Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 1: The Day of Summoning from My SSS-Rank Grim Reaper System, a Fantasy novel by Exxs.

The morning sun bathed the Celestial Academy in a golden light that made its white marble towers shine as if they were made of solidified stars. Two hundred eighteen-year-old students stood arranged in perfect rows in the Great Summoning Plaza, their navy-blue uniforms immaculate, their faces a mix of nervousness and barely contained excitent.

Today was the day that would define the rest of their lives.

Alex Carter wiped his sweaty palms on his pants for the fifth ti in the last ten minutes. From his position in the back row—always the back, always the last, always invisible—he observed the enormous summoning circle engraved in the plaza’s floor. The design was a masterpiece of interwoven runes that glowed with silver light, geotric patterns so complex it hurt to look directly at them for too long.

"Nervous, Carter?"

Alex turned his head. Beside him, a stocky boy nad Derek looked at him with a mocking smile. It wasn’t real malice—Derek wasn’t creative enough to be cruel—just the kind of casual condescension Alex had learned to ignore for three years.

"A little," Alex admitted, forcing a smile.

"I bet you’ll summon sothing pathetic. Maybe a rat. Or better yet, a cockroach!" Derek laughed at his own joke, giving him a friendly elbow that nearly made him stumble.

Alex didn’t respond. He let his gaze wander to the front of the rows, where the elite students waited. Even from behind, it was impossible not to recognize them. Marcus Steele, son of the most powerful Master Guild leader on the continent, stood with the posture of soone who had never known doubt. His platinum blond hair was combed back with military precision, and every inch of him scread confidence.

Two rows ahead, Emily Chen moved her brown hair behind her ear—a gesture Alex had morized during countless shared classes. She had never really noticed him—why would she? He was the orphan on scholarship, the one working double shifts at the library to pay tuition, the one always a step behind everyone else.

But today... today everything could change.

"ATTENTION!" Director Magnus’s voice resonated across the plaza, magically amplified so that every syllable vibrated in the students’ chests.

The murmur of two hundred conversations cut off instantly.

Director Magnus was an imposing man even at seventy. His white beard fell to mid-chest, and his eyes—one blue, one gold, the result of an ancient summoning contract—scanned the students with the intensity of a predator evaluating a herd.

"Students of Generation 427," he began, his deep voice charged with solemnity. "For eighteen years you have walked this world as re humans. Today, you will awaken. Today, the universe will answer the call of your souls and send you a companion, a guardian, an eternal bond that will accompany you until your last breath."

Alex felt a shiver run down his spine. He had heard these speeches dozens of tis in recordings, had read every book in the library about the Summoning Ceremony, but hearing it in person, knowing that in minutes it would be his turn...

"The rank of your companion will determine your destiny," Magnus continued, pacing in front of the summoning circle like a general before battle. "S-Rank—the gods among mortals. A-Rank—legendary heroes. B-Rank—distinguished warriors. C-Rank—capable fighters. D-Rank—common soldiers. And E-Rank..."

Magnus paused deliberately.

"E-Rank, those who did not et minimum expectations, will be reassigned to support duties. This academy has no place for diocrity."

Alex swallowed. No one ntioned F-Rank. Because technically, F-Rank didn’t exist. It was a system error, an anomaly so rare that historical records showed fewer than twenty cases in the last thousand years. And all of them... all had ended in tragedy.

"We will begin with the Honor students!" Magnus declared, and enthusiastic applause erupted.

Of course. They always started with the elite. The spectacle before the real business.

Marcus Steele was the first to walk toward the circle. His stride was calm, almost bored, as if this were just another Tuesday. He stopped at the exact center of the summoning circle, and the runes imdiately ca to life, glowing with blinding intensity.

"Marcus Steele!" Magnus announced. "Summon!"

Marcus raised his right hand to the sky. He didn’t shout, didn’t make any dramatic gesture—he simply closed his eyes, and the world responded.

The air tore.

There’s no other way to describe it. The space above the circle literally split like fabric being ripped apart, and from that wound in reality erged... pure majesty.

A roar shook the plaza. A roar that wasn’t sound but PRESENCE—sothing so ancient and powerful that it made every student involuntarily step back. Everyone except Marcus, who simply smiled.

The dragon that materialized was a creature of legend made flesh. Golden scales that reflected the sun like thousands of mirrors, each the size of a shield. Wings that extended enough to shade half the plaza. Eyes like molten suns that observed the world with primordial intelligence.

[DING!]

A holographic panel appeared above the dragon, visible to everyone:

[SOUL COMPANION SUMMONED]

Na: To be determined

Species: Solar Golden Dragon

Rank: S

Level: 1

Affinity: Celestial Fire, Divine Light

Skills: [Solar Breath], [Indestructible Scales], [Supre Flight], [King’s Roar]

The silence lasted exactly three seconds before the plaza exploded into applause and shouts of amazent.

