CHAPTER 76: THE OFFENSIVE SPELL EXAM! THE HEAD OF THE CLASS VS ALBERT (END)
100 points.
The moment the students saw my score, they all erupted.
âOOOOOOOOOOOOOOH!â
âI never thought heâd win against Blain!â
âHe was shooting down those silhouettes with crazy momentum!â
I got 100 points�
I was quite astonished myself.
This mustâve been some sort of mistake.
âŠSpeaking of which, Firvus said the equipment might break because of my Magic Arrow or something.
I mightâve broken a part of the examâs mechanism.
Sorry, Firvus.
âŠI say that, but I guess my score is what I actually got.
I was certain that I shot all the silhouettes with perfect accuracy, and I could confidently say that I didnât miss a single shot.
In that case, this is the result of my abilities, I suppose.
I felt pretty proud of myself.
Doing the entire test with only Magic Arrow was a pretty big feat. I suppose this meant I really was a little better at Magic Arrow than the other students.
Besides, Firvus gave me some advice.
The ability to decide how much power to put in your spells also came into play in this exam. Hence, Firvus told me the following:
Shoot with 10% of your Magic Arrowâs power.
Thanks to him, I managed to spend no time at all on making that decision. A moron like me wouldnât have been able to achieve the same result if I tried making that decision myself.
Way to go, Firvus.
Your advice turned coal into a diamond.
Firvus came out of the testing room, and I spoke to him. âThank you, Mr. Firvus.â
Firvus rapidly blinked in surprise after being suddenly called out.
Thereupon, the students began adding comments.
âHuh? Mr. Firvus gave some sort of advice to Albert!?â
âIâm pretty sure I saw them talking about something before the exam startedâŠâ
The students got rowdy, saying this and that.
After clearing his throat, he continued. ââŠW-Well⊠I-I suppose I did. I⊠I am an outstanding instructor⊠You did pretty damn well⊠AlbertâŠâ
âYou took the words right out of my mouth, Mr. Firvus.â
I said that from the bottom of my heart.
âNo fair, I didnât get any advice!â
âYou wouldâve gotten the same result, advice or no advice!â
The students started making an uproar.
Firvus turned towards them and spoke. ââŠSorry, but I handpick my students, yâsee⊠Youâll all need to get stronger for me to give out adviceâŠâ said Firvus, trying to put on airs.
I guess he regained his composure or something.
The students settled down. Then, their eyes all turned to a single male student.
98 points.
The head of the class, Blain Milhis.
The man who challenged me to a duel, then lost.
Blain approached me and spoke. ââŠItâs your win, Albert. Itâs an honor to be in the same class as someone like you.â
His eyes darted to Firvus.
âI wasnât given any advice, either⊠It seems like Mr. Firvus realized that I, Blain Milhis, still has a ways to go as a magician.â
ââŠUh, yeah⊠I-I guessâŠâ replied Firvus, his eyes averted. I suppose even a seasoned instructor had a hard time dealing with the head of the classâ pressure.
âI-I suppose⊠that may or may not⊠be the caseâŠâ
âIâve been blessed with such a wonderful environment⊠I have classmates who act as an obstacle for me to overcome, and an instructor who admonishes me for my inexperienceâŠâ muttered Blain in a satisfied-sounding voice.
Then, he turned his gaze toward me.
âYou sure know some amazing spells. You fire white arrowsâitâs almost as if theyâre Magic Arrows. However, theyâre definitely different from Magic ArrowâŠâ
âIâm using Magic Arrow, though.â
Hearing what I said, Blain was at a momentary loss for words.
Then, he laughed. âYou jest. Thereâs no way thatâs Magic Arrowââ
âIâm using Magic Arrow, though.â
Blain shook his head. âDuring the water quality investigation, I witnessed the scene of you defeating that Frenzied Spirit⊠At first, I had believed you used Magic Arrow, but⊠thatâs not quite right. Youâre using some sort of trick to hide the spell youâre using! Iâm right, arenât I!?â
I blinked in surprise and responded. âIâm using Magic Arrow, though.â
Blain stared into my eyes and muttered to himself. ââŠSo youâre keeping it a secret.â
âNo, thatâs not what I meanâŠâ
This was awkward.
