Flames raged and spread like wildfire, devouring everything in sight. Blood had been spilled, dyeing the ground in a deep, haunting crimson. Swords and broken weapons lay scattered, painted red by the carnage. And at the center of it all stood a lone young manâfrozen in place amidst the horrors of what could only be described as a battlefield of shattered hearts and satisfied vengeance.
He stood there, dazed. Confused. Terrified. His eyes scanned the scene in disbelief, a desperate desire to escape clawing at his chestâbut his body refused to move. Not a single finger twitched. It was as if invisible chains held him down, like some cruel hand had reached out from the earth itself and anchored him in place. Chains of wrath and grief wrapped around his neck and limbs, binding him like a prisoner of war.
With every passing second in that nightmare of a place, sanity chipped away bit by bit. He could feel itâthe slow, agonizing unraveling of his mind.
He couldn't look away. Couldn't even blink. His eyes, like blood, stared blankly at the blood-soaked hell surrounding him.
â...I... canât...!â
His breathing turned ragged, desperateâlike a fish flopping helplessly on dry land.
His body no longer obeyed him. The chains wouldnât even let him collapse. So he shut his eyes, hopingâprayingâthat doing so might numb the overwhelming dread swallowing him whole.
Of course, it didnât.
The crushing weight in his chest only tightened.
And then... after what felt like an eternityâthough it was likely just a few secondsâa voice echoed in his ears. A voice that sounded both strange and terrifyingly familiar. Deep. Gruff. Piercingly clear.
"Blood shall stain the hands once dormant.
Judgment stirs, its blade thirsting for the breath of all things.
Ruination walks, eyes blind yet all-seeingâ
Awareness is no mercy.
Awaken⦠and remember what was buried beneath the flesh."
âWh-what...!?â
The words hit him like a curseâno, a spell. A forbidden chant to awaken some ancient beast meant to destroy the world.
With each repetition, agony stabbed through his chest and skull. He trembled violently, chains rattling as he triedâfailedâto break free.
Again and again, the voice chanted. Again and again, the pain surged.
âShut up...!!â
He clenched his hands, struggling to bring them to his ears, to shut it outâto block that voice from tearing his mind apart.
But it was inside.
Inside him.
Finally, he let out a screamâan unholy, soul-ripping cry that could shatter eardrums if anyone had been nearby.
And just like thatâ
The world shattered.
The voice vanished.
Everything faded into a suffocating, eternal darkness.
---
Then, in the very next instant, he woke up.
Gasping.
His body soaked in sweat, chest heaving like heâd been running for hours without rest. He clutched his chest, panting desperately for air, eyes wide with confusion and panic.
He looked around.
An empty room.
Just a bed... a wardrobe... and nothing else.
âHaah⦠haah⦠a dream?â
That was the only explanation that made sense.
â...â
âHuh?â
He felt something shift beside him. Something small.
Turning his head slowly, he found a young girl standing by his bedside, clinging to him.
âAhâ¦â
He didnât say anything else. Just stared at her.
Her honey-brown eyes were shimmering with unshed tears. Her face was twisted in an expression of deep fear and concern.
âB-Brother...? Whatâs wrong??â
Her voice trembled, soft and fragile. She looked at him like heâd just come back from the deadâlike heâd faced a monster and barely made it out alive.
The boy, her brother, just sat there, eyes darting across the room, down to his own bodyâhalf-expecting to find some bullet wound or hole in his chest.
That only made her worry grow worse.
âBrother...?â
She called out again, more gently this time.
He finally blinked. Once, twice, three timesâcoming back to reality little by little. And then, his gaze settled on her once more, noticing the tears pooling in the corners of her eyes.
Quickly, almost too quickly, the expression on his face vanishedâswallowed whole by a fake smile.
"Ah, good morning, Alia. I didnât notice you there. Were you watching your big brother while he slept? Thatâs not a very proper thing to do, you know."
