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The room they used was not an office.

Kai noticed that first.

Room 14-C was three floors below the main hall, in the part of the academy building that the students didn’t use — administrative, functional, lit by large fixed lamp-stones that gave everything an even, shadowless quality that felt deliberate. The hallways down here were wide. The doors were heavy. The whole floor had the quiet of a place that expected its noise to stay contained.

Room 14-C had a long table. Eight chairs — four on each side — and at the far end, a single chair facing down the length of it, positioned slightly lower than the others, which was the kind of architectural manipulation that Kai noticed and filed without reacting to.

They’d set it up for an interrogation. Dressed it up in conference-room clothes, but the shape was the sa.

He arrived two minutes before fourth bell. Not early, not late. Roan had wanted to co and Kai had said no, which had produced the longest three seconds of silence Roan had ever directed at him.

"It’s a board eting," Roan had said.

"I know."

"You should have soone there."

"Lira Voss will be there."

Another silence, different quality. "You trust her?"

Kai had thought about it. "I trust that her uncle sent her and her uncle has his own reasons to want this to go a particular way. Which are roughly aligned with mine."

"That’s not the sa as trusting her."

"No," Kai had agreed. "But it’s enough for one eting."

Roan had let it go. Reluctantly, verbosely, with a great deal of comntary about Kai’s tendency to walk into things alone that Kai had listened to with the patient attention he always gave Roan’s concerns before doing what he’d already decided to do anyway.

He pushed open the door to 14-C.

Two people were already seated on the left side of the table. They looked up when he entered.

The first was a man in his fifties — heavyset, close-cut grey hair, wearing an academy senior coat with four rank insignia on the collar. His na, Kai would learn shortly, was Board Director Caius Holt. He had the face of soone who had spent thirty years being right about things and had developed a specific impatience with the occasions when he wasn’t. He looked at Kai the way you looked at a complication.

The second was a woman Kai’s estimate put at late forties — lean, with a careful stillness about her and eyes that moved with the particular precision of soone who had a perception-type class and had been using it for long enough that it had beco their default way of existing in the world. She wore no insignia at all, which told Kai she was either retired from whatever official position she’d held or not affiliated with the academy structure at all. Her na was Mira Callant. She looked at Kai the way you looked at sothing you’d read about in records and were now seeing for the first ti in the real world.

Lira Voss was seated on the right side of the table, near the window, with a cup of sothing steaming in front of her and the expression of soone who was present without being invested. She caught his eye when he ca in and gave him nothing — no nod, no signal. Just present. Already knowing.

Commander Voss was not in the room.

Kai sat down in the single chair at the end of the table. He noted the height difference. Said nothing about it.

"Kai Duskmore," Director Holt said. Not a greeting. An identification.

"Director," Kai said.

"You know why you’re here."

"I have an idea."

Holt opened the folder in front of him. He didn’t look at it. It was a prop — he’d clearly already read everything in it. "SSS rank. Class: Nullifier. Awakened yesterday morning in the south trial gate." He turned a page he wasn’t reading. "Identification stone produced a null result during registration. No precedent on record in the past six decades." He closed the folder. "That about right?"

"Yes."

"Tell what you can do."

Kai looked at him. "The class description is in the report Voss filed."

"I’ve read the report. I’m asking you."

The room was quiet. The lamp-stones buzzed faintly — low, steady. Kai beca aware that Mira Callant had not looked away from him since he sat down.

He kept his voice level and his hands still on the table.

"Erasure," he said. "Active ability. I can reach into any operating skill, ability, buff, or supernatural effect and remove it. The effect can’t be re-used for a duration. At current levels, that duration is approximately ten minutes for a common rank skill. I expect it to extend as my Void stat increases." He paused. "Null Field. Passive ability. A suppression field centered on . Everything supernatural operating within its range runs at reduced efficiency — higher cost, lower output, faster degradation. Currently the range is the building we’re sitting in."

Holt’s expression didn’t change. Sothing behind it did.

"The building," Mira Callant said. She’d spoken for the first ti. Her voice was asured, not sharp — the kind of voice that asked things because it genuinely wanted to know, not to establish territory.

"At Void 20," Kai said. "Yes."

"What was your Void stat at awakening?"

"Nine."

