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Now reading: Chapter 115: When They Are Seen from PERFECT REINCARNATION : Being Invincible in Another World, a Fantasy novel by Mystic0611.

The sixteenth morning did not carry the sa quiet weight as the day before. It carried clarity.

Not the kind that comforted—but the kind that revealed. The kind that stripped away assumption and left only what remained. The word from the previous day had settled deeply into every student’s mind, but now, it had changed.

The courtyard felt different the mont the students stepped into it. There was no tension in the air, no visible anxiety—but sothing sharper lingered beneath the surface. No one spoke loudly. No one moved without purpose. Even the smallest actions carried awareness. Because today they would be seen.

Near the training grounds, the noble group stood together, though their posture lacked the quiet confidence they once carried.

"They’ll compare us," one of them said.

"They already have."

"No," another replied quietly. "Not like today." That distinction mattered. Because until now they had only faced themselves. Across the courtyard, the other group stood in similar silence. The girl who had once struggled stood with steady breath, her gaze calm, but focused. "It’s not about winning," soone said.

"No. It’s about showing." She nodded. "...And understanding what that shows." From above, Mira leaned against the railing, watching the students gather. "They’re quieter again," she said. Evelyn stood beside her, arms folded. "Because now it matters."

Mira glanced at her. "It always mattered." Evelyn shook her head slightly. "...Now they know it does." The bell rang. And for the first ti it felt final. Students moved toward the training grounds without delay. The field was already prepared. Rowan stood at the center, his presence grounded and steady, but his gaze sharper than before. There was no casual observation in him today.

Aurelion arrived monts later. He looked at the gathered students. Then spoke. "Today, you will be judged." No rules because they already understood. "You will fight." A pause. "And you will be observed." That was enough.

"Begin."

This ti the field did not erupt into chaos. It organized itself. Pairs ford naturally. Not randomly but intentionally. Students chose their opponents or avoided them. Both choices were seen.

The first match began near the center. Two students stepped forward, their posture steady, their breathing controlled. They moved almost simultaneously. But one had already decided. His movent carried intent. The other reacted. That difference ended the exchange quickly.

Around them, more matches unfolded. Each movent carried weight. Each mistake was visible. The girl stepped into her match, her opponent watching her carefully. She didn’t wait. She chose. Her first movent was clean, her mana stable, her intent clear. Her opponent reacted well—but slightly late. That was enough.

She pressed forward. Not aggressively but deliberately. Her control held. Until her third decision. She hesitated slightly. So it broke her rhythm. Her mana flickered. Her opponent took advantage. The exchange reversed. She stepped back. Not defeated. But aware.

Mira entered her match without hesitation, her expression calm, almost indifferent. She didn’t wait. She moved when she chose. Her flow remained stable, her movents fluid, her presence controlled without force. Her opponent struggled to keep up. Not because of speed—but because of clarity. Mira didn’t overwhelm. She didn’t need to. She ended the exchange cleanly.

Evelyn approached differently. She observed first. Then—chose. Her movents were precise, efficient, minimal. Every step served a purpose. Every adjustnt was calculated. Her opponent tried to react—but couldn’t keep up with decisions that had already been made. The outco was inevitable.

The noble student stepped forward, his posture steady, his expression focused. This ti—there was no hesitation. He chose his opponent. Not the weakest. Not the strongest. But the one who challenged him. The match began. His first movent was strong. His second—controlled. His third—calculated. But his fourth—was forced. His mana destabilized. His opponent capitalized. The exchange shifted. He recovered—but slower. The outco—uncertain.

Across the field, patterns erged. Students who chose well—maintained control. Those who reacted—lost ground. Those who forced—collapsed. But more importantly—those who adapted—survived. Rowan watched everything. Every hesitation. Every decision. Every failure. "...Now they’re visible," he muttered. Because this—was not about skill alone. It was about clarity.