Blain was completely misunderstanding something. The spell that I use was genuinely Magic Arrow.
ââŠIndeed, if I were you, thereâs no way Iâd go blabbering about my secret to someone who showed up out of the blue. Truly, what an intelligent and magician-like way to go about things.â
After arbitrarily convincing himself, he held out his right hand to me. âIâve come to understand that you are a man who knows not of limits, Albert Luminous. I want to compete with you as rivals. Letâs get along from here on out.â
ââŠY-YeahâŠâ
I couldnât just ignore his held-out hand, so I shook back.
âŠThough I feel like weâre not on the same pageâŠ
Lucard gazed at the townscape of the capital from the room in the inn he was staying at.
The Kingdom Festival would start before long.
Crowds of people made their way through the streets to enjoyâor perhaps make a killing fromâthe upcoming festival.
In the past, this was a time of excitement and passion, butâ
the current Lucard felt nothing.
He looked down upon the excited people with cold eyes.
âCan I come in, Lucard?â
Together with a knock, he heard Faltimaâs voice from the other side of the door.
ââŠYeah, itâs fine,â responded Lucard. He shifted his gaze back to the room.
After entering the room, Faltima waved the sheet of paper in her hand, showing it to Lucard.
âThe âStudentâ contacted us.â
The Student was a spy that infiltrated the academy as a student.
They originally had a rank similar to the Crest Master, but after enrolling into the academy, everyone just started calling them Student.
Before enrolling, the Student had been establishing contact using mana-filled ink, which they had gotten from Faltima.
When they wrote on paper using that ink, Faltima could use her magic to transfer the contents of whatever they wrote onto another piece of paper.
âHere you go.â
Lucard took the paper held out to him and scanned over it.
Written on it was the following:
â Iâll proceed with the merchandise trafficking. Delivery is scheduled for tomorrow. Come to the designated location. â
Merchandise trafficking meant âseizing the Crest of Darknessâ.
Written below the message was the date and time of the delivery and a map of the designated place.
Lucard understood where that map was at a glance.
It was the academy.
Lucard was a former student there, so he distinctly remembered its layout.
â Iâll try to be present during the delivery, but proceed with retrieval regardless if Iâm absent. â
The message ended there.
The Crest of Darkness, which was sealed deep in the academy, would be displayed to the public for the Kingdom Festival exhibition. Their plan was for Student to use that opportunity to seize the Crest of Darkness, then have Lucard sneak into the academy thereafter and retrieve it.
Faltima began speaking. âWhat a pain. Canât we just steal the Crest of Darkness ourselves and run away without waiting a day or saying anything?â
ââŠThe Student is an important cardâŠâ
Darknessâ general consensus was to have the Student work hard at intel gathering and networking without getting suspected after the operation.
Thatâs why Lucard went out of his way to go and receive the merchandise.
âWell, who cares.â
Faltima then snapped her fingers together. âAh, thatâs right! Does the Student know anything about the white arrow magician that defeated the Crest Master?â
ââŠNo, they havenât mentioned itâŠâ
In the first place, the Student was living in the dorms within the school the whole time, and they were also abstaining from meeting anyone face-to-face so as to not attract suspicion; they werenât in the position to speak with that magician.
Faltima continued. âThen what if you tried asking about the white arrow magician? That magician might be involved with the academy.â
ââŠI see⊠that doesnât sound too bad.â
Lucard didnât think a magician strong enough to defeat the Crest Master could be a student, but they might have some sort of connection to the academy.
âFaltima, canât you send a response with your magic?â
She shook her head. âUnfortunately, no. I can only receive messages from the sender. How about asking the Student if you end up meeting them during the delivery?â
âThatâs true. Iâll do that, then.â
Lucard didnât think the Student would so conveniently have an answer, butâ