A week after the field trip incidentâ
"Today, weâll be conducting response training."
Instructor Samanthaâs voice echoed through the training hall.
The virtual arena behind her shimmeredâcapable of rendering jungles, blizzards, deserts, swamps, acid rainâanything one might encounter in real combat.
"Youâll enter individually. Your score will be determined by how quickly you detect and respond to the appearing enemy targets. As you know, long-range fighters have the advantage in this test. For those lacking points..." Samanthaâs eyes swept the class, "...this is your chance to compensate."
Cadet Number 1: Kael Ardyn.
The murmurs began immediately.
"Damn. Close combat in this mode sucks..."
"If he gets an open field, heâll score gold again."
"If it were me in a swamp, Iâd sink in five steps."
Soon enoughâ
Kael entered the simulation.
The landscape warped and shiftedâ
âinto a swamp.
"Ughâswamp terrain?"
"Thatâs awful for sword users!"
"Heyâluck is part of skill!"
Sympathy rippled through the cadets.
Then:
[Beep!]
A target board materialized somewhere in the murky expanse.
To the observers behind the glass, the simulation highlighted itâglowing faintly.
But insideâKael saw nothing. No glow. No hint. Just swamp and obscured vision.
Yetâ
"Huh?! He found it already?!"
"What?!"
A burst of pure blue mana surged under Kaelâs feet.
His acceleration was instantâalmost unnatural.
He sprinted lightly over the swamp like water-walking.
One clean slashâ
CRACK!
Target destroyed.
[Number 1: Kael â 9.72 seconds]
Samantha nodded approvingly.
The class frowned and deflated.
â...No chance.â
âHow do you beat that?â
âI canât even find the damn thing in ten seconds.â
Samantha cleared her throat.
Sharp tongue locked and loaded.
[Number 2: Drimus â 1 minute 37 seconds]
"One minute? If your opponent had been an archer, youâd have been sniped in the head a hundred times before you found the target!"
Drimus wilted.
[Number 3: Matthew â 3 minutes 8 seconds]
"Three minutes? Did you aim for three minutes because your number is 3? Iâll be charitable and assume thatâs not the case."
Matthew turned purple with shame.
Cadet Number 7, an archer, was blessed with storm + jungleâsupposedly ideal. Insteadâ
[Number 7: Low Veltia â 4 minutes 13 seconds]
Samantha didnât skip a beat.
"Four minutes is enough time for your opponent to take a snack break, finish it, and then defeat you."
Low Veltia looked like he wanted to sink into the floor.
The roasting was merciless.
"Number 14: Bordon."
"Yes!"
The moment the target appeared, Bordon activated his familyâs secret technique.
Frontkeeper.
"A-Amazing! A family secret art!"
"A mana sentinelâ!"
A giant armored warrior formed from pure mana thundered into view, bulldozing the forest in its path, tearing trees and dirt apart in a wide sweep.
[Number 14: 25.31 seconds]
A solid time.
Bordon stepped out confidentlyâ
Only to be manhandled right back in as Samantha grabbed his scruff and tossed him like luggage.
"Number 14?!"
"If you are from one of the Four Great Ducal Families, surely you understand the purpose of this test?"
Her voice was ice.
"The objective is to locate and eliminate an enemy hidden in hostile terrain. Not to become a rampaging idiot who erases the entire ecosystem!"
"I-Iâm sorry!"
"Again."
Bordon took the test a second timeâ
More careful.
More focused.
[Number 14 (retry): 45.81 seconds]
He lost timeâbut Samantha nodded faintly.
Even soâ
He still held the second fastest time of the class.
"Next, Number 23!"
As my number was called, a strange hush fell over Class A. Several students leaned forward unconsciously, and someone whispered my nameâ"Lucien!"âhalf incredulous, half curious.
I stepped into the virtual training chamber. In its inactive state, it resembled a compact, sterile cube with glowing white gridlines. The long walk to the center felt oddly isolating. Just standing there gave the sensation of being inside an endless box.
Then the simulation activated.
The world around me expanded, unfolding outwardâtrees sprouting from digital earth, vines spiraling up trunks, wind whipping through growing branches. Humid air settled in, and visibility dropped under sheets of heavy rain. Soon, I stood in a full jungle storm.
Wonderful.
A jungle with a storm. For a gunslinger.
âTeacher Samantha... youâre definitely doing this on purpose.â
Close-combat cadets got swamps and deserts. Archers got open terrain. Ranged fighters got visibility. And Iâthe "gunman"âgot a hellscape with weather interference, wind distortion, thunder noise, and obstructed sight lines.
âSheâs vicious.â
Thunder cracked overhead, followed by a rumble beneath my boots. I inhaled once and released the breath slowly.
âFine. Iâll show you.â
I closed my eyes.
