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Chapter 22: The Entrance Exam (II)

I pressed forward. Not attacking — advancing. Closing distance with the asured, predatory pace of soone who controlled the fight’s geography without needing to swing. Every step I took forced Aiden to adjust, to react, to cede ground. I was dictating the rhythm. Making him dance to my tempo.

This was the performance. This was what the evaluators needed to see — a fighter with superior technical skill, clean fundantals, and the tactical awareness of soone who’d been trained by the best. D-rank-adjacent. Convincing. The mask extended to combat.

Aiden reset. His jaw tightened. The green eyes sharpened. He was adjusting in real-ti — reprocessing his opponent, upgrading the threat assessnt, recalculating his approach. Good. The boy learned fast.

He attacked again. Different this ti. Less structured. He abandoned the opening combinations and went instinctive — a rapid sequence of strikes that had no textbook na because they’d been invented in backyards and alleys by a kid who couldn’t afford a training manual. Slash, thrust, spinning elbow (not a sword technique — a brawler’s move repurposed for ard combat), low kick to the knee, imdiate overhead chop.

Chaos as strategy. Unpredictability as weapon. The exact opposite of the Valdrake school’s precision.

And it was working.

I parried the slash. Deflected the thrust. The spinning elbow caught

by surprise — my ga knowledge hadn’t included that move because it wasn’t a technique the ga’s combat engine supported — and I barely avoided it, feeling the wind of his forearm pass an inch from my jaw. The low kick connected with the outside of my knee, not hard enough to damage but hard enough to compromise my stance for a fraction of a second.

The overhead chop ca down.

I caught it. Blade to blade, crossed guards, faces two feet apart. His green eyes staring into my violet ones.

He was breathing hard. So was I.

Two minutes.

My Void reinforcent was holding. The ridians were carrying the load, feeding Aether into my muscles and reflexes with the adapted efficiency the Fractured Path quest had earned . But I could feel the strain building — a heat in my forearms, a trembling in my wrists, the early warnings of a system approaching its limits.

Three minutes was the wall. I needed to lose before I hit it.

But I needed the loss to look right. Not like failure. Like bad luck.

I pushed Aiden back. Disengaged. Created space. Resud the Valdrake stance.

The crowd was making noise again — not the generic hum of before but sothing more specific. Surprise. The Valdrake heir was fighting well — that was expected. But the commoner was fighting back. That was not.

I saw the evaluators’ table at the platform’s edge. Instructor Veylan was watching with his arms crossed. His expression — perpetual baseline of unimpressed — had shifted by approximately one degree. His eyes were tracking not just the fight but my Aether output, and I could see the calculation happening behind that scarred face.

He was asuring the gap between what I was showing and what I should be showing.

Two minutes thirty seconds. Thirty seconds left in my window.

Ti for the ending.

I shifted my stance. Opened my guard — slightly, deliberately, in a way that a D-rank fighter in the Valdrake style would never do voluntarily but that an exhausted or overconfident one might do unconsciously. The left shoulder dropped a fraction. The blade angle widened by ten degrees. A gap in the defense, positioned at my lower right ribs.

An invitation.

Aiden saw it.

I watched the recognition flash through his green eyes — the instinct of a fighter who’d learned to read openings the hard way, in real fights where missing one ant getting hurt. He didn’t question it. Didn’t wonder why a Valdrake would leave a gap. He just acted, because hesitation was a luxury for people who’d grown up safe, and Aiden Crest had never been safe.

He lunged. Full extension. A thrust aid directly at the opening I’d created, committing his weight, his balance, his entire body to a single decisive strike.

Perfect.

I shifted to take the hit — a controlled impact to the ribs, painful but non-damaging, the kind of clean strike that would end the match by demonstrating that the commoner had found a weakness in the aristocrat’s defense. A narrative the crowd would accept. A narrative the evaluators would record. A loss that looked like a mont of human error rather than a fundantal inadequacy.

And then sothing happened that was not in the plan.

Aiden’s Aether signature — the solid, unremarkable Acolyte-level output I’d been reading throughout the fight — pulsed.

Not from the surface. From below. From that second layer, the dormant potential I’d detected on the arrival platform, the sleeping ocean beneath the puddle.

The Starfire Legacy.

It didn’t fully activate. It wasn’t a dramatic awakening — no blinding light, no transformation, no power-up sequence. It was subtler than that. A single pulse of energy that surged through Aiden’s ridians and into his lunging blade, multiplying the force of his strike by a factor I couldn’t calculate in the fraction of a second I had to process it.

The wooden practice sword hit my ribs with the force of a battering ram.

I felt things crack.

Not the sword. .

The impact launched

sideways. My feet left the platform. For one suspended mont, I was airborne — the crowd a blur, the Aether storms a sar of violet above , the pain in my ribs a white-hot scream that my body processed approximately two seconds behind the event that caused it.

I hit the stone. Rolled. Slid.

Stopped three inches from the platform’s edge.

The arena was silent.

Then it wasn’t.

The sound hit like a wave — shock, excitent, disbelief — three thousand voices processing the sa impossible image: Cedric Valdrake, the Ducal heir, flat on his back at the edge of the platform with a commoner’s sword still vibrating from the force of the blow that put him there.

My vision was gray at the edges. The pain in my ribs was — significant. Not broken, but fractured. Maybe. Hard to tell when your nervous system was screaming at a frequency that made fine-grained assessnt difficult.

I lay on the white stone and stared at the ceiling of the Spire, where Aether storms crackled and the impossible architecture of a floating school defied every law of physics I’d ever studied, and I thought:

Twelve percent.

The twelve percent probability the system had given for Starfire Legacy activation during the match.

