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It didn’t take long for the cryo pod to work its magic. Maybe five or six hours passed inside that icy cocoon, the kind that numbed more than just the body.

By the ti I stepped out, my injuries were gone—patched up neatly like they never existed. Apparently, it wasn’t anything fatal, just the backlash from using mana too aggressively. Common stuff.

Now, I sat in the infirmary. Again. This ti for a mandatory follow-up check.

The nurse assigned to —still the sa one—stood a few feet away. The pink-haired, deep-blue-eyed seductress who always looked like she belonged in a different kind of institution.

One with less clothing and more dramatics.

She wore the sa sleek, form-fitting uniform that clung to every curve like a second skin. A nurse cosplay designed by a sadist. Probably the Academy’s idea of dical therapy: mix healing with humiliation.

But honestly, I wasn’t in the mood for lust. I had too much rotting in my head to think about anything else.

And to be brutally honest... I felt fine.

Not just physically. But ntally. Emotionally. Spiritually? If that even counted anymore.

The regret—the guilt—the so-called morality of ending over twenty thousand lives? Gone. Just poof. Like vapor under the sun.

It turns out I had a rather powerful antidote to guilt: justification.

And I was damn good at justifying.

So what if I twisted logic like a wet rag? So what if I cobbled together nonsense reasons to silence my conscience?

I lived by a simple philosophy: If I deed you unworthy of existing, then you weren’t worth the air you breathed.

It was clean. Efficient. Personal.

Didn’t matter if you were man, woman, child, dog, demon, or god. I didn’t discriminate. I never had.

The universe is cruel. I just played along with the rules—no, I bent them to suit .

And the cherry on top?

I ranked up.

’System Profile’

— Profile —

Na: Cassius Lancaster

Rank: ★★★★

Exp: 67,770 / 1,000,000

Elent: Lightning, Nothing

Abilities:

[Flash Speed], [Lightning], [Thousand Slash], [Violent Fist], [Indigo Bloom], [Physical Enhancent], [Null Blade], [Silent Unravel]

Skills:

[Violet Violent Swordsmanship], [Mana Control], [Swordsmanship], [Reading Comprehension], [Culinary], [Politics], [Blood Boost]

— Stats —

Health: 200,000 / 200,000

Strength: 401

Stamina: 260

Speed: 440

Endurance: 330

Dexterity: 250

Luck: 62

Stat Points Available: 10,000

— Close —

Ten thousand stat points.

That number wasn’t just impressive—it was ridiculous.

But that was the thrill of rising through the ranks. Every Rank Up ca with exponential benefits. A single star? You got 10 points. Two stars? 100. Three? 1,000.

Now four stars?

10,000.

The difference between ranks wasn’t just a step up—it was a canyon. And I’d just leapt across it.

Sure, the EXP requirent had ballooned into absurdity, and the climb to the next star would be hell, but who cared?

Right now, I was staring at a pool of raw potential. A tide of power just begging to be molded.

Getting stronger wasn’t a goal anymore—it was a religion.

But amidst the stats and the boosts, two abilities caught my eye.

[Null Blade]

[Silent Unravel]

They weren’t there before. I knew my arsenal. Every skill, every technique. These were new.

My instincts tingled the second I saw them. Not from excitent—no. From caution.

They didn’t reek of lightning. They weren’t anything like my current abilities. No sparks. No thunder. Just... silence.

’Nothing,’ I thought.

It was the second elent listed under mine.

And I wanted to keep ignoring it.

It sounded poetic. Cool, even. But I’d long since learned that cool things kill. And "Nothing" was the kind of elent that probably didn’t obey rules. Not natural ones. Not human ones. Maybe not even cosmic ones.

I wasn’t ready for that.

Not yet.

So, like the responsible, emotionally-detached, murder-justifying lunatic I was—I shelved the thought. Stuffed it in a box. Locked it. Buried it six feet under my psyche and threw away the shovel.

Because if there was one thing I hated more than weak enemies and forced sentintality... it was complications.

"Your check-up is complete," the nurse’s voice cut through the air, snapping out of my thoughts. "No major injuries detected. Just standard repercussions from mana overexertion. You’re stable."

She tapped sothing on her tablet, then added, "Also, ten credits have been deducted from your account."

I gave a simple nod. "Right. So, I’m good to go now?"

She didn’t answer imdiately. Instead, she folded her arms under her chest, tilting her head slightly.

That sa form-fitting uniform clung to her like a second skin, making her look more like a model from a questionable fantasy magazine than soone in the dical field.

Her pink hair shimred faintly under the sterile lights, and her deep blue eyes locked onto mine with unsettling clarity.

Then she spoke.

"I have so questions for you."

I frowned. "Questions?"

"You may answer them," she clarified gently, "and then you can leave."

