On the day of the duel
As I was warming up and observing Raven who had stepped into the arena, I noticed him swallowing dryly while looking at me.
âIâve heard rumors that Cradle students are exceptional, but I didnât expect you to have already recovered from such injuriesâŠâ
âWell, this much is pretty normal.â
In truth, the necklace of the Sun God that Vidar had gifted me played a big part.
Its faint health regeneration effect sustained over a week had a surprisingly significant impact in the long run.
Of course, when you consider that even divine power or medicine eventually loses its efficacy, this was only natural.
âMay I ask one thing? Where does your skill level stand among the students of the Cradle?â
âAmong second-years, Iâm probably the weakest.â
âThatâs excessive humility.â
âHaha!â
I wish I was just being humble.
The students who had endured turbulent times were already far ahead of me. Having grown stronger recently made me realize the gap even more.
âYouâd have to be able to beat someone like me with ease just to be considered average.â
ââŠâŠâ
Raven responded not with words, but by quietly drawing his sword.
It wasnât out of contempt or denial. It simply felt like he didnât concern himself with such talk and was focusing entirely on the fight.
As expected of a skilled veteran who had survived countless battlefields, trying to shake him with words was futile.
âAlright, shall we begin?â
Shling!
I drew my sword.
Naturally, a magic engineering battery was attached to the scabbard.
The moment it was drawn, the blade began to emit an intense energy.
Seeing the fully formed aura engulfing the entire blade and not just part of it, Raven narrowed his brows in tension.
âWhatâŠ? That arrogant guy can wield sword energy to that extent?â
The smug-looking girl in the spectator seats gasped in disbelief.
Hmm, that kind of reaction. It was a refreshing change.
Up to now, whenever I showed this, the only responses I got were things like, âOh wow, our kid is amazing!â
Sure, in the Cradle, full sword energy was treated like itâs something anyone can do. But honestly, this level would qualify someone to be the captain of a knight order in a mid- to small-sized territory.
âIâm coming.â
âAlright.â
With that, Raven charged straight at me.
His movement was more beast-like than human.
It felt instinctual. He was swinging with raw sensation, likely because heâd never received formal sword training.
Clang!
The moment our swords clashed, I could tell.
He was strong. His sword energy wasnât fully complete, but it was close.
His swordsmanship was rough but instinctive and fierce.
It was definitely impressive that he had grown this strong without being in the Cradle.
Then again, he mustâve lived a life just as intense as the Cradleâs students.
Which is why itâs a shame.
âGrr!â
Even if I was considered the weakest, I was still one of the elites who had received structured training in the Cradle.
And itâs not like Iâve been slacking off. In fact, the past six months Iâve endured were just as intense as last yearâs terror-filled chaos if not more so. There was no way a gap wouldnât form.
Not to mention, the difference in education was huge.
âOh, thatâs not how youâre supposed to do that. Isnât he using what he was taught all wrong?â
âAh! If heâd slashed from the side just now, it wouldâve ended right there!â
âJeez! JohanâŠâ
I mean, when youâre constantly surrounded by swordsmanship monsters, you end up getting good whether you like it or not.
Those guys were always giving unasked for advice to people quietly training on their own.
And they casually demand things that seem flat-out impossible.
Whatâs more annoying is that, somehow, once you keep trying, those impossible things actually start to become possible.
And yet, their ideals still soared far above mine. Thatâs why I was still categorized as someone who needed protection.
âYouâre definitely a promising one. Iâm looking forward to whatâs ahead.â
âHumph!â
Of course, that doesnât apply here.
Iâd received a fair amount of preliminary education as a noble, took structured lessons in the Cradle, and had been tempered through all kinds of unjust trials.
Iâm strong!
âTch!â
Suddenly, Raven struck the floor of the arena with his sword, sending stone fragments flying.
A fighting style truly befitting a mercenary.
If this had been a typical duel between nobles, heâd have been booed for being dishonorableâŠ
âNice!â
âWell done!â
âNow that thereâs dirt on the ground, scoop it up with your sword and fling it!â
This was the Cradle.
