Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 144 : Chapter 144 from Top Instructor of a Third-Rate Academy, a Action novel by Akazatl.

144

The carriage was unremarkable.

No—compared to the carriages gathered nearby, it was downright modest.

A single black horse, as though shaped from darkness itself, bore the entire burden of the carriage.

In the driver’s seat, a young man lounged carelessly, leaning back at his ease.

He looked to be in his twenties, his face full of mischief. At first glance, he appeared free-spirited, but every small movent of his body was packed with intent.

‘A Runner.’

He was an Aura user I did not know.

He did not seem to be a regressor, so it was likely he had awakened Aura on his own—through my book, through the teachings of others, or by grasping a few key points for himself.

‘And a man like that is a coachman.’

He glanced at briefly, then, as if losing interest, clasped both hands behind his head and sprawled out on the driver’s bench.

The butler moved to the side of the bench, as though his role ended here.

The butler who had guided was also a master at roughly the level of a Sword Walker.

He appeared to be in his late twenties, similar in age to the coachman, but his eyes were sharp, and his body beneath the tailcoat was solid and well-trained.

He stepped beside the bench and nudged the lounging man with his thigh, then sat down.

His posture was ramrod straight, like a soldier’s.

‘As expected of Crownhardt.’

The Empire’s borders and front lines were effectively Crownhardt’s territory.

Those two alone exemplified the duchy’s reputation.

I opened the carriage door.

“Welco.”

I was mistaken.

Trying to judge Crownhardt based on just two soldiers had been foolish.

Inside the carriage, the Duke of Crownhardt himself was seated.

‘Huge.’

The Duke of Crownhardt possessed a physique so massive it could fairly be called overwhelming—greater than anyone I had ever t.

Even seated, his height looked as though it might reach my own when standing.

Two ters fifty? No—closer to two eighty?

The carriage’s simplicity was not without reason.

Building a carriage sturdy enough, in one solid piece, to hold this colossal man would have required the full concentration of every craft involved.

It was more surprising that a single black horse could pull it at all.

“It has already been ten years since you said you would accept a commission. You made wait a full decade. I am Crownhardt.”

His black hair was grown long and tied tightly behind his head, but the ends had faded to white, likely from the blood and fatigue of the front lines.

Wrinkles lined his eyes, and beneath his jaw ran a deep vertical scar where new flesh had ford.

Yet all traces of age were aningless in the face of the violent, overwhelming power he radiated.

The hand he extended for a handshake was as large as my face.

“Pleased to et you. I am Cassian.”

“Cassian Defnos.”

“I have abandoned the Defnos surna. I am an illegitimate child. I have no interest in devoting myself to a life that will never be acknowledged.”

“And yet you sent a résumé bearing the Defnos na to our house.”

“I thought it might pique Your Grace’s interest. A youthful indiscretion.”

“It succeeded.”

“In hindsight, I should have let it fail. I did not expect you to rember and seek out after ten years—especially when the imperial court surely told you not to.”

I watched the Duke of Crownhardt’s expression.

From the mont we t, he had not smiled even once, staring at intently.

It was the sa look I had seen earlier at the funeral.

Greed.

The gaze of a man who had once been thwarted in his desires, and still dared to dream.

“They cannot bring our war to an end.”

“By war, do you an the war against the external barbarians?”

“People.”

His heavy voice cut off.

“A war against people.”

It was not sothing one would expect from an imperial general who prioritized invasion and conquest.

He did not view his enemies as savages, but understood them as equal actors.

And he sought to stop the fighting.

Only then did I finally understand why, ten years ago, I had been commissioned by the House of Crownhardt.

“It is a shaful past, but during my academy years, I was soone who openly criticized the Empire. I wanted to overturn that hollow, ceremonial Empire from its very foundations.”

“I saw.”

Graduates of the Imperial Royal Academy compiled the assignnts they had submitted during their studies into portfolios and sent them to noble houses when seeking commissions.

In truth, those assignnts were far more painfully embarrassing than even my basic swordsmanship manual.

