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The Extra is a Genius!?-Chapter 515: Exhaustion
Noel didn’t waste time easing into it.
He moved up beside Gustave while the crew kept straining against the hull, voices rough and uneven as ropes creaked under the effort. The ship groaned again, stubborn as its captain had said, refusing to budge more than a few inches at a time.
"Walk me through it," Noel said, tone calm, practical. "What’s holding and what isn’t."
Gustave wiped a hand across his mouth and nodded toward the ship. "Hull’s sound," he said. "No splits, no flooding. That’s the miracle. Steering took the worst of it—rudder’s misaligned, some internal damage. She won’t move on her own like this." He exhaled. "We tried forcing her back into the water. Didn’t get far."
"So it’s muscle and time," Noel said.
"And hands," Gustave replied. "Which we’re short on."
Noel nodded once, then asked the next question without hesitation. "Supplies."
Gustave’s shoulders loosened just a fraction. "Better than expected. A few stores were smashed when we ran aground, but most held. Food’s fine. Water too. We’re not starving."
Elyra stepped in beside Noel, folding her arms loosely. "He’s carrying reserves," she said, glancing at Noel. "Dimensional pouch. Enough to keep people alive if something goes wrong." Her gaze sharpened slightly. "But that’s not for daily use. That’s for when everything else fails."
"Agreed," Noel said immediately.
He looked back to Gustave. "Casualties."
The captain didn’t dodge it. "We lost people," he said quietly. "A bit over ten. More injured. But considering how hard we hit..." He shook his head. "Could’ve been worse."
Elyra’s jaw tightened. Her expression hardened—not collapsing, not cracking, just setting into something colder and more resolved. "When we’re out of this," she said evenly, "their families will be compensated. Properly."
Gustave met her eyes and inclined his head. "They’ll be remembered."
Noel let the silence sit for a moment, the sounds of labor and strained wood filling the gap. Then he nodded once, the priorities aligning clearly in his mind.
"Alright," he said. "Then this is manageable."
Elyra shifted her weight and turned slightly, cutting across the flow of the conversation without raising her voice. "Before we go any further with the ship," she said, tone firm but controlled, "we need to deal with something else first."
Gustave looked at her. So did Noel.
"Clara needs a secure place," Elyra continued. "Somewhere she can sit, lie down if needed. Away from strain, away from fighting."
There was no preamble. No softening of the words.
"She’s pregnant."
The noise around them didn’t stop. The crew kept pushing. The hull kept groaning. But something in the space between the group shifted all the same.
Gustave’s gaze moved to Clara.
He didn’t say anything. He didn’t frown or raise his voice or demand an explanation. He simply looked at her for a long second longer than necessary, taking in the way she stood, the way her hands rested unconsciously at her sides, the tension she hadn’t fully managed to hide.
His silence was heavy.
Clara noticed. Of course she did. Her shoulders drew in slightly, and she looked away, jaw tightening as if she’d expected this reaction and decided to accept it anyway.
Gustave finally spoke, voice even. "That changes things."
"Yes," Elyra said.
Noel didn’t interject. Neither did anyone else. There was nothing to argue. No justification that would make the situation safer than it already wasn’t.
Gustave turned slightly, gesturing toward the ship behind him.
The vessel loomed over the shore, its hull broad and reinforced, layered with plated wood and mana-treated metal meant to withstand siege fire and prolonged campaigns. This wasn’t a merchant ship scraped together for trade routes—it was an Estermont war vessel. Built for conflict. Built with obscene amounts of coin. Even stranded, even battered, it carried the quiet presence of something designed to dominate the sea rather than beg it for passage.
"We’ll make space," Gustave said. "One of the inner cabins. Reinforced bulkheads. Minimal vibration." His tone made it clear this wasn’t a suggestion. "She won’t be near the deck crews or the loading lines."
Clara looked up at him. "I can still help," she said, softly but stubbornly. "Just not—"
"No," Gustave replied. "Not here."
There was no need to explain further. On a ship like this, those words meant the decision had already been accounted for in structure, protocol, and priority.
Clara’s shoulders drew in slightly. She looked away, jaw tightening, fully aware of what that silence and refusal meant—and why she deserved neither comfort nor leniency for it.
Elyra didn’t react outwardly, but her presence shifted. This was her family’s vessel. Her responsibility. And the line Gustave had drawn aligned perfectly with it.
Noel and Elyra moved together toward the clustered crew without exchanging a word. They didn’t need to. The ship was loud with effort—boots scraping wood, strained voices calling counts and instructions—but beneath it all ran the quieter rhythm of injury: uneven breathing, suppressed groans, the stillness of people trying not to draw attention to pain they couldn’t hide much longer.
