LightReader

Chapter 4 - Chapter 3: Mana Storm and Misunderstandings

Chapter 3: Mana Storm and Misunderstandings

Ordanis Academy wasn't just a school—it was a city built atop an arcane reactor the size of a fortress.

Mana pipelines flowed through it like veins, powering floating dorms, teleport pads, sentient cleaning golems, and twenty-seven libraries. Twenty-seven. I counted.

Which made it hilarious when the place broke down on day three.

---

"Warning: instability in Sector 5. Mana surge detected. All students are advised to evacuate to designated shelters."

The announcement blared through crystalline speakers embedded in the hallway walls.

I was not in Sector 5.

I was under it.

Specifically, in an abandoned ventilation shaft beneath the library's western wing. I had just located a collapsed wall that hid the [Pillar of Unweaving]—a sealed chamber containing a relic that could dismantle spells and enchantments. Extremely handy in a world where everyone throws fireballs like dodgeballs.

Then the lights flickered.

The walls groaned.

And suddenly—BOOM.

A wave of raw mana blasted through the shaft, flinging me across the stone corridor.

---

I groaned, rolling onto my side, blinking through the neon blue haze.

The air around me shimmered—mana storm. Raw, unstable magic surging like a wild current.

I had ten, maybe fifteen minutes before it either collapsed the tunnels or mutated me into a crab or something. Not the good kind.

Footsteps echoed ahead.

"Anyone there!?" a voice called.

I froze. That voice—

Silver hair. Golden eyes. Long coat flowing like a cape.

Reina Von Lysser.

What was she doing down here?

Before I could hide or activate a stealth spell, she spotted me.

"You."

"Hi," I coughed. "You're not going to stab me, right?"

Her eyes narrowed. "Why are you underground during a containment breach?"

"Why are you underground?"

"I asked first."

"...I like tunnels."

A pause. Her expression didn't change, but I could feel the judgment.

Then the tunnel shook again—louder this time. Arcs of mana crackled along the walls, like magical lightning looking for a target.

A moment later, the thing responsible crawled into view.

Eight limbs. Armor of cracked crystal. A face like a melted spider golem.

A rogue Mana Wraith.

Spawned when too much unstable energy collects and binds to residual thoughts—usually from dead students.

Charming.

"Oh great," I muttered. "A storm-born death bug. Just what I needed today."

Reina stepped forward. "I'll handle this."

She raised her hand. A white-gold spell circle spun into existence, layered with complex glyphs.

"Wait!" I blurted. "You can't cast—"

Too late.

She launched a compressed mana bolt.

The wraith absorbed it.

Then screamed.

The tunnel exploded in mana backlash, sending both of us flying.

---

We landed in a broken storage room full of old alchemy ingredients and one very confused janitor skeleton.

I sat up, wheezing. Reina stood, unharmed, dusting her coat.

"What the hell was that thing?" she asked, voice tight.

"Mana Wraith," I said. "You can't use direct spells. It eats mana."

"Then tell me next time!"

"I tried! You were too busy being a protagonist!"

She blinked. "What?"

"Nothing."

The wraith screeched again, burrowing toward us.

"Alright," I said, standing with a groan. "No mana spells. That means physical damage. You got a sword?"

She summoned a rapier of glowing glass.

"Cool. I have... a shovel."

She stared.

"It's enchanted."

---

The fight was fast and ugly.

The wraith darted forward, limbs spinning. Reina blocked two strikes with elegant footwork and slashed its flank, sending shards of crystal flying.

I circled behind it, activating [Rusted Ring of Eos], one of my hidden pieces. For ten seconds, it added divine damage to physical strikes.

I leapt up and whacked the creature right between its melted eyes with my enchanted shovel.

CRACK.

It shrieked.

"You just smited it with a garden tool," Reina said, breathless.

"Yeah, well, some of us work with what we've got."

The wraith tried to regenerate, but she pierced its core with a lunge that sent energy cascading through its cracked shell.

It collapsed into mana mist.

We stood in silence, catching our breath.

I grinned. "Not bad, Princess."

"I outrank a princess."

"Noted."

---

Afterwards, as we climbed out of the collapsed sector via an emergency elevator, Reina glanced at me.

"You knew what that thing was. And how to beat it."

"...I read a lot."

"No one else in our year would have reacted that fast."

I shrugged. "I'm not special. Just paranoid."

She looked like she wanted to ask more—but didn't.

Instead, she said, "Next time we're underground and something tries to eat us, you tell me before I cast."

"Deal."

"And get a better weapon."

"Shovel's staying. It's personal now."

---

Later that night, I added the [Broken Mana Core] from the defeated Wraith to my inventory. It would be useful for crafting a barrier charm three arcs from now.

Two hidden pieces, one improvised relic, and one pissed-off noble genius later—I was still alive.

But I'd been noticed.

Which was dangerous.

Time to lay low. Or plan better.

...Maybe both.

More Chapters