Chapter 97: Ch97 – James
The rain intensified.
What had been a steady fall turned into a relentless assault, drumming against armour, hammering the arena floor, turning the sacred circle into a large puddle.
Ryan stayed where he was.
The pain in his side had changed.
During the fight it had been distant—drowned out by adrenaline and panic. But now it had turned to sharp, insistent pulses. Every breath tugged at the wound where the dagger had slipped between his armour.
He pressed his gauntlet harder against it.
Blood still seeped through his fingers, though not as violently as before.
Ryan sucked in a slow breath through his teeth.
It hurts way more now.
Around him the arena had gone eerily still.
The only sound was the rain.
And the crowd.
Hundreds of hushed voices whispered beyond the mist-shrouded stands. The sound travelled across the arena like distant wind through trees.
No one shouted.
They only whispered, afraid to anger the Gods.
Ryan slowly lifted his head.
The mist was beginning to break apart under the sheer force of the rain. Grey curtains thinned and drifted away, revealing more of the battlefield with every passing moment.
Only then did Ryan reach up.
His fingers found the edge of his helmet. His fingers carefully took off the leather straps.
For a moment he hesitated.
The metal felt strangely heavy, as though it had absorbed the entire weight of the trial.
He pulled it free.
Cold rain immediately drenched his hair and face. Water ran down his brow and mixed with the blood at the corner of his mouth.
Ryan took a long gasp of open air.
It tasted like wet earth and iron.
He lowered the helmet into the mud beside him and wiped rain from his eyes.
Through the thinning fog he could see something… a figure approaching.
A healer stepped out from the dissolving mist.
Behind her, the first rays of sunrise broke through the storm clouds in faint streaks of orange light. They caught the rain falling around her shoulders, turning the water into glimmering threads.
For a moment Ryan thought she looked almost ethereal.
Like an apparition walking out of the storm.
She reached him, and without hesitation and knelt in the mud beside him.
“Your side?” she said calmly.
Ryan moved his hand away from the wound.
The moment he did, fresh blood seeped through the torn layers beneath his armour.
The healer pulled aside the damaged padding and placed her hands against the wound, letting the blood stain her skin.
Warmth spread through Ryan’s side as mana flowed into the injury.
It wasn’t painless.
The sensation burned faintly beneath the skin, like heat pressing deep into the torn flesh. Ryan clenched his jaw as the magic worked through the wound.
The bleeding slowed, and then stopped.
The healer moved her hand away.
“You’re lucky,” the woman said quietly. “A little deeper and it would have pierced something vital.”
Ryan gave a faint nod.
The warmth faded, leaving behind a dull ache where the wound remained.
He could still feel it with every movement.
But at least he was alive.
The healer withdrew her hands and rose again, she moved off into the mist, searching for the next victim.
Ryan pushed himself to his feet a moment later.
His legs felt unsteady, and pain flared along his side as he straightened.
Most of the mist above waist height had vanished by now.
The rain had beaten it down.
Shapes emerged across the arena—fighters, instructors, healers moving through the mud.
Ryan picked up his helmet and began walking toward the covered stands.
Each step squelched into the soaked ground.
When he crossed the boundary of the arena, the stands finally came into clear view.
Hundreds of spectators leaned forward beneath cloaks and hoods.
Their voices remained low, anxious.
Eyes followed Ryan as he approached.
At the front stood Helena.
The moment she saw him step out of the arena, relief flashed across her face before she quickly masked it.
“Thank Ceres,” she said softly.
Ryan barely heard her.
His attention had already shifted elsewhere.
Jared stood nearby, helmet in his hands. Mud streaked his plain armour and several deep slashes marked the plates across his chest and arms.
But he seemed in better shape than most.
A few steps away stood the mysterious knight with the faintly etched tree upon their breastplate.
A mace still hung loosely in their hand.
Rain slid off the smooth curve of their helmet.
Marcus emerged from the fog behind Ryan.
For once, the devout knight said nothing.
More figures stepped from the arena.
Navius appeared first.
His red armour was battered and dark with rainwater. Behind him walked the silver-armoured fighter with the deer-like horns rising from his helmet.
Three red-armoured grunts followed them.
One of them was guided carefully by a healer.
His hands clutched the visor of his helmet.
The man he had blinded.
A heavy feeling settled in Ryan’s chest.
Nine combatants had exited the arena.
Three were still missing.
“Where’s James?” Jared muttered.
“And Jeremy?” Ryan said.
Then two healers emerged from the rain.
They carried a knight between them.
Mud coated the armour so completely that its colour was impossible to tell.
Ryan’s felt his stomach drop.
They laid the body down near the edge of the arena.
A healer removed the helmet.
Jeremy.
His face was pale beneath the mud, his eyes closed.
A healer held two fingers to his throat.
“He’s alive.”
Ryan let go of the breath he was holding onto.
The healers immediately began tending to him, taking his armour off and checking for wounds.
Another group appeared through the rain.
Two figures were being carried this time.
One wore plain, mud smothered armour.
The other wore black plate.
James.
And the Blackwood knight.
