Chapter 47:

Chapter 47: Thunder Over Wind, Shadows Over Victory

The Day I Reincarnated in Another World and Became The Darkness Lord


The Ironwood Royal Magic Academy's coliseum was a bowl of sun-drenched stone and deafening noise. 
Today, the "False Peace" of the kingdom was draped in the vibrant banners of competition, a thin veil of sportsmanship masking the underlying military tension that defined the era. 
High in the VIP stands, Princess Alisa Ironwood watched with narrowed eyes, her golden hair shimmering under the afternoon sun, while beside her, the transfer student Ryuto leaned forward, his hand reflexively twitching toward where his divine blade usually rested. 
The air within the arena didn't just carry the scent of sweat and anticipation; it was heavy with the ozone-sharp tang of static and the whistling pressure of condensed mana.
"Next match—Group D!" the announcer's voice boomed, amplified by resonance runes that made the very floorboards of the stadium vibrate. 
"A clash of Class A's top-tier contenders—the Golden Bolt, Zerath Veylan, versus the Azure Gale, Rin Stormhart!"
The crowd erupted. This was the match the academy had been waiting for: a collision of two fundamentally different philosophies of combat.
Zerath Veylan stepped onto the sands first. He was a colossus for his age, broad-shouldered and possessing a grounded stability that made him look like a statue carved from the earth itself. 
His short golden hair seemed to catch fire whenever he circulated his mana, and as he drew his magic blade, the steel didn't just reflect the light—it crackled with arcs of blue-white electricity. 
Opposite him, Rin Stormhart was his polar opposite. Lean, lithe, and possessing a deceptive fragility, he moved as if gravity were merely a suggestion. 
His pale blue hair drifted around his face like a localized breeze, and his twin shortswords—forged from high-grade wind-conductive silver—glowed with a faint, pulsing light. 
"Begin!"
The word had barely left the referee's lips when the arena floor shattered. Zerath didn't move; he detonated.
"Thunderclap Burst!" he roared, slamming his heavy blade into the stone. Bolts of jagged lightning erupted from the point of impact, snaking across the ground in a chaotic web of white-hot energy. 
The shockwave sent a spray of gravel and sparks toward the stands, forcing the defensive barriers to flare into life.Rin, however, was already gone. He didn't jump; he ascended. 
"This Gale!"
With a flick of his wrists, wind surged beneath his boots, making him weightless. He moved through the air like a glitch in reality, sidestepping the lightning arcs with a grace that bordered on the supernatural. 
In a blur of azure motion, he closed the distance, his twin blades spinning into a silver kaleidoscope.
Clang—Clang! Clang!
The sound of their exchange was a rhythmic staccato of thunder and whistling air. Zerath swung his heavy blade with the momentum of a falling mountain, each strike leaving a trail of scorched sand. 
Rin met these blows not with strength, but with deflection, using the pressurized air around his shortswords to redirect the massive force of the lightning blade.
"Tch!" Zerath grimaced as one of Rin's blades grazed his bicep, drawing a thin line of red. 
"Your wind can cut fast, Rin. But speed is just a parlor trick without weight!"
He thrust his sword toward the sky, the metal acting as a lightning rod for the mana he was siphoning from the atmosphere. 
"Blazing Thunder!"
A blinding pillar of white light descended from the heavens. The impact was so violent it created a crater five meters wide, the heat turning the sand to glass instantly. 
Rin leaped aside at the last possible microsecond, the ends of his pale hair singeing from the sheer proximity of the heat.
"Wind isn't just about speed, Zerath," Rin shouted, his voice steady despite his quickening breath. 
He began to spin, his twin blades becoming the axis of a rising storm. "It's about the freedom to be everywhere at once! Cyclone Edge!"
The wind intensified violently. It wasn't a mere breeze anymore; it was a localized hurricane that began to tear the very tiles from the arena floor. 
The tornado-like force rushed toward Zerath, swallowing the light and drowning out the sound of the crowd.
Zerath stood his ground, his golden hair standing on end from the sheer electrical output. He gripped his hilt with both hands, his muscles bulging beneath his uniform. 
"Then let's see if your freedom can survive my judgment! Thunder God's Breaker!"He charged.
He didn't run; he became a projectile of pure kinetic energy. He drove his blade straight into the heart of the cyclone. 
The collision at the center of the arena was a sensory nightmare—a blinding explosion of violet-white lightning piercing through a howling wall of azure wind.
For a heartbeat, time seemed to freeze. Then, the cyclone burst.
Rin was flung backward like a broken doll, his twin shortswords clattering uselessly against the stone as he crashed into the coliseum wall, the impact leaving a spiderweb of cracks in the masonry. 
He slumped to the ground, his body twitching as residual electrical currents danced over his skin.
The referee raised a trembling hand. "Winner—Zerath Veylan of Class A!"
The crowd's roar was a physical force, though beneath the cheers, there was a buzzed realization of how close the match had been. 
"Class A... they're truly on another level," a student in Class B muttered, his face pale.
Zerath stood in the center of the smoking arena, his chest heaving. He didn't celebrate. Instead, he gave a respectful, disciplined nod toward the unconscious Rin. 
"...That was a good match," he whispered, his voice low and raspy. "You almost had me."
As the sun dipped below the spires of Valerion, the frantic energy of the tournament gave way to a heavy, expectant silence. 
Tomorrow was the final day—the day the survivors of each group would clash to determine the academy's true peak. 

