Home Academy's Undercover Professor Chapter 669: The Wolf Walking the Abyss (2)

Academy's Undercover Professor

Chapter 669: The Wolf Walking the Abyss (2)
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Hans, with his greatsword slung over his shoulder, gazed calmly at Tarian.

‘Tarian. The last remaining Holy Knight Commander of the Bretus Theocracy.’

Among the three Commanders, he was said to be the strongest—and he had come all the way here to kill him.

Hans had known this would happen.

Now transformed into the Beast of Jévaudan, his abilities were perfectly suited for stopping large armies.

Endless waves of summoned cryptids—

That alone was enough for a single being to change the tide of battle. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖

And of course, no fool would leave an enemy capable of such summoning alone. They would focus their strength on eliminating him no matter what.

‘Besides, he’s not alone.’

Around Tarian stood his subordinate Holy Knights.

‘There are priests and mages, too. How troublesome.’

Even one-on-one, the outcome would be uncertain. But Tarian wasn’t alone—he had subordinates who could provide support.

‘And I’m on my own.’

Leaving Hans, who could summon forces of this scale, to fight alone was unfortunate—but inevitable.

They didn’t have enough numbers to guard him.

In fact, it was more accurate to say they couldn’t afford to protect him.

But that didn’t mean they had left him completely defenseless.

At the very least, countermeasures had been set to protect against enemy attacks.

Even the mist rising all around was a smokescreen—to obscure Hans’s presence as much as possible.

‘So the day has finally come when I have to fight with my own hands.’

The feel of the greatsword in his grip was unfamiliar.

The blade, nearly five meters long—almost matching his own height—was massive, yet Hans held it as lightly as a wooden stick.

‘A pillar imbued with curses.’

It was forged from an ancient architectural pillar discovered in long-forgotten ruins.

Though made simply—carved from the pillar with only a handle attached—the power within it was anything but simple.

‘Who would have thought that brat was actually a master of the Ancient Curse School.’

Hans recalled Cravat, the man who had handed him this weapon.

He had looked like a young boy, but his real age was nearly double that.

Cravat had taken one of the cursed pillars his school studied, layered his own curse upon it to amplify its power, then forced it on Hans to wield.

—“I wasn’t sure what to use this for, but looking at your size, just swing it like a club.”

At the time, Hans had thought he was joking. But it turned out he wasn’t.

Hans raised the greatsword and steadied his stance.

He had never learned swordsmanship in his life. /N_o_v_e_l_i_g_h_t/ Grabbing a sword now wouldn’t suddenly make him a swordsman.

But his instincts as a beast—and his awakened body as the Beast of Jévaudan—were different.

Swoosh—

He lowered his upper body, pressed one hand to the ground, and stretched both legs behind him.

A stance like a wolf on all fours, gripping a sword.

It came naturally, the most optimal form suited to his body.

The Holy Knights tensed at the sight.

‘What is that?’

‘I’ve never seen a stance like that before.’

It couldn’t even be called swordsmanship.

And yet, it didn’t look awkward.

In fact, his massive frame made the posture seem menacingly natural—like a beast about to leap and tear out their throats.

But the Holy Knights didn’t retreat.

They had come here for the very purpose of slaying this monster.

“Blessing of Courage.”

“Holy faith to vanquish evil.”

The priests cast divine spells, and a warm light enveloped Tarian and his knights.

Hans frowned as he watched them.

In his current half-rational, half-instinctive state, that light stirred something primal within him—an agitation that clawed at his instincts.

‘There’s no benefit in dragging this out.’

His crimson eyes sank heavily.

And then—

Hans’s figure blurred and vanished from sight.

The Holy Knights’ eyes widened.

“He disappeared!”

“Where did he go?”

Had that been an illusion? A decoy meant to distract them?

While the knights hesitated, only one man moved—Tarian himself.

The holy light radiating from Tarian’s sword intensified.

The flaming blade of golden brilliance stretched until it reached five meters in length.

Tarian swung it in a horizontal arc, as if cleaving the world in two—

And at that moment, it collided with Hans’s greatsword, unleashing a cataclysmic blast.

KWA-AANG!

The impact was too tremendous to believe it came from swords alone.

Hans and Tarian—

The ground beneath them cracked apart, the shockwave scattering debris in every direction.

The Holy Knights watching could hardly believe it.

“...So he was just moving that fast?”

They were no novices. Though weaker than Tarian, these were elite knights—each of them strong enough to rival master-class warriors.

And yet, they had lost sight of Hans’s movement entirely.

KAGAGAGAK!

The clash between Hans and Tarian continued.

Tarian’s holy flames blazed ever brighter, but the curse seeping from Hans’s greatsword suppressed them.

A flicker of shock crossed Tarian’s eyes.

“A curse that repels holy power?”

That wasn’t any ordinary curse.

And a greatsword bearing such a curse was certainly no ordinary weapon.

Tarian began to be pushed back.

Even with priestly blessings and his own divine reinforcement, he couldn’t overpower Hans.

The mages stepped in to assist, firing spells toward Hans’s head.

Hans broke away from the power struggle and leapt backward.

Whirrr—

He spun several times in midair, landing lightly with barely a sound.

It was an uncanny movement for someone of his massive five-meter frame—

like watching a tangible phantom.

Hans tilted his head side to side, recalling the sensation of his last movement.

‘Yes, it works.’

His mind didn’t know how to fight, but his body did.

His chest—his instincts—remembered.

Where to step, how to move, how to swing his arms.

