Varek Empire, Southern Reaches.
In the outer ring of Caldenre City, one of the few cities that still bothered building proper walls, a group of teenagers stood in a loose crowd outside a gate that had no business existing in a place this quiet.
It shimred. Not like water. More like heat rising off stone in the dead of sumr — that sa kind of wrong.
The gate was maybe three ters tall, dark at the edges with a pale silver glow at its center. It breathed. Or at least that’s what it felt like. Like sothing on the other side was inhaling very slowly, waiting.
The students standing in front of it were fifteen, sixteen at most. All of them ard. Swords on backs, spears leaning against shoulders, a few bows with quivers that looked brand new and completely unused. Their gear was clean. Their expressions were not.
"I told myself I wouldn’t be scared," a girl muttered sowhere near the back. "I lied to myself."
"Sa," a boy next to her said without hesitation. "Been lying to myself all morning."
"It’s a trial gate," soone else said sharply, loud enough for a few heads to turn. "First-tier. Weakest thing they could throw at us. Stop embarrassing yourselves."
"Easy for you to say, Dael," the first girl shot back. "Your father runs a hunting guild. You’ve seen monsters before."
Dael didn’t respond. Just crossed his arms and looked away.
A ring of armored adults stood around the periter, weapons ready, eyes scanning the treeline. They weren’t there to fight whatever was inside the gate. They were there in case sothing ca out before the students did. That was its own kind of comfort — the bad kind.
Kai watched the gate from where he stood near the edge of the group, a little away from the main cluster of students.
He was average height, which people always seed surprised by when they t him. He had that kind of build that didn’t look like much until you actually saw him move — lean, unhurried, like nothing had ever scared him enough to make him tense up. His hair was dark brown and slightly too long, pushed back from his face. His eyes were a dull grey. Not the dramatic silver that novels talked about. Just grey. Quiet.
He wore a plain black jacket over a dark shirt, a short blade at his hip that he’d had since he was twelve, and a bag on his back that was embarrassingly light compared to most of the others.
"You’re doing it again," said the person standing next to him.
Kai glanced sideways. "Doing what?"
"That thing where you stare at sothing like you’re trying to see through it."
Roan was a full head taller than Kai, broad across the shoulders, with a ss of red-brown hair that never sat flat no matter what he did to it. He had freckles and an honest face — the kind of face that made people want to tell him things. He was also, at this exact mont, holding his spear so tightly that his knuckles had gone pale.
"You’re scared," Kai said.
"Obviously I’m scared." Roan didn’t even try to deny it. "I’ve never killed anything. Have you?"
"Rabbits."
Roan stared at him. "Rabbits."
"Couple of them. When I was younger. For food."
"Kai, I love you, man, I do, but that is not the sa thing as killing a monster."
Kai almost smiled. "I know."
He looked back at the gate.
Trial gates — the lowest rank in the hierarchy of dungeons — were the only way to awaken. That was just how it worked. The world had changed forty years ago when the first gate opened above Caldenre’s old capital and swallowed three city blocks whole. Nobody knew why. Nobody had a satisfying answer even now. Gates just appeared. Monsters ca out of them. People learned to fight back.
And then soone figured out that if you sent teenagers in before the gate fully matured, before it grew into sothing dangerous, they ca back with sothing new inside them. A class. A rank. A thread of power the world itself stitched into you.
F rank. Useless, mostly. D rank. Average. C, B, A — rarer with each step up. S rank was the kind of thing you’d read about in records and not quite believe.
Nobody talked about what ca above S.
"Students of the Valdris Academy."
The voice cut through the chatter and the crowd went quiet fast. The man who stepped forward was not particularly tall and not particularly intimidating at first glance — mid-forties, short dark hair going grey at the temples, a military coat with no rank insignia on it. His na was Commander Aldric Voss, and he ran the Valdris Academy with the kind of quiet authority that didn’t need to announce itself.
