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The Extra is a Genius!?-Chapter 537: Shardbound March
The streets opened wide as they moved away from the harbor.
Stone avenues stretched ahead in clean lines, broad enough for traffic that never came. Windows stood unshuttered, doors closed but undamaged, signs hanging neatly above shops that looked ready to open at any moment. It felt like walking through a city caught mid-breath, everything in place, nothing progressing. On the outer islands, emptiness had meant ruin. Here, it meant suspension.
Noel walked at the front without rushing, steps steady, attention spread outward rather than forward. Noir stayed close to his shadow, her presence brushing against his awareness as she tracked the same invisible currents he did. The pull ahead was constant now, no longer faint, no longer ambiguous. Whatever held that much life wasn’t scattered. It was centralized.
Movement broke the stillness.
From a side street, shapes emerged, metal scraping softly against stone. The first chained monsters stepped into view, their motions stiff and synchronized, heads lowered, limbs jerking in half-correct responses. Thick chains ran from their torsos and wrists, trailing back into the alley where they vanished into the walls, pulled taut by something deeper in the city.
Marionettes.
They didn’t roar or charge blindly. They advanced in formation, weapons raised with mechanical precision, eyes empty of intent.
Noel didn’t slow.
He stepped forward, blade already in motion, and the first construct never finished lifting its arm. Revenant Fang cut cleanly through the chain at its shoulder, the magic binding it unraveling the instant the connection snapped. The body collapsed where it stood, hollow and inert.
The second fell just as quickly. A short burst of flame along the blade, contained and controlled, burned through reinforced joints without spilling outward. The third tried to flank, chains tightening as it moved, but Noel shifted once, minimal effort, and drove the sword through its core. No spell names. No excess force. Just execution.
It was over in seconds.
More appeared farther down the street, then from another crossing. The pattern repeated. Step. Cut. Break the chain. Move on. Noel barely broke stride, his mana steady, unstrained, his movements smaller than they used to be, more efficient. Where before these encounters would have demanded coordination and setup, now they barely registered.
Behind him, Elyra watched closely, eyes following the flow of the fight rather than the strikes themselves. Elena noticed it too, the way Noel no longer reacted to threats but anticipated them, adjusting before danger fully formed. Selene said nothing, but her gaze never left his back.
"These aren’t defenders," Elena murmured after the last construct fell. "They’re sentries."
Noel nodded.
He looked ahead again, toward where the streets narrowed slightly and the pull of energy thickened, heavy and layered. The city remained silent, intact, deceptive in its calm.
This was only the edge.
The change was immediate.
The pull in the air sharpened, condensing into something heavier, denser, like pressure gathering before a storm. Noel felt it settle against his senses before the others had time to react, the familiar weight of an enemy that didn’t belong to the perimeter.
Stone cracked ahead.
From the intersection where three streets converged, a larger shape stepped into view, its presence warping the stillness around it. The Shard Warden towered over the chained constructs they had cut down moments earlier, its body reinforced with layered plating etched with crystalline seams. Thick chains wrapped around its limbs and torso, far heavier than the others, each link anchored to different points along the street, walls, and ground itself. The system controlling it wasn’t subtle. It was brute, redundant, designed to keep something powerful moving no matter the cost.
Noel recognized it instantly.
Before, this thing had taken all of them. Coordination. Setup. Risk. Even then, it had nearly broken through.
Now, it simply stood there, turning its head with slow, deliberate intent as its chains tightened in unison.
Noel stopped.
The group halted with him, the silence stretching as the Elite took another step forward, stone groaning under its weight. Mana rolled off it in controlled pulses, dense enough to press against the skin.
"I’ll handle this," Noel said calmly.
He stepped ahead without waiting for a response.
Elyra’s voice followed him, steady and without panic. "If it turns dangerous, we go in."
Selene gave a short nod, already braced. Elena didn’t argue. 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞
Noel stopped several paces ahead of them, placing himself squarely in the Elite’s path. He didn’t raise his blade yet. He didn’t rush.
"I want to test something," he said, more to himself than to them.
The Shard Warden moved.
Chains snapped taut, dragging against stone as it surged forward, each step deliberate, crushing. The ground trembled faintly under its advance, mana flaring as the system fed it power.
Behind him, the others stayed where they were.
Watching.
Ready.
