Font Size
15px

Survival Requires Emotional Detachnt and Ruthless Logic.

_____________________________

It took approximately seven days to fully recover from fatigue, much longer than expected. During that period, I rejected all etings with mbers of the Black extended family and nerdy childhood friends.

In my opinion, they were an unnecessary burden I didn’t need to deal with. The boy they shared a relationship with was dead.

The less humans you interact with, the less bullshit you have to deal with. I’m better off alone.

For the rest of the week, I engaged in light exercise. This body’s greatest weakness is its feeble limbs, which I’m eager to eliminate as soon as possible.

_____ Day 8______

Standing in front of the bathroom mirror, I felt disgusted by this body’s appearance. The old Adam preferred the bowl haircut, which exposed his bony face and gave him a nerdy look. His high cheekbones stuck out while his skin latched onto his bones tightly.

To an extent, he looked emaciated... like soone suffering from malnutrition.

Why?

Because Adam was a vegetarian.

This body was so disturbing to look at, it pissed off each ti I rembered a beauty would try and this. It reaffird my suspicion that I was nothing but a al ticket in her eyes.

"This explains why no one bullied him. They were scared they might kill him by mistake." I sighed.

Judging based on Adam’s mories, his friend group was the usual targets for school bullies back in high school. Strangely, he never got picked on and always ignored while they ssed with his friends.

Adam never understood the reason for this, even though the answer was glaring.

"The forr owner of this body is pathetic," I concluded.

With a sigh, I left the bathroom and returned to my room, where my clothes were laid out on the bed. It was a white T-shirt with a purple cross symbol. Alongside that, I got black jeans, running shoes, and a leather jacket.

"I’ll get a haircut later," I told myself while putting on my clothes.

As soon as I was done, I walked out of the room, and as promised, the two agents were patiently waiting for outside.

Johnson, the bald agent, approached and held my shoulder firmly, causing my knees to wobble. His grip was strong as that of a gorilla—just a little bit of pressure, and he would have snapped my bones like a twig.

"Are you ready?" He asked, and I nodded silently.

No other words were exchanged as we headed for the exit under the countless eyes, eager to see what the new Limitless looked like. Cara flashes ca from all directions, with loud whispers. Every patient and staff mber in the hospital wanted to see my face.

This explains why they had kept hidden off in that room all this ti. We took the elevator to the ground floor, but it wasn’t what I was expecting.

At the ground floor, the commotion was worse.

The wide lobby overflowed with people—doctors, nurses, patients in gowns, even staff from other departnts who had no reason to be there. So stood on chairs, others pressed against glass windows just for a glimpse. Ard security officers in dark vests ford a tight circle around us, clearing a path as the tension thickened like fog.

"Keep moving," the bald agent said under his breath, eyes scanning for threats.

I didn’t flinch. I kept walking.

For so reason, I was calm under pressure... under the gaze of many...

A voice suddenly broke through the chaos. Familiar. Warm.

"Adam? Adam, it’s Uncle Jay! Please, look at !"

My steps slowed—just slightly—but I didn’t turn. I didn’t even blink in his direction. I suspected whoever Adam was before, this uncle must’ve ant a lot based on my instinctive reaction.

I walked like I didn’t recognize a single soul.

The black Jeep awaited just outside the hospital entrance, its sleek body polished and humming quietly. Two matte-gray military vans flanked it, their engines already running. More ard personnel stood watch, rifles gripped, eyes alert.

Doors opened as we approached. The crowd behind the barricade scread louder, but none of it mattered. I climbed into the Jeep without a word.

The door shut with a heavy thud, and for a second, the world outside beca a silent blur.

Only then did Ray, the blond agent, speak.

"Welco to your new life, Limitless."

The Jeep purred to life, rolling smoothly onto the road. I sat in the backseat, silent, flanked by tinted windows that gave the world a dim, bluish tint. The agents up front murmured now and then into comms I couldn’t hear.

Outside, the world looked... different.

Glass towers lined the streets, their sleek, curved forms glowing faintly with embedded Aether veins—threads of pulsating energy that powered the entire city.

