Chapter 159: The Pedestal of Stupidity
Date: 6/22/2001 – 11:27 PM
Location: The White Room – Assessment Floor
Perspective: Kaiser Everhart
Director Vance stood before me, his presence a heavy, suffocating shroud. With a flick of his wrist, a holographic interface materialized between us, shimmering in the sterile light.
My test results hung in the air, glowing with clinical indifference.
“I have been reviewing the answers from your assessment,” Vance said, his voice flat. He swiped a finger through the air, isolating my final score.
“Designation 000001 was the only student to achieve a perfect 100. The rest of the top tier ranged from 95% to 99%. You, however, managed to land exactly at the bottom of that threshold.”
He looked at me through his silver-rimmed glasses.
“Why did you hold back, Designation 981?”
I blinked, widening my eyes slightly to mimic the confused innocence of a child caught in a misunderstanding. “I… I didn’t hold back, Director. The exam was quite difficult. My head was hurting by the end of the third question.”
Vance didn’t flinch.
He swiped the display again, bringing Question 5 into sharp focus. “Then explain this. Question 5 is a Level 4 spatial equation.”
“Statistically, only you and Designation 1 provided the correct synchronization. You achieved a 20/20 on the most difficult problem in the Foundation’s current database.”
I looked at the glowing numbers and shrugged my small shoulders. “What a coincidence. I suppose I just got lucky with the variables.”
“Lucky?” Vance’s voice dropped cold. He pulled up the results for Question 1.
“You left the first question—a basic mana-density derivation—half-finished. You provided the correct logic but stopped before the final sum. It resulted in a massive point deduction. You are the only student who failed the easiest question yet perfected the hardest.”
“I… I must have forgotten the time,” I murmured, staring at my feet. “I saw the clock and panicked. I moved to the end of the test because the big numbers looked more interesting. I didn’t think I’d actually get them right.”
Vance stepped closer. The temperature in the room seemed to drop. He began to read Question 5 aloud, his voice echoing with a terrifying clarity.
Question 5: A Level 4 Teleportation Portal requires a stabilized event horizon to prevent molecular shearing. Given a radius R, calculate the exact mana-density required to maintain the circumference of the portal’s aperture during a 500-mile transit.
Note: The value of the circular constant is required for the final synchronization.
“This was your answer,” Vance said.
He tapped the holographic screen, and my handwriting sprawled across the air. It looked simple at a glance—deceptively so. I hadn’t just used the standard 3.14… or even the common 50-digit approximation of pi.
I had written out 1,517 digits of pi by memory, weaving them into a formula that accounted for things the instructors hadn’t even asked for.
I had mapped the destination coordinates with a precision that included the altitude of the exit point and the atmospheric density of the 500-mile mark. I had calculated the moisture content in the air to prevent fog-clouding upon arrival. I had even adjusted the mana-flow to account for the day/night cycle and the specific vibration of the grass at the target location so the portal wouldn’t disturb the local flora.
It was a perfect simulation of a reality that didn’t exist yet.
Vance turned back to me, his silver eyes piercing. “Designation 1 solved this using the standard Foundation advanced-sync method. His answer was perfect.”
“But your answer… your answer accounted for the moisture in the air and the gravitational pull of the moon.”
He leaned down until he was at eye level with me. “How did you manage to write an answer greater than Designation 1 while claiming to be ’lucky’?”
I maintained my mask. My heart rate remained at a steady 65 beats per minute.
“I just… I like circles, Director. When I thought about the portal, I could see the destination. I thought it would be sad if the grass got burnt when I arrived. So I added some numbers to make sure it stayed green.”
He knows. But he cannot prove the extent of the “Aporetic Reasoning” without breaking me open.
This is the moment where I become his most valuable, and most dangerous, asset.
Vance straightened his back, his shadow looming over me once more. “You are either a fool pretending godhood, or you are the greatest liar this facility has ever produced.”
I let a small smirk settle on my face, a breach of the blank-slate protocol that governed the lower-tier designations.
Vance’s silver eyes sharpened behind his spectacles. “You are expressing human emotions,” he observed, his voice devoid of surprise.
“Spontaneous facial mimicry and ego-driven expressions are not scheduled for teaching until the Year 2 Emotional Understanding curriculum. You are ahead of the timeline.”