"S-RANK!"

"Of course Marcus would get an S!"

"It’s a fucking golden dragon! There are only seven in the entire recorded world!"

Marcus stroked the creature’s snout with familiarity, as if they had been friends for years instead of seconds. The dragon purred—sothing Alex didn’t know dragons could do—and wrapped its tail around its summoner in a protective gesture.

"Extraordinary," Magnus said, though his tone suggested he had expected exactly this. "Congratulations, Mr. Steele. A bond worthy of your lineage."

One by one, the elite students were called. Sophia Blackwood summoned a Crimson Phoenix—A-Rank, regeneration and eternal fire abilities. Jas Park materialized an Obsidian Behemoth—A-Rank, absolute defense. Catherine Moore received an Ancient Wind Spirit—B-Rank, but with exceptional growth potential.

Alex watched, morizing every detail, every system reaction. His heart beat faster with each successful summoning. They were all incredible. All powerful.

He just needed one. Just one decent companion. C-Rank would be fine. Hell, D-Rank and he could live with that. He just needed sothing that would allow him to stay at the academy, finish his education, build a life that wasn’t serving tables or cleaning streets.

"Emily Chen, step forward."

Alex tensed. He watched her walk toward the circle with that natural grace that made everything look easy. Her summoning was quick—an explosion of iridescent light, and a Lunar Unicorn appeared, its white fur shining with constellations that moved across its body like living tattoos.

[Rank: B]

Respectable. Very respectable. Emily smiled, clearly pleased, and stroked the unicorn’s mane. Alex felt sothing twist in his chest—not quite envy, but sothing close.

Minutes turned into hours. Or at least that’s how it felt. The ceremony continued, student after student. So received C-Ranks with nervous smiles. Others got D-Ranks and tried to hide their disappointnt. Three students summoned E-Rank companions—a common wolf, a hawk with no special abilities, a basic venomous snake—and were discreetly escorted aside by instructors with compassionate expressions.

Eventually, inevitably, only one remained.

"Alex Carter."

The na sounded like a sentence in the now half-empty plaza. Most of the elite students had already retired to celebrate with their families. Only the mid and low ranks remained, the mandatory instructors, and a few onlookers.

Alex walked toward the circle. Each step seed to take an eternity. He could feel eyes on him—so curious, most indifferent, a few—was it his imagination?—full of pity.

The summoning circle felt larger when you were alone in it. The runes seed to move beneath his feet, slithering like silver light snakes.

"Alex Carter," Magnus repeated, his voice neutral. "Proceed."

Alex closed his eyes. Breathed deeply.

Please, he begged the universe, the gods, anyone who was listening. Just give a chance. Just one.

He raised his hand, imitating what he had seen hundreds do before him. He reached... inward. Toward that place in his chest where sothing had been waiting all his life—sothing that whispered in his dreams, sothing that felt like formless potential.

The circle reacted.

But not like with the others.

The runes didn’t glow with glorious light. Instead, they darkened. They dimd to an ashen gray, and then to sothing deeper—not quite black, but the absence of color, like staring into a void.

A cold spread from the circle. Not a physical cold, but sothing deeper. The kind of cold that touches the soul.

"What..." Magnus frowned, stepping forward.

The space above Alex cracked—but it didn’t tear like with Marcus’s dragon. It rotted. Like a corpse decomposing at accelerated speed, reality fragnted into dark pieces that slled faintly of graveyard earth.

And from that rot erged...

A figure.

Small.

So small.

It barely reached Alex’s chest. A skeletal form wrapped in a tattered robe that might have been black once but was now a faded gray. Tiny bones, no larger than a child’s. And in its bony hands, a scythe.

Except the scythe was the size of a toy. Cheap costu shop plastic. It even had a crack in the handle.

The silence in the plaza was so complete Alex could hear his own heart breaking.

[DING!]

The system panel appeared, but it flickered, as if having trouble loading:

[SOUL COMPANION SUMMONED]

Na: ???

Species: ???

Rank: F

Level: ???

Affinity: ???

Skills: [DATA CORRUPTED]

F.

F-Rank.

The rank that shouldn’t exist.

For exactly five seconds, no one said anything. Alex stared at the small skeletal figure, which stood there motionless, its skull tilted to one side like a confused dog.

Then soone laughed.

It was a choked laugh, probably involuntary. But it was like breaking a dam.

Another laugh. And another. And suddenly the whole plaza was laughing.

"What the FUCK is that?"

"A skeleton? It’s the size of a child!"

"Look at that scythe! Looks like she bought it at a dollar store!"

