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Chapter 1 - The Prodigy of Method

The wind in the village of Hage didn't just blow; it scraped. It tore at the rocky

soil and the tough, stringy weeds that passed for vegetation. Lencar Abarame,

aged fifteen, was using it as a whetstone.

He was on the cliff edge overlooking the giant demon skull that served as the

village's primary landmark. While the rest of the village's children were still

asleep or preparing for chores, Lencar was finishing the final phase of his daily,

decade-long routine.

His body was drenched in sweat, shimmering in the pale dawn light. He

was in a low, agonizing horse-stance, a position he'd held for the last twenty

minutes. But this was no ordinary stance.

To a bystander, he was just a boy with iron-clad discipline. Internally, he

was at war.

Push.

He willed his mana—a small, flickering, but tenaciously controlled pool—to

wrap around his quads and glutes, resisting his own stance. He was actively

trying to force his own knees to buckle, while his muscles, forged by this very

process, refused to yield.

He'd called it "Mana-Forging" ever since he was six.

This was the secret of his second life. He was Kenji Tanaka, a 28-year-old

data analyst from Tokyo, who had died a boring, spreadsheet-filled death and

been reborn in a world of magic. A world he recognized. Black Clover.

The "how" of his death was a blur. The "what now" had been terrifyingly

clear. He was a commoner in a feudal, magic-obsessed kingdom. A data point

at the bottom of the graph.

He wouldn't accept that.

At age five, he'd first felt his mana. At age six, Kenji's knowledge of fit-

ness, physiology, and progressive overload had merged with Lencar's new reality.

While nobles used mana to replace physical effort, he would use it to enhance

it.

He used mana for resistance, making every push-up, every squat, every run

feel like he was moving through wet cement. Then, he used his mana for recov-

ery, flooding his torn muscle fibers, forcing them to repair faster, denser, and

stronger.

The result was a 15-year-old body that had no right to exist in a poor village.

He wasn't a giant, but every inch of him was packed with the dense, efficient

muscle of a dedicated fighter. It wasn't Asta's manic, sculpted-from-nothing

muscle. It was a hybrid, forged by a unique blend of two worlds.

With a final, gasping shudder, he broke the stance and collapsed onto the

dirt, his chest heaving. His mana was completely, utterly spent. It was the best

feeling in the world. Draining the lake to make it just a little bit bigger when

it refilled.

He lay there for a minute, staring at the purple-orange sky.

Today.

Today was the Grimoire Acceptance Ceremony. The day his 15-year plan

finally moved to phase two.

He'd done all he could. He had the meta-knowledge of the plot. He had a

body that, he suspected, could rival a knight-in-training. All he needed now

was the final piece: a grimoire.

He stood, his muscles already knitting back together under his mana's gentle,

practiced flow. He wasn't even sore anymore.

He ran back to his family's small but sturdy farmhouse, his feet barely

touching the ground. His "mother" and "father," simple, kind commoners,

waved him in for a breakfast of hard bread and potato soup. They loved their

strange, quiet, intensely disciplined son, even if they didn't understand him.

"Don't forget the delivery for the church, Lencar," his mother, Marta said, using

her weak wind magic to clear the dust from the table.

"I won't," he replied, grabbing the warm, cloth-wrapped loaf. His family's

farmland was decent, and they always shared their bread with the Hage church.

"You're a good lad," his father, Rion added, stoking the hearth with a small,

controlled puff of fire magic from his finger. Both their grimoires were thin,

three-leaf clovers with only two pages of spells each, but they were content.

He stepped outside, the loaf tucked under his arm, and immediately heard the sound of a voice that could shatter glass.

​"I'M GOING TO BE THE WIZARD KING! JUST WATCH ME, YUNO!"

​Lencar didn't need to look. Variable A (Asta) and Variable B (Yuno) were approaching the path. Asta was currently doing thumb-pushups while moving forward, his face a mask of sweaty determination. Yuno walked beside him, hands in his pockets, looking like he was strolling through a garden rather than a dusty path.

​"Morning, Lencar," Yuno said, his voice calm and level. "Finished your 'resistance' training?"

​Lencar nodded slightly. "The numbers don't lie, Yuno. Consistency is the only path to growth."

​"NUMBERS?!" Asta jumped up, vibrating with energy. "I don't need numbers! I just need GUTS! Hey, Lencar, today's the day! One of us is going to get a grimoire that'll make the nobles cry! It's probably gonna be me!"

​"The statistical probability of you getting a 'top-tier' grimoire with zero mana is... unique," Lencar said, keeping his tone neutral. He didn't want to discourage Asta, but he couldn't help the analyst in him.

​"Unique means GOOD!" Asta roared, charging toward the church.

He had avoided them his

entire life. They were the protagonists. Getting close to them was a one-way

ticket to chaos. He had his own path.

The Prodigy of Magic. The Prodigy of Muscle.

And me, Lencar thought, a small, confident smile touching his lips. The

Prodigy of Method.

The Grimoire Tower for their region was a dusty, ancient thing. Lencar

stood in the crowd, a calm island in a sea of nervous, chattering teenagers.

