stabilization, a war among the races over who held control of the pieces, destroying the pieces in the process which lead to more wars. A secret council deed knowledge of the pieces too dangerous, and in efforts to bring about peace, they removed references to it, and its purpose."
Axiom paused.
What remains are fragnts and contradictions. Gaps people notice but cannot explain, even in mories of those long lived.
Leo thought about Ironhold’s library.
"Why does this matter for the challenge?"
"Because the world you are building in is unstable. The Chaos War is ongoing. The missing history suggests powerful forces want it hidden. Understanding that shapes how you navigate alliances and truth."
Leo nodded slowly.
"One more thing. People will ask where I am from. What do I say?"
A practical concern.
They discussed options before settling on sothing simple.
"Remote village, one of the ones destroyed. Your family and people when you were really young and have been drifting ever since. You can’t rember much between that and ending up at the outpost island."
"Nice, it would be difficult to verify."
"Correct. Your actions will define you more than your origin."
Leo agreed.
---
He leaned back, everything laid out. The challenge was possible. Barely. It benefited him.The world was more complex than he had realized.He had a cover origin story.
But the real question remained.
"Do I actually want this?"
He already knew the answer.
Fear was still there. Sharp and real. The thought of becoming property if he failed. Losing himself, essentially potential slavery.
But beneath it was sothing stronger.
Ambition. Purpose.
"When will you tell her?"
"Tomorrow night. After the awards ceremony."
"And your decision?"
Leo was quiet.
"I already know what I am going to say," he admitted. "I just need to accept the cost."
"Whatever you choose," Axiom said. "Choose it fully. Half-commitnt will get you killed."
"Yes or no. But an it."
"Exactly."
Leo stood and walked to the window. The weight was still there, but it was clearer now.
He knew what he wanted. He knew what it would cost. Tomorrow night, he would tell Iori.
For now, he just needed to sit with it. Let it settle. Prepare for what ca next.
"Thank you," Leo said quietly.
"You are welco."
The presence faded. Leo was alone again. But the clarity remained in his mind.
Two years. Everything or nothing. Living instead of surviving.
He looked out at the estate grounds. The Jubilee continued. One more day of celebration, then his answer.
The fear remained. But so did the determination. He had made his choice.
Now he just had to say it out loud.
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