“Or perhaps I am a bit too emotional, Director,” I replied.
He ignored the comment and swiped the holographic display to a new data set.
“You have been staying late after the simulation cycles conclude. Specifically with Designation 000829. Your physical proximity and frequency of dialogue suggest a social bond. Tell me… why are you taking the route of friendship in a facility designed for survival of the fittest?”
“You misunderstood my motives, Director Vance,” I said, my tone flattening into a rehearsed innocence.
“I am currently the lowest-ranked student in this tier. I am simply trying to survive by securing a high-value ally. It is a pragmatic use of—”
“Enough,” Vance cut me off. He swiped again, bringing up Question 3.
Question 3: Find the eigenvalues of a 12th-dimensional mana-matrix where every odd-numbered row is a derivative of the Void-Constant. Express the result in Abyssal integers.
He pointed at my work. The display filled with a dense, chaotic web of symbols that mirrored a complex Smith Chart.
“The Foundation has not yet introduced the Abyssal Calculus. Nor have we taught the use of integral variables for 12th-dimensional mapping,” Vance stated.
“Yet, you provided a solution that uses 9 distinct variables to calculate the intersection of space, time, and the void.”
He began to list the variables I had injected into the matrix:
Temporal Displacement
Spatial Curvature Index
Void-Leakage Coefficient
Mana Viscosity
Abyssal Pressure
Entropic Decay Rate
Molecular Resonance
Atomic Vibration Threshold
Celestial Inversion
“Your result wasn’t just a number,” Vance said, his voice dropping to a whisper. “It was a blueprint. You used these variables to describe a timed explosive curse. A detonator that triggers the moment the target attempts to use a sacred or heavenly spell. It soaks into the subject’s blood, neutralizing healing magic instantly. No counter-measures. No survival.”
He stepped into my personal space, his shadow completely eclipsing me. “You did not include these variables in Question 5, where they would have increased your accuracy. Instead, you wasted them on Question 3 to create a weapon that confused the instructors. They have never seen a curse designed to counter celestial magic with such intensity.”
Vance gripped the edge of the holographic podium. “You are an oddity, Designation 981. Are you trying to prove a point? Are you trying to demonstrate that you are, in fact, not a defect?”
I maintained my smile. It was a mask of polite curiosity, hiding the gears of the factory turning within. I looked up at him, my blue eyes reflecting the cold silver of his glasses.
“Director Vance,” I said softly, “if you don’t mind, I’d like to pose an interesting question of my own.”
“What is fairness?” I asked.
“People like to think it’s simple. A concept upheld by rules and principles. But perhaps fairness is just a word—dragged across mouths to justify convenience. A multi-faced mirror. Everyone sees a different reflection and calls it ’just.’”
Vance didn’t answer. He watched me with the stillness of a statue.
“Some say fairness means the same treatment for all,” I continued, stepping slightly to the side to catch the light.
“But does that mean a fish and a bird must climb the same tree? Others argue for fairness in results—give more to those who need more. But who decides the weight of need?”
“Then there’s fairness by opportunity: let everyone run the same race. Ignore who was born with a leg disability.”
“Is talent fair? Is beauty fair? Is being born clever or being born broken fair?” I paused, letting the silence answer.
“No. Are human beings fair? Of course not. And yet… we build systems, label them with justice, with merit, with equality—and hope it holds. Hope it doesn’t tilt too hard toward the gifted.”
“Hope the ones below don’t notice the cracks.”
Vance adjusted his glasses. The silver frames caught the glare of the overhead lights. “And your point, Designation 981?”
“Imagination can often be far more cruel than reality,” I said, my gaze narrowing on him. “These children—they are brilliant. Gifted. Destined. But somewhere along the line, that gift stopped being a blessing.”
“Here, it is nothing more than a survival tool. And survival tools break. Giftedness isn’t a guarantee of success. It’s a potential for it. That’s the part people like to forget.”
“The adults here… they don’t see children. They see weapons.”
I took a breath, my tone steady and quietly confident. “They don’t raise you. They test you. They don’t nurture your potential. They see if it can carry itself. If you can’t wield your own gift, then it consumes you. Until you kill yourself using it.”
