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Now reading: Chapter 101: Rune Apprentice Rank 3 from The Darkness System: Rise of the Broken Sovereign, a Fantasy novel by GodofWisdom.

Two months disappeared like smoke in wind.

Kael spent them bent over stone tablets, his fingers cramping around rune brushes, his eyes burning from the microscopic precision required to inscribe lines thinner than hair. The System’s evolution had upgraded his available rune manuals, and he’d purchased every interdiate text the shop offered—fourteen manuals in total, covering everything from defensive arrays to elental channeling to the theoretical foundations of spatial inscription.

The credits flowed like water.

Academy stipends covered basic needs. Guardian funds covered everything else. Kael spent without hesitation—high-grade inscription ink, beast bone tablets, brushes crafted from the mane of a rare mountain lion whose fur supposedly conducted mana more efficiently than standard materials. Whether that was true or just marketing, the brushes felt better in his hand, and that was enough.

He didn’t even challenge the leaderboard much making his ranking to drop from rank 19 to rank 24 as other students climbed past him through consistent combat victories and public ranking matches. The whispers started—people wondering if the Morir trio had been overhyped, if Kael’s reputation was built on luck rather than skill or if he was scared to fight now that the competition had caught up.

Runes were more important than ego.

The leaderboard itself had shifted dramatically. Yenna—now Foundation Establishnt Rank 8 Peak—had solidified her Rank 2 after her Morir gains, solidifying her position among the elite. But Rank 1 remained occupied.

Karacus Drakmore.

The Ice Dragon-kin hadn’t just maintained his position. He’d solidified it. Foundation Establishnt Rank 9 Peak, bordering on Mana Heart, with a cultivation base that felt like standing next to a glacier. He’d beaten three challengers in the past two months alone, each victory cleaner than the last.

Kael had watched one of those matches from the arena stands. Karacus had barely moved. Three punches. Three downed opponents. The dragon-kin hadn’t even broken a sweat.

Yenna wasn’t getting that number one spot back. Kael would have bet his entire shadow point reserve on it.

Isabella had settled at Rank 9, stable and quiet, doing what Isabella did best—accumulating power without drawing attention. Mason Croft held Rank 2 behind Yenna now, his War God bloodline pushing him higher every week. Cassian had climbed back to Rank 4 after a single public match where he’d frozen ti mid-combat and casually repositioned himself behind his opponent.

The top twenty was a shark tank. Kael was content to be a stone at the bottom for now.

The certification examination for his apprenticeship took place in Master Finnick’s private workshop.

The room was cluttered—tablets stacked on every surface, half-finished arrays glowing faintly in corners, the sll of ink and stone dust perating everything. Finnick himself sat at his central desk, ancient face unreadable, fingers steepled beneath his chin.

"Rank 3 certification," he said flatly. "You have one attempt. The tablet is prepared. Begin when ready."

A smooth stone slab sat on the workstation before Kael—six inches square, polished to a mirror finish, pre-treated with conductive solution.

The inscription target was displayed above it in floating runic text: Complex Containnt Array. Seventeen strokes. Four interlocking geotric patterns. One continuous mana flow.

No room for error.

Kael picked up his brush.

The first stroke went down.

The brush moved like it was tracing a path that already existed rather than creating one. The ink settled into the stone’s prepared channels.

Second stroke. Third. Fourth.

His breathing slowed as his heartbeat steadied. The world narrowed to the tablet beneath his hands and the pattern taking shape within it.

Fifth through tenth. The first geotric pattern completed—a hexagonal fra with internal branching lines that would serve as the array’s primary containnt structure.

Eleventh through fourteenth. The second pattern overlaid the first, interlocking at precise angles, creating channels for mana redirection.

Fifteenth. Sixteenth.

The final two strokes completed the outer binding and the central activation point. Kael pulled the brush away and held his breath.

The array humd.

Faint blue light traced through the inscribed lines, following the channels he’d created, testing the flow, seeking weaknesses. The light pulsed once. Twice. Three tis.

Then it stabilized.

Kael set down the brush and stepped back.

Finnick didn’t move.

Thirty seconds passed. The old man’s eyes traced every line, every intersection, every geotric relationship in the array. His expression remained stone.

Finally, he looked up.

"Marginally acceptable."

Kael almost laughed. He knew Finnick well enough by now to recognize that "marginally acceptable" from this particular man was equivalent to "outstanding" from anyone else.

"Certification confird," Finnick continued, making a note on his tablet. "Rune Apprentice Rank 3. Don’t let it go to your head. You still inscribe like you’re trying to kill the stone rather than cooperate with it."

"Understood, Master."

"Get out of my workshop."

The next three days were spent inscribing everything he owned.

Kael sat cross-legged on his dormitory floor, short blades laid out before him, brush in hand, Spirit Eyes active to monitor the microscopic flow of mana through each stroke. The enhanced vision was invaluable—he could see exactly where ink was settling wrong, where channels were narrowing too much, where the mana would bottleneck during actual use.

First: Stabilization runes on both short blades.

The pattern was simple—three strokes per blade, positioned along the flat of the weapon near the hilt. The rune’s function was equally simple: reduce mana waste during technique activation by smoothing the transition between the blade’s physical structure and the elental energy flowing through it.

Two percent reduction per blade. Four percent total. Small on paper. Significant in extended combat.

Second: Amplification runes on both blades.

More complex—seven strokes each, requiring precise geotric alignnt with the blade’s existing enchantnts. The rune boosted lightning conductivity by fifteen percent, aning every Lightning Fang or SILENCE technique would hit harder without costing additional mana.

Third: Barrier runes on coins.

Kael had prepared a set of twenty coins. The Barrier rune was the sa pattern he’d used in Thornwell, but smaller, more refined, adapted to fit on a one-inch disc.

Ergency defenses. But they were all one-ti use per coin. Not powerful enough to stop a serious attack, but enough to deflect a surprise strike or buy a half-second of breathing room. He could even sell them if he needed credits.

Fourth: Containnt rune inside his bow.

This was the most delicate work. The Shadow-Strike Bow’s internal structure was already enchanted—adding a rune ant working within those existing channels without disrupting them. Kael spent four hours on a single inscription, Spirit Eyes straining to track the mana flow through the bow’s layered enchantnts.

The result was worth it. Arrow trajectories stabilized in adverse conditions—wind, rain, mana interference. Every shot would fly truer.

Finnick appeared at the workshop on the third day.

The rune master picked up one of the short blades, turned it over, examined the inscriptions with those ancient eyes. Then the other blade. Then a coin. Then the bow.

Silence.

Finnick set the bow down with exaggerated care.

"You’re still wielding a sledgehamr." He turned to leave. Paused at the door. "But at least you’re hitting the right nails now."

From Finnick, that was practically a love letter.

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