The blank scroll sat on Kai’s desk and didn’t do anything.
Which was the problem.
Every other item he’d pulled from the dungeon had responded to inspection — hold it, focus on it, the system spits out a na and a rank and a description. Standard process. He’d done it with the two regular scrolls from the boss loot, confird both were skill scrolls of common rank, set them aside for the group to sort through in the morning.
The blank one was different.
He’d been staring at it for twenty minutes.
It wasn’t blank in the way a blank piece of paper was blank. It was blank the way the identification stone had gone black — not the absence of sothing written, but the absence of whatever should have been there. Like the system had tried to put information on it and found nothing to put.
He held it in both hands. Focused. Nothing.
He activated Null Field and looked at it through the passive radar.
And stopped.
The scroll had a signal.
Not like a skill. Not like a monster ability or a class effect. Those signals had shape — they coiled or pulsed or radiated depending on what they were. This was different. It was flat. Completely, perfectly flat. Like the signal of sothing that had been erased but left a mark where it used to be.
Like a scar where a skill had been.
He set the scroll down carefully.
’Sothing was on this,’ he thought. ’And it’s already been removed.’
By who. By what. And why did a first-tier trial gate drop an item with an erased skill imprint on it.
He filed it. Added it to the growing list of things he didn’t have enough information to answer yet. The list was getting long.
He looked at the window. Full dark outside. The academy grounds were quiet — the last of the returning dungeon groups had co in hours ago, and the dormitory block had wound down to the particular silence of a building full of exhausted people trying to sleep.
He hadn’t slept.
He’d considered Null Space — more hours, more training — but decided against it. His body needed actual rest eventually. Sixteen hours in Null Space was physical work regardless of the ti ratio, and he’d already done a full day on top of it. Running himself into the ground in the first forty-eight hours was not the plan.
He put the scroll in the inside pocket of his jacket, closest to his chest where he’d feel imdiately if anything happened to it.
Lay down.
Stared at the ceiling.
’Void 20,’ he thought. ’Level 2. Day one.’
Roan’s question ca back to him. What is the Void stat going to be when you’re Level 10?
He’d done the rough math. If the pattern held — accelerating gain per level, not linear — by Level 10 he was looking at sothing above 40. Maybe closer to 50. And Level 10 was still Novice rank. Still the lowest tier.
After Novice ca Apprentice. Then Journeyman. Then Expert. Then Master. Then Grandmaster, which almost nobody reached. And above that, theoretical territory that the academy books ntioned in footnotes and then moved quickly past.
He thought about the Null Field radius at Void 20 versus Void 9.
At 9 he’d sensed Finn’s class residue from forty ters without trying. At 20, sitting in his dormitory room right now, he could feel the entire building.
Not the people. Not their thoughts, nothing like that. Just the active and passive skills sitting on them like warmth through walls. Roan two rooms down had Body Reinforcent sitting quiet and steady. Thatch across the hall had sothing active — Void Sight, probably, he was either still awake or it ran passively during sleep. Soone on the floor below had an enhancent skill pulsing at irregular intervals, like they were testing it.
An entire building of newly awakened fifteen-year-olds, and he could read the shape of every ability in it without leaving his bed.
’Stop,’ he told himself.
He closed the radar down. Pulled Null Field back to minimum.
The building went quiet in the way that mattered.
He slept.
---
First bell was early enough to feel like a punishnt.
Orientation ran in the main courtyard — all of the first-year students arranged in rows, which given that there were over two hundred of them took a while to organise properly. The morning air was cold and flat. Nobody looked particularly rested.
Kai stood in the back row with Roan on his left and Thatch two spots down. Finn and Cole were sowhere in the middle rows, already arguing in low voices about sothing. Sera was in the front row because she’d arrived early enough to choose her spot, which told you everything about Sera.
The orientation was run by a woman nad Senior Instructor Maren — tall, dark-haired, sowhere in her late thirties, with the kind of permanently evaluating gaze that ca from years of watching students do things they thought no one was noticing. She delivered the standard first-year speech with the efficiency of soone who’d given it many tis and had stripped out everything that wasn’t necessary.
