LOGINKael Draven had faced many problems in his life.
Annoying bosses, empty wallets, and a future that never seemed to arrive. He had handled all of it with a quiet, tired kind of acceptance that came from years of practice.
But nothing had prepared him for this.
The small black shape crawled through the doorway, moving low against the floor like smoke infused with weight and intention. It had no clear form, no eyes, no mouth, just a shifting dark mass that pulled the warmth out of the air wherever it passed.
Every student in the hallway had stopped moving; nobody screamed anymore; they stared, frozen in place, the way people freeze when they encounter something their mind cannot immediately categorize.
Kael stared too, and his status panel floated quietly beside him.
[ Luck: SSS ]
He looked at the panel, then at the creature, and then back at the panel.
"Now would be a great time to do something," he muttered.
The panel did not respond.
The creature turned slowly in his direction, the dark mass shifting and reshaping itself as it moved. Kael took one step back, then another, and then his foot caught the edge of a loose floor tile.
He tripped, his arms windmilling, his body twisting sideways, and he hit the wall hard, grabbed a torch bracket to stop himself from falling completely, and yanked it clean off the stone with a sound like a bone cracking.
The torch flew from his hand in a wide spinning arc across the corridor, and then it landed directly on the creature.
The black shape let out a sound like tearing fabric and collapsed in on itself, the smoke hissed and curled against the floor tiles, the cold in the air vanished instantly, and then the creature was gone, leaving nothing behind except a small scorch mark on the stone and a silence so complete that Kael could hear his own breathing.
He stood against the wall, one hand still gripping the empty bracket, chest heaving.
The hallway was completely silent, and every student stared at him.
Kael looked at the scorch mark, then at his hand, and then, there was a crowd of students watching him with expressions somewhere between disbelief and awe.
"I swear I did not do anything," he said.
Nobody moved, then a voice broke from somewhere in the back of the crowd.
"He destroyed it with a single throw."
A wave of whispers followed immediately.
"Did you see how fast that was?"
"He did not even cast a spell."
"What rank is that technique?"
Kael opened his mouth, and then it closed again.
He had tripped over a loose tile, the torch had slipped from a bracket he had accidentally torn off a wall, none of it had been intentional, none of it had involved skill, control, or any deliberate action on his part, but looking at the stunned faces surrounding him, he understood clearly that explaining the truth would accomplish absolutely nothing useful.
He pushed himself off the wall and straightened his uniform.
"No big deal," he said quietly.
The whispering behind him grew louder, and a hand grabbed his arm.
Kael turned, and Lyra Windrune stood there, and for the first time since he had met her, her expression had changed just slightly. Not much, but enough to notice, her eyes were sharp and focused, moving carefully between him and the scorch mark still smoking faintly on the floor.
"That creature was a Shadow Fragment," she said. "A low-level one, but still dangerous enough to injure most first-year students."
"Right," Kael said. "A Shadow Fragment."
"You eliminated it without a casting stance, without a spell, and without a single point of mana."
"Right," he said again.
Lyra's eyes narrowed slightly. "How?"
He thought about telling her the truth that he had tripped over the torch, which had slipped, and that his SSS rank luck had apparently decided to take over without asking his permission first. Then he thought about how that would sound, standing in a hallway full of students who had just watched him apparently destroy a magical creature with a single casual throw.
"I just reacted," he said.
Lyra stared at him for a long moment. The look on her face was not admiration. It was not relief or gratitude; it was something colder and more focused than either. She was studying him the way someone studies a puzzle: they have not yet decided whether to solve it or set it aside, then she released his arm and turned toward the crowd.
"The assessment will proceed," she said evenly. "Get inside."
The crowd began to move.
Kael followed, staying toward the back. His heart was still pounding. His hands were still shaking slightly at the fingers. He had done absolutely nothing. He had tripped over a tile and knocked a torch off a bracket. His luck stat had handled the rest without warning or explanation.
But everyone in that hallway now believed he had done it deliberately.
Inside the awakening hall, the magic circle on the floor had gone dark after the disruption. Twelve long benches lined the walls. At the center of the room stood a tall man in grey robes, with sharp eyes and a jaw that looked as if it had been carved rather than grown. Professor Eldrin Hale looked exactly like someone who had not smiled in several years and had no plans to start.
His gaze swept slowly across the students filing in, then landed on Kael, and stayed there a moment longer than it had on anyone else before moving on.
"Students," the professor said. "This assessment will determine your mana class and initial rank. You will each approach the circle and channel your mana into the core stone. Your results will be recorded and assigned."
A smooth, round white stone sat at the center of the darkened circle.
Kael looked at his status panel one more time.
[ Mana: F ]
He exhaled slowly through his nose.
This situation is going to turn out very poorly.
One by one, students stepped forward and pressed their hands to the stone; most produced average results. A few produced strong ones. One girl near the front made the stone flare a brilliant white for three full seconds, and murmurs of genuine surprise rippled across the benches. Then, the professor looked up from his record board.
