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Now reading: Chapter 56 – Forged in Silence from Second Life as a Soldier, a Fantasy novel by SoldierofAvalon.

It turned out Walter’s invitation was for training.

He usually trained alone and only joined squad drills when required, so when he asked to spar with him during personal hours, I was genuinely surprised.

Training with him was brutal.

He reminded of Private Varik, our second training instructor during my early months at Stonegate, only aner. Which was surprising; I didn’t think there could be anyone aner than Varik.

Most of our sessions were hand-to-hand or with spear and shield, and he never went easy. My ribs, arms, and shoulders were covered in bruises more often than not. Sohow, he had already figured out the limits of my [Minor Restoration (C)] skill. He seed to adjust the intensity based on my schedule; if I had night patrol or fort duty, he went easier. On my days off, he hit twice as hard, leaving half crippled for the next few days. Even with constant use of [Minor Restoration (C)], it still took four or five sessions to fully heal.

Walter was the sa as always. Even during training, he hardly spoke. He only corrected my form or grunted in approval when I did sothing right. Occasionally, he’d give brief instructions on technique or mana control, but any question outside the lesson was t with a curt, “Focus on training.”

Every session ended the sa way, with him naming the next eting ti and walking off without another word.

It wasn’t like he could command to train; technically, I could have refused.

But I didn’t.

Because, despite everything, he was effective.

After the first week, I could already feel the difference. Even though [Defensive Spearplay (C)] had reached its limit, my movents beca smoother. My coordination improved. I learned to balance attack and defense instinctively, conserving mana and stamina at the sa ti. My strikes landed with more weight, my guard shifts were cleaner, and I could last longer before exhaustion set in.

But the most surprising thing of all was how he taught to use [Hand-to-Hand Combat (C)].

It had been one of my least-used skills so far. After coming to the fort, I regretted picking it. I’d only chosen it because training at Stonegate had emphasized it. But once I arrived here, there was no real use for it, not even in drills. Against beasts, there was rarely a chance to use unard combat, unless you were desperate.

Walter’s training changed that. He seed genuinely pleased that I’d chosen the skill.

He forced to use my body in ways that made realize what the instructors ant all along. The skill wasn’t just about fists or grappling; it was about how to move, how to channel force through the body, and most importantly, how to connect mana with motion.

One morning, between drills, I finally asked him the question that had been on my mind.

“Hey, Walter. I know you said [Hand-to-Hand Combat (C)] helps with channeling mana into the body, but I still don’t get how. I can’t afford to spend too much ti on unard training with everything else going on.”

He grunted, a good sign.

That grunt usually ant it was a fair question, one worth answering.

“Don’t judge a skill by its na,” he said at last. “Use it. [Hand-to-Hand Combat (C)] isn’t just about fighting barehanded; it teaches you how to channel power through your limbs while maintaining balance. Use it with your marching skill, or your spear skill. Tie every movent together. When you’re in unard combat, your whole body, from head to toe, is involved. [Hand-to-Hand Combat (C)] trains that control. It’s the foundation for [Mana Reinforcent (UC)], one of the core skills for elite fighters with low elental affinity.”

I froze. I’d already learned to rge [Guard Duty (C)] with [Mana Sensitivity (C)], but I’d never thought about connecting other skills together, or using them outside their specific contexts.

It sounded so obvious now that he said it.

I’d have to completely rethink my approach to training.

Two weeks passed.

Between Walter’s beatings, night patrols, and my own reports, life settled into a rhythm of exhaustion.

Then one evening, after another grueling session, I joined Walter for a drink.

It wasn’t unusual for him, he drank almost every night, but it was the first ti he’d allowed to join him.

We sat near the fort’s wall, our mugs catching the faint glow of the watchfires. The air slled faintly of smoke and tal. Walter drank in silence, eyes distant, his scarred knuckles resting on the table. After a while, when he seed drunk enough to let his guard down, I decided to ask the question that had been gnawing at since the day he started training .

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“Hey, Walter,” I said quietly, “why did you decide to train ?”

For a few seconds, he just looked at , expression unreadable.

Then he glanced up at the night sky and sighed.

“You remind of an intelligence kid from my squad,” he said.

I imdiately regretted asking. His tone wasn’t angry, but hollow.

For the first ti since I’d t him, he looked vulnerable.

Usually, he was distant, detached, the kind of man who didn’t flinch at anything.

But now, his eyes seed to look past , toward sothing long gone.

“He was always curious,” Walter continued quietly. “Always asking questions. Always trying to figure out everything. Kid, you’ve got that sa spark. You’ve got a bright future ahead of you, but I want you to survive this grand tide.”

The word kid surprised , it was the first ti he’d ever called that.

“But why ?” I asked after a mont. “Why not include Michael too?”

He sighed, rubbing a hand across his face.

“You don’t see your own potential yet. The sergeant wanted you for his house from the first day you got here. Michael’s been chasing noble patrons since the day he arrived, trying to get one to sign him. But you…” He paused, studying through half-lidded eyes. “You’ve got fire. You want to build sothing on your own.”

