Young Master's Pov: I Am The Game's Villain-Chapter 50: The Sword That Speaks (II)

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Chapter 50: The Sword That Speaks (II)

It was the engine.

---

Sixth bell. The team assembled.

Nine people on a floating platform under violet stars. The usual arrangement — semicircle facing Veylan, Ren at the back with his notebook, Kira on Elara’s shoulder, Nyx visible because she’d decided visibility was more efficient for group training.

And me. With a new sword.

The reactions were immediate and varied. 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝙚𝔀𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝒐𝒎

Liora saw the blade first. Her amber eyes locked onto the black metal and the invisible edge and the darkness trailing its length, and her forge-fire signature blazed with the particular frequency I’d catalogued as "something I want to fight."

"New weapon," she said. Not a question.

"New weapon," I confirmed.

Draven’s cold signature compressed further — his standard response to detecting something that didn’t fit his existing threat models. His eyes tracked the blade with military precision, cataloguing dimensions, weight, balance, and the energy it radiated.

Caelen looked at the sword, then at me, and his wind-wire signature tightened with the particular tension of a man who’d just realized the disruption technique that had beaten him in the ranking battle was about to get significantly more disruptive.

Mira’s fire pulsed. Theron cracked his knuckles.

Elara’s flowers multiplied.

Nyx — standing at the edge of the group, half in shadow — said nothing. But her silver eye fixed on the blade with the focused attention of an intelligence operative adding a critical new variable to her operational model.

Veylan walked forward. Stopped three feet from me. Looked at the sword.

His scar tightened.

"Where did you get that?" he asked. The voice was quiet. Not the professional quiet of an instructor. The cautious quiet of a soldier who’d identified an unknown weapon at close range.

"Beneath the academy. A Valdrake vault sealed during the Founding Era."

"It’s alive."

"Sentient. His name is Nihil."

"I am a Mythic-grade sentient weapon forged from the crystallized Void Core of—"

"He’s aware," I said.

"Let me finish. I’ve been waiting four hundred years to introduce myself to someone who isn’t you."

Veylan’s eyes shifted from the blade to me. The assessment lasted two seconds — the time it took for a veteran combat instructor to evaluate the strategic implications of a student arriving at training with a weapon that radiated more power than most of the faculty.

"Will it help?" he asked.

"He amplifies my Void output by a factor of eight to twelve. With him, I can perform at Warden-level in combat. And the combat itself accelerates my cultivation through a feedback loop."

"So training with that sword makes you stronger faster."

"Significantly."

Veylan looked at the group. Seven students and one scholar, all watching the exchange with expressions ranging from excitement (Liora) to analysis (Draven) to mild existential crisis (Ren).

"New training protocol," Veylan said. "Valdrake spars with Nihil. Everyone else adjusts to the increased threat level. If the sword amplifies him to Warden-equivalent, you’re all training against a Warden now. That means faster reactions, tighter formations, and no margin for error."

Liora smiled. The fierce, bright, hungry smile.

"Finally," she said.

"The loud one has spirit," Nihil observed, loud enough for the entire platform to hear. "Reckless spirit, but spirit nonetheless. Her fire alignment is crude but powerful. Like a forge that hasn’t learned finesse. I approve. She’ll make excellent combat energy."

Liora blinked. Looked at the sword. Looked at me.

"Did your sword just... rate me?"

"He does that."

"The ice specialist is more interesting," Nihil continued, apparently deciding that the entire team deserved his unsolicited evaluation. "Frostborn compression at his age suggests either exceptional training or exceptional trauma. Possibly both. The wind fighter — adequate technique, improving rapidly, his recent breakthrough has promise. The fire girl is unstable, which makes her the most dangerous person here besides me. The earth wall is boring but unkillable. The nature speaker is—" A pause. Longer than his other evaluations. "—unusual. Her bond with the spirit beast creates a resonance I haven’t observed in centuries. The fox is more than she appears."

