Incubus Living In A World Of Superpower Users-Chapter 266: Post-Fall Global Shifts

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Chapter 266: Post-Fall Global Shifts

The moment Everly’s balance gave out, Ethan was already moving—his stride smooth, purposeful, instinctual.

He caught her before her knees fully buckled, one arm bracing behind her back while the other steadied her side, holding her upright like he’d already calculated the fall and adjusted his steps in advance.

There was no hesitation. No panic. Just movement—fluid, practiced, confident. The kind of movement that didn’t ask for attention but commanded presence anyway.

Professor Deyna didn’t smile or offer a warm, congratulatory line. She simply gave a nod—one of those slow, deliberate gestures that said more than a whole speech might have.

"Right instinct," she said, eyes shifting from Ethan to Everly with calm detachment. "Healing’s not about taking pain. It’s about carrying it just long enough to pass it back."

Everly’s face was pale, her jaw tight from the strain. The muscle beneath her cheek twitched once. She didn’t gasp or cry out. S

he just let out a slow, strained breath through clenched teeth and nodded once, eyes half-lidded but determined. "Got it," she muttered, voice low.

She didn’t say thank you.

And Ethan didn’t need it.

When his turn came, there was no ceremony. The platform lit up beneath his feet like a sleeping beast being stirred, lines of white-blue energy crawling outward from the center.

Ethan stepped onto it with a quiet steadiness, then closed his eyes once, not to focus, but to clear. He wasn’t preparing to endure the pain. He was syncing with it.

Then the simulation hit.

It came fast—faster than he expected. A searing, ripping pain tore through his right side and shoulder, sharp enough to freeze the air in his lungs and make his fingers twitch involuntarily.

For a moment, it felt like someone had reached into his chest and pulled the ligaments apart one by one.

But Ethan didn’t fall or flinch, as he was able to lock his stance, channeled every ounce of tension into his calves and core, and focused inward—not to resist the pain, but to map it.

He tracked each spike as it came, every stinging flare of simulated agony—watching the rhythm, marking the peaks, breathing through the valleys.

Sweat beaded along his forehead, his arms tensed under the weight of invisible trauma, but he never lost balance. His jaw clenched hard enough that his back molars ached by the end.

When the simulation finally faded and the field around him powered down with a soft whine, Ethan stepped down slowly, his fingers cold and twitching slightly, his back soaked in sweat beneath his collar.

He didn’t collapse—but it had taken something out of him.

Deyna didn’t offer praise. No "well done." No comment at all. Just a glance—a measured, approving scan that held him in place for a second longer than necessary, then moved on.

Half the class was already down—either slumped against the back wall or being helped out of the room by assistants.

A third had dropped mid-session and hadn’t come back. No one was joking. No one had the energy for it.

When the final chime sounded to end the session, Deyna addressed them one last time without changing her tone.

"The body recovers. The heart takes longer. And the mind? Longer still. Remember that before you assume healing is a soft skill."

Then she turned away and started repacking the medical kits with precise, practiced motions. That was it. No ceremony. No discussion.

Their next class wasn’t nearby. They had to take a lift two floors up, into a different wing that didn’t feel like the rest of the training buildings.

It was quieter here, more... reflective. The hallways were broader, with low ambient light strips built into the stone—casting a soft, bluish shimmer that reflected across the polished floors like water caught in moonlight.

The amphitheater itself had no seats. Just tiered steps around a recessed floor space, with a cluster of thin-glass panels floating in midair.

Each panel flickered with fragmented clips—archived footage, corrupted maps, shards of surveillance from the early days after the Fall.

It felt less like a classroom and more like a shrine to everything the world had lost.

The course was called Post-Fall Global Shifts.

But the person standing in the center wasn’t a professor. He wasn’t even particularly old.

Orin Galebright stood straight-backed in the center, dressed in formal combat-tailored attire with silver threading along the sleeves—an insignia of rank or old-world lineage.

His voice carried sharp clarity as he opened his presentation, not like a student trying to earn a grade, but like a soldier giving a report to command.

"My ancestors," he began, "were part of the last sanctioned guild tasked with mapping meteor impact zones during the satellite collapse phase of the Fall.

That’s not hearsay. That’s archived proof—recovered, verified, and documented."

He spoke with careful pride, like someone used to knowing their words mattered. No stutter. No hesitations. His pacing was slow, deliberate. Measured.

"We didn’t run when the skies broke open. We stayed. We charted the fractures. Mapped the burnstorm corridors. Protected our holdings while others retreated."

Then his eyes shifted—subtle, but pointed—toward Ethan and the Moonshade twins.

"Some lines, of course," he added, tone still composed, "didn’t earn their territories. They stepped into the silence left behind by others.

Claimed rights to regions already broken. Inherited valor rather than forging it."

The weight of his implication landed like a thrown blade.

Ethan didn’t answer.

But he turned to Evelyn.

She was already moving.

Not rushed. Not angry. She simply stepped down from her position into the amphitheater’s open floor—her boots making no sound on the stone.

She walked with that same composed grace she always had, a quiet steadiness that didn’t ask for attention, but made the absence of noise feel deliberate.

She didn’t ask permission to speak.

"I assume," she began, "you’re referencing the Moonshade line."

Orin shifted his weight slightly, opening his mouth to reply.

She didn’t let him.

"First clarification," she said softly, "our family secured Region 18A five days after the meteor fragmentation. Total casualty count: 19,322. Internal reports only. No outside support."

She stepped another half-meter closer, her voice still level.