Chapter 36 â Missed You!
The world returned in a flash of blinding white, then steadied beneath his feet. The ground was rough. Familiar. Real. Leon blinked slowly, eyes adjusting as the pressure in his chest eased just a bit.
He was out.
The scent of damp earth mixed with faint trails of mana in the air. Soldiers stood ahead in formationâuniformed guards and mages posted along the perimeter of the Class Awakening site, their expressions unreadable. But beyond them, past the cordon, one figure stood apart.
Commander Seraphine Vael.
Long strands of purple hair trailed behind her, caught in the soft wind. Her face, always sharp with discipline and grace, was locked in placeâthose amethyst eyes staring straight ahead, glowing beneath the overcast sky with chilling clarity.
Leonâs shoulders sagged slightly. His jaw loosened.
â...I made it.â
He didnât smile. He didnât wave. But something tugged faintly at the edge of his heart. Reliefânot just for surviving, but because she was there. Waiting. No lectures. No drills. Just presence her quiet presence waiting for him.
Then she vanished.
A blur. A flicker of motion beyond normal eyes.
Before his next breath, cold steel pressed against his neck. Her swordâbare and gleamingâhovered one twitch away from opening his throat. She hadnât hesitated. No words. No questions.
Leon didnât flinch.
This time, he could feel itâstill couldnât see it. The way she moved, the shift in her weight, the mana drawn tight through her limbs. Her flash step wasnât a mystery to him anymore. It wasnât teleportation. It was skill, control, speed... and now, he understood only a little.
But she seemed much faster.
Before he could speak, her voice slid through the air, cold and even, but edged with something sharper.
"Where did you get that cloak?"
Leonâs eyes narrowed, just a fraction.
The blade didnât shake. Her stance was perfect. But her aura boiled around her, rippling with grief, fury, and something deeply personal. Beneath the mask covering most of his face, Leon breathed in slowly.
âShe thinks Iâm wearing it because... I killed him.â
Because Leonâthe silver-haired boy who trained beside her, who laughed through pain, who endured three years in her shadowâdidnât walk out of the dungeon.
Instead, this masked figure appeared, silent, hidden, clad in the cloak of her disciple like a thief wearing stolen pride.
She had waited for him. Prayed for him.
Now, she was ready to kill to know the truth.
Leon stood still. He didnât reach for his weapons. He didnât plead. Around them, not a single guard stepped forward. The mages didnât blink. No one moved. To them, this was either a punishment... or an execution.
The dungeon had collapsed behind him.
And the boy they remembered had not returned.
In their eyes, this was Seraphineâs burdenâa consequence of letting a child enter a dungeon that never shouldâve existed. Nobody voiced it aloud, but the blame was heavy in every glance.
Leon slowly looked up.
Even with his face concealed, his voice slipped through with calm weight. "...I missed you."
The sword didnât lower. But her fingers curled tight.
And for the first time, Seraphineâs breath faltered.
Farther back, the watching soldiers tensed.
They couldnât hear the words exchanged, but the image before them was strikingâCommander Vael, sword to a boyâs throat, expression carved in stone. From what they could see, she hadnât even blinked.
They assumed he was a thief. Someone whoâd stripped the cloak from a body inside. Someone who thought they could walk away with it like a trophy.
They had seen that cloak beforeâon the boy who followed the commander like a shadow. That boy was small, proud, sharp-eyed. And now this oneâtaller, older, silentâhad taken his place?
They expected blood.
But thenâSeraphine froze.
Not fully. Not outwardly. But inside, her mind was spiraling. That voice... the way he spoke. The rhythm, the spacing, the weight behind each syllable.
âThatâs him.â
She scanned him again. The posture. The shoulders. The silence behind the mask. His hair was bound, hidden. His aura masked. But she saw past it.
He hadnât wanted to be recognized. He had thought this through. Carefully.
âSmart,â she thought. âBut why does his body feel different and how is so tall now? What happened inside?â
Her thoughts swirled, but her hand didnât tremble. She kept the act alive, blade firm at his neck.
Then, with a practiced flick, she sheathed the sword.
Without warning, she hoisted Leon over her shoulder.
"You," she muttered, tone clipped and cold, "are coming with me."
Leon didnât resist. Not even a twitch. He had felt the flicker of recognition in her reaction. The softening in her eyes. That was all he needed.
He twisted slightly on her shoulder, throwing his arms out dramatically. "Save me!" he cried in mock terror. "Iâm too young and beautiful to die like this!"
His feet kicked at the air. His voice carried just far enough.
The guards blinked. A few shifted uneasily. Not one of them laughed.
Seraphine didnât stop. She marched straight past the formation and stopped before the lead mages and command agents stationed nearby.
Her eyes narrowed. Her voice dropped.
"If a single word about what you saw here today leaves this place," she said, "I will personally come find you."
She let the sentence hang. Then scanned every face one by one.
"I donât care who you serve. I donât care where you run. I will remember."
The first mage swallowed hard. Another saluted.
"M-Maâam! Understood!"
"Not a word, Commander!" a soldier barked, his uniform suddenly too tight around his throat.
As she turned sharply away, Leon continued his performanceâarms floppy, voice exaggerated, eyes glinting beneath the shadow of his hood. He didnât look scared.
But to the others?
He was already dead.
The commander didnât walk. She stormed.
They reached the black carriage stationed just beyond the trees, its silver trim glinting faintly in the mist. Seraphine opened the door with one hand and dumped Leon inside with the same motion. Then she stepped in behind him and slammed it shut.
"Take us back to the estate," she said.
The driverâs voice came immediately. "Yes, Commander."
The carriage jerked into motion, wheels crunching over packed dirt.
The woman driving was no ordinary attendant. She was Seraphineâs shadowâher blade in courtrooms and battlefields alike. And she didnât look back. Didnât speak. Didnât ask.
To her, the boy inside wasnât a guest.
He was a corpse.
Whether he had murdered Seraphineâs disciple or scavenged his body, it didnât matter. The sentence would be the same.
Inside, the carriage fell quiet.
The windows fogged faintly from breath and tension.
Seraphine sat opposite him, body still, expression unreadable. She hadnât spoken again. Her hands rested on her thighs, but the tightness in her fingers betrayed the storm inside.
Leon didnât wait.
He raised his arms and calmly undid the knot of the cloth mask.
The fabric slipped away and pooled in his lap.
Then he reached up and pulled down the hood.
His silver-white hair fell into view, catching the sunlight.
His faceâolder, sharper, but unmistakably hisâturned toward her.
And for the first time since he had stepped out of the dungeon, his eyes met hers.
"No more hiding, behind a sarcatic facade" he wishpered quietly.