Sky rails hovered above the roads, carrying pods that zipped silently between districts. Holographic billboards floated in the air, displaying governnt alerts and corporate ads, all bathed in soft neon hues.

"Do you know how this beautiful city was built?" Ray’s voice stole my attention for a mont.

I glanced in his direction, noticing their eyes on through the rear-view mirror.

"Through the mass acquisition of Aether. A rare energy source which can only be acquired from the dungeons." I responded.

In this world, a pinky-sized aether crystal was worth more than bars of gold. This was the reason countries went to war against each other.

Ray nodded while Johnson looked over his shoulder with an impressed smile.

"I read a lot." I shrugged, to which he nodded.

"If you know this much, I trust you understand how crucial Limitless is to every nation. That is why, here in the ISA, we take good care of our own..."

ISA stands for Imperial States of Arica

The last part sounded more like a bribe. It felt like he was giving a reason to stay loyal to the empire, as if I had a choice.

We passed a police outpost—hover bikes parked in rows, officers in energy-woven armor. On the right, a public plaza buzzed with automated drones handing out supplies to civilians. A statue stood tall at the center of it: a Limitless warrior in full combat gear, arms raised, flanked by stylized energy wings.

"Things move fast when survival depends on it," Agent Johnson muttered without turning. "Fifty years ago, none of this existed."

I said nothing, but the landscape outside spoke volus. These dungeons had turned this world into sothing I couldn’t recognize.

We moved into the outskirts, where the structures thinned, and the roads stretched into rolling green hills. Wind turbines spun lazily in the distance, feeding the grid. Every building shimred faintly—proof that nothing here ran on fossil fuel or traditional tech. Just pure, refined energy.

Eventually, the road ended at a pair of colossal gates—twenty feet high, forged from reinforced alloy and humming with a subtle blue light. Etched into the tal were the words:

Lone Star Limitless Academy.

The gates slid open with a soft hiss, and we passed through.

Security drones imdiately sward overhead, scanning the vehicle. At the checkpoint, guards stepped forward, clad in bodysuit armor, visors covering their faces. One scanned my face through the window. A beep confird my identity.

"He’s clear. Let them through."

The Jeep rolled into the campus proper, and my eyes widened.

The academy was enormous—almost like a city within a city. Massive structures rose on both sides. So looked like training arenas, others like research towers.

"Looks bigger than I thought," I muttered.

"Wait until you see the inside," Agent Ray said with a smirk.

We curved onto a private road that led toward the administrative wing. It was the tallest building on campus—glass and stone, with energy conduits running across its surface like glowing vines. A massive emblem floated above the entrance: a silver triangle with a blue core, pulsing gently.

The Jeep stopped. Doors opened.

"Let’s get you registered," the bald agent said as he stepped out.

I followed.

The elevator chid softly as it stopped on the third floor. Agent Ray led the way down a hallway, each step echoing against the polished floor. We stopped at a reinforced door. A panel scanned Ray’s palm, then opened with a faint hiss.

"This is where we evaluate your Aether Resonance," he said, stepping into a sterile room filled with humming machines.

Cables snaked across the floor and connected into a single cylindrical chamber in the center, tall enough to stand in, with glowing lines running along its sides. In front of it was a large glass wall that separated the chamber from a control room, where several scientists and technicians were already watching.

"Step inside," Ray instructed.

I walked into the cylinder without a word. As soon as the door shut, the hum of the machines deepened. Lights flickered along the glass, scanning head to toe.

Then ca a soft pulse—deep, almost like it was echoing through my bones.

"Aether resonance scan initiated," a calm voice said overhead.

A holographic gauge appeared in front of the glass wall, labeled from E to S.

The dial spun, slowed, then stopped at C Rank.

It didn’t detect the [Gatekeeper] talent...

I stepped out once the scan ended, wires unlatching from the chamber. The mont I was out, I turned to Agent Ray.

"Well?" I asked.

He tapped the tablet in his hand before answering.

"You scored a C. Not bad," he said. "Average... but solid."

I nodded and remained silent. I wonder what they would think when they find out the door skill was nothing compared to the SSS-ranked talent I possess.