If even one of my students were to learn about my writings, attitudes, and actions from that ti…

I would rather die.

Suppressing the heat rising to my face, I extracted the common thread from those assignnts.

“You wish to end the war? Even if it ans overthrowing the Empire?”

“Countless people die on the front lines even now. And they do not even know why they are dying. Is that not hollow?”

“They fight to protect the Empire.”

“Do you know this? On the fiercest sections of the border, most of the soldiers are slaves.”

Because their chances of survival were low.

“Or orphans, debtors who fled, murderers, criminals rejected even by the rcenary trade.”

So that no one would mourn their deaths.

So that their lives could be spent freely in tactics and strategy, without hesitation.

“No matter how hard they fight, the land, money, slaves, and wealth gained all go to the nobles who hold the rights to territorial wars.”

The duke lifted his head.

His eyes openly mocked strategy, military doctrine, and the ideology of imperialism itself.

He did not look like a general defending the Empire’s borders.

He looked like a man intent on overthrowing the Empire.

A revolutionary.

That burning gaze asked whether I agreed with his ideals.

And that was why I pitied him.

“Have you heard any rumors about ?”

In the near future, the Empire he loathed would lose its power.

It would remain a focal point binding all of humanity, but its form would differ from the reality the Empire so desperately desired.

And it would differ from what the Duke of Crownhardt envisioned as well.

“I hear you mastered sothing called Sword Aura. As it happens, we have n in our camps who have learned it. I even reviewed the manual myself. It was swordsmanship worthy of your ideals.”

From that single exchange, I understood.

This man knew nothing about regressors.

Given his personality, had he known, he would have brought it up first.

‘Perhaps this is Crownhardt’s limitation.’

A house that guarded the Empire’s borders and possessed countless warriors who reached the level of Sword Runners with only a few books.

Yet a house pushed to the front lines, deprived of proper information, and sidelined.

That was Crownhardt.

And that was why, in my youth, I had thought I could make use of them.

“Your Grace, then allow to ask another question. Do you know anything about demons?”

And that thought had not changed even now.

***

“You are quite late.”

Abrahal was waiting for outside.

Beside him stood Rozalin, Hati, and also the Spear God and Pan.

They all looked fully prepared to depart, just as I had instructed.

“Was it a long discussion?”

“It was about the Empire’s situation and the future of the world.”

“Then it could hardly be brief.”

Abrahal laughed as though he understood.

“Well, then. Let us leave.”

“Eh? Right now?”

“Yes. This eting itself was part of a trap. We need to go imdiately.”

“……A trap?”

At my words, the air grew taut in an instant.

That is right—a trap.

One nearly perfect, yet made hasty by an unexpected variable.

“While speaking with the Duke of Crownhardt, I realized sothing. This trap is aid at you as well, Lord Abrahal.”

“At too?”

Abrahal, who had been listening from a slight distance, raised an eyebrow.

“Yes. From this mont on, you and the Spear God should hide yourselves as quickly as possible. You need to leave the Empire. Liquidate any assets you can imdiately.”

“Avril.”

Abrahal pieced together several clues and produced the answer at once.

“Yes.”

“Damn it. Thank you. Understood. I will see you soon in Akarind!”

Grinding his teeth, Abrahal departed, with the Spear God lumbering after him.

They headed toward a spot so distance from his carriage.

Given that it was Abrahal and the Spear God, I was not overly worried.

“Let us go.”

I boarded the carriage with the students, and Hati imdiately set it in motion.

“Teacher. What did Avril do?”

What did he do, indeed.

I could not say exactly where Avril’s sche had begun.

But one thing was certain.

“Professor Hollians was likely murdered.”

“Murdered? Seriously?”

“Rozalin. Do you rember when my teacher died in your previous life?”

At my question, Rozalin tilted her head with a small sound of confusion.

“I am not sure. I do not rember.”

I had expected that.

During this Academic Exchange Conference, she had never once brought up anything unusual while I t with my teacher.

‘That is the strange part.’

While discussing the future with the Duke of Crownhardt, it had struck .