Of course it was the twelve percent.

In gas, twelve percent ant it almost never happened.

In real life, twelve percent ant it happened to you, personally, at the worst possible mont, because the universe had a sense of humor and that humor was exclusively at your expense.

---

[ DEATH FLAG #1 — STATUS UPDATE ]

The Entrance Exam

Match Result: DEFEAT

thod: Opponent’s latent bloodline produced an

energy surge during a committed attack. Impact

force exceeded projected paraters by 340%.

Injury Assessnt: Rib fractures (2). Bruised

intercostal tissue. Minor internal Aether

disruption. Non-lethal.

Death Flag Status: ...

Calculating...

---

The notification hung incomplete. The status flickered. Calculating.

I was still on the ground. The referee was approaching. The crowd was roaring. Aiden was standing in the center of the platform, looking at his own hands as if they’d done sothing he hadn’t authorized.

I needed to get up.

I needed to get up right now, because how I rose from this stone mattered more than how I fell onto it. A villain who stayed down was pathetic. A villain who got up was dangerous. The next ten seconds would determine whether this mont beca "the day Cedric Valdrake was beaten" or "the day Cedric Valdrake took a hit that should have killed him and stood up anyway."

I pressed my palms against the stone. The scars beneath my gloves scread. My ribs scread louder.

I stood up.

Slowly. Deliberately. Not with the urgency of soone recovering from a blow, but with the chanical precision of soone who had decided to stand and was rely informing gravity of this decision.

The arena went quiet again.

I looked at Aiden Crest. He looked back. His green eyes were wide — not with triumph but with sothing closer to alarm. He could feel it. Whatever had surged through him during that strike, he could feel the residue of it crackling in his veins, unfamiliar and enormous, and he didn’t understand what had just happened.

He’d won. He knew that.

He also knew — on so instinct buried deeper than combat training — that what he’d just hit

with wasn’t his.

I held his gaze. Three seconds. Four. Then I did sothing the original Cedric would never have done after a public defeat.

I inclined my head.

One degree. The barest nod. Not a bow. Not submission. Acknowledgnt. The gesture of soone who recognized that they’d been beaten fairly — or fairly enough — and who did not intend to contest it.

The crowd didn’t know how to react. A Valdrake, acknowledging a commoner’s victory? In what universe?

In this one. The one I was rewriting.

The referee raised Aiden’s hand. The crowd found its voice — cheering, confused, excited, a roar that shook the Spire’s walls. Aiden’s expression was a war zone of emotions: pride, confusion, guilt, and the dawning realization that beating the Valdrake heir in front of three thousand people had just painted a target on his back the size of the arena floor.

Welco to the ga, hero.

I walked off the platform under my own power. Each step sent a lance of pain through my ribs. My Void reinforcent was spent — the ridians had hit their wall and the Aether flow had dropped to a trickle. I was running on willpower and Cedric’s refusal to show weakness in public.

The crowd parted as I walked through. The empty space was wider than usual. Not fear this ti. Sothing else. Sothing I couldn’t na.

Ren was waiting at the edge of the seating section, his face white, his hands shaking.

"dical wing," he said. "Now. Right now."

"After I sit down."

"You have broken ribs."

"I have fractured ribs. Different structural category."

"Cedric —"

"I need to watch the remaining matches." I sat. The pain was extraordinary. I didn’t let it show. "Bring

tea. Not from the academy kitchen."

Ren stared at

for a long mont. Then he turned and left at a pace that was almost — but not quite — running.

I sat in the Valdrake section. Alone. Ribs on fire. ridians spent. Pride intact.

The Villain’s Ledger completed its calculation.

---

[ DEATH FLAG #1 — STATUS ]

The Entrance Exam

Result: DEFEAT (controlled paraters exceeded)

Death Flag Assessnt: PARTIALLY DISARD

The defeat was narrow, public, and non-humiliating.

The subject demonstrated D-rank adjacent combat

capability. The subject’s response to defeat

(standing, acknowledging, walking off under own

power) exceeded canonical villain behavior.

Reputation damage: MINIMAL

Political vulnerability: LOW

Cascade trigger (Flag #2): SUPPRESSED

However: the subject sustained visible injury.

Physical weakness may be noted by observant

parties. If the true extent of core damage is

investigated as a result of this injury, Flag #2

may reactivate.

Status: Disard (conditional)

The system grudgingly notes that the subject

survived a 12% probability event through a

combination of physical resilience, tactical

awareness, and what can only be described as

an unreasonable refusal to stay on the ground.

Villain Points Earned:

25

> Reason: Maintained composure under extre

physical duress. Rose from near-defeat without

visible weakness. Intimidation factor increased

through demonstrated durability.

Narrative Deviation Index: 2.1% -> 2.8%

> The nod of acknowledgnt to Protagonist #1

was non-canonical. The system has noted it.

The system notes everything. The system never

forgets.

---

2.8%.

Death Flag #1: conditionally disard.

Ribs: fractured.

Dignity: sohow intact.

I watched the remaining matches through a haze of pain that turned the world slightly crystalline at the edges. Sowhere in the crowd, Seraphina’s golden signature had dimd — contracted, focused, aid at

with an intensity that suggested she was fighting the urge to cross the arena and heal the injury she could probably sense from fifty ters away.

Sowhere in the shadows, Nyx’s shimr had sharpened. Watching. Recording. Evaluating her investnt.

And sowhere in the faculty box, Instructor Veylan was writing notes. His scarred face betrayed nothing. But his eyes hadn’t left

since I’d stood up from the stone.

The villain lost his first fight.

He got back up.

The story continues.

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