Hwoong! Hwoong!
â......â
The swordsmanship cadets, who were once again vigorously jumping rope today, watched as some of their fellow cadets either collapsed from being hit by the heavy iron ropes or struggled for breath due to exhaustion. They stared blankly at their instructorâs training routine.
No, calling it training seemed too kindâthis was closer to torture. It was an unbelievable sight, almost surreal.
ââ¦Hey, young master, is that really how knights are supposed to train?â
âStop with the sarcasm and just call me by my name, mercenary.â
âHmph, says the guy whoâs always sarcastic himself.â
âYou started it.â
The young man and the boy bickered. Though they were the same age, Garand, the mercenary apprentice, looked much older due to his rough upbringing, while Arno Offen, the nobleâs son, had grown up in relatively gentler conditions. While Arno secretly envied Garandâs more masculine appearance, he kept that jealousy hidden and responded with a retort.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
ââ¦Donât ask obvious questions. What knight in their right mind would train like that?â
âBut heâs doing it right now.â
âThatâs why itâs hard to believe even as Iâm watching it.â
ââ¦I see.â
Swinging a metal rod with an 80-kilogram steel bar attached to it, without hesitationâit was an unbelievable sight.
Even if they tried to tell someone, who would believe such a thing?
It was just that incredible.
Creak! Creak!
Every time the instructor swung the iron bar, ominous sounds echoed from his body. It sounded like bones breaking, but if you listened carefully, it wasnât that.
It was the sound of muscles tearing.
The muscles were screaming in agony.
âUgh!â
It wasnât the instructor who groaned, but the cadets. Having experienced that pain themselves, their groans came out automatically.
This was one of the inevitable consequences of undergoing systematic training from a young age to become strongerâthe pain of muscles tearing.
It was practically an injury, and the agony was unbearable.
âThat must hurt. Kunta doesnât like pain.â
The foreign-looking boy with a clumsy manner of speaking, Kunta, who was a full head taller than Garand, flinched at the sight. Though he seemed somewhat naïve, it wasnât ignorance but rather untainted innocence that made Kunta's emotional expressions all the more genuine.
He understood that the tearing of muscles and the sound it made indicated an unimaginable level of pain.
âIt hurts like hell⦠No, pain alone canât even begin to describe it.â
It felt like the inside of your body was burning, like your flesh was being slashed by knives. The more severe the tearing, the more unbearable the pain became.
â¦Thatâs what it should have been.
âInstructor, doesnât that hurt?â
âIt hurts. But itâs bearable.â
ââ¦Instructor, youâre strange.â
âStrange? Any knight could do this.â
ââ¦Thatâs a lie.â
âHah, youâre not falling for it.â
Even the innocent barbarian didnât believe such nonsense. Ihan had been hoping to trick him, but Kunta had wisely kept his distance. Though, even so, Kunta kept observing Ihanâs training.
Boom!
âHoo!â
When Ihan finally set the metal rod down, the ground shook beneath him.
He casually leaned the iron rod somewhere and wiped his sweat-soaked body with a towel, before immediately picking up his personal jump rope.
It was a rope âslightlyâ heavier than the 10-kilogram ones used by the cadetsâthis one weighed 50 kilograms, with each handle weighing 20 kilograms like a pair of dumbbells.
Ihan had wanted to make the rope even heavier, but if he did that, it would be too large to spin, so 10 kilograms was the limit.
A pity.
Still, as the saying goes, if you donât have teeth, you make do with gums. Satisfied with the current weight, Ihan began to jump rope.
Whip, whip, whip, whip!
It was slow but steady. With each leap, his muscles bulged and moved.
Occasionally, the rope would whip against his bare skin, but Ihan ignored the pain and kept jumping.
Thud! Thud! Thud!
With each jump, the ground shook beneath him, making it difficult for anyone to stand still.
What on earth is that?
The cadets watched in stunned silence, unable to hide their shock.
âHow long are you going to slack off? Youâre not going to do anything?â
âInstructor, how do you even have the strength to talk in that condition?â
âEven if I donât have the energy, I still have enough to scold slackers.â
ââ¦Weâre not slacking.â
âEveryone says that with their mouths.â
âDamnâ¦â
And so, the young nobles resumed their jump rope training. Damn this crazy iron rope! One day, they swore, theyâd break it for good.
Whip! Whip!
With newfound determination, they spun their ropes at a speed much slower than Ihanâs, but still far beyond their limits.
ââ¦How much stronger are you trying to get?â
âStrong enough to always be ahead of you.â
ââ¦â
It was even scarier because they knew he wasnât lying.
Ihan didnât feel embarrassed about training in front of others. If anything, he found it more uncomfortable to just stand around giving orders and watching others train.
At the very least, one should be able to do what they ask of others, and do it even harder and more intensely. That way, it would motivate others to push themselves as well.
âAfter this, I should wrestle with Kunta.â
That boy was something else.
When it came to hand-to-hand combat, Kunta was more skilled than anyone else. He might be the strongest in hand-to-hand combat among the cadets.
That made it even better. Ihan needed a sparring partner for his martial arts practice, and Kunta was perfect. Though Ihanâs win rate was higher, that was because his strength surpassed Kuntaâs. In terms of technique, Kunta was actually better.
For sword duels, there was Arno.
For spear training, there was Garand.