Ti passed. Not slowly. But precisely. Each exchange carried aning. Each movent—was judged. The girl adjusted her approach, her movents becoming more deliberate. She no longer rushed her decisions. She no longer hesitated unnecessarily. She chose. And this ti—it worked. Mira refined her flow, her movents sharper, more efficient, more intentional. Evelyn reduced even further, eliminating unnecessary motion entirely. The noble student adapted, learning from his mistakes mid-fight. Not perfectly. But effectively.

The field stabilized. Not because mistakes disappeared—but because understanding increased. The movent across the field slowed—but it didn’t stop imdiately. Students remained in place longer than usual, not because they were exhausted, but because they were aware. Every exchange they had just experienced lingered in their minds, replaying in fragnts. A step taken too early. A hesitation that cost them control. A decision that worked—only until it didn’t. No one needed to be told where they stood. They had already seen it.

A student near the edge exhaled slowly, lowering his hand as the faint remnants of his mana faded. "...So that’s it," he muttered under his breath. It wasn’t frustration. It wasn’t even disappointnt. It was clarity. Beside him, another student nodded quietly. "We weren’t equal to begin with." That statent didn’t spark argunt. Because no one disagreed.

Across the field, small groups began to form—not in the sa way as before, not divided by background or status, but by sothing far more subtle. Those who had moved with confidence stood quieter now, reflecting. Those who had struggled didn’t look defeated—but they didn’t look hopeful either. They looked... aware. The girl stood still for a mont longer than the others, her gaze fixed ahead. She replayed her third movent—the hesitation, the break, the shift that cost her the exchange. She could see it clearly now. Not as a mistake in execution—but as a failure in decision. Her grip tightened slightly. "...Next ti," she murmured to herself. Not as determination. But as acknowledgnt.

At the center, the noble student rolled his shoulder slowly, his breathing steady, but his thoughts sharper than before. He had chosen well at first. He had controlled the flow. But that fourth movent—the one he forced—had undone everything. He exhaled through his nose. "...I rushed." There was no one to hear it. But it didn’t matter. Because the realization was enough. Further across the field, a quieter student sat down briefly on the stone edge, resting his arms on his knees. His matches had not been impressive. Not fast, not decisive. But he had lasted longer than he expected.

\He didn’t smile. But he didn’t look discouraged either. "...So this is where I stand." Not at the top. Not at the bottom. Sowhere in between. And for the first ti—that position felt real. Rowan’s gaze moved across the field slowly, taking in all of it—not just the outcos, but the reactions. The ones who looked frustrated. The ones who looked calm. The ones who had already begun adjusting their mindset. "...Good," he muttered quietly. Not because they had succeeded. But because they had seen. The field no longer felt like a place of competition. It felt like a mirror. And every student standing on it had just been forced to look into it—without anything left to hide. Aurelion stepped forward. "You’ve shown yourselves." No one spoke. Because they knew—this was not the end. "Tomorrow," he said calmly, "you will be ranked."

That shifted everything again. Not by effort. Not by potential. But by result. He turned Left. And once again the field remained still. But this ti not from tension. From realization because now they understood they were no longer equal.

From above, Seraphine watched the field quietly."They’re ready," she said. Aurelion stood beside her. "No." A pause. "They’re exposed." Because ranking did not create difference. It revealed it. And the academy was about to make that undeniable.

The field did not empty all at once. Students lingered at the edges, so standing in quiet thought, others walking slowly as if each step carried more weight than before. No one spoke loudly. No one tried to justify what had happened. There was nothing to argue. What they had seen today did not need explanation—it had been felt, lived, and understood in the simplest way possible. A few glanced toward others, not with rivalry, but with recognition. They had all stood on the sa ground, made their choices, and faced what followed. That alone had already begun to reshape the way they looked at one another.

From above, the academy grounds appeared unchanged, yet sothing beneath the surface had shifted permanently. The illusion of saness had broken. In its place stood quiet differences—clear, undeniable, and earned. Beside Seraphine, Aurelion remained still, his gaze following the last few students leaving the field. "They won’t be able to ignore it anymore," she said softly. Aurelion didn’t answer imdiately. His eyes lingered on the ones who walked slower than the rest—the ones already thinking ahead. Then, calmly, he said, "Tomorrow, they stop pretending."

[To be Continued]

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