She was quiet for a mont. "And the class milestone gains —"

"All logged in the report," Holt cut in. He wasn’t looking at Mira. He was looking at Kai. "What he’s telling us is that he’s been operating at Novice Level 2 for less than a day and he can already passively suppress every class ability in this building without activating anything."

"That’s accurate," Kai said.

A pause.

"Can you feel mine?" Holt asked. Flatly.

Kai looked at him for a second.

Then he activated Null Field — not the full range, just the local version, the few-ter radius — and felt the table. Holt. Mira. Lira.

Holt had two things running. A passive skill, steady and low — so kind of endurance or resistance type. And sothing else, deeper, that had the layered quality of a long-maintained buff that had been active so long it had almost beco background.

Mira had nothing active. Which was either extrely controlled discipline, or she was suppressing her own output deliberately because she knew what he was and didn’t want him reading her.

That told him quite a lot about Mira Callant.

Lira had Shatter sitting quiet and ready, the sa B rank signature he’d felt in the training hall.

"Director," he said, "you have a passive resistance skill and what feels like a long-duration personal buff. The buff has been running for a while — years, maybe. Common rank or higher." He looked at Mira. "You’re suppressing deliberately."

Holt stared at him.

Mira tilted her head one degree. Nothing else changed in her face.

"That’s not sothing you should be able to do from across a table," Holt said.

"No," Kai agreed. "It isn’t."

The silence stretched out. Kai let it.

"Void 20," Mira said quietly, more to herself than the room. "Novice rank. Day one." She looked up. "What does it scale to?"

"I don’t know the ceiling," Kai said. "The description says it interacts with concepts beyond the physical at sufficient levels. I haven’t been able to test that. What I can tell you is the rate of increase is accelerating — not linear. Each level gains more than the last."

"By how much?"

"Levels 0 to 1 gained two points. Level 1 to 2 gained three. If the curve continues —" He paused. "I’d rather not speculate out loud."

Mira looked at him. "Why not?"

"Because speculating about it in this room right now, with two Academy Board mbers who ca in twenty hours ahead of schedule, creates a negotiating atmosphere I’d prefer to avoid."

The silence that followed that had a different texture.

Holt leaned back. He had the look of a man recalibrating — not thrown, but adjusting. The kind of adjustnt that professionals made when sothing didn’t fit the shape they’d prepared for.

"You understand why we’re here," he said.

"Yes."

"Then you understand what we’re going to propose."

"A handler," Kai said. "Oversight of my training. Regular reporting of ability developnt. Possibly a research component — access to historical dungeon records in exchange for cooperation." He kept his voice even. "And so version of institutional affiliation that gives the Academy Board a stake in my activity going forward."

Holt stared at him.

"That’s a sophisticated read of the situation for a sixteen-year-old," Mira said.

"I’ve had so ti to think about it," Kai said. He looked at Holt directly. "My answer is no."

The room went quiet in a way that suggested the no had landed exactly as hard as he’d intended.

Holt leaned forward. "Duskmore —"

"I don’t have anything against the Academy," Kai said. "I’m not trying to be difficult. I understand the concern. An ability that can strip any skill from any person in a building-wide radius, operating on a stat that’s accelerating without a visible ceiling — yes. I understand why you’re here. I understand why you ca early." He looked at Holt steadily. "But a handler ans my information goes up a chain I don’t control, to people making decisions I don’t have input on, for objectives I didn’t sign up for. And the mont that structure exists, my ability to do what I actually need to do becos contingent on approval I haven’t been given."

"What you need to do," Holt repeated.

"I have a brother. He’s been missing for four years. He went into a high-rank dungeon with a guild team and didn’t co out. The guild stopped searching eight months ago." Kai didn’t change his expression. "I have an SSS rank class with a Void stat that’s going to be sowhere unreasonable by the ti I’m out of Novice tier. I’m going to find him. Everything else is secondary to that until it’s done."

Holt looked at him for a long mont.

Then he looked at Mira.

Sothing passed between them that Kai couldn’t fully read — too subtle, too embedded in a longer history he wasn’t part of. Mira kept her face neutral through it.

"The missing person," Holt said. "Orin Duskmore. S rank. Guild team: the Crimson Reach. Gate designation: Tier Five, interior collapse, search terminated." He wasn’t reading from anything. He had it morized. "You think he’s alive."