He was trying to diffuse the tension, playing the situation like he always didâlighthearted teasing to make her argue back, to shift the mood, to anchor things in normalcy. Something familiar.
But, perhaps he had misunderstood the situation entirely.
"Shiro? Are you alright? You look pale... Do you need a doctor? You were screaming in your sleep just now."
Alia ignored the morning greeting entirely. Her voice was soaked in worry, trembling just slightly at the edges.
Shiro couldnât respondânot to the questions, not to the fear in her tone. He hadnât seen what he looked like while he slept: the way heâd been sweating, convulsing, barely held in place by her tiny hands clutching his arms, stopping him from rolling off the bed.
Of course, Alia hadnât seen the dream. But she knew. She knew pain when she saw it.
Meanwhile, trapped inside that nightmare, Shiro hadnât known who was beside him, hadnât known what his body was doing at all.
He had no idea what it meant for a child like her to witness such a terrifying scene.
He couldnât grasp the weight it left behind in her small heart.
Still smilingâstill clinging to the lieâhe spoke again, trying to brush it all off.
"Oh no, donât worry. It was just a dream... A flying dragon! Yeah, a massive one! Wreathed in flames! It was trying to eat me!"
What a shameless liar.
Shiro had always lied to his little sister. Always with gentle words, soft tones, harmless stories. He told himself it was for her sake. That it was better she didnât know.
That he was terrified of his own shadow.
That darkness made his skin crawl.
That he once lost to a wild boar and ran crying through the woods.
He hid everything.
And of course, he never expected her to know things like⦠that they werenât even blood-related. Just a pair of children pretending to be siblings. But even then, Shiro didnât want to be seen as weak.
What would happen if his little sister thought he was a coward?
Wouldnât it be better to be her reliable, cool older brother?
Isnât that what we all want to be?
But what that master liar didnât know... was that Alia knew everything.
Yesâthis twelve-year-old girl knew all of it.
Every lie he told, every time he tried to hide his fear behind empty wordsâshe saw through it all.
And every time, sheâd pretend not to notice.
Sometimes sheâd wait, just to expose him later in the most dramatic, devastating way.
Sometimes, sheâd just hold onto it in silence.
And in return, Shiro never noticed a thing.
Yes, she was a liar tooâon a completely different level.
Should a twelve-year-old be capable of that level of deception?
Absolutely not.
But that was the kind of bond the two of them shared.
Of course she cared about himâof course she was terrified when he screamed and thrashed in his sleep. But because she cared, she pretended.
She faked being fooled, just to ease his heart.
A twisted way of showing love.
"A dragon?" she echoed.
"Y-Yes! It was Huge!"
"And what did you do?"
"Well, I wanted to fight it, like the heroes do... but, you know, I didnât stand a chance. So I ran."
Aside from the part where he ran away and didnât fight, everything else was a lie.
A dragon that scared him that much? Enough to make him tremble and sweat like that? Sure, maybe. But she wasnât fooledânot by his trembling lips or the cracks in his voice.
Still, she played along.
She always did.
"...Coward."
Without mercy, she cut straight through him.
"!âIâm not a coward! I justâ"
"Brother... you looked like a frightened kitten when you woke up. I donât know what kind of dream you had, but Iâm not sure it was a dragon chasing you. Couldâve been a cat."
"â¦Huh?!"
She kept teasing him, deliberately brushing aside her earlier fear.
Shiro stared at her as she laughedâmocking her pathetic big brother.
And despite how weak he felt... it made him happy. Just a little.
To him, it looked like her fear had passed.
Like she had moved on.
And Alia, for now, decided not to push the matter further.
She replaced her tears with gentle laughterâfor his sake.
The narrative has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.
Again, youâd wonder... is this really a twelve-year-old girl?
âWell, I just wanted to let you know that breakfastâs readyâbefore you start trembling like a duck. Donât be late unless you want me to eat your share.â
âTrembling like a duck...? Seriously, where do you even learn these lines?â
Their usual back-and-forth banter lasted a few minutes before his sister finally left the room, leaving Shiro behind, sitting in bed and still processing what he could only describe as either a bizarre dreamâor an outright nightmare.