Noel drew Revenant Fang at last, the blade settling into his grip with familiar weight. He exhaled once, slow and controlled, eyes fixed on the Elite as it closed the distance.
The Shard Warden struck first.
Chains tore forward in a brutal sweep, links thick as wrists snapping through the air with enough force to crater stone. The control behind them was crude but overwhelming, every line pulling at once, trying to erase space rather than claim it. Noel didn’t step back. He vanished instead, slipping sideways into shadow as the chains slammed together where he had been, stone exploding under the impact.
He reappeared a heartbeat later at the Warden’s flank, already moving. A thin line of lightning flashed from his fingers, precise and silent, punching through one of the chain’s anchor points. The link went slack instantly, control severed, the limb stuttering mid-motion.
The Elite adjusted, or tried to. More chains tightened, compensating, dragging its bulk forward with raw momentum. Noel met it head-on this time, fire blooming tight along Revenant Fang as Ignition Surge wrapped the blade in contained heat. He cut once, clean and short, carving through reinforced plating without letting the flame spill beyond the strike.
The Warden roared, mana surging in response, chains snapping inward again to crush him in place.
Noel was already gone.
A crack of thunder split the air as he drove forward in a line of blinding light, Stormpiercer carrying him straight through the pressure, through the layered defenses, through the heart of the formation. The impact landed with surgical violence, lightning detonating inside the Elite’s frame, armor rupturing as the spell’s velocity and charge overloaded the system holding it together.
The Shard Warden staggered.
It tried to recover. Tried to reassert control. Chains writhed, searching for purchase that no longer existed, their movements lagging behind Noel’s positioning. Every time it turned, he was already elsewhere, breaking another anchor, another joint, another line of command. There was no rhythm it could lock onto. No pattern to adapt to.
Noel stepped back once, just enough to give himself space. The Warden lunged, desperate now, its remaining chains pulling it forward in a final, uncoordinated rush.
He raised Revenant Fang.
"Eclipse Rend."
Shadow swallowed the light.
The blade split into black afterimages, a sweeping arc of pure void cutting forward. It didn’t collide. It erased. Chains dissolved mid-motion, metal devoured as if it had never existed. The Warden’s body followed, its structure collapsing inward as the system anchoring it was stripped away in a single, precise stroke.
The Elite fell without a sound.
What remained hit the ground as an empty shell, hollow and inert, chains clattering lifelessly against stone before fading into nothing.
Silence rushed back in.
Noel stood where he was, blade lowering slowly, mana steady, unstrained.
The remains didn’t linger.
What was left of the Elite sagged inward, the last tension bleeding out of the chains as they lost cohesion. Links dulled, then thinned, then simply ceased to exist, leaving nothing behind but scorched stone and the faint outline of where something massive had stood seconds earlier.
The system asserted itself without ceremony.
[You have slain Shard Warden (Archmage – Elite). You have received 1% Core Progress.]
Noel felt the shift immediately. Not a surge, not a rush, just a deeper settling, like weight redistributed where it belonged.
[Current Core Progress: 44.00% — Mana Core: Archmage]
He exhaled once, slow, eyes lowering briefly as the numbers aligned with what his body already knew. There was no thrill in it. No urge to celebrate. Just confirmation that the gap between effort and result had narrowed even further.
When he turned back, the others were still where he had left them.
Elyra studied the empty street first, then him, eyes sharp with assessment rather than surprise. She tilted her head slightly, a corner of her mouth lifting. "You know," she said, tone light but pointed, "you just earned yourself something for later."
Elena let out a breath she hadn’t realized she was holding, her shoulders easing as she looked from the scorched stone back to Noel. There was relief there, and something quieter beneath it, a recognition of how far he’d come without needing to put it into words.
Selene met his gaze for a brief moment and inclined her head. Nothing more. It was enough.
Noel stepped back toward them, sliding Revenant Fang into place as easily as breathing. He didn’t comment on the fight. He didn’t explain. There was no need.
The pull ahead had sharpened again.
Stronger now. Closer.
He glanced down the narrowing street where the life signatures clustered thick and unmoving, layered atop one another like a held breath. Whatever systems were still running had not reacted to the Elite’s destruction. Whatever mattered hadn’t revealed itself yet.
"Let’s move," he said simply.