We didn’t care about means or methods. We only cared about victory.
And as for noble pretenses?
Anyone who clung to that nonsense is already long dead, no exceptions.
And since that kind of thing was so casually tolerated here…
âWhat?!â
Youâd better always remember that I can fight the same way.
Even if I get hit, itâll hurt, sureâŠbut it wonât kill me.
So, in that moment, I kicked up the dirt exposed by the broken floor straight into Ravenâs face.
Means and methods to win?
If Iâd cared about that, Iâd already be dead whether by Kult or someone else around me.
âHow could youâ!â
Raven looked utterly shocked, as if he never imagined Iâd pull something like that.
However, true to his experience as a skilled mercenary, the moment I flung the dirt, he shielded his face and immediately stepped back.
âCowardlyâŠâ
That transfer student had been getting on my nerves for a while now, criticizing only me.
Or maybe not? Perhaps she had taken a liking to Raven, who had defended her earlier.
Hmm, yeah. If this were a romantic comedy, I wouldnât really have the right to complain.
âYouâre full of confidence!â
âAhââ
While I was distracted watching the girl who had just insulted me, I momentarily forgot about Raven.
Using the dust as cover, Raven silently closed the distance and swung his sword without hesitation.
Of course, thoughâŠ
âWhat?!â
âAh, my apologies.â
I had no reason to let myself get hit.
Did she call it cowardly? Iâd show her what real cowardice looked like.
Ravenâs sword seemed to slash deep across my chest, but it couldnât harm me.
Illusion magic.
[Mirage]
âThere wasnât any rule saying we couldnât use magic, right?â
âThatâsâŠ!â
I had kicked the dirt in the first place to hide the fact that I was casting a spell.
From the beginning, I hadnât used magic and relied only on swordsmanship for this moment.
Senses, means, and strategy.
From the start, this duel had been a fight I couldnât lose.
Raven had been far too complacent.
He mustâve assumed I wouldnât use underhanded tricks because I was a noble.
In a way, that was rather naive.
âSo, I win, right?â
ââŠâŠâ
Now that his decisive strike had failed, it was only natural that the risk turned against him.
I pointed my sword at Ravenâs neck.
âIâve lostâŠâ
âThatâs right.â
A clean victory.
And my first individual win here at the Cradle.
It felt strangely sentimental.
âI know I didnât make the best first impression, but letâs call it even now.â
ââŠâŠâ
I reached out a hand toward Raven who was kneeling before me. It wasnât because I particularly wanted some heartwarming development. It was just clear that this guy Raven was built differently from the start.
He would probably get stronger. And there was no benefit in getting on bad terms with someone who was clearly destined to grow more powerful.
âSo be it.”
Raven nodded in agreement. Good, this made things perfect.
I figured it was safe to say weâd gotten at least a little closer.
So, I decided to ask something that had been bothering me since our last conversation.
âIs that way of speaking just⊠how you normally talk?â
âAhem! I heard there were a lot of nobles at the Cradle, so I practiced a bit.â
âAnd have you ever actually seen anyone around here talk like that?â
âNo, dammit⊠I even splurged on a book. Was I scammed or what?â
âThere you go. Now you sound more natural.â
It had struck me as weird from the beginning.
For a mercenary, his way of speaking was way off.
Having a foul mouth was more normal.
âAlright, you over there, the one still giving me the stink eye. Yeah, you. Itâs your turn now, isnât it? Get ready.â
Youâre dead meat when Yuna gets to you.
***
Before the second duel began,
I went to find Yuna so I could give her some encouragement.
âYuna, you know what to do, right? Make sure she feels the difference in your skill down to her bones. Really crush her.â
âJohan, saying it like that makes you sound like a really awful noble.â
âI am an awful noble.â
âUh⊠is there even a reason to go that far?â
âShe pissed me off.â
âYou really are an awful noble!â
Exactly. Thatâs what I said.
âWell, Iâm half-joking. The real reason isâŠ.sheâs the kind of person who wonât get it unless sheâs put in her place.â
âMhmm, she definitely gives off the vibe of an arrogant young lady.”