Tied to a pillar, standing in the middle of that square⦠what could that even mean?
âMaybe itâs some kind of bad omen...?â
He gave up trying to make sense of it. With a sigh, he pushed the thought aside and got up from bed.
After making his bed, washing his face, and changing into his usual outfitâa worn-out brown pair of pants and a short-sleeved blue shirt that made him look like any other villagerâhe looked like your typical country boy. Nothing fancy. Just plain and simple.
And that matched everything else around him. The room. The house. His life.
The house was a modest two-story wooden home. Upstairs were three small roomsâhis, his sisterâs, and a shared bathroom. Downstairs, a cramped kitchen sat tucked into a corner, and a small dining area held a round table with exactly three wooden chairs.
It was the kind of house youâd see everywhere in the village. Not poor, but definitely humble. In fact, almost all the homes in the village followed the same pattern.
âAnother typical day in this placeâ¦â
Of course, he couldnât hide how bored he felt. He was a young man, surrounded by the elderly. Sure, there were other people his age in the villageâbut none of them shared his interests or way of thinking.
His daily life was⦠predictable. Work in the wheat fields from morning till sunset. Come home. Eat. Sleep. Repeat. Thatâs how itâs been for years. Thatâs how it would be for many more.
Sure, there were seasonal festivals and the occasional event, but nothing truly exciting.
Shiro didnât care for them much either. But even he couldnât deny⦠this routine was slowly driving him insane.
I mean, come on. Spending your whole youth stuck in a cycle like that?
Who wouldnât want to run away?
There were only a few things that kept him going, and the biggest one of themâbooks.
Yeah, Shiro was a bookworm. Not the casual type either. He didnât read to kill timeâhe read because he loved it.
But that love? It was also part of his curse.
This village, with its barely-there education, only offered the most basic lessons to children. No libraries. No bookshops. Just a handful of old books scattered around, and none of them worth rereading.
Shiro was like a bookworm⦠without any books to munch on.
Once he was done getting ready, he headed downstairs.
Two people were already seated at the table, where three plates of fried eggs and three glasses of juice were neatly set out.
Yup. The classic setup.
One of them was his sister, Alia, smiling as usual while she dug into her food.
The other? An old man in his late seventies. Deep wrinkles lined his face, his hair and beard white as snow, and his dark eyes sharp even in old age.
Shiro gave the man a short greeting, calling him âDad,â before sitting down and joining them.
Three chairs. Three plates. Three rooms. One bathroom. A tiny kitchen no woman would approve of.
And no sign of a mother in sight.
The table was⦠quiet.
If you walked in, you might think these were strangers forced to live together. Barely any words. No small talk. No warmth.
But to them? This was normal.
In their house, it was polite to eat in silence.
Except⦠no one ever said why no one actually spoke.
That silence didnât last long thoughânot with Alia around.
âDaddy, Daddy! You shouldâve seen Shiroâs face when I woke him up! He looked just like a panicked chicken! Fufufu~â
ââ¦Here we go againâ¦â
Shiro muttered under his breath, already sensing the storm coming.
The old man didnât respond at first. You might think he hadnât heard her. But after a moment, he turned his head slowlyâalmost unnaturally soâand gave her a quiet smile before suddenly letting out a laugh so deep and loud it could terrify the dead.
Yeah, not exactly the kind of laugh that makes you feel safe.
âHahhahaha! Oh really? Looks like Shiro still needs his cute little sister sleeping next to him so he wonât get nightmares!â
Despite his gruff voice and scary looks, the old man cracked up at his daughterâs jokeâthen took it a step further by throwing shade directly at Shiro.
Alia burst out laughing, just as Shiro tried taking a sip of his juiceâonly to snort it out of his nose.
âUghâam I the main course now?! What happened to âno talking during mealsâ?!â
He protested as he wiped the spilled juice from his shirt, though he wasnât really mad.