I raised an eyebrow. "May answer them. So, I don’t have to. There’s no actual obligation here, is there?"

She shook her head slowly, her expression neutral but persistent. "No. There isn’t. This is personal, I assu. I won’t cross any boundaries if you’re not comfortable."

"Then don’t ask the question," I replied coldly. "It’s that simple."

She sighed, brushing her hair back with a practiced motion. "I’m part of the dical departnt, Mr. Lancaster. When I see soone suffering, my first instinct is to help. Even if they don’t ask for it."

I t her gaze, unimpressed. "So, you think I’m suffering?"

Her voice softened. "Yes. I do."

I narrowed my eyes unconsciously. Her tone didn’t accuse . It didn’t pity either. It was just... factual. As if she’d already done her diagnosis.

She continued, "I’ve observed how you interact with people. The way you carry yourself. There’s a certain distance you maintain. But more than that... I’ve seen how you are when you sleep."

That made pause. Sleep?

My expression shifted, subtle but sharp. "Do I sleepwalk or sothing?"

She shook her head. "No, nothing like that. Sothing worse."

"Worse?"

"You curl into yourself," she said, almost in a whisper. "Your body language screams fear. Isolation. Like you’re trapped sowhere and just... surviving it. It’s not physical pain, but it’s deep. It looks like the echo of trauma."

Her words hung in the air.

I wanted to scoff, maybe even laugh. But the worst part? She wasn’t wrong. And she wasn’t just guessing.

She added softly, "That’s why I’m asking. If there’s anything weighing on you... you can talk. You don’t have to—but you can. I extended the sa offer to the child too."

"Rufus?" I asked, my voice dropping.

She nodded. "Yes. He’s under my care as well."

"How is he?"

Her eyes lowered slightly. "He’s alive. That’s the best I can say for now. But... he’s not speaking. Complete silence. It’s like the world’s too loud for him. Or maybe he’s too far away from it."

"So no progress?"

"No vocal response," she confird. "He reacts to stimuli. Flinches at sudden movent. But words? Questions? He shuts down completely. I believe it’s trauma-induced mutism."

"I figured as much," I muttered.

"Which is why no one should force him," she said firmly. "He must recover on his own terms. Pushing him will only worsen the damage. Let him be. Let him choose what he wants."

"That’s the problem though," I muttered, rubbing my temple. "We don’t know what he wants..."

She hesitated, then said, "He was muttering sothing. Quietly. When no one was around. I only caught pieces of it. And... he has this habit. He checks his hands and legs constantly. Like he’s searching for sothing that isn’t there."

My breath caught for a second.

Torture... That made sense. He’d been brutalized, over and over. His mind probably still lived inside that chamber, even though his body had escaped. Repetition carves deep into the psyche.

But then... sothing didn’t add up.

A question suddenly clicked in my head. One I couldn’t ignore.

"Can I ask you sothing?" I said, voice lower than before. "When you first received him—Rufus—was he... injured? Like... severely?"

The nurse furrowed her brows, puzzled. "No. Not at all."

I froze.

"There wasn’t a single wound on his body," she continued, as if not realizing the weight of her words. "His condition is entirely psychological. No bruises, no lacerations. Nothing. We ran full scans."

My heart dropped.

No way in hell.

That wasn’t possible. I saw him. I was there. He was nailed—nailed—through his fingers and feet. Blood-drenched, bone-deep. His limbs were broken.

His eyes—those blank, distant eyes—they were fading in real ti. There’s no way anyone could walk away from that with zero injuries.

Unless...

Unless soone—or sothing—intervened.

The nurse must’ve noticed my silence because she cleared her throat. "Was he... supposed to be injured?"

I blinked. Hard.

She was his therapist. She deserved to know.

"Yeah," I said finally. "When I found him, he was in a catastrophic state. His hands and feet were impaled with iron nails. His body was a canvas of bruises and cuts. He was... dying."

She inhaled sharply, a tremor of horror in her breath. "To do that to a child..."

I nodded grimly. "That’s why he checks his limbs. It’s not random. It’s a reflex. He’s probably expecting pain that doesn’t co. Phantom pain. Or worse—he’s just confused it’s not still there."

She placed her hand over her mouth. "Phantom trauma... yes. That would explain it. The mind is repeating the sensation long after the wounds are gone."

"But most likely," I said, eyes distant, "it’s a habit. One burned into him through sheer repetition. Pain was probably his only constant."

The nurse’s eyes hardened with resolve. "I need to go deeper into this. His trauma may be more complex than I thought. If he healed that fast with no scars... either there’s advanced intervention involved, or sothing is terribly off."

I didn’t answer. Because I didn’t know which one was worse.

But one thing was clear.

Sothing was wrong with Rufus. And whatever it was... it wasn’t just human cruelty anymore.

It was sothing deeper. Stranger.

And far, far more dangerous.

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