He fell silent again, the wind carrying the distant hum of the fort’s night patrols.

After a long pause, he continued, voice low and rough.

“Let tell you sothing you might not have figured out yet. For people at Tier 4 and above, the rest of us are just pawns. At that level, they can live for more than two centuries; it’s hard for them to care about short-lived soldiers. When the Captain said, ‘I will not let my na be tarnished by incompetence or failure,’ he ant it. His life is worth more to the Kingdom than all of ours combined. He’s a precious resource to the Kingdom. Even if this fort falls, the Kingdom won’t let him die here. The only thing he’ll truly lose is his na. But for the rest of us, fall of the fort ans death.”

He drained the last of his drink, stood up slowly, and patted my shoulder.

“I just want you to live through this beast tide. And when you beco a sergeant, rember this conversation. Lead with your head, but value your squad’s lives like you did on that expedition.”

Without another word, he turned and walked toward the Longhall.

I stayed where I was, staring at the stars scattered over the black sky.

I didn’t know what to think, pity, respect, or fear, but I knew one thing for certain: I’d take his training more seriously from now on.

And I’d survive this grand tide.

From the next day onward, between drills and reports, I did what any intelligence private would do: I started gathering information.

If Walter wouldn’t talk about his past, I’d find out myself.

It wasn’t hard once I knew where to look.

Intelligence privates were notorious for gossip; they loved trading stories over ale and boredom. With the hints Walter had given , the pieces ca together faster than I expected.

Walter Graves, once Sergeant Walter Graves, had led one of the best squads in the infantry division five years ago. By every account, they were disciplined, reliable, and effective. Many thought he’d be transferred to the Vanguard division as a sergeant. Then, during one outer-expedition patrol, a critical intelligence error occurred, a misinterpretation of beast movents in a lieutenant’s report. The squad walked straight into a large herd of Tier 2s.

Walter was the only survivor.

The scandal shook the fort. The lieutenant, being part of a noble house, was quietly transferred to another posting far away.

Walter refused to lead again. He turned down every promotion and refused to retire, bound by a contract with a noble house. He swore never to serve a noble and chose to remain as a regular soldier instead.

Since then, command had kept him assigned to squads with poor records, part punishnt, part precaution. His presence reduced casualties.

He had joined Sergeant Fenward’s squad only three months before I arrived.

Learning that, I couldn’t shake a bad feeling about Walter. It felt like he was still trying to atone for losing his old squad, throwing himself into protecting every private under his command. And after the announcent of the Grand Beast Tide, it looked like the burden had only gotten heavier.

I never told him what I’d learned, and he never brought up that night again.

We kept training as usual, hard, silent, relentless.

In fifteen days, I’d made a lot of progress.

[Class Progression]

Junior Officer (Cadet) – Level 14 (400 / 1400 EXP)

1000 XP – Guarding against a Threat

475 XP – Expedition in the wilderness

225XP – Night duty

300XP – Intelligence report

200XP – Training Fellow Soldier

Level 12 → Level 14

Mana Cultivation: Tier 1– 20.5 → 50

[Skill Progression]

[Applied Military Theory (UC)] – 12 → 13[Soldier’s March (C)] – 23 → 24[Minor Restoration (C)] – 22 → 24[Perceptive Instinct (UC)] – 1 → 5[mory Recall (UC)] – 8 → 12[Map Reading (C)] – 12 → 18[Hand-to-Hand Combat (C)] – 20 → 25*

Physical Attributes

Constitution: 20.5 → 21.9Strength: 20 → 21Agility: 15.3 → 15.9

Spiritual Attributes

Intelligence: 21.1 → 22.6Wisdom: 16.2 → 16.9Willpower: 11.2 → 12.3 → 13

STATUS

Na: Edward

Initiate Class: [Junior Officer (Cadet)] – Level 14 (400/1400 EXP)

Elental Affinity: 0.1% Wind

Mana Cultivation: Tier 1 (50/100)

HP: 219 / 219

HP Regen: 58.8/day

MP: 200 / 495

MP Regen: 51.8/hr

Class Skills

[Applied Military Theory (UC)] – Level 13[Soldier’s March (C)] – Level 24[Defensive Spearplay (C)] – Level 25*[Perceptive Instinct (UC)] – Level 5[Minor Restoration (C)] – Level 24

General Skills

[mory Recall (UC)] – Level 12[Field dicine (C)] – Level 22[Basic Rune Theory (C)] – Level 20[Siege Rigging (C)] – Level 15[Map Reading (C)] – Level 18[Mana Sensitivity (C)] – Level 22[Hand-to-Hand Combat (C)] – Level 25*

I’d gained two levels since returning to the fort, one right after the Venelion fight and another during the march back and daily drills over the last fifteen days.

What surprised most, though, was the 0.7 increase in Willpower from training with Walter. It was the first stat I’d ever gained through physical exercise since receiving my class.

Who knew there were hidden benefits to Walter’s torture?

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