Truth is, Shiro had grown used to being the familyâs punching bag.
Noâmore than used to it. It had become his job.
Yeah⦠he was the household clown.
âI bet you were being chased by a puppy in your dream! Or maybe it was a kitten!â
âRemember that time you screamed because a bat flew at you? Youâre even scared of animals! Fufufu~â
âI seriously donât know how I live with this kind of family⦠And who said bats play with humans?! They bring bad luck and chaos, thatâs what!â
He grumbled, keeping a bitter smile on his face.
You gotta respect the guy.
Being the familyâs clown? Thatâs a tough gig.
Especially when you didnât choose it.
The family finished their meal rather quicklyânaturally, not without the usual jabs and bursts of laughter directed at poor Shiro every couple of minutes.
Afterward, Alia decided to head outside and play. She was tenâjust the right age to start attending school. And of course, their humble little village did have a small school building. But⦠there was one tiny issue.
âDad... what did the school principal say?â
Shiroâs tone was hesitant for some reason, like he already knew the answer wasnât going to be good. His eyes flicked toward his father, who gave him a dry, awkward smile in return.
âAh, yeah... she said they donât accept âlittle monstersâ in their school...â
âAh... I see. Makes sense, I guess. No helping it, huh. Weâll just leave her be.â
âYeah... I guess so.â
The old man placed a hand on his forehead, letting out a long, weary sigh like the weight of the entire parenting world was pressing down on him.
Now, of course, weâve all heard stories about âdifficult kidsâ or ârowdy troublemakers.â But Alia? Alia was a different breed entirely.
On her very first day of school, she managed to break the fingers of a boy two years older than her... using nothing but a pencil.
âA pencil, huh... donât you think thatâs a little much?â
âYeah... we really should keep an eye on her growth.â
âNo... Honestly, I think itâs a little late for that.â
What kind of child breaks someoneâs fingers with a pencil? Well, if you asked Alia, sheâd tell you they were just playing. She stuck the pencil between his fingers and pressed down, hard. Of course, it hurtâbut the boy didnât scream. No, that was the mistake.
He tried to act tough in front of a younger girl. Big mistake.
And Alia? That wasnât just a girl. That was a full-blown sadist in training. She knew he was hurting, and thatâs exactly what made it fun for her. But since he wouldn't show the pain, she kept pressing. Harder. Until he finally screamed his lungs out, calling for the teacher.
And even then, she didnât stop.
âDo you feel pain now? Huh? How does it feel, huh?!â
âThey said she was... laughing.â
Needless to say, she was expelled that same day. Shiro was called to the school and got chewed out like he was the one who broke the kidâs fingers.
âItâs literally that kidâs fault. If he was hurting, he shouldâve just said so. I would've stopped if he told me,â Alia explained calmly afterward, as if what sheâd done was the most reasonable thing in the world.
After the tiny monster was banished and the cursed topic was pushed aside, a sense of calm returned to the table. Well⦠a calmer kind of serious, this time.
As the father stood at the sink, washing the dishes, he glanced over and noticed the worried expression lingering on Shiroâs face. Letting out a quiet sigh, he spoke, like someone who already knew the answer.
âSo... the dream again?â
It was clear from his tone that this wasnât a one-time thing. This dream... kept coming back.
Shiro looked up, no hesitation in his voice.
âYeah⦠still the same one. That damn blood-soaked field. Those cursed voices echoing through my head. I donât even know what it means! If I had any experience in magicâjust a littleâI might be able to figure it out... but right now? Itâs just some meaningless nightmare.â
Magic, of course, existed in this world. In many forms, each with its own purpose and use. What Shiro was referring to was a particular type: Clairvoyance Magic. It could help interpret dreams with surprising accuracy. And as the name suggests, those who mastered it could even see beyond dreamsâa glimpse into the future. Or so the legends claimed. No one had truly reached that level. Yet.