Class assignnts. Training schedules. Dungeon access protocols. The ranking system explained in detail for anyone who’d sohow missed it in five years of academy prep. The points system that governed progression through the year. Standard things, delivered cleanly.
Kai listened. Took in what was relevant. Noticed the things that weren’t said.
What wasn’t said: anything about special handling for unusual awakening results. Anything about the 48-hour window Voss had ntioned. Anything about the black identification stone.
Voss was standing at the side of the courtyard, hands behind his back, watching the orientation with the sa asured stillness he brought to everything. He hadn’t looked at Kai once since it started.
Which was itself a ssage.
Unremarkable, he’d said. Forty-eight hours.
Kai stood in the back row and was perfectly unremarkable.
After orientation ca individual class assignnts — posted on boards outside the main hall, students crowding around them. The first-year class was divided into four tracks based on awakening rank and class type. A track for D and F ranks, a B and C track, an A track, and a special track listed on the board simply as SR, which stood for Super Rank — A class awakenings and above.
Kai found his na on the board.
It wasn’t in the SR track.
It was in a column at the far right that had no label at all. Just his na. One line. No track designation.
Roan found it at the sa ti and said nothing, which was loud in its own way.
Finn appeared at Kai’s shoulder a mont later, read the board, and said, "That’s not a track."
"No," Kai agreed.
"They made a separate column for just you."
"Apparently."
"What does that an for your schedule?"
Kai looked at the note below his na. A room number and a ti — fourth bell, today. No instructor na. No subject listed.
"It ans soone wants to talk to at fourth bell," he said.
Cole read over Finn’s shoulder. "That’s three hours from now."
"Yes."
"What are you going to do for three hours?"
Kai looked at the training ground schedule posted on the adjacent board. Third-tier training hall — interdiate sparring, open to any rank, no booking required until tenth bell.
"Train," he said.
---
The third-tier hall was large and mostly empty at this hour — a few second-year students running drills at the far end, one instructor supervising without much visible investnt. The floor was compressed earth, the walls lined with wooden practice dummies and weapon racks. High ceilings that made the sound of impact travel.
Kai found a clear space, shed his outer jacket, and started with the form he’d rebuilt in Null Space.
It felt different doing it in the real world.
In Null Space everything was feedback-clean — no input but the movent itself. Out here there was gravity in its normal configuration, there was air resistance, there was the specific weight of the short blade rather than the abstract version he’d been working with for sixteen hours. It was noisier in every sense.
But the corrections he’d made held. The weight shift that had been half a beat late was fixed. The slack in the third strike sequence was gone. He could feel the difference between what he’d had before Null Space and what he had now, and the difference was real.
He ran the form four tis at slow speed, then faster, then full pace.
"You’re changing sothing mid-form."
He stopped.
The voice ca from the left. A girl — his age, maybe a year older — leaning against the wall with her arms crossed and an expression of genuine assessnt rather than criticism. She had close-cropped dark hair and wore the academy uniform with the SR track insignia on the collar, which ant A rank or above. Sothing in the way she stood suggested she’d been watching for more than a few seconds.
"Fourth strike," she said. "You shifted the weight earlier than the standard form calls for. It’s not wrong — actually it’s better — but it’s not what they teach."
"I worked it out yesterday," Kai said.
"Yesterday." She said it without inflection, but the slight tilt of her head suggested she found that interesting. "In the dungeon?"
"After."
She pushed off the wall and walked over. She was a few centiters shorter than him and moved with the precise economy of soone whose class was physical — no wasted motion, nothing decorative. "What’s your class?"
"What’s yours?" Kai said.
Not aggressive. Just level.
She looked at him for a second with an expression that recalibrated slightly. "Shatter. B rank. Makes my strikes produce fracture force on impact — hits from the inside out." She said it the way people with good classes said things when they were used to the class being impressive. Then: "You’re the one with the black stone."
"The information moved fast."
"It always does." She held his gaze. "What’s the class?"
Kai looked at her for a mont. Unremarkable, Voss had said. Forty-eight hours.
But the 48-hour clock was for people above the Academy Board. Not for a B rank SR track student in the training hall at seventh bell.
"Nullifier," he said.
