Home The Darkness System: Rise of the Broken Sovereign Chapter 130: Ripples on Glass
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Chapter 130: Chapter 130: Ripples on Glass

Caelan moved.

His entire being compressed into the tip of his sword, sword intent and mana fusing into something that existed halfway between technique and philosophy. Each thrust released a concentrated burst of that fusion—small, precise, devastatingly fast.

The first burst came before Kael could blink. A point of white light, expanding into a razor-thin line that carved through the air toward his throat.

Kael’s blade came up.

Slaughter intent flooded into the dark steel. Over three months of training the intent had taught Kael one truth: he couldn’t match Yenna’s precision or Caelan’s decade of refinement. But what his intent lacked in elegance, it compensated for in raw, brutal depth. It was the difference between a scalpel and a sledgehammer. Both could kill. One just made a bigger mess.

Gravity wrapped around the intent-coated blade, adding weight and compression. Kael wanted to add lightning but the strain was already immense. Slaughter intent wasn’t meant to be combined with elements. It fought against integration like a wild animal refusing a leash.

One element. That’s all I can manage.

Caelan’s second burst arrived. Kael deflected it with a horizontal slash that sent white sparks scattering across the arena. The third burst came faster. The fourth faster still. Each one carried enough concentrated intent to wound a late Mana heart cultivator if it landed cleanly.

Kael deflected. Deflected again. The impacts jarred his arms, sent shockwaves rippling through his Tier 4 body, made his bones sing with accumulated stress.

Now.

His blade swept horizontal—both blades, actually, moving in perfect synchronization as he poured everything into a single technique.

"SKY RENDING TECHNIQUE, FOURTH FORM: VOID SPLIT."

The attack that emerged was nothing like the crude version he’d used against Seraphine on Hevaria. Three months of refinement had transformed it. Slaughter intent and gravity—they flowed, each element enhancing the others rather than competing. The slash extended outward as a horizontal plane of annihilation, edges sharper than reality should allow.

Caelan’s concentrated bursts met it head-on.

The first burst shattered against Void Split like glass against a tidal wave. The second lasted a fraction longer before dissolving. The third, fourth, fifth—all of them consumed by the expanding wave of destruction that simply did not stop.

Caelan’s eyes widened for the first time in the entire fight.

The Void Split reached him in an instant.

The diagonal slash opened his chest from right shoulder to left hip—deep enough to see bone, clean enough that the blood took a moment to register. The force launched Caelan backward like a discarded doll, his body flying out of the arena ring, tumbling toward the spectator stands—

The referee appeared.

One moment, empty air. The next, a weathered hand catching Caelan by the back of his collar, arresting his momentum with casual ease that reminded everyone why Spirit Soul cultivators oversaw student matches. Green energy flowed from the referee’s palm, coating Caelan’s ruined chest in healing light.

The wounds closed. Muscle knitted. Skin reformed.

Thirty seconds. Less, maybe.

Caelan stood on his own feet, breathing hard, one hand pressed against his newly healed chest as if checking that it was real. His violet eyes found Kael across the arena, and something passed between them—respect, perhaps, or the recognition of a worthy opponent.

The referee’s voice cut through the stunned silence.

"Kael Vorn wins—moving up to rank six. Caelan Asten drops to rank seven. Sage Moonveil drops out of the top seven. Note that you all have just a week before the selection for the inter academy tournament is decided."

Kael rolled his shoulders, feeling the last remnants of slaughter intent retreat back into his chest. The diagonal slash on his own chest—the one Caelan had landed with Shattered Moon’s breakthrough—had already closed. Tier 4 physique didn’t just enhance strength and speed. It accelerated healing to levels that would have seemed supernatural to his younger self.

The crowd’s roar hit him like a physical wave. Students were on their feet, some cheering, some arguing, all of them buzzing with the electric energy that only an upset victory could generate. Kael Vorn—rank nine this morning, rank six now—had defeated two top-ten fighters in consecutive matches using completely different approaches.

The arena held no more interest for him. He’d climbed to rank six, securing his position in the top seven for the inter-academy competition. Now he needed to prepare—not for ranking matches, but for the real thing. For opponents who wouldn’t be limited by academy rules or referee intervention.

He wanted to go and spar with Rue to train his mental fortitude. Kael walked toward the Gold Tier dormitories, mind already running through training scenarios.

The hallways were quiet—most students still at the arena, watching the aftermath of his matches. He turned left at the familiar junction, counted doors, and pushed open the one he thought was Rue’s without knocking.

His brain registered the scene a half-second before his body reacted.

Sage.

Half-naked Sage, sprawled across her bed in nothing but a sports bra and underwear, a bag of chips cradled against her stomach, eyes fixed on a projected movie that Kael didn’t recognize. Her nine tails were splayed across the mattress behind her like a golden fan, each one twitching lazily in response to whatever was happening on screen.

She looked toward the door.

Kael’s smile froze.

He turned around.

"Wrong room—"

The air shifted behind him. Then warmth pressed against his back—legs wrapping around his waist, tails coiling around his torso, sharp claws settling against his neck with just enough pressure to remind him how easily they could puncture skin.

"Where do you think you’re going?" 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖

Sage’s breath was hot against his ear. Her body was soft where her claws were sharp, and the contrast made something in Kael’s chest tighten in a way he absolutely refused to acknowledge.

"I thought this was Rue’s room."

"You thought wrong."

"Obviously."

Her tails squeezed tighter. "Are you going to keep making excuses, or are you going to admit you came to see me?"

Kael sighed—the long-suffering exhale of a man who had accepted his fate. "I came to see Rue. For training."

"Mmhm." Sage’s tongue traced the edge of his ear. "And now you’re here. With me. Training can wait."

A few moments later, Kael sat cross-legged on Sage’s bed in a lotus position, watching a movie he hadn’t chosen with claw marks decorating his arms, shoulders, and back. Some of them were already healing.

He wasnt entirely sure how he’d ended up here. One moment Sage had been pressing him against the door, the next he was being dragged to the bed, and then somehow—through a sequence of events he preferred not to examine too closely—he’d become a cushion for a fox-kin who treated personal space as a suggestion rather than a boundary.

The movie was some romantic drama from a planet he’d never heard of. Sage was completely absorbed, chips crunching between her teeth, tail tips occasionally twitching when something emotional happened on screen.

Kael watched her instead of the projection.

"Sage."

"Hmm?" She didn’t look away from the screen.

"You dropped out of the top seven."

"Did I?"

"You’re not going for the tournament."

Sage finally paused the movie. Her violet eyes—so similar to Rue’s, yet so different in expression—turned to meet his.

"No," she said simply. "I’m not."

Kael waited. When no elaboration came, he raised an eyebrow.

"Why?"

The question hung in the air between them. Sage’s tails stilled—every single one going motionless in a way that felt more significant than any words could have been.

She picked up another chip. Crunched it slowly.

"That’s a complicated answer to a simple question, Kael."

"I’ve got time."

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