“I have no special talent.”
Vance let out a dry, low chuckle. “You have no talent? Don’t make me laugh. You’ve grown exponentially in the past week since the self-studies began. That rate of data integration can only correlate with Designation 1.”
“You, 981, are an Adaptability Genius.”
“May you like to test your hypothesis?” I asked.
“That is my purpose for being here,” Vance replied, his voice regaining its clinical edge.
“A reassessment of your hidden talent which we’ve missed. Judging from your test scores, it’s evident. Nobody else was even close to getting the 5th question right. Only by being adaptable could you break the material down and understand it so thoroughly, much like we’ve seen from Designation 1.”
He reached into his coat and produced a handheld scanner. It emitted a thin, blue light that swept over my forehead, mapping the neural pathways and searching for the unique mana-signature that signaled an innate “talent.” I waited patiently. I felt the cool hum of the device as it probed my biological architecture.
BEEP.
The scanner buzzed a sharp, discordant red.
The notification was clear: No Talents Detected.
Vance stared at the device, his brows furrowing. The logic he had built—the evidence of my test scores—had just collided with the physical reality of the scan.
“This… this is impossible,” he muttered. “The data shows growth that matches the highest tier. How can the scanner be blank?”
“As I’ve said, Director Vance, I’m not talented,” I stated coldly.
“Results happen over time, not overnight. I simply put in the work that the others consider beneath them.”
“But how?” Vance’s voice rose, a rare flicker of annoyance breaking through his composure.
“How can you be talentless yet survive this long and pass the assessment with those specific variables? It does not make sense! You solved a dimensional matrix using the Void-Constant!”
“Nothing ever really gets easier,” I said, meeting his silver eyes with my own. “You just get better.”
Vance looked genuinely annoyed now, his jaw tightening. “What are you saying now? That you deem yourself special? That your effort is somehow superior to the gifts of Heaven?”
“Nothing like that, Director,” I replied. I didn’t feel pride, only the cold clarity of my own reasoning.
“I don’t possess the ego to see myself as anything, really. But as it stands, you should know… you have to be ’odd’ to be number one.”
I narrowed my eyes on him, pushing the conversation to its final point.
“The speech about talent and fate you spoke of earlier… Do you truly believe in that?”
“Clearly,” Vance said, his voice hard with conviction. “And with all my worth. It is the foundation of our world.”
“What you people commonly call fate and talent is mostly just your own stupidity putting them on a pedestal,” I stated, my voice like ice.
“I see them as nothing more than people born with a headstart in life. A headstart can be overcome by someone who knows how to run the race correctly.”
I took a step closer to him, my small stature irrelevant against the weight of my words.
“Your philosophy is wrong, Director Vance.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 216: Cruel Sight of Destiny - III
- Chapter 215: Peaceful Tides - II
- Chapter 214: Parasitic Tragedy - I
- Chapter 213: Days of Twilight
- Chapter 212: Starchild - II
- Chapter 211: Starchild - I
- Chapter 210: All Bets In
- Chapter 209: High Ground
- Chapter 208: Reckoning I
- Chapter 207: The Reaping
- Chapter 206: Promise Me to not interfere
- Chapter 205: Reunion Of The Trio
- Chapter 204: The Siren’s Method
- Chapter 203: The Golden Standard
- Chapter 202: Counter Break
- Chapter 201: The Only One
- Chapter 200: Please Don’t Look at Me
- Chapter 199: The Sky-Eye
- Chapter 198 - 10th January
- Chapter 197: The Price of History
- Chapter 196: The Birth of Ascension
- Chapter 195: A Dream In My Eyes - I
- Chapter 194: I’ll Prove It Myself
- Chapter 193: Mother of Despair
- Chapter 192: The Mother Beneath the Crater
- Chapter 191: Me and My Wife
- Chapter 190: The False King and His Princess
- Chapter 189: Don’t Touch My Princess.
- Chapter 188: I’m Going to Kidnap You
- Chapter 187: The Price of Doing Good
- Chapter 186: The Price of a Life - PART 2
- Chapter 185: Where Heroes Didn’t Come - PART 1
- Chapter 184: Don’t Touch Her.