"​Ahem, Welcome, young seekers!" his voice echoed, booming with a weight that made the dust dance. "Today, you stand at the threshold of your destiny. Long ago, our land was on the brink of total annihilation. A terrifying demon threatened to swallow the world in darkness. But one man stood against it. With a single grimoire and a heart of light, he slew the beast and became the first Wizard King."

​Drouot gestured toward the massive skull visible through the tower's high windows.

​"That legend is not just a story; it is the foundation of the Clover Kingdom. Each of you holds the potential to protect our peace. Whether you are a peasant from the Forsaken Realm or a royal from the capital, the grimoire does not judge by blood. It judges by the soul! It is the tool that will shape your mana into miracles!"

​He leaned forward, his eyes twinkling.

​"Some of you will find simple spells for daily life. Some will find the power to lead armies. But remember: a grimoire is only as great as the mage who wields it! Now... seek your truth!"

Lencar tuned him out, his heart beginning to pound, his discipline finally

cracking under the sheer anticipation. This is it. Fire. Water. Earth. Lightning.

I don't care. Just give me something to work with. Give me a tool to put in

this weapon-rack of a body.

"And now... the granting!"

Light exploded from the walls. Grimoires shot through the air. And then,

the pillar. A brilliant, blinding golden light.

Right on schedule, Lencar thought, shielding his eyes. The four-leaf clover.

Yuno's destiny. It lowered itself into the prodigy's hand.

The room was silent, awestruck. The light faded. The last of the grimoires

settled.

And Lencar's hands were still empty.

He stared at them. A cold, sharp, unplanned dread pierced his disciplined

mind. What?

He looked over. Asta, too, was empty-handed, and was already shouting

about it. The crowd was snickering, pointing.

No. This isn't right. Lencar frantically searched his own mana. It was there,

small but present. I have mana! I'm not Asta! I've been training for a decade!

Why...?

For the first time in fifteen years, Kenji Tanaka's panic completely over-

whelmed Lencar Abarame's control.

Thud.

It wasn't a zip. It wasn't a flash of light.

It was the sound of a heavy, neglected object falling from a high shelf, bounc-

ing off a railing, and landing with a dusty whump at his feet.

The room, which had been focused on Asta, went silent again. Everyone

turned.

Lencar looked down. It was... nothing. A book, bound in plain, unadorned,

slightly scuffed brown leather. No clover. No emblem. No glow. A perfect,

smooth, blank slate.

"W-what is that?"

"He's worse than the loud one! He got a blank book!"

His hands shaking, Lencar bent down and picked it up. The moment his

fingers touched the leather, the panic evaporated, replaced by a jolt not of

magic, but of potential. It felt... hungry. Empty.

He heard the tower master's dismissive scoff. He heard the fresh wave of

laughter. He was "Blank Book." Asta was "No Book." The two jokes of the

ceremony.

Lencar clutched the book to his chest. He ignored them all. He stared

at the blank cover, a slow, dawning realization—a hypothesis—forming in his

analytical mind. It's a vessel. It's empty because I'm supposed to fill it.

As the crowd began to disperse, he felt the stares. He needed a disguise for

his grimoire. Hide.

He focused, pushing his small mana pool into the blank cover. Look normal.

Look like everyone else.

A simple, two-leaf clover, faint as a watermark, slowly faded into view on

the brown leather. It was weak, pathetic, and utterly unconvincing. But it was

something. It was control.

My grimoire... it's for Replica Magic.

The realization was electrifying. He looked up, and his eyes locked on Yuno,

who was walking past, the golden four-leaf clover held at his side.

Lencar's analytical mind raced. Test it. Test it now.

He stumbled forward, "accidentally" tripping. "Woah!"

He slammed into Yuno's side, his own blank grimoire slapping flat against

the cover of the four-leaf clover. It was a perfect, cover-to-cover contact for less

than half a second.

"Ah, sorry!" Lencar gasped, pushing himself off. "Incredible grimoire, man.

Congrats. Don't trip on your way out like I did."

Yuno gave him a strange, neutral look, then nodded and walked on.

Lencar leaned against the wall, his heart hammering from the sheer audacity

of the gamble. He waited until the tower was empty, then opened his grimoire.

The first page was still blank. He almost despaired, until he felt it.

It started as a trickle, then a stream, then a roaring, deafening tsunami. A

boundless, bottomless ocean of mana flooded his body. It was vast, powerful,

and utterly serene. It was Yuno's mana.

His own small, flickering mana pool didn't just grow; it was eclipsed, replaced

by a new, massive capacity that felt as wide as the sky.

He almost passed out from the sensory overload.

Gasping, Lencar looked at his grimoire. A new section had appeared, titled

"Wind Magic." He turned the page. There, in perfect, elegant script, was a

single spell: Wind creation spell: [Towering TORNADO].

He stared, his mind finally grasping the rules.

He had Yuno's mana capacity. He had one of Yuno's spells. He could feel,

instinctively, that he couldn't change the spell. He could cast it, but he couldn't

shape it or use the wind flexibly. It was a replica, a perfect but inflexible copy.

As Asta's distant shouting echoed from outside, Lencar clutched his grimoire.

His small, two-leaf clover disguise had faded, leaving the cover blank once more.

He had no magic of his own. But now, he had the potential for all of it.

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