Why had Rozalin not told sothing so important?

It was because she did not know.

Was it because, at the ti, she had been wandering deserts and forests, indifferent to imperial affairs?

‘No. She scoured the Empire precisely because this period alone made it possible.’

She rose to the position of Grand General and knew the Empire’s secrets inside and out.

There was no way she would not know about the death of a man like Professor Hollians, one of the Empire’s foremost intellects.

‘He did not die at this ti. It was not a grand death worthy of a state funeral, but an ordinary death like anyone else’s. Or perhaps he died when too many people were dying at once for it to be properly recorded.’

And yet, my teacher had died.

With a lavish state funeral, a death known across the world.

Sothing had changed to create this outco.

‘Was it ?’

Had leaving sothing like a final testant to robbed him of his will to live?

No—that was narcissistic nonsense.

If a life ended that easily, he would have died of heartbreak imdiately after my own death.

And such an absurd death would have been rembered by Rozalin.

Then there was only one other possibility.

Soone had killed him.

“Avril would do sothing that insane?”

“Strictly speaking, it was not Avril himself.”

It was soone Avril had brought here.

Soone who would commit any madness for the sake of their students—

And for the sake of Akarind Academy.

“We spread Akarind Academy’s greatness far and wide through the Academic Exchange Conference. By now, Akarind Academy has likely risen to a level comparable to the Imperial Royal Academy.”

But only comparable.

If the balance were not decisively overturned, things would eventually revert.

So it needed to be cented here.

“If you kill Professor Hollians, the core of the Imperial Royal Academy—”

“Insane……”

Rozalin and Pan stared at as though it were impossible.

“Why? Why would he do that?”

“While you were gone, Blue Moon ca to see .”

I had thought it was a simple summons.

But what if it had been related to my teacher’s death?

“Within Goldline, there is Avril and there is Abrahal.”

Outside of Goldline, however, everyone was simply Goldline.

So if Avril had brought the chairman here and caused an incident, would the bla fall solely on him?

No—would they not hold Abrahal, the head of the guild, responsible?

“They were targeting Abrahal and my siblings.”

The mont Avril arrived in the Empire, he likely withdrew all his forces.

Perhaps even the Aura clashes within the Empire had been nothing but misdirection.

“Terrifying… but fascinating reasoning. Were you always like this, Teacher?”

Serris, who had been watching quietly, smiled brightly as she asked.

She sounded as though she found the situation amusing.

“I am rely presenting a hypothesis.”

And so—

“We will hear the answer from the people waiting outside.”

The carriage ca to an abrupt halt.

When I looked out the window, a familiar face stood there.

It was Raipen, the rcenary Avril had once assigned to for Aura training.

You are reading Top Instructor of a Third-Rate Academy Chapter 144 : Chapter 144 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

Qingshan cover
Same author

Qingshan

Akazatl ·Action

Oh,fleetinglight,Iofferyouacupofwine.Iknownottheheightofverdantmountains,northedepthoftheyellowearth.Ionlywitnessthecoldmoonandwarmsun,comingtoslow...

The Extra's Survival cover
Same genre

The Extra's Survival

Mohitkumar ·Action

OnmywaytothejobinterviewunfortunatelyImetanaccident. Insteadofdying,Ifoundmyselfwakingupinthenovel'Dawnoflegend'whichIreadbeforedying. Iwakeupinthe...

Too Stubborn to Die cover
Same genre

Too Stubborn to Die

B.F.Huups ·Action

MultiversalRecordforFastestTutorialDeath:AaronDober,0d0h0m0.02sWhentheApocalypsecame,Aaronwasskydiving,andunfortunatelyforhim,hisTutorialwasrunbyab...

Reborn as a Transcendent cover
Trending now

Reborn as a Transcendent

Mad Flower ·Action

TheglobalreleaseofthefirstofitskindVRMMOisimminent,Yaegerhadmiraculouslygonebackin...Readmore Theglobalreleaseof thefirstof itskindVRMMOis imminent...

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.