‘Fighting with reason won’t do. It’s the opposite. I’m a beast now—I have to entrust myself to instinct and wildness.’

But if he sank too far into instinct, he’d lose himself—becoming nothing more than a rampaging monster.

Reason and instinct.

He had to walk a perfect line between the two.

‘All right, then.’

Let’s get started.

* * *

While the fierce battle raged outside—

Seridan was moving through the inner fortress, meticulously examining every spot that looked even slightly suspicious.

‘Somewhere in this inner citadel, that scientist Victor is still hiding.’

Victor Dreadpool.

Once the First Order of the Black Dawn Society—

and originally a man from the Bretus Theocracy.

He was almost certainly still here, watching their every move from the shadows.

‘They said he committed countless inhumane experiments. A man with a mind like that wouldn’t waste an opportunity like this.’

The Crusaders were closing in from outside—

and for Victor, this was the perfect time to strike from behind.

Seridan was determined to stop him.

“Have you found anything?”

Arfa asked as he followed her, with Bellaruna close behind.

“Not yet. But I’m starting to get a feel for it.”

Seridan analyzed the internal structure and hidden mechanisms within the walls as she spoke.

“This entire citadel is one enormous device. It’s so intricately and perfectly built that it’s hard to believe something like this could have been made in the distant past.”

“So it’s true, then.”

“Even the most perfect mechanisms have seams. I bet that scientist Victor is hiding right in one of those gaps.”

And the only one here capable of finding those gaps—was Seridan herself.

“Here.”

She stopped before a plain white wall.

It looked utterly ordinary, but her eyes gleamed with certainty.

“When the mechanisms interlock, they leave microscopic spaces between them. That’s where the hidden chamber is.”

“I can’t sense anything at all, though.”

Arfa examined the wall closely but found nothing unusual.

For an automaton of such advanced make to sense nothing meant it truly appeared normal.

“Of course it does. A place like this isn’t hidden by mere machinery.”

Seridan reached a hand toward Bellaruna.

“Hand me that.”

Bellaruna passed her a small vial filled with purple liquid—its very color emanating an ominous aura.

“The citadel’s structure is made of Holy Stone. Its conductivity for divine power is high enough that this whole area constantly hums with faint sanctity. They hid something beneath a shell of holy energy.”

Seridan shook the vial and hurled it at the wall.

Clink—

As the liquid splashed, the white surface blackened and sizzled, bubbling furiously.

Then streaks of holy light spread and oxidized like dye dissolving in water.

“That curse-infused reagent Cravat gave me—it can erase divine energy for a short time.”

As the divine veil peeled away, the wall revealed its true form—

a hidden doorway leading deeper inside.

“Let’s go.”

At her command, Arfa pushed the stone door open.

Though it looked heavy, his superhuman strength made it effortless.

Beyond the door, a long spiral staircase led downward.

The three of them descended.

At the bottom lay a vast, white chamber—like a hangar.

“My god...”

Inside were countless machine parts piled to the ceiling.

“What is all this?”

“I told you—this is the ‘gap’ within the fortress’s massive mechanism. Probably a storage space for discarded components and materials.”

“Then we really did find the right place.”

“Yeah, looks like it.”

Then—an alarm blared through the room.

“And it seems they just realized we’re here.”

With a heavy click, a door on the opposite side opened.

Beyond it, something rushed toward them—

Grotesque creatures that looked like humans fused together in horrific ways:

some with two heads, others with ten hands sprouting from where their arms should be,

and some with wings made entirely of fingers growing from their backs.

Just looking at them made one’s sanity erode. These were human test subjects, monstrosities born of Victor’s experiments, now charging in to kill them.

“There are too many! If we fight head-on, we’ll be at a disadvantage!”

Arfa turned to Seridan and Bellaruna.

The number of test subjects was far beyond expectation.

If they had suddenly burst out into the citadel without warning, the results would have been catastrophic.

“You two fall back. I’ll handle this.”

Of the three, Arfa was the only one suited for direct combat.

The other two were capable in their own ways—but not for fighting.

“No. Even you can’t take all of them alone. Who knows what abilities those things might have?”

Seridan’s tone was firm.

“But still—”

“Kid. You’re not the only one who can fight, you know?”

Seridan smiled at him, and Bellaruna silently wondered, who exactly is she calling a kid here?

“So you have a plan?”

“Of course I do. Why wouldn’t I? Look over there.”

She pointed at a mountain of mechanical parts.

“With all those materials piled up? We’ve got plenty to work with. So you—just buy us some time, got it?”

“...Got it.”

Arfa answered and then launched himself toward the charging monsters.

The enormous leading specimen roared and swung at him, but Arfa moved swiftly, evading and driving a kick straight into its chest.

THOOM!

The hulking creature’s torso caved in, and it flew backward, crashing into the others behind it, toppling them all in a heap.

While Arfa held the line, Seridan dove into the pile of parts, scanning for usable materials.

“Good. Condition’s not bad. Maybe because these were used to maintain the citadel’s mechanisms—they’re far from ordinary.”

Which meant—

She now had the perfect chance to build something big.

“How do you plan to move all that heavy stuff and assemble it?” Bellaruna asked in disbelief.

With Seridan’s small frame, it seemed impossible to even pull out a single piece from that metallic mountain.

“Of course, I’m not doing it alone.”

Seridan grinned and pulled something from her pocket.

“That’s why I brought this.”

It was a cube of black metal—

radiating a powerful magnetic force.

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