ShadowBound: The Need For Power

Chapter 741: You Accomplished More Than You Think

ShadowBound: The Need For Power

Chapter 741: You Accomplished More Than You Think

Translate to
Chapter 741: You Accomplished More Than You Think

The shift in the hall was immediate.

The murmurs lowered. Students turned their heads. Those sitting on the floor began pushing themselves up despite obvious exhaustion, while others who had been leaning against friends or walls straightened as much as their bodies allowed.

Even the ones who looked seconds away from collapsing forced themselves upright. Pride, discipline, and academy habit all worked together, making the second years stand as properly as they could while the authoritative figures entered.

Headmaster Thion Layenhart walked in first, composed as always, his steps steady and unhurried. Beside and behind him came Assistant Lucia Greydon, her clipboard held close, her gaze already moving across the students with sharp assessment.

Mystica Moonstone followed with her familiar unreadable smile, looking far too amused by the state of the hall. Sir Kaelen entered with his usual formal bearing, hands behind his back and expression stern. Behind them came the other professors and instructors, each taking in the condition of the second years as they made their way toward the stage.

The authority figures climbed the stage and moved toward their seats, though not all sat immediately. Many remained standing long enough to observe the students properly. The hall had grown almost completely silent now, broken only by the occasional strained breath, shifting footstep, or faint groan from someone trying very hard not to show how much pain they were in.

Thion approached the pulpit at the front of the stage.

For a moment, he said nothing.

His gaze swept across the hall slowly, moving over every second year present. He studied the torn uniforms, the bandages, the blood, the exhaustion, the stubborn posture of those refusing to sit, and the lingering awareness in the eyes of students who had spent seven days surviving somewhere that had forced them to grow or break.

Then he finally spoke.

"Welcome back, second years."

His voice carried across the hall clearly, calm and firm.

A few students seemed to relax just slightly at those words, though most remained stiff and attentive.

Thion’s gaze continued moving across them, and something almost like satisfaction touched his expression.

"I am glad to see that all of you were able to make it through the full assessment period," he continued. "You were placed within an unstable realm, deprived of structure, separated from the usual comfort of your peers and instructors, and forced to rely on your own judgment, endurance, restraint, and adaptability. Looking at you now, I can say that each of you has returned with proof of what you endured."

He paused, allowing the words to settle over the exhausted students.

"You have survived Nalim."

The hall remained quiet for several moments after Headmaster Thion’s words settled over the second years.

No one cheered. No one spoke out of turn. No one even really moved, aside from a few students shifting their weight with faint discomfort or adjusting bandages that had started to loosen during the teleportation back.

The words should have brought relief, perhaps even pride, but most of the students were too exhausted to react properly.

Surviving Nalim sounded impressive when spoken inside the safety of the Eastern Grand Hall. It sounded almost clean. Almost honorable. But to the students standing there with torn uniforms, empty stomachs, aching bodies, and memories of the past seven days still fresh in their minds, survival had not felt clean at all. It had been dirty, painful, humiliating at times, and terrifying in ways many of them were still processing.

Thion allowed the silence to remain for a while longer before speaking again.

"However," he continued, his voice calm but carrying clearly through the hall, "surviving Nalim is not the only thing all of you accomplished during this assessment."

That statement drew a few tired gazes upward.

Some students blinked slowly, as though their minds needed a moment to catch up with the idea that there was still more to be said. Others looked at the Headmaster with faint confusion, while a few exchanged glances with nearby classmates.

Liam remained still where he stood near Charlotte, his eyes fixed toward the stage. Charlotte, for once, did not immediately make a comment. She only folded her arms loosely and waited, though the impatience for her bath was still visible in the way one of her fingers tapped against her arm.

Thion’s gaze moved across the second years again.

"You also managed to accomplish something no previous group of students has achieved during this particular assessment format," he said. "All one hundred of you made it through the full seven days without a single Forced Extraction."

A subtle shift moved through the hall.

This time, the students reacted.

Not loudly, but enough.

Several eyes widened slightly. A few students who had been slouched with exhaustion straightened a little more. Some looked around as if confirming that everyone truly had returned. Others seemed to realize the weight of that statement only after seeing that no one was missing from the hall.

Thion continued.

"More than that, none of you chose to leave through an extraction point. Whether by decision, circumstance, or simple misfortune, every one of you remained within Nalim until the end of the assessment period. That has never happened before."

The hall remained quiet, but the silence had changed slightly.

This one was more aware.

More conflicted.

Because the truth behind that accomplishment was not simple.

There were students among them who had deliberately ignored extraction points when they appeared. Some had seen the shimmering portals open in the distance, felt the chance to leave settle heavily in front of them, and still forced themselves to turn away.

They had wanted to endure the realm for themselves. They had wanted growth. They had wanted proof that they could survive not because the academy offered an exit, but because they were capable of lasting until the end.

There were others who had not been so noble.

Some had found extraction points and tried to reach them, only to arrive seconds too late. They had watched the portals collapse just as their fingers nearly touched the Myst field. Those students now stood in the hall with complicated expressions, because the Headmaster’s praise included them, even though they knew that if their timing had been a little better, they would have left Nalim days ago.

Then there were those who had never seen an extraction point at all.

Not once.

Those students looked especially exhausted, and some among them stared at Thion with the kind of expression that said they did not know whether to feel proud or personally wronged by fate.

If an extraction point had appeared before them, if one had opened even a few meters away while they were starving, wounded, hunted, or simply tired beyond words, the Headmaster’s praise would not have applied to them now.

They knew that. Their classmates knew that. The academy probably knew that too.

Still, despite all those complicated truths, there was one thing every student could accept with some measure of pride.

No one had been forcibly extracted.

Not a single student had reached the point where the academy had to pull them out because they were about to die, collapse completely, or lose the ability to continue.

Some had come close. Some had pushed themselves far beyond what they should have. Some had probably survived by luck, stubbornness, or the kind of desperation they would never admit aloud. But none of them had triggered the academy’s emergency intervention.

And that mattered.

Because Forced Extraction meant failure.

Total failure.

It meant the student had not simply chosen to leave. It meant they had been judged incapable of continuing. Even those who had desperately wanted to escape Nalim had not wanted that. Not one of them had wanted to return to the academy as someone dragged out before the end because they could no longer survive.

Thion seemed to understand that, because his expression softened by the smallest margin.

"I am impressed," he said. "With all of you."

The praise landed differently this time.

A few students lowered their gazes, not out of shame, but because they did not know how to hold that kind of acknowledgment while still feeling so physically destroyed. Others looked at the stage with quiet pride beginning to show through their exhaustion.

Dylan, standing near Liam and Charlotte, gave a weak but very real grin, though it looked like smiling too hard might cost him the last of his strength.

Charlotte leaned slightly closer to Liam and muttered, "Look at us making history. How charming."

Liam did not answer.

After a short while, Thion spoke again.

"I know many of you are currently thinking of only a few things," he said. "The infirmary, food, proper rest, and perhaps a very long bath."

Charlotte immediately gave Liam a look that clearly said the Headmaster understood her.

Liam ignored it.

A few weak chuckles moved through the hall, small and tired but genuine enough to ease some of the tension.

"For that reason," Thion continued, "I will not keep you standing here longer than necessary. The remainder of this announcement will be handled quickly. Miss Greydon, Sir Kaelen, and Sir Regulus will now inform you of your updated rankings."

How did this chapter make you feel?

One tap helps us surface trending chapters and recommend titles you'll actually enjoy — your vote shapes You may also like.