"I think there’s no evidence he’s dead."

"There’s no evidence of a lot of things."

"No." Kai looked at him. "There’s also no record of anyone with S rank dying inside a Tier Five collapse without a trace. S rank fighters leave traces. The dungeon collapses around them or their ability effects survive them or — sothing. The guild’s search turned up nothing. Not a little. Nothing." He let that sit. "That’s not death. That’s sothing else."

Holt was quiet.

Mira was watching Kai with the intent, still focus of soone who’d spent a very long ti learning to read people and was finding this one interesting in a specific way.

"What do you know about the Crimson Reach?" she asked.

Kai looked at her directly. He’d been waiting for her to engage properly. He had the sense she was the one who mattered in this room, despite Holt’s seniority.

"Mid-tier guild. Specialised in Tier Four and Five expeditions. Decent reputation, not exceptional. Took on a Tier Five designation designated Gate Zero-Three-Nine on the eastern border, eighteen months after the gate appeared. Interior collapse was reported by the junior retrieval team they sent in after comms went dark." He paused. "The retrieval team ca out. The original expedition team didn’t."

"The retrieval team had seven mbers," Mira said. "Four of them died inside the dungeon before reaching the point of collapse. The remaining three ca out with class-level damage severe enough that two of them never fully recovered."

Kai hadn’t known that. It wasn’t in the official guild letter and the public records had been sanitized.

He filed the revision. Kept his expression flat.

"What’s in Gate Zero-Three-Nine that killed a four-man retrieval team and damaged three more?" he said.

"That’s not sothing we’re able to discuss with —"

"With a Novice rank student," Kai said quietly. "I understand. I’m just pointing out that I’m going to find out anyway, one way or another, and the version where you tell is the one where I’m not operating completely blind in sothing that already killed people."

The room was quiet.

Mira and Holt looked at each other again.

This ti the communication in the look was different. Longer. More complicated.

Holt sat back. He had the expression of a man making a decision he wasn’t fully comfortable with, which was different from the expression of a man who wasn’t going to make it.

"We’re not going to discuss Gate Zero-Three-Nine in this eting," he said finally. "What I am prepared to do is table the handler proposal in exchange for a different arrangent." He looked at Kai directly. "Voluntary reporting. Not mandatory. You update the Board when you have ability developnts significant enough to affect our threat assessnt. In return, we give you access to the restricted gate records — everything above Tier Three, including Zero-Three-Nine’s full interior survey." He paused. "And we don’t classify your awakening. Which we could, Duskmore. The legal frawork exists for SSS rank awakenings and we don’t need your consent to invoke it."

Kai looked at him.

"But you’re not going to," he said.

Holt t his gaze. "No. I’m not."

A beat of quiet.

"Because it wouldn’t work," Mira said simply, from her side of the table. "And he knows it."

Kai turned to her.

She’d stopped suppressing. He felt her class co online — not dramatically, just present. Sothing perception-based, deep and layered, the kind of class that had been running for decades and had grown into the person using it rather than existing separately. It felt like being looked at from very far away with very good eyes.

"A Nullifier who doesn’t want to be classified," she said, "is a problem the classification frawork wasn’t designed to solve. You’d erase the classification itself before it took effect, if you chose to." She tilted her head slightly. "You know that, don’t you."

"I hadn’t tested it," Kai said. "But yes."

"So we’re not here to control you," she said. "We’re here because we’d like to know where you are and roughly what you’re doing. Which is a considerably more modest ask."

He looked at her for a mont.

"Why?" he said. Not hostile. Genuinely asking.

"Because an SSS rank Nullifier operating freely in the world is not a controllable variable," Mira said. "But it could be a useful one. And we’d rather have so communication with a useful variable than none." She folded her hands on the table. "The gate records. Voluntary reporting. Nothing classified. Nothing mandatory. You walk out of here with the sa freedom you walked in with."

Kai looked at the table. The lamp-stone hum was a steady low note. Outside, the sounds of the academy grounds were faint through the thick walls — distant voices, sothing tallic, ordinary.

He thought about the blank scroll in his pocket. The Class Origin Log. The previous Nullifier who had erased themselves from history and left nothing behind — not because they’d lost, but because they’d chosen it. Because sothing about becoming what this class was had ended in that specific, particular way.