He stopped in front of them and looked across the crowd for a mont without speaking. Just looking.
"Five years," he said finally. "Five years of drills and theory and mock battles and every single one of you complaining that you were ready for the real thing." A pause. "Today you find out if you were right."
Nobody laughed. It wasn’t really a joke.
"A trial gate is still a gate. The monsters inside are weak, yes. The dungeon is small, yes. But your class awakens the mont you step through, and what that class is — what rank it carries — that is not sothing any of your training determines." He let that sit for a second. "Luck has nothing to do with it either, whatever anyone’s told you. The gate reads sothing in you that you probably don’t even know is there. Trust it."
He stepped to the side.
"In groups of eight. First group, move."
The first eight students moved toward the gate with the reluctant energy of people walking into cold water. Two of them were visibly shaking. One of them looked like he might actually be sick.
The gate swallowed them.
Kai watched the silver light ripple and go still again.
Roan exhaled slowly next to him. "So. We’re really doing this."
"We’re really doing this."
"Any guesses? For your class?"
Kai shook his head. He’d thought about it plenty over the years — everyone did — but he’d learned a long ti ago that hoping for a specific thing just made the disappointnt sharper when it didn’t co. He’d take whatever the gate gave him and figure out the rest from there.
That was the plan. That had always been the plan.
’Just get in. Get a class. Get strong enough to—’
He stopped himself.
There was a face in the back of his head that he didn’t let himself look at too often. His brother’s face. Older than him by four years, which ant Orin had gone through his own trial gate when Kai was eleven. He’d co back from it different — quieter in a way that wasn’t the sa as calm. And then six months later, he’d left for a high-rank dungeon run with a guild team and never co back.
No body. No ssage. The guild sent a letter that said they were still searching.
They’d stopped searching eight months ago.
Kai’s jaw tightened.
He was alive. He had to be. Orin was the best fighter Kai had ever seen — and Kai had grown up watching the guild teams train. His brother did not go down to so dungeon monster without a fight, and a fight like that left traces. No traces ant no death. It just ant sothing else. Sothing Kai didn’t have the rank or the resources or the access to look into yet.
Yet.
"Kai."
He blinked. Roan was looking at him.
"You went sowhere."
"I’m here."
"You were doing the face."
"What face."
"The one where you look like you’re planning sothing slightly illegal."
Kai did smile this ti, just slightly. "Let’s just get through the gate."
Their group was called twenty minutes later. Eight of them total — Kai, Roan, and six others whose nas Kai knew from years of shared classes but hadn’t spent much ti with outside of them. A girl nad Sera who was arguably the best archer in their year. Two brothers, Finn and Cole, who were inseparable and always seed to be mid-argunt. Two others whose nas he kept mixing up — Brynn and Bryn, which wasn’t a joke, that was genuinely their nas — and a quiet boy nad Thatch who Kai was fairly certain had never once spoken at full volu.
They lined up.
The gate breathed.
"Together," Sera said, and none of them argued with that.
They stepped through.
---
The cold hit first. Sharp and imdiate, like stepping into a cellar, which didn’t match the warmth outside at all. The sll was damp stone and sothing else underneath it — sothing old and faintly organic that Kai couldn’t na and didn’t want to.
They were in a corridor. Low ceiling, rough stone walls, torches mounted in rusted iron brackets that burned with a yellow-orange light that flickered more than it should. The floor was uneven. The whole place felt like it had been built by sothing that understood the idea of a corridor but not the actual point of one.
Everyone had their weapons out imdiately. Kai had his blade in hand. He hadn’t even thought about it.
"Spread out a little," Roan said quietly. "We don’t want to bunch up."
Good instinct. They spread.
And then —
Light.
Not the torch kind. This was blue. Bright and clean and sudden, blooming right in front of Kai’s eyes, hovering in his vision like it was painted on the inside of his eyelids. A sound rang through his head — not a sound, exactly. More like the idea of a sound. Like a tone that existed just below hearing.