And despite all his time poring through every book in the village libraryâreading until his eyes stungâhe hadnât found a single one that mentioned magic. Only volumes about politics, wars, noble lineages, military strategies... all useless to his current problem.
His fatherâs face twisted into a frown as he looked at his sonâclearly struggling, clearly desperate. He slowly approached and spoke in a soft voice.
âMy boy⦠be patient. Neither of us knows much about that magicâor the chants or rituals needed to interpret your dream. Even though you have a magic seed, your knowledge is still lacking. And no one else in this village even has a seed.â
That âseedâ he mentionedâwas the source of oneâs magical power. A core of energy that allowed someone to tap into and control magic. Each seed came with an element: fire, wind, water, earth, etc. Some rare ones allowed twoâor even fourâelements. But those were... almost mythical. Shiro only knew what he did from books.
It was a complicated world. Ridiculously so.
Shiro gave a bitter smile. He knew his father was right. No one in the village could help him. If he really wanted answers⦠heâd have to leave. But was it really worth leaving everything behindâhis familyâjust to understand a dream? A dream that might be nothing more than a symptom of stress?
âYouâve always been like this, Dad. Straightforward and honest. But you know Iâm set on this path. Even just learning the basics of magic would be worth it. In our era, the real useless ones arenât the people born without seeds. No, itâs the ones who have them⦠and choose to do nothing with them. Iâd rather leave this villageâleave everything behindâthan become that kind of person.â
He never hid his desires. Of course heâd want to leave this placeâthis village heâd lived in for so many long, dragging years. And during all that time, not once did he complain. No matter how annoying or thankless the task, heâd always carried it out without hesitation, without a single grumble. Even little Alia knew he wanted to leave someday. And if he really decided to go? No one would stop him. It was his right, after all.
But that nagging sense of responsibility⦠it always held him back from making what could easily be called a reckless decision.
After hearing his son speak his mind, the old man laughed. Loudly. So loudly, in fact, that his voice practically echoed through the entire house.
Shiro blinked, frozen in place, puzzled and a little scared.
Whatâs so funny? He didnât say anything laugh-worthy.
Was even his desire something to be mocked?
"Son, youâre not wrong. Wanting to leave the village isnât shameful at all. In fact, Iâll help you pursue that dream however I can."
Shiro felt a spark of joy ignite inside him at his fatherâs warm words. But thenâ¦
'Help meâ? What does he mean by that? Itâs not like he has political pull or secret magical powers heâs been hiding all this time⦠right?
He shook it off. Probably just a nice thing to say. Nothing more. No need to overthink it.
But then, after a short silence, his father spoke again.
"Arenât you going to ask me what I meant?"
"Huh?"
âWasnât that just⦠emotional support or something?â
Thatâs what Shiro thought. Still, he answered Honestly.
"Maybe itâs rude of me to say this⦠but I didnât ask because I didnât think you could actually do anything. I figured you were just trying to cheer me up a bit."
"Well, thatâs a little rude."
"â¦Sorry."
It was rude, no doubt. But it was also the truth. This old man had nothing to offer. Or so Shiro thought. But of course, who wouldnât get curious after hearing something so out of the blue?
"Say⦠do you know about Stalefort Academy?"
Wait, what?
"Stalefort? Thatâs⦠a private academy that teaches magic, right?"
"Is that all you know? Tch, you still have a lot to learn. But never mind that. What do you think of the place?"
Now Shiro was just plain confused. What did his father want with his opinion of a magic academy? Why even bring it up?
"Itâs not just a school⦠Itâs the school. The biggest, most prestigious academy for learning magic and its arts. But... I donât quite get your point. Could you clarify?"
Without answering right away, the old man walked over, his large frame coming to a stop right in front of Shiro.
Now donât go imagining him as a frail old man with a cane and a crooked back. Thatâd be a mistake. Despite his age, he was well-built, moved smoothly, and looked like he could wrestle a bear if he felt like it.
Never underestimate old folks.