Her expression didn’t change imdiately. Then, slowly, sothing in it sharpened. "That’s not a class I’ve heard of."
"No."
"What rank?"
He told her.
She was quiet for three full seconds. Then she said, "Show sothing."
Kai looked at her. "Why?"
"Because I’ve been in this academy for two years and in that ti I have t exactly zero people whose class I couldn’t imdiately categorise. Combat, support, enhancent, perception — every class fits sowhere. You’re the first one that the stone went black for and I want to understand what that ans in practice." She uncrossed her arms. "So show sothing. I’ll spar with you. Use the ability if you want to."
"You want to spar soone whose ability erases skills."
"Yes."
"Your class is entirely skill-based."
"Yes," she said again, without missing a beat. "That’s the point. I want to see it from the other side."
Kai looked at her for a mont. She was serious. Not reckless — there was nothing wild in her expression, no edge of showing off or proving sothing. Just genuine curiosity, the systematic kind.
He picked up a practice blade from the rack — blunted, balanced roughly like his real one.
"Your na," he said.
"Lira Voss," she said.
Kai stilled for just a fraction of a second.
"Voss," he repeated.
"He’s my uncle," she said, and the faintest edge of sothing — amusent, maybe — showed at the corner of her mouth. "He doesn’t go easy on because of it. If that’s what you’re calculating."
Kai filed that. Commander Voss’s niece. B rank. SR track. Two years ahead of him. Offered a spar imdiately after introducing herself.
Not a coincidence.
He raised the practice blade anyway.
"Rules?" he asked.
"First clear strike. No permanence on the erasure — just show the chanism."
"Agreed."
She moved first.
She was fast — faster than he’d anticipated from her size, the B rank showing in the quality of the movent. Her strike ca from the right, angled for his shoulder, and the mont it landed he felt the fracture force skill activate inside the blade — not a physical sensation, but on the Null Field radar it lit up like a match strike, sharp and imdiate.
He erased it mid-swing.
The blade connected with his shoulder guard. Normal impact. No fracture force. Just wood on leather.
She stepped back.
Looked at her blade. Looked at him.
"That was mid-swing," she said. "After the skill activated."
"Yes."
"How much warning did you have?"
"Enough."
She tried again — faster this ti, no wind-up, the skill activating at the sa mont her foot left the ground.
He caught it on the Null Field radar the instant it ignited and erased it before the strike landed.
Again. Normal impact. No fracture.
She lowered the practice blade.
"You felt it the mont I decided to use it," she said. It wasn’t quite a question.
"The mont it activated. Not before." He paused. "Though I’m not entirely sure those are different things."
She was quiet for a mont, sothing working behind her eyes. "What does it feel like? From your side?"
Kai thought about how to put it in words that weren’t just describing the chanics.
"Imagine everything supernatural in the area around you is a sound," he said. "Your class is running, it sounds a certain way. The mont you use the skill it gets louder. The mont I erase it, it goes quiet." He looked at the practice blade in his hand. "The whole building sounded like that last night when I was trying to sleep."
She stared at him.
"The whole building," she said.
"Two hundred students and their class skills. Yes."
"From your room."
"From my room."
Lira Voss looked at him for a long mont. Long enough that one of the second-year students at the far end of the hall glanced over, noticed she’d stopped moving, and went back to their own drills.
"My uncle told to find you this morning," she said finally.
Kai had suspected.
"What did he tell you to do?"
"Find out if you were actually what the stone suggested or if it was an equipnt error." She set the practice blade down on the rack. "It’s not an equipnt error."
"No."
"He also told —" she stopped. Started again. "He said that the eting at fourth bell isn’t with an instructor."
Kai looked at her.
"It’s with the Academy Board," she said. "Two of them. They ca in last night after he filed the preliminary report. They were supposed to wait forty-eight hours but they ca in anyway." She held his gaze steadily. "He wanted you to know before you walked in there."
Kai took that in.
The forty-eight hours were gone. Less than a day in.
He looked at the window — bright morning, students crossing the courtyard in the direction of their first classes. Everything ordinary from the outside.