[Class Awakening — Kai Duskmore]
He went still.
[SSS Rank Class Identified.]
[CLASS: NULLIFIER]
[You do not build. You do not summon. You do not enhance.]
[You erase.]
Kai stared at the words floating in front of him and for a mont he didn’t breathe.
SSS.
He knew what that ant. Everyone knew what it ant in theory — it was the kind of thing you learned about the way you learned about historical disasters, as sothing that happened once or twice in recorded history and probably wouldn’t again. The kind of rank that made people stop and stare and sotis say nothing at all for a long ti.
And here it was. Sitting in front of him like it was nothing.
’Nullifier,’ he thought.
He read the description again. Slower.
[You do not build. You do not summon. You do not enhance.]
[You erase.]
The words settled into him and he felt sothing shift — not dramatically, not like an explosion or a surge of energy or any of the things the old stories described. More like a lock turning over sowhere deep in his chest. Quiet. Final.
He understood it instinctively in a way he couldn’t have explained out loud if he tried. The class wasn’t about creating power. It wasn’t about hitting harder or moving faster or calling down fire from whatever passed for a sky inside a dungeon.
It was about removal.
Skills — gone.
Monster abilities — deleted.
Defenses — stripped.
Whatever stands in your way — taken out of the equation.
A sound snapped him back. Down the corridor, one of the torches flickered hard and went out, and from the darkness beyond it ca a shuffling noise. Low. Getting closer.
Roan appeared at Kai’s shoulder, spear raised, his voice dropping to barely anything. "You okay? You zoned out for a second."
"I’m fine." Kai’s hand tightened on his blade. "Sothing’s coming."
"Yeah." Roan was already watching the dark. "How many, you think?"
From the black end of the corridor, two pairs of eyes caught the torchlight. Yellow-green. Small. an.
And then more behind them.
"More than two," Kai said.
Roan exhaled through his nose. "Brilliant. Okay. Fine. Okay."
The things ca out of the dark and they were small — knee height, maybe a little above, with grey-green skin that looked like old leather stretched too thin. They moved in a hunched, scrambling way, heads low, arms too long for their bodies. Claws. Small mouths full of more teeth than necessary. A dozen, at a rough count, and at the back of the pack, one that was larger than the rest by half again — moving differently, slower, with sothing in its eyes that looked uncomfortably close to patience.
Crawler goblins. Basic. First-tier.
The kind that were supposed to be easy.
The kind that were currently charging.
"GO!" Sera’s voice cracked through the corridor and everything exploded.
Finn and Cole hit the front of the pack like they’d rehearsed it — Cole sweeping low with a short axe while Finn’s sword ca across at chest height on the goblins, dropping two of them in the first three seconds. Blood on the stone floor, black in the torchlight. Roan was right behind them, spear driving forward, pinning a third against the wall.
Kai moved.
Not to the front. To the side, keeping low, watching the larger one at the back. It hadn’t charged. It was still watching. That bothered him significantly more than the twelve that had.
A goblin ca at him from the left, claws raking for his face. He ducked under it, blade coming up — clean, fast — and it was done. He didn’t think about it. His body knew what to do. Five years of training, sa as everyone else.
Another one, right behind it. He sidestepped, caught it with an elbow across the jaw, brought the blade back around.
The sounds in the corridor were not pleasant. Short, sharp, ssy. The sll got worse.
And the big one at the back finally moved.
It didn’t rush like the others. It walked. Purposeful. Its claws were twice the length of the smaller ones and its eyes were locked directly on Kai — not on Roan with his spear, not on Finn and Cole who had cut through most of the pack, not on Sera who had put two arrows into the lee from further back.
On Kai.
’Great,’ he thought.
It raised one hand and sothing happened that no one in the training manuals had ntioned for first-tier dungeons — the air around its claws went dark. Not shadow. Sothing with weight to it. Sothing that absorbed the torchlight instead of just blocking it.
