Verren watched as Renn left the arena after winning.
He was exhaustedâspent. But victorious.
Verren didnât hesitate any longer.
He turned from the pillar and leapt back to the outside area of the arena.
The chaos of cheers in the building continued, but none of it touched him.
Verren had made his decision.
He would walk to the other end of the arenaâtoward the waiting roomsâand speak with Renn directly.
Even if the boy refused at first, Verren was sure of one thing.
He was going to take that youth as a disciple.
That thought had barely finished forming whenâ
"Ladies and gentlemen!" the commentatorâs voice boomed again, carried by the arena-wide enchantments. "Weâve just witnessed one of the greatest fights this coliseum has ever seen!"
The crowd roared.
"But itâs not over yet! Up next is another match! The winner of the next match... will be facing Renn Noah in the Grand Finals!"
Verren paused mid-step.
He turned his head.
Then came the names.
"In just a few moments, the other two of the powerful fourâUga and Mic Norâwill be facing off!"
Verren stopped completely.
That name.
Mic Nor.
The moment he heard it, he closed his eyes. He knew it well.
Verren opened his eyes.
"I see," he muttered under his breath. "So heâs here too."
"If heâs here... then no matter how talented that youth is, he canât possibly win."
Grand Knight Verren narrowed his eyes.
Even he knew he couldnât hold a candle to Michael.
How could someone weaker than him hope to succeed?
And worse... Renn wasnât even at his peak again.
But Verren didnât stop walking.
Michaelâs presence didnât deter him.
His goal remained unchanged.
Renn was still his focus.
*
Renn didnât reply.
Not immediately.
But as Verren stood across from him, having just delivered his sharp and clinical verdict, the signs were there.
Rennâs jaw clenched. His shoulders, tight. His fingers, still dusted from his match against Prince Rui, curled slightly at his sides.
And on his faceânot anger, not fear. But reluctance. A deep, gnawing reluctance that clawed its way up from his gut and showed itself in the stiff lines on his face.
It was the kind of expression one wore when faced with an unavoidable truth.
Verren recognized it.
"I know what youâre thinking," Verren said, softer now. "You want to prove me wrong. That youâre not outmatched."
Renn said nothing. His gaze fell to the ground for a brief second, then rose again.
"You want to fight him," Verren continued. "You want to face him anyway."
Still, no answer.
But Verren didnât need one.
He could see it in Rennâs eyesâthat stubborn refusal to yield.
It was admirable. It was foolish. It was familiar.
Verren let out a small, amused breath.
"You remind me of myself at your age."
"Is there a reason why you still want to fight?"
Rennâs silence stretched between them.
It was fullâfull of unspoken thoughts, clenched pride, and raw, aching realization.
After what heâd seen, after the battle that shook the entire coliseum, Renn couldnât lie to himself.
He had thought his fight against Prince Rui was the pinnacle. That survivingâno, winningâagainst a youth of imperial bloodline was proof that he belonged among the monsters. That he could stand on the same level.
But then Michael fought Uga.
And the truth hit him like a cold wave.
He didnât just lose the throne he thought he was close toâhe realized he was never even in the palace.
Michael wasnât someone he could "compete" with.
And Uga? That gentle giant he had barely registered as a threat before? That boy couldâve flattened him with raw power alone.
He clenched his jaw harder.
Even exhausted, Renn didnât want to show weakness in front of this old man.
The reason he hadnât act out even with everything the man had said was because he had a feeling that this old man in expensive looking armour could probably kill him with a flick of his finger.
This only made Renn further depressed.
It was like he was facing monsters left and right today for no reason.
Renn asked the only thing his mind could form clearly through the haze of exhaustion and internal crisis.
"...Why are you here?"
His voice was quiet. Grand Knight Verren didnât respond right away.
The manâs gaze, calm and sharp like a drawn blade, didnât waver.
"I asked first," he said simply. "Answer me, and Iâll answer you."
Rennâs brow furrowed.
That was fair.
He let out a breath and finally spoke, voice low. "Iâm not doing this because I think I can win," Renn admitted, his voice sharper now, more grounded. "Iâm doing it because... this is for my goal."
"This is probably the closest I can get to my goal and itâs right in front of me."
"I see."
Verren stepped forward once, the metal of his armor clinking softly.
"And now, your question."
He placed his hands behind his back and straightened fully. The pressure that had quietly rolled off him since their meeting became suddenly clearâdense, vast, and absolute. Like standing beneath a stormcloud that hadnât yet struck.
"You caught my interest."
Rennâs eyes narrowed slightly.
"I watched your fight. From start to finish."
Renn looked at him carefully now, guarded but not dismissive.
Verrenâs next words came slowly, but with unmistakable weight.
"I want to guide you."
That made Renn blink.
"Guide?"
"I want you as my disciple," Verren said plainly.
No flourish. No grand declaration. Just a truth dropped like a stone into still water.
Silence fell again.
Renn wasnât sure what to say.
Verren looked down at Rennânot in condescension, but in clarity.
"Youâre not ready for Mic Nor. Thatâs not shameful. But you are ready for more. And I can show you the pathâif youâre willing to walk it."
Rennâs lips parted.
Then he closed them again.
The old man certainly radiated power, but that alone wasnât enough for Renn to accept on the spot.
He didnât even know who the man was.
Becoming someoneâs apprentice wasnât a decision to be made casuallyâespecially not with a stranger.
Besides, Renn wasnât particularly interested in becoming anyoneâs disciple to begin with.
Right now, his focus was on how he could win this competition and use it to elevate his familyâs status.
It was then that Verren asked him another question.