- Chapter 183: Sea of The Heart
- Chapter 182: The Day He Chose the Past
- Chapter 181: The Composite Sword
- Chapter 180: The Hungry Bunny
- Chapter 179: Party Ascension
- Chapter 178: Zero Potential
- Chapter 177: The Gone Star
- Chapter 176: The Avalon Invitation
- Chapter 175: Supreme Masquerade
- Chapter 174: The One Above All
- Chapter 173: The Architecture of Failure
- Chapter 172: Ceres Omega
- Chapter 171: Void’s Trial 3: The Acceptance (3)
- Chapter 170: Void’s Trial 3: The Acceptance (2)
- Chapter 169: Void’s Trial 3: The Acceptance (1)
- Chapter 168: Void’s Trial 2: The Fiction of Reality (2)
- Chapter 167: Void’s Trial 2: The Fiction of Reality (1)
- Chapter 166: Void’s Trial 1: The Essence of Life
- Chapter 165: God-Killer Theory
- Chapter 164: KAISERISM - THE TRUTH
- Chapter 163: Mother’s Love...
- Chapter 162: Happy Birthday Kaiser!
- Chapter 161: The Final Hours
- Chapter 160: The First Number 000001
- Chapter 159: The Pedestal of Stupidity
- Chapter 158: The Hierarchy of Genius
- Chapter 157: Will You Wait?
- Chapter 156: Self-Engineered Weapon
- Chapter 155: Surprise Examination
- Chapter 154: Flawless Mnemonics
- Chapter 153: What’s Affection?
- Chapter 152: Your Name is ’Amelia’
- Chapter 151: Personality Types - KDN
- Chapter 150: Abandonment
- Chapter 149: Kaiserism
- Chapter 148: What is fiction?
- Chapter 147: Aporetic False Genius
- Chapter 146: I Will Find The - Truth -
- Chapter 145: The Life of a ’1 Year Old’
- Chapter 144: A False Genius?
- Chapter 143: Toxic Love
- Chapter 142: - Harmless Guy -
- Chapter 141: The Avalon Island Raid
- Chapter 140: The Elvian Kingdom
- Chapter 139: We’re Engaged?!
- Chapter 138: I Like You - Celia <3
- Chapter 137: Timeless Love
- Chapter 136: Celia’s Crushing Childhood - Part III (FINAL)
- Chapter 135: Celia’s Crushing Childhood: Part II
- Chapter 134: Celia’s Crushing Childhood: Part I
- Chapter 133: Don’t Decide My Happiness
- Chapter 132: Ribbon of Love
- Chapter 131: The Night She Asked Why
- Chapter 130: You Can’t Get Rid Of Me.
- Chapter 129: Aching Love
- Chapter 128: Everything for you
- Chapter 127: Under the Moonlit Blossoms
- Chapter 126: Defy All Measures
- Chapter 125: Uninvited Guests to The Grave
- Chapter 124: The Mighty God Killer
- Chapter 123: The Vengeful Hunter
- Chapter 122: The Darker Side Rises
- Chapter 121: I was... Deceived
- Chapter 120: You’re My Toy
- Chapter 119: Cursed Arrival
- Chapter 118: Depths of The Hunt - II
- Chapter 117: Join Me
- Chapter 116: The Hunt Begins - I
- Chapter 115: Tales of My Love
- Chapter 114: Fake Childhood
- Chapter 113: Dark Lover
- Chapter 112: Demonic Feud
- Chapter 111: The Veil Falls
- Chapter 110: Happy Birthday Celia!