He didn’t want that outco.

He wanted Orin.

He wanted to be strong enough to get to wherever Orin was and bring him back and then figure out the rest from there.

The gate records were not a small thing. Full interior surveys above Tier Three were restricted for everyone outside the upper tier of the guild network. He hadn’t had a plan for getting access to them that didn’t involve either breaking a considerable amount of academy policy or waiting until he was powerful enough that nobody would stop him.

Waiting was the thing he was least willing to do.

"Voluntary reporting," he said. "I decide what’s significant enough. Not you."

"Agreed," Mira said.

"The gate records. All of them above Tier Three. Not just Zero-Three-Nine."

Holt’s jaw tightened.

"Zero-Three-Nine and two additional designations of your choosing," Mira said.

"Five additional."

A pause.

"Three," she said.

"Four," Kai said. "And I want them today."

The pause was longer this ti.

Mira looked at Holt. He looked back at her. Sothing in the look had shifted — not defeat, but the expression of soone who had expected a harder negotiation and was recalibrating to a faster one.

"Four additional," Holt said. "Today."

"Then we have an arrangent," Kai said.

Nobody moved for a mont.

Lira, who had been sitting by the window without speaking for the entire eting, looked at Kai with the ghost of an expression that was not quite a smile and not quite surprise. Sothing in between.

Holt opened the folder again — the real version of it this ti, a different page — and slid a transfer chit across the table. "Archives are on sub-level two. Chit grants you access. You’ll be assigned a restricted reading room."

Kai took the chit.

He stood up.

"One more thing," Mira said.

He looked at her.

"The Class Origin Log." She held his gaze steadily. "We know it exists. Every class at SSS has one — it’s part of the system architecture for apex-level awakenings. You won’t tell what it says, and I’m not asking." She paused. "I’m asking if you’ve read it."

"Yes," Kai said.

"And?"

He looked at her for a mont. She’d stopped being what she’d seed when he ca in — the careful, neutral observer. What was under that was different. Sharper. She had the specific kind of interest in the Origin Log that ca from knowing sothing about it already.

"Previous holder," he said carefully. "Sixty-one years ago."

She didn’t react.

Which told him she’d known.

"How much do you know about the first Nullifier?" he said.

"Less than I’d like," she said. "And more than anyone else alive." She looked at him steadily. "When you’re ready to have that conversation — truly ready, not just inford enough to think you are — I’ll be available." She paused. "The conversation will be significant."

He looked at her.

She looked back.

Whatever was in her eyes, it wasn’t academic interest. It wasn’t institutional managent. It was sothing older than this eting, older than this arrangent, that had been waiting a long ti for the right mont to show itself.

He filed it. Pocketed the chit.

"I know where to find you," he said.

He walked out.

---

The hallway outside 14-C was empty.

He stood in it for a mont, listening to the lamp-stone hum, feeling the building around him through Null Field — the sa map it had been when he ca in, nothing changed, two hundred students and their newly awakened classes going about the first full day of what their lives were going to be.

Lira ca out behind him.

She fell into step without being asked. They walked toward the stairwell at the end of the hall in silence for a mont.

"The four additional records," she said.

"Yes."

"You had a target in mind before you started the negotiation."

"I had five targets. They countered at three. Four was the middle."

She was quiet for half a step. "Which four?"

Kai considered. She was Voss’s niece. She’d been in this building for two years. She was B rank SR track with a combat class that told him she spent ti in gates, not just classrooms.

"Zero-Three-Nine," he said. "That’s Orin’s gate. The other four —" He paused. "There are four other Tier Five gates on the eastern border that opened within eighteen months of Zero-Three-Nine. Sa cluster, sa ti window. No expeditions above a retrieval run on any of them."

She looked at him. "The Board has access to those records."

"Yes."

"If they’d sent proper expeditions to those gates, the records would show it. If they didn’t —" She stopped walking. "They know sothing about that cluster."

"They know sothing about that cluster," Kai agreed.

She stood in the hallway and looked at him with an expression that had moved past recalibration

You are reading SSS+ Awakening: Evolving My Legendary Skill to level 100 Chapter 7: The Board on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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