He reached out, placing a large hand gently on Shiroâs head, and looked at him with a strange softness in his eyes. That only made Shiro more suspicious.
Before he could ask, the old man dropped a bomb on him:
"Since you know what Stalefort is⦠then I suppose it's fine to tell you.
Youâve been officially accepted to take the entrance exam."
"â¦HUH?!"
Shiroâs eyes went wide, his jaw almost hitting the floor. It was the happiest thing heâd ever heardâand yet, too good to believe.
Stalefort. The most elite magical academy in the world. Every graduate was a legend, a name etched into history.
No wonder his brain short-circuited. He jumped out of his chair and fired off question after question like a madman:
"Waitâwhat does that even mean?! Did I mishear you?! Howâhow could that evenâ?! Iâm sorry for yelling but seriously, WHAT ARE YOU EVEN SAYING?!"
The volume. The tone. The sheer panic in his voice. Yeah, he couldnât help it.
His father just nodded, not the least bit fazed.
After all, Stalefortâs tuition alone could buy their entire village.
And thatâs if you even got the chance to take the entrance examârumor was, the exam itself had requirements. You had to be strong, knowledgeable in magic, and capable of taking down a small dragon⦠solo.
And Shiro? Yeah, no.
This kid probably couldnât take on a goat.
Not exaggerating.
But somehow, his father had gotten him in. Or so he claimed.
"I know, I know. Sounds like a dumb joke, right? But itâs real. Let me put it properly."
The old man cleared his throat and suddenly spoke in a deep, commanding tone:
"Shiro Leonard! You have officially been selected to participate in the entrance examination for the greatest magic academy on the continentâStalefort Academy!
You have one week to prepare before the examination begins.
â¦Thatâs what the acceptance letter said, anyway."
Shiroâs legs buckled a little, and he slumped forward, his head hanging low.
It felt like winning the lottery without even buying a ticket.
But, apparently, that was what happened.
Somehow
"So, what do you think?"
Shiro took a deep breath and lifted his trembling hands to his face.
They were shakingâshaking from joy. His fatherâs words had hit like a meteor.
He clenched his fists tightly, raised his head, and stared straight at his father, eyes blazing with passion.
"I donât know if this is a dream or notâ¦
But yes! Iâll take the examâand Iâll pass!
I donât know how you pulled this off, or what strings you had to pull, and I know you wonât tell me even if I ask.
But no matter what it takesâIâll do it!"
"Ahaha⦠Honestly, Iâm a little hurt by how fast youâre ready to leave us behind. I expected you to hesitate, maybe say something like, âBut what about the village? Whoâll help you with the work?â
I wasnât expecting you to completely forget about poor little Alia, but wow, way to disappoint me, kid."
Ouch. That was a direct hit to the chest.
But⦠was there really anyone who could take care of that sadistic gremlin?
"No⦠I didnât mean toâ"
Heâd gotten too carried away.
But seriouslyâwho wouldnât? Being accepted into Stalefort, of all places?
For nobles, just qualifying for the exam was a huge honor.
"Haha, donât worry. Iâm joking.
This is your chance, Shiro. Donât waste it. Forget this dying village full of old bones and go carve out your future!
And donât worry about meâIâm not that old yet. I can take care of myself.
Now go chase your destiny, boy!"
With those words, Shiroâs heart burned even hotter.
But⦠what was Stalefort really? Why was it so expensive? What made it so special?
And what kind of test would it be?
Those questions haunted Shiro all week.
It was, without a doubt, the longest week of his life.
He dedicated every second of it to training his frail bodyâeven just a littleâand studying from a small notebook his father had handed him.
That notebook was packed with spell formulas, skill techniques, and magical theoryâstuff heâd never even heard of before.
It even talked about the origins of magic itself.
Of course, there was no way he could finish the whole thing in a single weekâit was thick, dense, and full of mystery.
And no, he didnât know where his father got it, or how.
And no, his father wasnât about to explain.
But finally, the long week came to an end.
And it was time to leave the village and face the test that would change his life forever.