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Saving The Monster Race Starts With Breeding The Elf Village-Chapter 152: Fight For Your Future
The realization hit the crowd like a wave of ice water.
They had assumed that the horrors of Luca’s world were contained there.
That the weapons he brought were anomalies, curiosities from somewhere so far away they might as well be from another dimension.
They had lived in a comfortable bubble, believing that what couldn’t reach them couldn’t hurt them.
But Luca was telling them that bubble was an illusion.
The humans on the other continent would progress.
They would advance through the same stages Luca’s ancestors had.
They would discover gunpowder, develop firearms, refine them over generations.
And eventually—maybe in decades, maybe in centuries, but eventually—they would hold weapons like the one in Luca’s hand.
Weapons that could tear through wooden walls like paper.
Weapons that could turn a village into a graveyard in seconds.
Weapons that could end the elf race entirely.
The horror of it settled over the crowd like a physical weight.
Faces that had been curious moments ago now showed naked fear.
Mothers pulled their children closer.
Sisters gripped each other’s hands.
Even the bravest warriors among them looked shaken.
They had been living in a peaceful mindset, thinking nothing truly bad could happen.
That they could simply exist, unchanged, untouched by the march of time.
Now they understood.
The same chaos Luca had just demonstrated—the same brutal, effortless destruction could one day be unleashed upon them by human hands.
And if they remained as they were, passive and unchanging, they would have no defense. No answer. No hope.
Luca watched them for a moment, letting the weight of realization settle.
Then he raised a hand.
"But don’t worry."
The words cut through the growing panic like a blade. Every eye snapped to him.
"It’s not like they’re going to attack right now. The development of gunpowder and firearms in your world is still in its infancy."
Right now, on the human continent, they’re just beginning to experiment with cannons—crude things, massive and unreliable. It will take a very long time before they create anything like this."
He patted the rifle.
"Especially something that can fire at this rate."
A ripple of relief passed through the crowd. Some shoulders loosened. Some breaths came easier.
"But—"
The word cut through the relief like a blade.
Luca’s face grew solemn again.
"That’s not the point I’m trying to make. The timeline isn’t what matters here."
He looked around at all of them—at every elf gathered in that clearing.
"What matters is that you cannot stay as you are. You cannot remain passive, stuck in your old ways, believing that everything will be fine if you just maintain the status quo."
He pointed at them, at their traditional clothing, at their ancient practices.
"I mean, just look at yourselves. You refuse to eat meat because of old traditions, even when food is scarce."
"You rely on outdated medicine and healing practices because that’s what you’ve always done."
"You cling to your old ways like a child clinging to a worn-out blanket, even when those ways no longer serve you."
His voice hardened.
"The humans aren’t doing that."
"No. They’re progressing. They’re advancing. They’re moving forward, evolving, growing stronger."
"They’re doing everything they can to gain advantage—over the land, over resources, over anything that stands in their way."
He gestured toward the distant human continent.
"And if you keep maintaining the status quo? If you keep idling away, thinking your lives will be fine with no worries, just like you did in the past when mana protected you? It won’t be long before the humans gain an insurmountable advantage."
He sighed, letting his next words land with full weight.
"I’m here to protect you now. But imagine if I wasn’t. Imagine if the same pattern continued—you staying static, them advancing."
"What do you think would happen then?"
No one spoke.
No one could. 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚
But images filled their minds unbidden.
Blood on the ground. Bodies scattered. Homes burning.
The village that had stood for millenniums reduced to ash and memory.
Leona looked away, her face twisted with grim horror. She didn’t want to imagine it.
But she couldn’t stop.
She saw Luna, her daughter, lying dead on the ground. She saw Lulu beside her, holding her hand, while Nyx corpse who died trying to protect them.
She saw the little ones, the children she had watched grow, torn apart by weapons they couldn’t comprehend or defend against.
She saw everything she loved, destroyed.
And in that moment, she understood.
Slowly, she turned back to Luca. Her voice was quiet, but steady.
"So that’s what this is really about."
Luca met her gaze.
"It’s not just about showing us how powerful the gun is. It’s not just about making us fear it."
She swallowed.
"It’s about showing us the threat that’s looming. The threat that will conquer us if we don’t change. If we don’t stop being passive and start progressing."
Luca stared at her for a second before he let out a breath—a sigh of relief, of acknowledgment, of hope.
"Yes, Leona. That’s exactly what I’m trying to say."
He looked around at all of them, his expression earnest.
"I’m not telling you to immediately start building factories and inventing new technologies. I’m not expecting you to transform overnight."
"But I am telling you that you need to wake up."
He said with so much conviction, that made them feel like a splash of water was thrown at their faces.
"You need to stop assuming everything will be fine."
"That the future will be as peaceful as the past."
"That you can just continue existing without effort or change."
He pointed at the destroyed wall.
"That was wood. Splinters. Easily replaced. But if you don’t learn this lesson—if you don’t understand that you must adapt, must grow, must fight for your future—then one day, that won’t be wood."
"It will be you. Your children. Everyone you love."
The elves stood in heavy silence, processing everything.
And slowly, something began to shift.
It started with the elders—the ones who remembered the days of magic, who had lived through the transition to this new world.
They looked at each other, and in their eyes was not fear, but grim acknowledgment.
They had been clinging to the past because the past was all they had left.
But Luca was right. The past was gone. And if they kept staring backward, they would never see the danger coming from ahead.
Then the mothers, the ones who held children in their arms, who had the most to lose. Their grips tightened on their little ones, but not just in fear.
In determination.
They would not let their children be victims of a future they could have prevented.
Then the young ones—Luna and Lulu and their peers.
The fire that had always burned in them, the restlessness that had made them mock tradition, the hunger for something more—it found a new direction.
Not just rebellion for its own sake, but purpose.
They could be the ones to change.
They could be the ones to build something new.
Even the little children, who didn’t fully understand the words but felt the shift in the adults around them, straightened their small backs and looked at Luca with something like hero worship.
One by one, face by face, the fear transformed.
Into determination.
Into resolve.
Into a burning, collective will to survive and thrive.
Leona herself felt it—a fire she hadn’t felt in decades.
A fire that had been extinguished when she married Julius, when she lost her place, when she thought her life was over.
But it was back now, burning brighter than ever.
She would not let her daughters or sister die.
She would not let her people fade.
She would change.
They would all change.
Together.
Not because Luca told them to.
But because their future depended on it.
Meanwhile, Luca watched the transformation with a quiet smile.
This was what he had hoped for.
This was what he had needed to see.
He had feared that the elves would remain stuck in their ways, blind to the danger approaching them.
He had worried that no matter what he showed them, no matter what he said, they would retreat back into their comfortable traditions and wait for disaster to strike.
But now?
Now he could see it. The change was real. The spark had caught.
They were finally ready to fight for their future.
And that, more than any weapon or tool or piece of technology, was what would save them.







