My Infinite System.
Chapter 84: “You’ve earned your graduation.”
CHAPTER 84: “YOU’VE EARNED YOUR GRADUATION.”
Lucian stood in the silence that followed.
The hydra’s scream faded.
Its heads crashed to the floor one by one—stone, fire, frost, wind, lightning—all twitching, all done. The body convulsed, then slumped like a puppet with its strings cut. A low groan came from the monster’s core, deep in its chest, glowing faint green beneath its scales.
But Lucian didn’t look at it.
He turned to the others, sheathing his blade with one smooth motion. His voice came out quiet, steady—like the weight of the battle hadn’t even scratched him.
"Take care of the core," he said. "I don’t want it."
Silas blinked. "You sure?"
Lucian didn’t answer right away. He glanced past them toward the far end of the chamber.
The gate core was still floating there—pulsing, warping. A mess of twisting mana strands that shimmered with pale red light. Unlike the monster, that thing was alive. It wasn’t breathing—but it was aware. Watching.
"I’ll take care of that instead."
Reia stepped toward him. "You think destroying the gate core will...?"
Lucian nodded. "It should collapse the entire gate."
Evelyn frowned. "And send us back?"
"That’s the idea."
He didn’t wait for approval.
Didn’t ask if they were ready.
He just turned and walked.
The ground was cracked beneath his boots, mana still unstable in the air. The further he stepped, the stronger the pull from the core. Not gravitational—just... presence. Like it was daring him. Like it knew.
Lucian stopped a few feet away from it. His hair shifted slightly in the breeze of loose energy swirling off the core’s edges. Red light wrapped around his hands.
And he whispered.
"Collapse."
He didn’t use a skill.
He didn’t shout.
He just reached out—one hand—and gripped the floating gate core like it was nothing more than a beating heart.
A sound rang out.
Low. Deep. Metallic and wet at the same time.
Then the core cracked.
A ripple burst through the entire gate chamber, and the world shook. The walls fractured. The air turned silver. The floor beneath their feet began breaking apart, dissolving into floating shards of light. The ceiling vanished.
And then—
So did everything else.
Like a light blinked out.
Outside, the gate hadn’t moved in hours.
It just stood there—twisted and silent, symbols crawling like veins across its surface. Cracks bled light slowly, like it was leaking time itself. Everyone had tried everything. Still, nothing.
Until now.
Until—
Cracks exploded across the gate’s face.
Dozens of them. Then hundreds.
The runes on its surface pulsed once—violently—before breaking apart into golden particles. The structure folded inward, sucked into itself like a collapsing lung.
Then—
A shockwave of light.
Not destructive. Not hot. Just bright.
And then—silhouettes.
Five.
Lucian stepped out first.
Dust clung to his shoulders. His shirt was torn slightly at the side. His hair was messy, and there was a faint scratch above his brow. But his eyes were steady.
Behind him came Reia, one hand still glowing with active mana as if she hadn’t fully powered down yet. Then Silas—covered in faint soot and bits of stone. Then Evelyn, her clone already gone, her breathing slow but stable. And finally Vyn—floating just slightly, her eyes glowing faint violet.
The field outside erupted in noise.
The gate had opened. They were alive.
The scouts were first to react, rushing forward with scanners and heal spells already forming on their gloves.
Athena didn’t move at first.
Her eyes locked on Lucian.
Then on Evelyn.
Then back to Lucian.
She walked up, her coat flapping lightly in the wind. No words. Not yet.
Lady Merrin was already moving, heels slamming the dirt as she stormed toward them, lips drawn tight.
"Evelyn!" she barked, eyes wide. "You—"
But Evelyn didn’t let her finish.
She raised one hand calmly, like she’d expected this.
"I’m fine."
Lady Merrin looked like she wanted to argue. Scream. Collapse. Instead, she clenched her jaw and backed up a step.
"You’re not allowed to scare me like that again," she muttered.
Evelyn nodded once.
Then turned her head.
Her eyes met Lucian’s for just a moment.
He gave her a slight nod.
She smiled.
Then the Caelum delegates arrived.
"Silas," one of them called.
He tensed slightly. Reia drifted closer to him.
"We’re relieved you’re safe," the eldest said, trying to sound warm. He wasn’t.
Reia’s fingers brushed Silas’s wrist.
He didn’t respond to the delegate. Just said, "We’re fine."
The man tried again. "You should come with us. We have facilities—"
"We’re staying," Reia said. "With Athena."
The air tensed.
Athena finally spoke, stepping beside Lucian.
"They made their own choices," she said. "And they proved themselves."
One of the delegates frowned. "This gate was unregistered. Unstable. They weren’t ready."
Lucian finally looked at him. Calm. Empty.
"They were."
The man opened his mouth, then stopped. Something in Lucian’s eyes made him freeze. Not power. Just weight. Like Lucian had walked through something none of them would ever understand.
Then came the final arrival.
Lucy.
She shoved past the scouts and nobles like they weren’t even there.
She walked right up to Lucian, grabbed his arm, checked his shoulder, scanned his face.
"You good?"
Lucian gave a slow blink. "Yeah."
Lucy stepped back.
Then punched him in the arm.
Hard.
"Idiot," she muttered, turning away quickly.
Athena looked around at the group. The energy field was fading now. The portal gone. Just wind and grass and the smell of old magic in the air.
She nodded once.
Then stepped forward and raised her voice so the whole field could hear.
"This wasn’t a normal gate. It wasn’t meant to be."
Eyes turned to her.
"This was a test. A trap. Maybe both. But Class Zero survived it. Together."
She turned to Lucian again.
Then to Evelyn, Reia, Silas, and Vyn.
"You’re not students anymore," she said.
"You’ve earned your graduation."
No cheering.
No dramatic music.
Just silence.
And then—
Vyn exhaled.
Silas laughed under his breath.
Reia smiled, eyes half-lidded.
Evelyn’s shoulders finally relaxed.
And Lucian?
He just looked up at the sky.
The sun was out now.
The world was still turning.
And somewhere behind his eyes, something new had settled.
A quiet shift.
Not pride.
Not power.
Just...
Clarity.