"F-Rank... I didn’t even know that was possible..."

"Poor Carter. Must have done sothing terrible in a past life."

The laughter mixed with murmurs of pity and mockery. Alex stood frozen, his hand still extended, his mind refusing to process what he was seeing.

This couldn’t be happening.

Three years of work. Three years of double shifts, of sleeping four hours a night, of studying until words blurred on the pages. All for this mont. All for a chance to be sothing more than garbage.

And the universe had given him... this.

"Silence," Magnus ordered, but his voice lacked conviction. He too stared at the small skeleton with sothing close to horror. "Mr. Carter, I... this is..."

The skeletal figure turned its skull toward Alex. Empty eye sockets that should be dead, lifeless, aningless.

But for a mont—a single, brief mont that no one else seed to notice—

The empty sockets lit up.

Blood red.

Brilliant crimson, like ignited rubies, like the light filtering through eyelids when you look at the sun.

And in that mont, Alex heard a voice.

Not with his ears. Deeper. Sowhere behind his thoughts, in the space where dreams and waking t.

A single word, whispered like the last breath of a dying man:

"Master."

The red lights vanished as quickly as they appeared. The skeleton was again just a pathetic pile of bones with a toy scythe.

Alex blinked. Had he imagined it?

"Mr. Carter," Magnus said, and now there was sothing definitive in his tone. Sothing final. "Please, report to my office after the ceremony. We have... matters to discuss."

The murmurs intensified. Everyone knew what that ant.

Alex nodded chanically. He left the summoning circle in a daze. The small skeleton followed, its bones clicking softly against the stones, dragging its toy scythe behind it like a tired child.

As he passed a group of students, he heard their whispers:

"They’ll probably expel him."

"Who would want an F-Rank skeleton?"

"It’s even sadder than the E-Ranks..."

Alex didn’t look at them. He couldn’t. If he did, if he saw the pity on their faces, sothing inside him would break permanently.

He found a bench at the edge of the plaza and collapsed onto it. The skeleton stood before him, motionless, waiting.

Alex studied it properly for the first ti. Thin bones, probably fragile. The robe was literally falling apart, full of moth holes. The toy scythe had a barely visible price tag stuck to the handle: $2.99.

"What are you supposed to be?" Alex whispered, more to himself than to the creature.

The skeleton didn’t respond. Of course it didn’t. It was just a pile of animated bones. F-Rank probably didn’t even have real intelligence.

Around the plaza, other students celebrated with their companions. He saw Marcus laughing as his golden dragon perford aerial sorsaults. Emily brushed her unicorn’s mane with a radiant smile. Even the D-Rank summoners seed reasonably happy.

And Alex had... this.

The sun began to set, painting the sky orange and purple. The ceremony had officially ended. Students began to disperse, heading to dormitories or celebration halls.

Alex remained seated.

The skeleton remained standing.

Sowhere in the distance, he heard bursts of laughter. Music began to play from the halls—so rich student throwing a summoning party. Probably Marcus.

"I guess I should give you a na," Alex murmured finally, his voice hollow. "Though I don’t know how much longer I’ll have you."

The skeleton tilted its skull. Perhaps curiosity. Perhaps just random movent of brainless bones.

Alex thought of all the grand nas he had imagined for his future companion. Nas like Tempest, or Ragnarok, or Excalibur. Nas that inspired terror and respect.

He looked at the toy scythe.

"Grim," he said finally. "I’ll call you Grim. Short for Grim Reaper, I guess. Though you..." he laughed without humor, "you’re anything but death personified."

The skeleton—Grim—didn’t react. Just kept staring at him with empty sockets.

Except...

Was it his imagination, or had those sockets beco slightly darker? As if the shadows within them had deepened?

Alex shook his head. Probably just the evening light playing tricks on his eyes.

He stood, his legs numb from sitting too long. "Co on, Grim. I have to go to Director Magnus’s office. Probably to sign my expulsion papers."

He began walking through the now-empty plaza, his footsteps echoing on the stone. Grim followed, its bones making rhythmic clicks, its toy scythe scraping the ground.

Click. Click. Click. Scrape. Scrape.

The sound would haunt Alex in his dreams for years.

In the Director’s office, the news would be worse than he imagined.

But for now, in this final mont before his world completely crumbled, Alex looked back at his companion.

Grim followed him—a loyal pile of bones with a toy scythe.

And in the depths of those empty eye sockets, where no one else could see, where even Alex wasn’t sure it was real—

A pair of red lights flickered.

Just once.

Like a heartbeat.

Like a promise.

Like the prelude to sothing the world wasn’t yet ready to know.

You are reading My SSS-Rank Grim Reaper System Chapter 1: The Day of Summoning on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Lord of the Truth cover
Trending now

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.