The target for this test was a magically engineered birdâan artificial construct designed to mimic one of the most difficult combat targets: tiny, fast, agile, and intelligent. Many assumed birds were easy targets until they watched this one move. It flew at a speed impossible to track by eye, slipping between currents and branches with almost playful ease. Any magic that wasnât instantaneous would miss. Fire off spells wildly and it would simply weave between them. Large-area magic took too long to cast and burned too much mana.
And I? I wasnât even a proper mage.
Yes. This was intentional. Samantha wanted to see me fail.
But she wasnât aware of everything Iâd prepared.
I cocked the revolverâs hammer the moment Samantha gave the signal.
At the same time, I triggered my mana circuits.
It felt as natural as breathing. Ever since achieving Mana Control Lv. 5, channeling mana through my body had become smoother, faster, cleaner. The circuits beneath my skin lit up internallyâlike glowing threads in a tapestryâspreading from my palms through my arms, chest, spine, and legs.
My senses expanded.
Iâd been unable to master combat spells, so I had devoted myself entirely to auxiliary magic. It was efficient, it was quiet, and most importantlyâit activated automatically when mana flowed.
Even without turning around, I could sense the cadets behind me. I could feel their curiosity, boredom, interest, skepticismâall of it drifting in the mana currents like faint ripples on water.
Ahead of meâin the storm, in the swirling airâthere it was. The bird. Darting and twisting between raindrops, cutting through the wind, its wings fluttering at impossible speed.
This was pure analysis magic. Everything within a five-meter radius, even outside my line of sight, was mapped and fed directly into my brain. But sensing it wasnât enoughânot for the speed this thing moved at.
So I pushed harder.
I burned mana recklessly, my MP dropping rapidly, trading raw energy for heightened awareness. In return, my perception sharpened beyond simple motion tracking.
I could detect the angle of each wingbeat, sense the air pressure carving around its body, feel the tiny surges of mana that fueled its propulsion. All of that dataâevery variableâwas compiled into a predicted trajectory inside my mind.
I didnât look. I didnât aim with my eyes.
I aimed with my perception.
And thenâwithout hesitationâI pulled the trigger.
The revolver fired.
BANG.
The sound of the gunshot almost lagged behind the action, lost in the storm. By the time the sound reached my ears, the bird had already fallenâspiraling down, wings limp.
There was a tiny thud as it hit the wet earth.
Silence inside the chamber.
And from outsideâsomeone whispered, almost numb:
"...Is it over?"
*****
The moment Lucienâs turn came, the classroomâs mood shifted.
"Can Cadet Lucien actually pull it off?" Bordon whispered, eyes fixed on the simulation chamber.
Kael folded his arms, brow slightly furrowed. "Well... itâs not impossible, butâ"
He didnât finish.
Because the conditions were undeniably cruel.
Even Kael himself had been given a swampâdifficult, but workable.
But Lucien?
A jungle and storm for a firearm specialist.
That was outright sabotage.
"Elisha, what do you think?" Kael asked.
She wasnât even watching. Instead, she was calmly scribbling notes for an exam next week.
"If it were me," she said offhandedly, "Iâd complete it in under thirty seconds."
Bordonâs eyebrows lifted.
That was an amazingly confident statement.
So far, only two cadets had ever managed sub-one-minute times.
And only oneâKaelâhad reached sub-30 seconds.
Before anyone could mull it over, the signal sounded.
[Beep!]
The test began.
Kael, Bordon, and Elisha turned their eyes toward the training ground.
And the numbers onscreen blinked:
[3.45 seconds]
"...?!"
Chairs scraped as half the class instinctively stood.
The training jungle vanishedâdeactivated in an instantâand Lucien stepped out.
No one spoke.
Not even Instructor Samantha.
Only after a long pause did she finally open her mouth.
"...Excellent."
Not good.
Not well done.
Not acceptable.
Excellent.
Kael felt something cold run down his back.
If
he
had been the target, he might have managed to react to the shotâmaybe even block or evade.
But only perhaps.
Only maybe.
And that was himâthe protagonist.
He scanned the room.
How many cadets here... could withstand Lucien turning that gun on them with real killing intent?
One? Two?
Could
he
protect everyone?
Kael suddenly wasnât sure.
A small clatter snapped his attention downward.
A pen had fallen and rolled across the floor.
"Elisha?" he asked quietly.
She didnât answer.
In her mind, the past three seconds replayed on loop.
The moment the target appearedâ
Lucien had already
finished
aiming.
The first shot cut down the environmental interference.The second obliterated the target cleanly.
And his gun-hand never even wavered.
Marksmanship at the level of a master.
But that wasnât the most terrifying part.
It was his detection.
"...Thatâs impossible," Elisha murmured. "Even in my family, only my father can do thatâand his instincts are considered nearly precognitive."