Kira, on Elara’s shoulder, chirped. The sound was pointed — the particular chirp she produced when something had gotten her attention in a way she considered significant.

"And the shadow." Nihil’s voice dropped a register. "The shadow is excellent. Mirage Weaving of that quality in someone her age is remarkable. Her positioning on this platform alone tells me she could kill half the people here before they registered her movement."

Nyx’s shimmer didn’t change. But I felt — through the Void bond, through the expanded awareness Nihil provided — a single pulse in her normally suppressed signature.

Surprise. And something adjacent to respect.

"The sword sees clearly," she said.

"The sword has been alive for a thousand years and has developed opinions about everything. The sword would like everyone to know that his opinions are always correct and resistance is inefficient."

"Nihil," I said.

"Yes?"

"Stop introducing yourself to my team."

"They’re also my team now. We’re bonded. What’s yours is mine. That includes allies, combat energy, and whatever that delightful tea is that you drink every morning."

"You can’t drink tea."

"I can absorb the Aether from Starlight Tea if you pour it on me. The flavor profile is excellent. I’ve been smelling it through the stone for weeks."

Veylan pinched the bridge of his nose. The gesture was so human, so fundamentally un-Veylan, that Liora and Draven both stared.

"Training begins," Veylan said. "Now. Before the sword reviews my combat history."

"I was going to get to that," Nihil said. "Your left shoulder injury from the Battle of—"

"NOW."

Training began.

The difference was immediate. With Nihil in my hands, the D-rank ceiling I’d been operating beneath shattered. My Void reinforcement output — amplified eight to twelve times through the wielder-weapon feedback loop — placed me at a combat level the seminar members hadn’t faced from me before.

Liora was my first sparring partner. Of course she was.

She came at me with the same controlled aggression she’d shown in our first spar — the forge-fire at 70%, the measured advance, the probing strikes designed to read my responses. She expected the same Cedric she’d been training with — D-rank power, S-rank technique, three-minute wall.

My first parry sent her sliding backward six feet.

Her amber eyes went wide. Not with fear — with the specific expression of a competitive fighter who’d just been handed exactly what she’d been asking for.

"More," she said.

The spar lasted seven minutes. Not three — seven. The meridian wall that had limited my combat duration was pushed back by Nihil’s amplification and the feedback loop that fed refined combat energy directly into my channels. Every exchange was cultivation. Every strike expanded the container. Every parry, every deflection, every moment of channeled Void was a micro-advancement that I could feel accumulating.

Liora fought at 85%. Then 90%. Then — for the first time in any of our sessions — she hit 100%.

Crimson Aether blazed. Her practice sword glowed with contained forge-fire that made the metal vibrate at a frequency I could feel through the stone. She wasn’t holding back anymore. Wasn’t calibrating. Wasn’t assessing.

She was fighting.

And I met her. Blow for blow. Void against Fire. Negation against creation. The black blade and the burning sword exchanging strikes that cracked the air and left afterimages — dark and bright, shadow and flame, two forces that shouldn’t have been evenly matched but were, because Nihil’s amplification turned an Acolyte into a Warden and Liora’s full power was exactly what a Warden-level fight required.

"This," Nihil said, his voice thrumming through the blade with undisguised hunger, "is what I’ve been waiting for. MORE."

The combat energy feedback surged. I felt my meridians expanding — not gradually, not in the careful increments of morning cultivation. In real-time. The channels widening under the pressure of amplified Void combat at a rate that was visible in my internal awareness.

Ren, at the platform’s edge, was writing so fast his pen was smoking.

Veylan was watching with the particular stillness of a man recalculating everything he thought he knew.

And Liora — blazing, burning, magnificent Liora — was laughing.

Not a polite laugh. Not a social laugh. The full-throated, genuine, uncontrolled laugh of a warrior who had found what she’d been searching for since she first picked up a sword.

