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Now reading: Chapter 13: 1 Week from The Villian Who Broke The Story, a Fantasy novel by Robberybob.

The gravity room humd its low, constant tone as Kael finished the last of his reps, the sound so familiar by now it had beco sothing like white noise — present, unobtrusive, easy to forget. He held the final position for three full seconds before releasing, his breathing asured and controlled despite the weighted pressure that had been pressing down on every muscle in his body for the past two hours. He straightened slowly, rolling his shoulders, and walked toward the door.

"Stats," he said softly.

The familiar interface materialized in front of him, cold and clinical as always, the pale text hovering at eye level like a judgnt rendered without emotion.

*Na: Kael Draven*

*Race: Human / ???*

*Class: None*

*Rank: D*

*Strength Potential: ???*

*Strength: D*

*Agility: D*

*Stamina: D *

*Mana: D-*

*Affinities: Darkness*

He stared at it for a long mont. The Stamina bump was expected — the gravity training had been consistent, and his body was adapting the way bodies did when pushed past comfort and into sothing harder. The rest of it sat where it had been sitting, patient and unmoved, waiting for sothing the gravity room alone couldn’t provide.

The problem was clear enough. He had wrung what he could from this environnt. The school’s facilities were adequate for students operating within normal paraters — students who were climbing at a asured pace, who had teachers guiding their progression, who weren’t already running calculations about events that hadn’t happened yet but would, inevitably, unless sothing changed.

He dismissed the panel with a blink and walked out of the room, the door sealing shut behind him with a soft pneumatic hiss.

*For any further growth,* he thought, moving down the corridor at an unhurried pace, *I either report my rank-up to the teachers — which would be foolish — or I leave the school and go after a syndicate. A legendary sword style and a rank-up in one move. Two birds, one stone.*

The teacher option was off the table almost before it fully ford. Reporting his stats ant scrutiny. Scrutiny ant attention from people he didn’t want attending to him yet. The tiline he was working against didn’t leave room for that kind of interference.

The syndicate option was more interesting. More dangerous, certainly. But danger was a variable he could work with, provided he controlled the conditions around it.

He turned the corner toward the dormitory wing, his footsteps quiet on the polished floor.

*There’s a larger problem than rank, though.* The thought surfaced the way it always did — not anxiously, but with the flat, thodical quality of soone reading a map and noting that the road ahead ended. *To survive what’s coming, Human simply won’t be enough. Not at the rate things will escalate.*

He’d turned this over many tis in the week since the confrontation with Zion. The math kept arriving at the sa answer. Demons grew faster than almost any other race on the scale — their capacity to absorb strength, to copy and internalize abilities, to push past biological limits through sheer force of their nature made them categorically superior in the early stages of growth. The only races that outpaced them were the Dragon bloodlines, and those weren’t exactly accessible.

*If I can trigger the transformation — beco a Demon, or at least begin the transition — copying magic skills becos exponentially easier. Growth accelerates. The gap between where I am and where I need to be closes faster.*

The question of how wasn’t one he’d fully solved. But he was working on it.

He reached his room and stopped.

Lilith was standing at his door.

She was leaning against the wall beside it with her arms loosely folded, her dark hair falling over one shoulder, her expression carrying that particular quality she wore when she was pretending to be casual about sothing she wasn’t casual about at all. When she saw him coming she straightened slightly, and sothing in her crimson eyes shifted — just briefly — before settling back into composure.

"You’re late," she said.

"I was training," Kael replied, stopping in front of her and reaching past her to unlock the door.

"You’re always training."

"Yes."

She followed him inside without being invited, which had also beco routine. Sowhere over the past week the arrangent had solidified without either of them formally agreeing to it — dinner together after classes, Lilith appearing at his door with the quiet reliability of sothing that had decided it belonged there. Kael had noted it the way he noted most things: observed, filed, not comnted on.

He set his bag down and moved toward the kitchen on instinct.

"Kael." She was still standing near the entrance, watching him with an expression he couldn’t imdiately categorize. "Why do you train so hard?"

He paused with his hand on the refrigerator door. The question wasn’t aggressive. It wasn’t accusatory. It carried sothing underneath it that was closer to genuine — the kind of question people asked when they’d been thinking about asking it for longer than they’d admit.

"I want to prevent a disaster from occurring," he said.

It was true. It was also the most he was willing to give.

Lilith was quiet for a mont. When she spoke again her voice was lower, softer at the edges in a way that didn’t entirely suit her usual register.

"But I can protect you," she muttered.

Kael looked at her then — actually looked, the way he didn’t always bother to. She ant it. Whatever else Lilith was, whatever calculations ran beneath the surface of those crimson eyes, she ant that particular thing. He noted it. Filed it.

"I’ll prepare dinner," he said, turning back to the refrigerator.

"Not this ti."

She was already moving past him into the kitchen, her shoulder brushing his as she went, her expression carrying sothing that looked dangerously close to satisfaction. He stepped back and watched her for a mont.

"Go on," he muttered.

She smiled at that — a small, genuine thing that was different from her usual ones — and turned to the counter.

Kael retreated to the main room and dropped onto the couch, pulling out his phone. If Lilith wanted to cook, he wasn’t going to manufacture a reason to stop her. He had reading to do anyway.

He opened his browser and searched the Velvet Gang.

The results were what he expected — surface-level coverage, a few incident reports, nothing that penetrated into the actual organizational structure. He wasn’t surprised. In the novel, the year before the main character’s arrival had been largely undocunted, a gap in the narrative that the story had treated as backdrop rather than content. The demon attacks on the school — specifically targeting first-year students — had been referenced briefly, frad as the inciting tension that preceded the protagonist’s entrance rather than events worth examining in their own right.

*But I’m living in that gap,* he thought, scrolling without finding anything useful. *Which ans those attacks aren’t backstory. They’re incoming.*

The tiline sat in his chest like a stone. He didn’t know exactly when. He didn’t know which students, which nights, which corridors. The novel hadn’t cared enough to specify. It had only noted that first-years had been targeted, that several had been hospitalized, and that the administration had quietly suppressed the reports to avoid panic.

He locked his phone and set it face-down on his knee.

The sounds from the kitchen were dostic and ordinary — the soft click of burners, the sll of sothing beginning to warm, the occasional quiet movent of soone who knew their way around a kitchen better than he’d expected. He filed that away too.

"All done," Lilith called.

He got up and helped her set the table without being asked, moving around her in the small space with the easy efficiency of people who had shared a routine long enough to stop narrating it. They ate across from each other the way they had every evening that week — not in silence exactly, but not in the kind of conversation that required effort either. Comfortable, in the specific way that things beca comfortable when you stopped questioning whether they should be.

The food was good. Better than he would have admitted unprompted.

Afterward he waited for her to gather her things the way she usually did, the familiar rhythm of the evening winding toward its close.

Then his vision blurred.

It wasn’t gradual. It arrived suddenly and completely — the edges of the room going soft, the light saring, Lilith’s face across the table becoming the last clear thing in his field of vision. She was smiling at him. Not the small, genuine smile from earlier. This one was sweeter. More deliberate. The kind of smile that had been prepared in advance.

*Oh,* he thought, with the detached clarity of soone watching themselves make a mistake from a slight remove.

The room tilted. The table’s edge ca up fast and then didn’t matter anymore.

*I shouldn’t have let a villainess cook for .*

The thought arrived precisely, almost amused, in the last half-second before everywhere went dark.

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