"Kael Draven."
The murmuring stopped immediately, and every student in the room turned to look at him at once.
Kael stood slowly and walked toward the circle. He kept his expression neutral and his pace steady, the way he had learned to walk into a bad situation at work when retreating was not an option. He had no mana, no talent, and no idea what was about to happen.
He placed his hand on the stone, nothing happened for one long second, and then the stone exploded.
The east practice room was small and mostly empty.It had a wooden floor, a single mana lamp hanging from the center beam, and enough space for two people to move without colliding. It was used primarily for private technique work by upper-year students, and at this hour, after the evening bell, it was quiet and unbooked.Kael arrived first.He stood in the center of the room, taking in the walls scarred with scorch lines and impact dents that had accumulated over years of practice. The lamp cast a steady, warm light. The wooden floor had a faint creak near the left wall, which he discovered when he stepped on it.Lyra arrived three minutes later.She was carrying a small case, the library's folded page, and the focused expression she wore when planning. She set the case on the floor and opened it.Inside were two measuring stones, a small notebook, a pen, and a thin glass vial containing a pale silver liquid Kael did not recognize."What is that?" he asked, pointing at the vial."Res
They did not talk in the restricted corridor.Lyra took the book from his hands, replaced it in the case, and reattached the broken clasp with a small repair tool she apparently carried as a matter of routine. Then she gestured for Kael to follow, leading him back through the rotating shelf door and into the main library.The librarian glanced up.Lyra showed him her faculty access card.He nodded and looked back down.She led Kael up the main staircase to the third floor, the quietest part of the library. No other students were there. The shelves held oversized volumes too large for standard cases, atlases, architectural records, and old survey maps that almost nobody needed regularly.Lyra found a corner table between two large map stands and sat down.Kael sat across from her.For a moment, neither of them spoke.Then Lyra said, "How much did you read?""Two pages," Kael said. "The introduction and the three documented cases.""You saw the third entry.""The one with no name and on
Kael went back to the library the next morning.This time, it is not the upper walkway; there is a specific section.The librarian from the other day was already at the front desk when Kael arrived. He looked up, saw Kael, and his expression shifted several times before settling on resigned acceptance."Nothing has collapsed yet today," the librarian said."I appreciate the update," Kael replied.He moved past the main reading tables and down a side corridor along the back of the lower floor. He had noticed it during his first visit but had not explored it. A small hand-painted sign above the entrance read: Restricted Collection. Faculty Access Required.Kael stopped in front of it, and he looked at the sign.He was about to turn around when he noticed the door at the end of the corridor was open.Not fully, just a gap of perhaps two finger widths, enough to show the lock had not caught properly.He was not going to go in and was going to report the open door and go back to the histor
The academy library was the one place Kael had felt genuinely safe since arriving.It was large, quiet, and full of people who were too absorbed in their own reading to pay attention to anyone else. The shelves ran three floors high along the outer walls, connected by narrow wooden staircases and thin walkways with iron railings. The lower floor had long reading tables lit by steady mana lamps. The upper floors were darker and less visited, reserved for older and more obscure collections.Kael had taken to going there in the evenings.Not to study magic, which he could not use anyway.But to read about the world.Eryndor had a long history. Kingdoms, wars, lost civilizations, and things that predated all of them. The history section on the second floor had enough material to keep him occupied for months, and the more he read, the more he understood about the world he had been dropped into without explanation or preparation.He was on the second floor walkway in the evening after the t
The ceiling did not collapse completely.A single large stone block, part of an old support arch above the training hall that had apparently been deteriorating for some time, cracked loose from its bracket and dropped straight down toward the center of the room.Twelve upper year students scattered instantly.The organizer dove sideways.Kael did not move.Not because he was brave.Not because he had calculated anything.He simply had not processed what was happening fast enough to react.The stone block fell.It hit the first target marker dead center.The marker shattered.But the block, rather than continuing downward onto the floor, struck the edge of the shattered marker at an angle that redirected its momentum sideways. It skidded hard across the floor, hit the far wall, and stopped.Nobody was hurt.The room was silent except for settling dust.Kael stood in the exact spot he had been standing before the block fell, hand still half raised toward where the target marker had been
Kael woke up the next morning and immediately checked his panel.[ Luck Event: Incoming ][ Estimated trigger: Today ]He stared at it."Still not specific," he said.The panel did not care.He dressed slowly, watching the notification the way a person watches a dark cloud on the horizon. It was there. It was coming. He just had no idea what shape it would take when it arrived.He stepped into the corridor.Three first year students he had never spoken to were standing nearby. When they saw him, one of them immediately said, "Is it true you trained under a hidden master before the academy?"Kael blinked."No," he said."Is it true you can read mana signatures without channeling?""No.""Is it true you broke the core stone on purpose to confuse the ranking system?"Kael looked at all three of them."Where are these coming from?" he asked.They exchanged glances."Everyone is talking about the duel," one of them said.Kael rubbed his face and kept walking.By the time he reached the din