As for Roenâ¦
âThat guy⦠he keeps avoiding me.â
Roen seemed to be avoiding sparring with Ihan, perhaps because he feared revealing his true abilities.
A strange fellow.
âWell, I think I have an idea of whatâs bothering him.â
More than anything, Ihan suspected something, which made it hard to push him too much.
A peculiar illness common among war veterans. Ihan sensed it from Roen.
ââ¦Regressors must have their own burdens to bear.â
Ihan wasnât about to force Roen to confront it. It wasnât someone elseâs problemâit was a condition he knew all too well.
At that momentâ
âIn-instructor.â
ââ¦Hm? Is there something you need, chick cadet number 2?â
âIrene, instructor. And why am I number 2, not number 1?!â
Despite being his neighbor and the first cadet Ihan had gotten acquainted with, Irene protested why she wasnât ranked number one. Naturally, Ihan couldnât just tell her that she was "chick cadet number 2" because she was the second person on his list of people to keep an eye on.
âWell, who told you to keep failing the stamina test so frequently? Normally, youâd be the last chick, but I made you number 2 because weâre acquainted. You should be grateful.â
Ihan shamelessly dodged the question.
ââ¦Fact violence is bad, instructor.â
âWhatâs bad and violent is your stamina, Irene.â
âHingâ¦â
Irene Windler.
The only magician cadet in the swordsmanship department.
When she first arrived, countless male cadets blushed and avoided her. She was simply too beautiful, like a fairy.
Her long, golden hair was like spun gold, her eyes sparkled like embedded sapphires, and her skin was flawless and white as porcelain.
Her beauty could easily be compared to that of the mystical races.
And she was also a magician, possessing a mysterious aura.
It wasnât long before she stole the hearts of many male cadets.
â¦But now?
âItâs not easy to have such terrible motor skills.â
Instead of admiring her beauty, most people now worried about her, as if she were a fragile glass figure that might shatter at any moment.
âThat was shocking, for sure.â
Even the most frail noble ladies managed to do at least a hundred jump ropes before collapsing, but Irene?
âShe collapsed after three.â
She did exactly three jumps before breaking into a sweat like a waterfall and gasping for breath.
And that wasnât even with the heavy ropesâit was with the light ones.
Yet she jumped rope like some kind of marionette.
How could her arms and legs move so independently of each other?
At this point, Ihan wondered if there was some hidden defect in her body.
He even brought her to the healing room, thinking she might have a serious condition, but the priest gave him an incredulous look and said:
âShe just seems to have an unbelievably low stamina. How does someone get this weak? Even magicians have basic physical strength, but⦠this isâ¦â
Later, Ihan found out that Irene used magic for almost everything in her daily life.
With her exceptional talent, she could substitute basic tasks with telekinesis, using magic as naturally as one would use their hands.
âHow long have you been living like this?â
âUm, since I could use magic.â
âAnd when was that?â
ââ¦Since I was twelve.â
ââ¦â¦â
For seven years, she had lived as if bedridden, so it was only natural her stamina was lower than that of a three-month-old baby.
She truly was a âchick cadet.â
â¦From behind.
âHoo, Irene, the cadet whoâs weaker than a chick. Howâs your new diet going?â
âIâm eating a lot of meat and vegetables, just like you told me.â
âGood. Donât worry about health for now, just focus on eating. You need to put on some weight before you can do anything. Make sure to eat at least five meals a day.â
ââ¦Yes, sir.â
âGot it? Itâs all about survival now. Survival! You have to eat to stay alive!â
ââ¦Yes, sir.â
Her reply was weak.
Ihan wasnât confident about her future.
And, as expectedâ
âYouâve stopped relying on magic, right?â
âWell, umâ¦â
ââ¦At least try not to use magic when you come to class. Iâm saying this for your own good.â
ââ¦Yes, sir.â
â¦When would this chick ever get stronger than a chicken?
No, would she ever reach the strength of a normal human being?
âNo wonder the heroines in romance fantasies are always collapsing. With bodies this weak, itâs no surprise theyâre constantly getting hurt.â
The typical romance fantasy heroine. Always fainting, always getting injured, until she eventually falls ill.
It was no mystery why.
Ihan looked at Irene with a pitiful gaze, and she flinched.
Embarrassed.
Thank goodness you know how to be embarrassed, Irene. Iâm still ashamed of you, though.
âShut up, you witch! I know Iâm pathetic!â
She had only used magic because it was convenientâhow could she have known it would make her as weak as a patient?
In a way, joining the swordsmanship department had been a godsend. If she hadnât, she might have eventually died just by stepping on a pebble.
âI can jump rope ten times now, though!â
[What an achievement.]
The ghost girlâs sharp criticism.
Irene blushed in shame as she shook her head and turned to Ihan, who asked:
âSo, why did you come to me? Did you have something to say?â
âOh, right!â
Realizing she had been distracted by the conversation, Irene hurriedly spoke up.
âItâs just⦠there might be some trouble during todayâs class. I wanted to apologize in advanceâ¦â
âTrouble, huh? Are you talking about that?â
ââ¦Yes?â
âThat thing over there.â
ââ¦â¦â
Irene hesitantly turned her head.
There stood the person Ihan had referred to as âthat thing,â and before she could stop herselfâ
âOh! Youâre right, it is that thing.â
She had just called Odwal Bernard, the professor of the Magic Department, âthat thing.â