Roan’s voice, sharp with alarm: "Kai — it’s using a skill —"
The darkness launched from the creature’s hand like a thrown thing and Kai moved on instinct, twisting sideways, and felt the air where he’d been standing go cold and dead in a way that made his teeth hurt.
He straightened up.
The goblin leader — and that’s what it was, he understood that now, a variant, smarter than the rank suggested — drew its hand back for another strike.
Kai looked at the darkness gathering around its claws.
He felt sothing answer in his chest.
He didn’t know how he knew what to do. He just did. Sa way you know how to close your hand — no thought involved. He raised one hand, palm out, and reached with whatever that lock turning in his chest had released.
He erased it.
Not the goblin. Not yet. Just the skill. The dark thing gathered in its claws.
The air cleared instantly. The weight lifted. Like soone had opened a window. The goblin froze, looking at its own hand with an expression that — if you could call a goblin’s face expressive — was sothing close to confusion.
The torches stopped flickering.
For half a second, the entire corridor was quiet.
Then Kai crossed the distance between them in three steps and the fight was over.
He stood over the thing that had been the dungeon’s version of a boss monster and breathed for a mont, looking at what was left. Not pretty. But done.
Roan appeared next to him. He looked at the goblin. He looked at Kai’s hand — the one he’d raised.
"What," Roan said slowly, "did you just do."
"I don’t completely know yet." Kai lowered his hand. His fingers felt normal. No heat, no buzz, nothing dramatic. He might as well have reached for a cup on a shelf. "But it worked."
"It used a skill." Roan pointed at the thing on the floor. "First-tier bosses don’t use skills. They can’t. The dungeons don’t give them the capacity for it until second-tier at minimum."
"I know."
"And you just —" Roan made a gesture that was supposed to represent sothing but mostly just communicated that he didn’t have the words yet.
"Erased it," Kai said simply.
Roan stared at him. "What’s your class."
Kai looked at the notification still sitting quietly at the edge of his vision, patient as anything.
"Nullifier," he said.
The word landed in the corridor like a stone dropped into still water.
Roan’s mouth opened. Then closed. Then: "What rank."
Kai t his eyes.
"SSS."
Roan sat down on the dungeon floor. Just — sat down. Didn’t say anything for a full ten seconds. The others were drifting over now, drawn by the stillness after the noise, and he barely noticed them.
"SSS," he finally repeated.
"Yeah."
"Kai."
"I know."
"SSS."
"Roan. I know."
Roan looked up at him and there was sothing in his face that was caught between a grin and sheer disbelief and couldn’t quite settle on either.
"Your class," he said, "is called Nullifier. SSS rank. And you just deleted a monster’s ability with your hand."
"That’s about the size of it."
"And you’re standing there like you just swatted a fly."
"I don’t know how else to stand."
"Kai." Roan’s voice dropped. Sothing more serious in it now. "Do you understand what this ans? SSS rank doesn’t exist. It’s not sothing people get. It’s not sothing anyone’s gotten in — in how long? Decades? Maybe longer? And your ability is — you can erase things. Skills. Powers. Whatever they throw at you, you just —"
"Remove it," Kai said quietly.
"Remove it," Roan echoed. He shook his head slowly, staring at the floor. "Your brother was S rank."
Kai went very still.
Roan looked up, and his expression said he imdiately knew that had landed wrong. "I didn’t an —"
"No," Kai said. "You’re right." He looked at the dungeon corridor stretching ahead of them. Torches burning steady now. No darkness. No weight in the air. Just stone and firelight and the path going forward. "He was S rank. And he’s still out there sowhere. And now I have this." He looked at his hand for a mont. Then back at the path. "Which ans I can actually go looking."
Nobody said anything to that.
The notification in his vision pulsed once, soft and blue.
[Welco, Nullifier.]
[The world has rules.]
[You are not one of them.]
Kai closed his hand.
’Wait for , Orin.’
’I’m coming.’
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