A real fight.

"AGAIN," she shouted.

"The loud one is my favorite," Nihil declared.

The training continued until the storms turned from violet to silver. The team rotated through sparring sessions against my Nihil-amplified output. Draven’s ice met my Void and the collision produced a shockwave that knocked Mira off her feet ten meters away. Caelen’s evolved wind style pushed me harder than the ranking battle, and his new adaptive rhythm nearly broke through the Null Counter twice. Theron took three of my best amplified strikes to the chest, staggered backward half a step, and said "not bad" with the geological patience of a man who considered earthquakes a mild inconvenience.

Elara and Kira served as the early warning system — and with Nihil amplifying my Void Sense, their combined Nature-Void detection grid covered the entire platform with a resolution that bordered on precognitive. They detected Nyx’s flanking attempts four out of seven times. Nyx, who had never been detected four out of seven times by anyone, responded by vanishing so completely that even the combined grid lost her.

"Impressive," Nihil said about Nyx’s fifth successful stealth approach. "I can feel her presence. Barely. She disrupts Void Aether at a frequency that’s almost below my detection threshold. Almost."

"Almost counts," Nyx said, from directly behind me.

"Next time I won’t say almost," Nihil replied.

The challenge was set. A thousand-year-old sentient weapon versus a seventeen-year-old assassin. The most dangerous game of hide-and-seek in the academy’s history.

Veylan called the session at midnight. The team was drenched, exhausted, and operating with a cohesion that had advanced more in one evening than the previous week combined. Nihil’s presence had raised the ceiling for everyone — not through direct amplification but by forcing them to fight at a level they’d never been pushed to.

Ren’s notebook had gained twenty-three new pages of combat analytics. He’d mapped every team member’s performance curve against the Nihil-amplified baseline and identified six efficiency improvements that the group could implement immediately.

Veylan reviewed the data. Nodded once.

"Same time Thursday," he said. "Bring the sword."

"I go where he goes," Nihil said. "We’re bonded. This isn’t optional."

"The sword has opinions."

"The sword has facts. Opinions are for people who haven’t lived a thousand years."

Veylan looked at me.

"Is he always like this?"

"I’ve known him for thirty-six hours and yes."

The team dispersed. Ren walked beside me toward the Iron Wing, notebook clutched to his chest, his expression cycling between academic ecstasy and the particular exhaustion of a bottom-ten-percent combatant who’d spent three hours documenting Warden-level sparring matches.

"Cedric?"

"What?"

"The sword. Nihil. He said seven Valdrakes entered the chamber before you. And they all died."

"He said they came looking for power. I came looking for a solution."

"That’s what saved you?"

"According to a sword that’s been judging Valdrakes for a millennium. Make of that what you will."

Ren was quiet for five steps. Then:

"He called me ’the scholar’ and said he approved of my priorities."

"He likes that you reached for your notebook before you screamed."

"I almost screamed."

"But you didn’t."

"No. I didn’t." A pause. The ghost of a smile. "The brain is a weapon too."

Room Seven. The door closed. The night was quiet. Nihil rested against the bed frame — silent now, either sleeping or performing silence with the commitment of a weapon that chose its moments.

I lay on the bed. The meridians were humming — expanded, adapted, carrying the residual energy of three hours of amplified combat. I could feel the advancement. Not as a number or a rank notification — as a physical sensation. The channels were wider. The Void flowed easier. The gap between where I was and where I needed to be had narrowed.

Not enough. Not yet. But the direction was right and the speed was accelerating and the engine was running.

Three to four weeks. Adept rank. The containment.

I closed my eyes.

Beneath the bed, Nihil hummed. Quiet. Steady. The heartbeat of a weapon that had waited a thousand years for someone who came looking for a solution instead of power.

"Goodnight, boy."

"Goodnight, old man."

"I’m a sword."

"Goodnight, old sword."

"...acceptable."