---

In Kuro's dormitory room, the atmosphere was a stark contrast to the violence of the afternoon. 
The only light came from the moon, which cast long, silver bars across the floorboards. 
Kuro sat at his desk, his silver hair shimmering in the gloom. He was reading a book on the ancient history of the Mistwood Kingdom, his expression a lifeless void of absolute calculation. 
He didn't turn when the door clicked open. He didn't need to. He recognized the specific, light-footed resonance of her mana before she even reached the corridor.
Rei stepped into the room. She was still wearing the dark black and silver uniform of the academy, the fabric blending into the shadows. 
Her eyes, usually bright with a playful mischief, were now focused and somber. 
"Kuro-sama," she whispered, her voice a mix of reverence and a question she hadn't quite formulated.
Kuro slowly closed his book, the thud of the leather cover sounding like a gavel in the quiet room. 
He looked up at her, his violet eyes reflecting the moonlight with a depth that suggested he was looking at something far beyond the walls of the dormitory.
"Should this Rei take the champion's victory position?" she asked, stepping into the silver light. 
"If I reveal even ten percent of the core you gave me, none of these Class A students—not even Zerath—could stand for more than a second." 
Silence hung between them for a long moment. Kuro leaned back in his chair, his fingers brushing his chin in a gesture of clinical profiling. 
He thought of the "False Peace" and the way the First Hero utilized these tournaments to identify potential threats to his order. 
"Rei," he finally said, his tone as steady as the ticking of a clock. 
"That is your choice. I brought you from the Abyss to be my shadow, not my puppet. Whether you stand at the top of a human podium or remain at the bottom, your existence to me does not change." 
Rei blinked, her breath catching in her throat. She had expected a strategic command—a directive to hide her power or a cold order to humiliate the Class A elite. 
Instead, he had given her the one thing she hadn't known she possessed: autonomy.
A small, genuine smile touched her lips, one that reached her eyes for the first time that day. 
She understood the hidden meaning. Her value was inherent, tied to the 10% Shadow Core they shared, not to the approval of a kingdom built on lies. 
"...I understand." Her voice was a soft melody. "Then I won't take it. Winning such a thing is almost meaningless when the outcome of the world is already decided in this room."
Kuro turned his gaze back toward the window, his eyes narrowing. 
"Yes. The survivors of tomorrow are merely data points for the endgame. The real game hasn't even begun." 
Rei's smile deepened into something more dangerous, more devoted. She gave a slight, elegant bow. 
"As expected of Kuro-sama. Always three steps ahead of the gods."
She turned to leave, her footsteps silent on the wood. At the doorway, she paused, looking back at him one last time. 
The moonlight hit the side of his face, and for a moment, she saw it—not a smile, but a softening of the coldness she had known since Tokyo. 
"Kuro-sama… you're changing," she murmured, more to herself than to him. 
"But even if the world turns to ash and Kuro-sama becomes something else entirely, I will follow my master into the deepest abyss."
The door closed with a soft click, leaving Kuro alone in the silver dark. He sat for a long time, his analytical mind attempting to process the "anomaly" of her words.
Tomorrow, more would come to light. Soon, the "First Hero" would realize that a new variable had entered his perfect world. And soon… the shadows would begin to move.
---

✦ To Be Continued...

Tsukuyo
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