Reincarnated as the Only Male in an All-Girls Magic Academy!-Chapter 71: Start Of The Trial.

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Chapter 71: Start Of The Trial.

The morning sun painted the side block in shades of gold and amber, its rays filtering through the ornate windows and casting dancing patterns across the polished stone floors.

The air itself seemed to shimmer with anticipation, charged with an energy that made every breath feel electric.

It was the kind of perfect morning that seemed designed for momentous occasions, when even the light appeared more brilliant than usual.

Prospectives moved through the corridors and courtyards with a mixture of excitement and nervous tension that was almost palpable.

Their dark blue and orange uniforms created streams of color as they flowed through the common areas, gathering in small groups to discuss strategy or walking alone in focused meditation.

The fabric rustled with each movement, creating a symphony of whispered conversations and hurried footsteps.

Some stretched and warmed up in the open spaces, their movements precise and controlled as they prepared their bodies for the challenges ahead.

Others sat quietly, their eyes closed in concentration as they centered their minds and reviewed their techniques one final time.

The diversity of preparation methods spoke to the individual approaches each prospective had developed during their time at the academy.

The tournament that everyone had been anticipating for days was finally here.

Today would determine who among them possessed not just skill, but the mental fortitude and tactical intelligence to excel under pressure.

The air thrummed with the collective energy of hundreds of young weavers preparing to prove themselves worthy of advancement to the main academy.

Back in his dormitory room, Ren stood before his mirror with the kind of serene composure that seemed almost supernatural given the day’s significance.

His reflection showed a young man who had been transformed by weeks of intensive training.

His posture was straighter, his movements more fluid, his very presence somehow more substantial than it had been when he first arrived at the academy.

He adjusted his uniform shirt with careful precision, smoothing out the few wrinkles that had formed during the night.

The dark blue fabric contrasted beautifully with his silver hair, which caught the morning light streaming through their window and seemed to glow with its own inner radiance.

Every gesture was controlled and purposeful, as if he were performing a ritual rather than simply getting dressed.

His silver hair fell in perfect waves as he ran his fingers through it, each strand settling into place with the kind of natural elegance that couldn’t be forced or faked.

The mirror reflected back an image of quiet confidence, of someone who had found his center and wasn’t going to be shaken by external pressures.

The transformation from the uncertain boy who had arrived weeks ago was complete. This was a young warrior who had discovered his own power and learned to wield it with precision and grace.

Behind him, Lia’s voice rose in frustration as she searched through their shared space with increasingly frantic energy.

"Where is it? Where could it possibly be?" she muttered, pulling drawers open and rifling through their contents with the kind of desperate intensity that suggested the missing item was crucial to her very survival.

Her hair was a tangled mess from sleep, dark strands sticking up at odd angles and creating a wild crown around her head.

Despite there being a full hour before they needed to leave for the tournament, she was moving with the panicked urgency of someone who was already running late.

Her uniform was wrinkled, her socks didn’t match, and there was a look of barely contained chaos in her eyes.

"My comb!" she exclaimed, diving under her bed and emerging with dust bunnies in her hair.

"I can’t find my comb anywhere! How am I supposed to look presentable for the tournament if I can’t even tame this disaster?"

She gestured wildly at her hair, which seemed to have developed a life of its own overnight.

The contrast between her frenzied searching and Ren’s calm preparation was almost comical.

While he moved with the fluid grace of someone completely in control of his environment, she bounced around their room like a pinball, checking the same places multiple times and growing more agitated with each failed search.

Ren watched her performance with the kind of fond amusement that came from weeks of living with someone whose organizational skills were legendary for all the wrong reasons.

Without pausing in his own preparations, his enhanced senses easily located the missing comb sitting in plain sight on her nightstand, partially hidden behind a small potted plant she had insisted on keeping despite their limited space.

"You mean this comb?" he asked, reaching over and plucking it from its hiding place with the casual ease of someone who had been watching her search for several minutes.

He held it up between two fingers, letting it catch the light so she couldn’t possibly miss it.

Lia’s expression shifted from panic to embarrassment to mock indignation in the space of a heartbeat.

"How long have you known where it was?" she demanded, snatching the comb from his hand with more force than was strictly necessary.

"Since you started looking," he replied with a slight smile that managed to be both teasing and affectionate.

"I was wondering how long it would take you to actually look on your nightstand instead of everywhere else in the room."

She aimed a playful swat at his shoulder, which he dodged with fluid grace. "You’re terrible," she accused, but there was laughter in her voice.

"Here I am, having a crisis, and you’re just standing there being all calm and superior."

"At this rate," Ren continued, his tone light but with just enough mock concern to make his point,

"I’m starting to wonder how you’ll fare in actual combat. If you can’t spot a comb that’s right in front of you, what happens when an opponent tries a feint?"

Lia’s response was immediate and involved another attempted swat, this one aimed at his head.

"I was stressed!" she protested, settling down in front of her own mirror and beginning the careful process of working through the tangles in her hair.

"Some people don’t wake up looking like they stepped out of a painting, you know."

She attacked her hair with the kind of determined focus that suggested she was taking out some of her nervous energy on the innocent tangles.

Each stroke of the comb was deliberate and thorough, gradually transforming the chaotic mess into something resembling her usual neat appearance.