âExactly.â
Her past as a former Class 1-A student might have turned into a burden because of everyoneâs expectations.
Thatâs probably why she keeps trying to prove that sheâs exceptional.
Others likely caught on to that pretty quickly, too.
Which wouldâve made it even harder to deal with her.
If you go easy on her, sheâll just get mad; if you take her seriously, youâll end up crushing her spirit.
Someone has to bring that arrogant girl down a notch.
âYou know how many kids are basically suffering from âgood kid syndromeâ, right?â
âYeah. Itâs kind of sad, honestly.â
Most of the students at Cradle were good-natured.
They had to be.
If they didnât keep some kind of kindness in their hearts, theyâd have fallen for the sweet talk of one of the many terrorist groups that targeted Cradle and ended up betraying their school and their friends.
And there mustâve been quite a few who actually did betray them that way.
Half of those, Lobelia probably dealt with herself.
The rest were likely still involved with those terrorist groups even now.
âSo letâs be the ones to handle it. I donât want someoneâs mental breakdown over this turning into a whole incident.â
âWait, Iâm the one doing it?â
âWell, yeah. Thatâs actually right.â
So go and teach that cocky little brat a lesson already.
***
Yuna and the other girl step onto the stage.
I took a seat next to some classmates and decided to finally ask something thatâs been on my mind.
âSo whatâs her name, anyway?â
âHaha! Johan, if we told you that, what would that make us?â
ââŠNo, seriously, what would it make you? Iâm just asking for her name.â
âEh, it just doesnât feel right.â
Doesnât feel right how?
âIf we told you, itâd feel like we were selling her out or something.â
âForget it. Whatever.â
At this point, I was starting to think maybe it was better for her not to be remembered by me.
Isnât that actually true?
Most of the people I know have been swept up in all kinds of messes.
But the ones I donât know?
Theyâre probably living peaceful, healthy lives.
Or maybe they had just died quietly somewhere I didnât know about, without a sound or a trace.
Whatever the case, if it meant I didnât have to worry about it, then that was good enough.
âHow many seconds do you think it’ll take?â
âWell, Yuna’s nice, so maybe sheâll give her about five seconds?â
âIt could take longer. She might fight by breaking down every one of her opponentâs moves.â
The students were in agreement.
Yuna would win in a landslide. The only debate was how she would do it.
Well, my thoughts were about the same.
Yuna was going to win. Iâd already been thinking about the how of her victory from the start.
And finally, the duel began.
âIâll go all out!â
âThen I guess I will too?â
Boom!
With a thunderous noise, the duel ended in less than a second.
It was too fast to even see.
âWow, that was crazy.â
âWhat⊠what did I just witness?â
Even among her classmates, people were shocked.
But I had no idea what Yuna had even done, so I couldnât tell what was so amazing about it.
Still, despite what had happened, it looked like Yuna had held back her strength. The other girl hadnât passed out.
âPuhihihi! Wanna go again?â
â…I-I lost.â
The girl looked terrified.
What on earth had happened in that short moment to leave her like that?
âSo, what exactly happened?â
I asked one of the other students who was watching in awe beside me.
Judging by his reaction, he mustâve seen what Yuna had done.
âAh, I guess it was probably too fast for someone at your level to catch?â
âSo what did she do, then?â
âShe forcibly disarmed and subdued the opponentâs every weapon.â
âHuh?â
âFirst, she snatched the sword out of her hand, then pulled out every hidden blade and dagger from her wrists, thighs, and even inside her clothes and tossed them all into the air.â
âHmm.â
âThen she slammed the now unarmed opponent into the ground about three times and pulled her back up.â
âAh.â
Was I asking for a recipe or something?
The duel hadnât even lasted a secondâŠhow had she managed to do all that?
Still, there was one thing I could say for sure now.
âJohan! I did good, right?!â
âUh, yeah.â
âYouâd better treat me well from now on, right?â
ââŠIâll keep that in mind.â
If Yuna ever seriously tried to force something on me, I really wouldnât be able to escape.

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