They were laid gently beside Jeremy.
“Are they…?” someone whispered.
A man descended from the stands.
His clothing was rich—black and red, cut from fine cloth that clung darkly in the rain.
A noble.
He knelt beside the fallen Blackwood knight.
The healers worked quickly.
One removed James’s helmet.
Another lifted the helm from the Blackwood boy.
Both lay motionless.
The first healer checked James, two fingers to his throat.
For several long seconds the healer didn’t utter a word.
Then she exhaled.
“He’s alive.”
Relief spread through the Jared’s face like a forest fire.
The healer began removing sections of James’s armour.
The second healer checked the Blackwood knight.
Her hands paused.
The rain continued to pour.
Finally she lifted her head.
“He’s gone.”
The nobleman let out a raw, broken cry.
“James!”
The name echoed across the arena.
Ryan felt something twist painfully in his chest.
James. That kid was also named James… what if…?
No one spoke.
No one dared to interrupt the father.
Marcus remained silent beside Ryan.
Ryan lifted his gaze toward the stands.
Arcturus stood up there among the other nobles who were all focused on the dead boy.
His face was pale.
But he wasn’t looking at his son.
He wasn’t looking at Ryan or any of the other accusers.
He wasn’t even looking at the dead knight who had fought on the behalf of his family.
His gaze was fixed somewhere else.
The fallen statue.
Its shattered lightning bolt lay broken in the mud.
Arcturus stared at it like a man who had just witnessed his own death.
And the rain kept falling.
Ryan lowered his gaze again.
Behind him, Jared began to move.
The young man pushed past one of the healers and knelt beside the mud-covered body of his brother.
“James,” Jared said quietly.
His voice was low enough that only those closest could hear it over the rain.
He brushed a layer of mud from the man’s cheek with the back of his hand.
The next whispers were unintelligible even to Ryan a few steps away.
The healer working beside them gave Jared a brief glance but didn’t stop him.
James’s eyes were still closed, his breathing shallow but steady.
Jared leaned in closer and whispered more words.
For a moment, nothing happened.
Then James shifted faintly beneath the healer’s hands.
A weak breath escaped him.
“Good,” Jared murmured.
Ryan watched the scene in silence.
The rain softened the moment somehow, turning it into something private despite the hundreds of witnesses surrounding them.
A few meters away, the nobleman still knelt beside his son’s body.
His shoulders shook once.
Ryan couldn’t look a second longer. He turned away from it all.
His legs still felt heavy as he stepped beneath the wooden overhang of the stands. The pounding rain dulled immediately as the roof caught the worst of it.
Water still dripped from his armour, forming a small puddle beneath him.
Ryan spotted the bag where he had left it earlier, half tucked beneath one of the benches.
He crouched down beside it with a small groan.
The motion tugged painfully at his side.
Still sore.
Still very sore.
Ryan unfastened the straps across his chest first.
His breastplate came free with a dull metallic scrape. He set it carefully on the ground before loosening the buckles that held his pauldrons in place.
Each piece felt heavier than it did before, weighed down by water and mud.
One by one he removed them.
The pauldrons.
The vambraces along his forearms.
And finally, the gauntlets.
His fingers felt incredibly light once they were gone.
The rain-cooled air brushed against his open skin.
Ryan placed each piece into the bag slowly, the metal clinking softly as it settled.
The storm raged only a few steps away, but beneath the wooden cover the world felt oddly distant.
Muted.
For a moment he simply sat there, breathing.
Then Ryan reached into the pouch on his bag.
His fingers closed around metal.
It felt… warm.
No—hot.
Scorching hot.
Ryan frowned slightly and pulled his hand back just enough to look at the pouch.
“Why is it so hot?” he muttered under his breath. “It’s never warm…”
He reached in again and pulled it free.
The metal band rested in his palm
The engravings—they were glowing.
Brighter than he had ever seen before.
The markings shone through the dim light beneath the stands, their pale radiance cutting through the grey storm like a lighthouse.
Yet no one nearby reacted.
No one turned.
No one seemed to notice the light at all.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 114: Ch114 - A Performance
- Chapter 113: Ch113 - Cathedral of Light
- Chapter 112: Ch112 - The City
- Chapter 111: Ch111 - Watched
- Chapter 110: Ch110 - Black
- Chapter 109: Ch109 - Tradition
- Chapter 108: Ch108 - Blood
- Chapter 107: Ch107 - The Youngest
- Chapter 106: Ch106 - Big Black Castle
- Chapter 105: Ch105 - I’ll Come
- Chapter 104: Ch104 - In the Bracelet?
- Chapter 103: Ch103 - Stubborn Old Hag
- Chapter 102: Ch102 - Behind You
- Chapter 101: Ch101 - Impossible
- Chapter 100: Ch100 - A Favour
- Chapter 99: Ch99 - I Win
- Chapter 98: Ch98 - Curiosity Killed the Cat
- Chapter 97: Ch97 - James
- Chapter 96: Ch96 - Divine Judgement
- Chapter 95: Ch95 - Dawn
- Chapter 94: Ch94 - Where Twelve Stand
- Chapter 93: Ch93 - Mystery Knight
- Chapter 92: Ch92 - Green as Fresh Grass
- Chapter 91: Ch91 - D-Day
- Chapter 90: Ch90 - Light Spell
- Chapter 89: Ch89 - Steel on Steel
- Chapter 88: Ch88 - Lots of Love.