- Chapter 109: Awakening of Veil
- Chapter 108: New Year’s Night
- Chapter 107: Labyrinth’s Savior
- Chapter 106: Crawler’s Demise - VI
- Chapter 105: Crawler’s Demise - V (FINAL)
- Chapter 104: Crawler’s Demise - IV
- Chapter 103: Crawler’s Demise - III
- Chapter 102: False Impression
- Chapter 101: Crawler’s Demise - II
- Chapter 100: Aspiration of Thermodynamics
- Chapter 99: Crawler’s Demise - I
- Chapter 98: Wait For You
- Chapter 97: Beyond Dreams
- Chapter 96: Frost-Serpent
- Chapter 95: The Mother Of Fairies
- Chapter 94: Forest Of Wishes
- Chapter 93: Promise Of Stars
- Chapter 92: Celestial-Revival
- Chapter 91: History Of Celestine
- Chapter 90: Endless Friendship
- Chapter 89: Primordial Hunt Begins
- Chapter 88: Forbidden Destiny
- Chapter 87: Your Story Ends Here - II
- Chapter 86: The Last Tear Never Fell
- Chapter 85: The Aftermath
- Chapter 84: Ascend- Swarm Tyrant IV (Ending)
- Chapter 83: Celestine’s Hero
- Chapter 82: Rinascita’s Last Breath - Swarm Tyrant II
- Chapter 81: The Sky Falls - Swarm Tyrant
- Chapter 80: Preparations Of The Skies
- Chapter 79: Knights Of The Realm
- Chapter 78: Distorted Bonds
- Chapter 77: Your Story Ends Here - I
- Chapter 76: His Arrival
- Chapter 75: Rinascita’s Ending
- Chapter 74: Swarm Tyrant’s Arrival
- Chapter 73: The Masked Killer
- Chapter 72: The Grotesque War Begins
- Chapter 71: Heartbreak Part 4 (Final)
- Chapter 70: Heartbreak Part 3
- Chapter 69: Heartbreak Part 2
- Chapter 68: Heartbreak Part 1: I Wish I Lied
- Chapter 67: Grotesque War Part 2: Hidden Pasts
- Chapter 66: Grotesque War Part 1: Preparations
- Chapter 65: A Murderous Love
- Chapter 64: A Hero Born From Regret - Lucas Reinhardt
- Chapter 63: When Monster and Devil Cross Paths
- Chapter 62: Heartless Forever
- Chapter 61: Mother to the Void
- Chapter 60: I’ll Be The Monster
- Chapter 59: The Grotesque Nest
- Chapter 58: Red Flags Of Tomorrow
- Chapter 57: Before I Become Myself
- Chapter 56: False Heir
- Chapter 55: Abandoned
- Chapter 54: Obsessive Desires
- Chapter 53: Cold-Calculations
- Chapter 52: Heavenly Beginning
- Chapter 51: The Joker
- Chapter 50: Beginning and End
- Chapter 49: Cursed Love
- Chapter 48: Every Scar Marks My Rebirth
- Chapter 47: The One in Control
- Chapter 46: Cheat Skills
- Chapter 45: Whispers and Wagers
- Chapter 44: God-Speed Vs Technique
- Chapter 43: Torn Apart
- Chapter 42: The Swarm’s Beginning
- Chapter 41: Bloom of Curses
- Chapter 40: Broken Hopes...
- Chapter 39: He... he’s gone
- Chapter 38: The Swarm Tyrant
- Chapter 37: Meaning Behind Curses
- Chapter 36: Strings of Fate
- Chapter 35: The Wife Gatherer
- Chapter 34: Did I Steal Her Heart?
- Chapter 33: Stay With Me
- Chapter 32: A New Stage
- Chapter 31: The Nightmare
- Chapter 30: Decaying Fate
- Chapter 29: The Fallen Angel
- Chapter 28: The Broken Chains
- Chapter 27: Reawakening Conquest
- Chapter 26: The Queen of Curses
- Chapter 25: Empress of The Abyss
- Chapter 24: The Silent Executioner
- Chapter 23: King of Flames Vs Wielder of God-Speed
- Chapter 22: The Sword Saint
- Chapter 21: The Final Confrontation Begins
- Chapter 20: The Truth
- Chapter 19: Twisted Queen
- Chapter 18: My Gift
- Chapter 17: Two Sides
- Chapter 16: Turning Point
- Chapter 15: Breaking Talents
- Chapter 14: Her Memory
- Chapter 13: Strings of the Puppet Master
- Chapter 12: One Last Time
- Chapter 11: Crushed Dreams
- Chapter 10: Lost Purpose
- Chapter 9: Shattered Trust
- Chapter 8: No Mercy
- Chapter 7: Betrayal
- Chapter 6: A Step Closer
- Chapter 5: A Promise to Keep
- Chapter 4: Lost Hope
- Chapter 3: Cursed Past
- Chapter 2: Into the Darkness
- Chapter 1: The Cursed Fate