He thought about the blank scroll in his jacket pocket. Void at 20 and accelerating. The Class Origin Log entry about the previous Nullifier who had erased themselves from history.
The Academy Board had co early because they were worried about losing the window to control the situation.
Which ant they already understood what they were dealing with better than most.
’Good,’ Kai thought, surprising himself slightly. ’That makes the conversation easier.’
"Thank you," he said to Lira.
She nodded once. Then: "The fourth strike adjustnt. Where did you work it out?"
"Null Space. Class feature. Ti ratio."
She absorbed that. "How long were you in there?"
"Sixteen hours. Four passed outside."
Sothing moved in her expression — not envy exactly. More like the recalibration she’d done when he’d said SSS, but deeper. "What’s the ratio?"
"One to four at Void 20. It scales with the stat."
She looked at him for a long mont. "What’s the Void stat going to be when you’re my level?"
Kai almost smiled.
Roan had asked him almost the sa thing last night. He hadn’t said it out loud then either.
"Sothing unreasonable," he said.
He picked up his jacket. Slid it on. Felt the blank scroll in the inner pocket, flat and quiet and inexplicably present.
"Fourth bell," he said. "Academy Board."
"They’ll try to assign you a handler," Lira said. "Soone to oversee your training and report your progress upward. It’s what they do with high-rank awakenings."
"And if I decline?"
She looked at him with the specific expression of soone who found the question interesting rather than naive. "Then they’ll try harder," she said. "But — and my uncle would tell you this himself if he could say it plainly — an SSS rank Nullifier who says no to the Academy Board is a very different problem for them than a high-rank combat class who says no." She paused. "Because they can’t make you do anything. And they know it. And you knowing that they know it changes the conversation entirely."
Kai looked at her.
She’d thought about this. Not just in the last few minutes — she’d thought about it before she walked into this hall. Which ant Voss had thought about it and talked to her about it and sent her here with sothing specific to say.
The Commander was giving him more than forty-eight hours.
He was giving him a frawork.
"What does your uncle want?" Kai asked directly.
Lira didn’t hesitate. "Sa thing you want," she said. "Soone with your ability operating freely, not leashed to a desk in so Board facility making the institution look powerful." She t his eyes. "He’s been in this system long enough to know the difference between an asset and a weapon. The Board sees assets. He sees sothing else."
"What does he see?"
She almost smiled. It was a small thing, barely there.
"Soone who’s looking for their brother," she said.
Kai went still.
He’d told Voss nothing about Orin. Nothing at all.
Which ant Voss had looked him up after the registration hall. Had gone into the records and found the missing person report filed four years ago and connected it to the student standing in front of him with an SSS rank class and a very particular kind of ability.
He thought about what Voss had said at the table. I’ve seen what happens to assets when institutions get hold of them.
He thought about Orin. S rank. A guild team. A high-rank dungeon. Three lines of text in a letter.
He thought about the previous Nullifier. Erased themselves from history. No na, no records, no traces.
’He’s not just giving a head start,’ Kai realised. ’He’s telling to stay free.’
"Alright," he said quietly.
Lira nodded. She picked up her own jacket from the bench. "I’ll be at fourth bell too. My uncle asked to be there."
"As?"
"Soone in the room who already knows what you can do." She said it simply. "The Board responds differently when the information isn’t new to everyone present."
She walked toward the hall exit. Stopped at the door.
"The form," she said without turning around. "The weight shift. It’s correct. The standard academy form has it wrong — puts too much commitnt in the back foot on the fourth strike, leaves the return line open." She glanced back briefly. "Sixteen hours in a ti-ratio training space and you found it on your own." She looked at him for a second. "Don’t let them put you in a room, Duskmore. Whatever they offer."
She left.
Kai stood alone in the training hall for a mont.
Three hours until fourth bell.
He picked up the practice blade again.
He was going to need the movent to be perfect.
Not because the Board would see it. They wouldn’t.
But because in the eting at fourth bell, everything else was going to be a kind of performance — saying the right things, holding the right ground, reading the room correctly. All of that was going to require a very specific kind of calm.
And the way he’d always found calm was simple.
He raised the blade.
Started the form from the beginning.
One step at a ti.
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