Well, it would be stupid to boast about sothing I don’t know what it does. I still have no information on the [Gatekeeper] talent, so I won’t put too much thought into it.

I noticed Ray raised an eyebrow, probably expecting more of a reaction from . But why would I be shocked?

The system already determined it was C-ranked from the start, so it’s not shocking the academy findings aligned with it.

We moved down another corridor until we entered a much larger room. This one was stark white, with soft padded walls and thick flooring clearly designed to take a hit. Caras and sensors were mounted in every corner.

It reminded of the room within the door, except the padding was soft, and there were no caras.

A man in a gray coat greeted us from the side, flanked by a few ard guards and instructors. His eyes were hidden behind his glasses, but the wrinkles on his face exposed his age

"This is your second test," he said. "We’ll assess your ability now. Don’t hold back."

No introduction or short speech, just straight to the point....

’I appreciate people like this...’ I mumbled.

The examiner gestured towards the center of the room and walked over there without hesitation.

At the center, the space between , the examiner, and the observers was considerable, but they all instinctively took a step back.

Without uttering a word, I raised my hand and snapped.

A ripple of distortion sliced the air. Everyone watched, silent and still, as the space before tore open with a low shhhkkk. It sounded and looked like soone had drawn a zipper in reality and pulled it open.

Within the tear I created in space was a swirling darkness. I casually reached in and pulled out a toothbrush.

Dead silence followed.

Then a single cough.

"Is that... a toothbrush?" Agent Johnson muttered in disbelief and slight disappointnt.

My delivery was superb, so it made sense, they expected sothing more... Entertaining.

But I wasn’t going to give them that. I don’t plan to show them the true power of my [Door] skill, talk more about the [Gatekeeper] skill.

Why?

I’m not sure.

I’m just a distrustful person by nature. Maybe it has sothing to do with my past life. The extre desire to hold so sort of leverage over everyone and everything was too hard to deny.

I just had to keep my powers hidden. Should I see no reason to keep things this way, I will reveal more over ti and claim they are new discoveries. But until then, I will keep my blade hidden.

My paranoia is my greatest shield.

"Yup." I responded with a shrug.

Agent Ray leaned in with an intense gaze. He seed more knowledgeable than his counterpart.

"You tore space to retrieve that... aning there are two possibilities." He said with a thoughtful expression while rubbing his chin

It felt like he was speaking to himself.

"It is not teleportation. It’s a pocket dinsion." I said before he could speculate further.

Raising the brush to where everyone could see, I continued.

"I can store things and summon them at will."

Everyone’s eyes brightened as they heard my explanation. The reaction was much more positive than I expected.

"How much can you fit in there?" the gray-coated examiner asked, finally finding his voice.

I smirked

"I think we can throw in a car or two..."

Buzz!

That got them. Even Ray’s eyes widened slightly.

You are reading Reincarnated With An SSS-Rank Talent In An Apocalyptic World Chapter 3: Lone Star Limitless Academy 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

My beast Emperor System cover
Same author

My beast Emperor System

Riviz ·Harem

TheKtinosrace,descendantsoftheGodBeastswhomatedwithhumansonceruledtheearthwith...Readmore TheKtinosrace,descendantsof theGodBeastswhomatedwithhuman...

The Villain's Story cover
Similar genre

The Villain's Story

Blazuku ·Fantasy

ThreeSoulslayinonebody,Onesoulbelongingtoamanwhohadreachedthepeak,thestrongestthereeverwas,theonewhohadthetalenttodoso.Yethesufferedbecauseofhistal...

Mage Manual cover
Similar genre

Mage Manual

Listening Day ·Fantasy

Ashopenedhiseyestofindthathehadtraveledtoastrangenationofmanyraces,andpeoplewerekneelingbeforehim.BeforehehadtimetoadapttothenewidentityoftheTermin...

Above The Sky cover
Similar genre

Above The Sky

Gloomy Sky Hidden God ·Fantasy

Thefirststarthatpassedawayextinguishedtwothousandyearsago. Fourhundredyearslater,themysteriousCalamityofHeavenlyFalldestroyedthecivilizationofthepr...

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