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Clang! Clang!

Isaac’s sword clashed violently with Dera Heman’s blade.

The most skilled paladins present were the first to notice the change. The sound of the swords striking was different—sharper, fiercer. As they realized sothing unusual was happening, the rest of the onlookers widened their eyes, watching the duel with rapt attention.

Yet, only Dera Heman truly understood what had changed. The others rely saw Dera starting to lose ground, confused by his sudden disadvantage.

But Dera? He knew exactly what was happening.

To him, the opponent before him wasn’t Isaac.

It was Kalsen.

Although the movents weren’t identical to what Dera had studied and prepared for, only Kalsen could wield such unpredictable and powerful swordsmanship.

This was the Kalsen Miller he had fought before.

The Isaac before Dera now wielded his sword with an eerie, refined precision—like a predator lurking in the depths of a dark abyss, ready to strike at any mont. Yet, unlike before, there was no wild, raw killing intent. This was a swordsmanship that had been honed to perfection.

Dera’s instincts brought forth mories of the distant eastern snowstorms, where the Immortal Order could conjure deathly cold with their magic. In those storms, nothing could survive. The sharp, icy wind was as deadly as a blade, and hiding within that storm was always a hunter. The storm wasn’t a threat itself; it was rely a tool for the hunter, using the blizzard, the biting snow, and the howling wind to mask his presence and trap his prey.

Kalsen had been the hunter in the snowstorm.

And Dera had been the prey.

‘You’ve returned! Kalsen, you’re back!’

Despite being treated like prey once again, Dera felt no humiliation. Instead, he was filled with excitent and deep regret.

He had no idea what kind of transformation Kalsen had undergone to stand before him now. But he didn’t care. The man he had longed to fight again was finally here.

‘Of course, you didn’t remain idle! I, too, have imagined countless tis how much stronger you’d beco, and trained myself relentlessly for this mont, to ensure I could surpass whatever monster you’d beco!’

Though it was difficult to fathom, the idea that Kalsen could have returned as a Holy Grail Knight now seed irrelevant.

All that mattered to Dera was that the long-awaited rematch had finally co. His desire to win burned even hotter.

‘I will lead you to the right path this ti, Kalsen!’

Whoosh… The flas surrounding Luadin’s Key flared up, burning even brighter and transforming into pure white fire. Inside that raging fire, Dera began to unleash his true power.

The celestial lion of the heavens roared—a force even Kalsen Miller had never seen before.

Boom! Kalsen, controlling Isaac’s body, flinched as the fierce snowstorm he commanded was shattered by the lion’s roar. The hunter hidden in the storm was now exposed, fully revealed, as the burning lion charged forward without pause.

Kalsen tried to counterattack, swinging his blade once more, but Dera pressed down harder. The hunter’s sharp blade was no match for the lion’s claws. Dera’s relentless assault, indifferent to minor wounds, drove Kalsen back, forcing him off-balance once again.

The swordsmanship of the Golden Lion Paladins was simple yet overwhelming: crush your opponent with sheer force and stamina. Of course, that kind of power and endurance wasn’t sothing just anyone could achieve. It required divine miracles and blessings beyond what any ordinary human could access.

And Dera Heman, who could receive dozens of tis more blessings than anyone else, was born for this style of combat.

Kalsen felt both surprise and admiration.

‘…You’ve grown. You’re still half a step slower, but you’ve learned to use your overwhelming strength and miracles more intelligently. You’re using my own movents against .’

With overwhelming physical power, a lack of finesse could be forgiven.

But now, Dera wasn’t just relying on brute force and miracles.

He was still slower than Kalsen, but the mont he closed the gap, he knew exactly when to break his opponent’s balance and when to strike. The more power Kalsen exerted, the more Dera retaliated with even stronger counterattacks.

A bitter smile ford on Kalsen’s lips.

Isaac had been right.

To declare so confidently that he would “win easily” had been pure arrogance. Dera Heman had clearly undergone grueling training and discipline, pushing himself to the limits of his physical restrictions.

Kalsen couldn’t help but feel impressed by Dera’s progress. Defeating Dera had not been just another of Kalsen’s countless victories. It had been one of the most honorable accomplishnts of his career, one that could stand at the forefront of his many triumphs.

‘But I’ll still win this ti.’

Because it wasn’t just Kalsen and Dera in this battle.

Boom! Crack! Smash!

The clash of their swords and the pressure from their strikes created a scene that was almost impossible to believe. In re monts, the once-pristine courtyard of the Milishar Monastery was reduced to rubble. The walls and pillars bore deep scars from the fierce swordplay, and the paladins, watching from the sidelines, struggled to keep up with the intensity, knowing one misstep could cost them their heads.

Clang!

And then, another sudden change.

Once again, Dera Heman was the first to notice.

He sensed not just a hunter in the storm—but another lurking, monstrous presence within the abyss.

***

Isaac felt as though his entire body was lting in a scorching-hot cauldron.

Kalsen Miller’s mories, experiences, knowledge, aura, and understanding of swordsmanship were flooding into him. With every clash of their swords, Kalsen’s life—the decades he had lived and fought—was seeping into Isaac’s muscles, his very cells. Isaac was absorbing everything that made Kalsen who he was, compressing years of experience into re minutes of combat.

Every ti their swords t, Isaac’s body was tempered like tal being hamred into shape. Every wound left a mark on his soul, engraving itself in his mory.

Even his shallow breaths felt like they were being tempered in freezing water.

The pain was excruciating, but it was working.

The more Isaac absorbed Kalsen’s experience and knowledge, the more Kalsen’s presence within him seed to fade. At so point, Isaac realized that he was now the one swinging the sword—not Kalsen.

It wasn’t that Kalsen had willingly handed over control. It was as if Isaac had always been Kalsen from the start.

‘Go.’

As Kalsen’s fading consciousness whispered in Isaac’s ear, he left him with one final ssage.

“The next era belongs to you, Isaac.”

Isaac, still feeling sowhat dazed, swung his sword upward. Dera Heman, following his usual approach, moved to block the strike with his own sword. However, sothing made him hesitate, and he stepped back, a rare action that did not go unnoticed by the surrounding paladins.

Those watching were shocked.

‘He took that black sphere head-on yesterday, but now he’s backing off?’

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