- Chapter 87: Ch87 - Trial Of Twelve
- Chapter 86: Ch86 - Baby Brother
- Chapter 85: Ch85 - A Red Star
- Chapter 84: Ch84 - Charity Case
- Chapter 83: Ch83 - Cold, Dark, Damp.
- Chapter 82: Ch82 - They aren’t my problem
- Chapter 81: Ch81 - The Announcement
- Chapter 80: Ch80 - All of them—dead
- Chapter 79: Ch79 - Infirmary
- Chapter 78: Ch78 - Charity Case
- Chapter 77: Ch77 - Tier 1
- Chapter 76: Ch76 - You Caught Me
- Chapter 75: Ch75 - A lie
- Chapter 74: Ch74 - Dead Man Standing
- Chapter 73: Ch73 - An Omen
- Chapter 72: Ch72 - Gods be Good
- Chapter 71: Ch71 - House Lythros
- Chapter 70: Ch70 - The Melee
- Chapter 69: Ch69 - Let the Tournament, Begin!
- Chapter 68: Ch68 - Ceres
- Chapter 67: Ch67 - The Festival
- Chapter 66: Ch66 - Malick The Great
- Chapter 65: Ch65 - Protect Those I Love.
- Chapter 64: Ch64 - Pure
- Chapter 63: Ch63 - One Mistake. Never Two.
- Chapter 62: Ch62 - Mother
- Chapter 61: Ch61 - Combat Techniques
- Chapter 60: Ch60 - This isn’t about you.
- Chapter 59: Ch59 - Academy, Day One
- Chapter 58: Ch58 - Your Second Element Is…
- Chapter 57: Ch57 - The Market
- Chapter 56: Ch56 - Keep your voice down.
- Chapter 55: Ch55 - An Incident
- Chapter 54: Ch54 - The Schedule
- Chapter 53: Ch53 - James and Jared
- Chapter 52: Ch52 - What are You doing here!
- Chapter 51: Ch51 - Helena the Mad
- Chapter 50: Ch50 - The Principal
- Chapter 49: Ch49 - Tired of…
- Chapter 48: Ch48 - The Academy
- Chapter 47: Ch47 - Truth
- Chapter 46: Ch46 - Representatives of the Coalition
- Chapter 45: Ch45 - Lithara
- Chapter 44: Ch44 - Smells like…
- Chapter 43: Ch43 - Two Minutes
- Chapter 42: Ch42 - The Rupes Kingdom
- Chapter 41: Ch41 - Wakey Wake
- Chapter 40: Ch40 - Sleepy Sleep
- Chapter 39: Ch39 - The First Fortress
- Chapter 38: Ch38 - Journey through the Mountains pt3
- Chapter 37: Ch37 - Journey through the Mountains pt2
- Chapter 36: Ch36 - Journey through the Mountains pt1
- Chapter 35: Ch35 - Preparation
- Chapter 34: Ch34 - What?!
- Chapter 33: Ch33 - Tasty!
- Chapter 32: Ch32 - Wakey Wakey!
- Chapter 31: Ch31 - A Dance in the Shadows
- Chapter 30: Ch30 - Mountain Outpost
- Chapter 29: Ch29 - The Mountain Dwellers
- Chapter 28: Ch28 - A Blinding Light In the Darkness
- Chapter 27: Ch27 - A Crack in the Facade
- Chapter 26: Ch26 - A Crack in the Wall
- Chapter 25: Ch25 - Embarrassing Failure
- Chapter 24: Ch24 - Faster Ryan!
- Chapter 23: Ch23 - Escape!
- Chapter 22: Ch22 - Disgusting Humans!
- Chapter 21: Ch21 - Light Attribute
- Chapter 20: Ch20 - Nightmare
- Chapter 19: Ch19 - Deuteros... and Deuteros
- Chapter 18: Ch18 - Elerea
- Chapter 17: Ch17 - Meow?
- Chapter 16: Ch16 - Millipedes Suck!
- Chapter 15: Ch15 - Traitor
- Chapter 14: Ch14 - Night Watch
- Chapter 13: Ch13 - Run!
- Chapter 12: Ch12 - It Was An Accident
- Chapter 11: Ch11 - Magic Training
- Chapter 10: Ch10 - Physical Training pt2
- Chapter 9: Ch9 - Physical Training pt1
- Chapter 8: Ch8 - Early Start
- Chapter 7: Ch7 - Toris
- Chapter 6: Ch6 - Monster!
- Chapter 5: Ch5 - Progress?
- Chapter 4: Ch4 - Need Fooood
- Chapter 3: Ch3 - First Night
- Chapter 2: Ch2 - Déjà vu
- Chapter 1: Ch1 - I’m Dead?
- Ch0 - Auxillary