Charlotte followed them.
She hadn’t said anything since Gustave’s decision, but Noel felt her presence at his back all the same, light steps keeping pace. When they reached the first group of wounded, she stopped beside Noel, eyes already scanning faces, posture straightening as if a switch had been thrown.
"Everyone who’s hurt," Charlotte said, voice carrying without needing to rise, "line up. I’ll help as many as I can."
There was a brief hesitation—then movement. Crew members shifted, supported one another, formed a loose line with the quiet efficiency of people who didn’t need to be told twice. Some avoided her eyes. Others looked at her like she’d just turned the tide of the day.
Noel watched her for a moment longer than he meant to.
He stepped closer, lowering his voice so only she could hear. "You don’t have to push," he said. "But stop before it gets bad."
Charlotte glanced at him, the corner of her mouth lifting in that familiar, gentle way that never quite fooled him. "I know," she said. "I will."
He didn’t argue. Instead, he leaned in and pressed a brief kiss to her forehead. His hand hovered there for half a second longer than necessary before dropping back to his side.
"Please," he added softly. "Listen to your body."
She nodded once, eyes steady despite the exhaustion already creeping in, and turned back to the line.
Golden light bloomed around her hands as the first Blessing took hold. The effect was immediate. Color returned to pallid faces. Tension eased. A man who’d been clutching his ribs straightened with a gasp of relief that bordered on laughter.
And Charlotte swayed.
It was subtle. Just a fraction slower on the next step. A breath held a little too long before she moved to the next person. Noel saw it anyway. He always did.
As the crew recovered, Charlotte faded—color draining, shoulders tightening, each Blessing shaving something off that she didn’t get back. Elyra noticed too, jaw setting as she watched the exchange play out again and again: strength transferred, balance shifted, mercy paid for in quiet installments.
Gustave didn’t stay to watch the last of the Blessings take effect.
He waited until Charlotte had steadied herself—until the line thinned and the deck felt less like a triage ward—before speaking again. His voice was lower now, meant for the small circle that had naturally formed around Noel and Elyra.
"We haven’t gone far from the ship," he admitted. "Not once. Whatever’s out there..." He glanced past the hull, toward the inland rise where broken stone and warped ground disappeared into shadow. "It’s not quiet. And it’s not something you scout lightly."
Noel followed his gaze.
The island stretched far beyond what they’d first seen from the edge. Layers of elevation. Ruined structures half-swallowed by earth. Mana residue still clinging to the air like a lingering stormfront. It wasn’t just large—it was dense. The kind of place where problems didn’t sit still and wait to be found.
Too big to ignore.
The device at Noel’s side hummed again, sharper this time. 𝗳𝚛𝚎𝚎𝘄𝕖𝕓𝕟𝕠𝚟𝚎𝕝.𝗰𝕠𝐦
"There are a lot of people on this island," Theo said the moment the connection opened. "More than the last one. Spread out. Some clustered. Some moving. Some hiding. I can’t give you clean patterns yet, but it’s... populated."
Gustave turned, surprise plain on his face. "Who’s that?"
"Theo," Noel said. "He’s been guiding us since the first island. Tracking movement. Warning us before things get bad." He paused, then added, "He’s the reason we knew you were still alive."
A beat passed.
Then Gustave inclined his head slightly toward the device. "You have my thanks. Sounds like you’ve earned them."
"Likewise, Captain," Theo replied. "You kept the ship intact. That wasn’t luck."
A thin smile crossed Gustave’s face. "Years at sea," he said. "They teach you what not to let go."
Noel drew a slow breath, the pieces already arranging themselves into something workable, if not comfortable.
"We secure the ship," he said. "Finish stabilizing the crew. Make sure she can move when we need her to." His eyes lifted again toward the island’s interior. "Then we deal with the Shard here. And after that—" His voice didn’t harden, but it anchored. "We go back for Marcus and Roberto."
No one questioned the order.
Noel took one step forward.
Then his legs gave out.
There was no warning. No stumble, no dramatic sway. One moment he was standing, focused and speaking—and the next, the strength simply wasn’t there anymore.
Elyra caught him before he hit the deck, arms locking around his shoulders with instinctive precision. At the same time, shadows peeled away beneath him as Noir surged out of his silhouette, her form expanding until she stood solid and massive beside them.
They eased him down together.
Noel didn’t fight it. Didn’t even try to stay upright. His body went slack the moment it was supported, breath shallow, exhaustion written into every line of him.
Noir lowered herself carefully, allowing his weight to settle across her back, her presence steady and protective. She stayed still once he was secure, emerald eyes lifting briefly to the others before returning to him.