The process was almost meditative, her breathing slowing as she found rhythm in the repetitive motion.

"Besides," she added, pausing to examine her progress in the mirror, "being observant about missing combs and being observant about combat techniques are completely different skills. I’ll have you know my tactical awareness is excellent when it matters."

Ren nodded seriously, though his eyes twinkled with suppressed mirth. "Of course. I’m sure all your opponents will be considerate enough to hide behind potted plants where you can easily spot them."

When Lia finally finished with her hair, arranging it in the neat style she preferred for formal occasions, she turned to face him with an expression that mixed confidence with genuine uncertainty.

"How do I look?" she asked, and there was something vulnerable in the question that went beyond simple vanity.

The tournament represented more than just competition for her, it was a chance to prove that she belonged among the academy’s elite, that her acceptance hadn’t been a mistake or an act of charity.

The way she held herself, the slight tension in her shoulders, all spoke to the pressure she was feeling to perform at her absolute best.

Ren’s expression softened as he looked at her, seeing past the surface preparation to the determined warrior beneath.

"Amazing," he said simply, and the sincerity in his voice made it clear that he wasn’t just being polite. "Same as always."

The compliment hit its mark, and Lia’s smile was radiant as confidence flooded back into her posture.

In that moment, she transformed from a nervous student into the capable fighter he had trained alongside for weeks.

Before he could react, she stepped forward and kissed him quickly on the lips, the gesture so spontaneous and natural that it seemed to surprise both of them.

The kiss was brief but warm, carrying with it weeks of shared training, mutual support, and growing affection that had developed between them.

"That doesn’t mean I won’t whoop your ass if we meet in the tournament," she said as she pulled back, her grin equal parts affectionate and competitive.

There was a fire in her eyes now, the kind of determined intensity that made her such a formidable opponent despite her sometimes scattered approach to daily life.

Ren’s response was immediate and came with a smile that matched her own competitive spirit. "I wouldn’t want it any other way," he replied, and the words carried the weight of genuine respect for her abilities.

The prospect of facing her in combat didn’t intimidate him, it excited him, the way any true warrior was excited by the chance to test themselves against a worthy opponent.

.....

The massive arena had been transformed overnight into something that resembled a colosseum from ancient legends.

The stone construction was both elegant and imposing, designed to accommodate not just competition but spectacle on a grand scale.

Morning sunlight streamed through carefully positioned openings, creating dramatic patterns of light and shadow across the arena floor.

Despite its enormous size, the arena was only half-filled with the combined student bodies from all three side blocks.

Hundreds of prospectives in their distinctive uniforms created a sea of dark blue and orange that rippled with movement and conversation.

The remaining empty space seemed to emphasize just how vast the construction was, designed to accommodate crowds that dwarfed even this significant gathering.

The prospectives had arranged themselves in loose groupings that roughly corresponded to their block affiliations, though there was some mixing at the boundaries.

The atmosphere was electric with anticipation, conversations flowing in multiple languages as students from different backgrounds shared their nervousness and excitement about the coming trials.

Some areas buzzed with animated discussion as groups debated strategy and shared last-minute advice.

Other sections were quieter, filled with individuals who preferred solitary preparation or meditation before facing the unknown challenges ahead.

The conversations gradually died down as a familiar procession emerged from the arena’s entrance stairs.

The same group of instructors who had overseen their training and evaluation throughout their time at the academy moved with the kind of measured dignity that commanded immediate attention.

Their robes rustled softly as they took their positions, each movement precise and purposeful.

But it was the figure at the center of the group that drew every eye and silenced every voice.

The short woman in purple robes was instantly recognizable from their first special event; her stereotypical witch-like appearance somehow made more imposing by familiarity rather than less.

Her pointed hat cast shadows across her weathered face, and her staff clicked against the stone floor with each measured step.

She moved with the kind of authority that didn’t need to be announced or proclaimed.

Students straightened instinctively as she passed, recognizing someone whose power was both real and significant within the academy’s hierarchy.

The way the other instructors deferred to her made it clear that she held a position of considerable influence.

When she reached the center of the arena floor, she turned to face the assembled prospectives with the kind of theatrical timing that suggested years of experience commanding large audiences.

The silence was complete now, hundreds of young warriors waiting to hear what challenges lay ahead of them.

She cleared her throat with a sound that somehow carried perfectly to every corner of the massive arena despite its size.

The acoustics had been designed to ensure that even whispered words from the center could be heard clearly in the furthest seats, and her voice filled the space with effortless authority.

"Welcome, prospective students," she began, her words echoing slightly off the stone walls before settling into perfect clarity.

"Today marks your final special event before admission to the main Imperial Weaver Academy as official students."

The words sent a visible ripple through the assembled crowd as the reality of what they were facing settled in.

This was the culmination of everything they had worked toward since arriving at the academy.

Success here meant advancement to the next level of their education and careers. Failure meant... well, nobody wanted to contemplate what failure might mean.

"I am now about to explain what your first trial will entail," she continued, pausing to let the significance of the moment build.

The silence stretched, filled with the collective held breath of hundreds of young warriors waiting to learn their fate.

Her staff tapped once against the stone floor, the sound sharp and final in the pregnant quiet that surrounded them all.

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