Login via

Hunter Academy: Revenge of the Weakest novel Chapter 978

"What?"

The word wasn’t shouted, nor sharp—it was laced with irritation, yes, but also restraint. Julia’s voice cut through the silence like a blade across silk—clean, deliberate. Her arms remained crossed, but her gaze never wavered.

She glared at Victor—not with challenge, not with flirtation, but with expectation.

Because she knew him.

Far better than most in the room.

They all did, in truth. Julia, Lucas, Ethan… even Irina and Carl to an extent. Long before Arcadia Hunter Academy had drawn them into this new war-forged mold, they had crossed paths in pre-academy schools. Institutions meant to raise prodigies. To filter the exceptional from the promising.

And Victor?

Victor Blackthorn had always been exceptional.

Untouchably so.

He hadn’t needed to speak much then either. He simply was. Brilliant, disciplined, devastating in battle. But even in those early days—amid duels and drills, lectures and assessments—there had been one exception to his stoic detachment.

Julia.

It hadn’t been loud. It hadn’t been confessed. But it had been obvious—to those who knew how to look.

The way Victor used to turn his head whenever Julia entered a room, just a moment longer than necessary.

The quiet shifts in his stance when she spoke—how he’d subtly align himself in her direction.

The way he used to offer her his hand first when instructors demanded paired exercises, even when it made less tactical sense.

The way he never corrected her… when he corrected everyone else.

For someone as composed and indifferent as Victor, the subtlety was the confession.

But then came the last year. The withdrawal. The long silences. The way he all but disappeared from the academy under special training orders—his presence reduced to a ghost.

And with that, the signals had stopped.

Or so Julia had assumed.

Now, here he stood. His aura returned. His strength unbound. And yet his gaze?

Still on her.

Still searching.

Victor didn’t answer right away.

He didn’t smile. He didn’t speak.

He simply regarded her—those green eyes unblinking, that calm carved-in-marble expression betraying little. But to Julia, who’d known him longer than most… there was a flicker there.

Victor opened his mouth, the movement subtle—like everything he did—but decisive. The pause ended, and at last, his voice cut through the space between them. Low. Clear. Strangely… careful.

"…You’ve gotten better."

Julia’s eyes narrowed slightly. "Better?"

Victor gave a slight nod. "Yes."

It wasn’t a compliment dressed in flowery language. It was matter-of-fact, unadorned. Like everything else about him, there was no effort to soften or embellish. Just the truth, as he saw it.

He shifted slightly, posture still refined, hands loosely at his sides. "I watched your swordsmanship."

Julia raised an eyebrow, her arms still folded. "You watched?"

"During the duel," he clarified, as if the distinction mattered. "The way you layered illusion into footwork. The rhythm distortion. It’s sharper than before. Less instinct, more design."

Julia held his gaze for a moment longer, then tilted her head and gave a small, sideways smirk. "Of course it is."

A flicker of amusement—so faint it might’ve been imagined—crossed Victor’s features. He looked at her for another second, longer than necessary again, before his eyes slowly slid past her—

—to Astron.

And when they landed on him, the shift was undeniable.

The coldness sharpened.

His calm never broke, but the air around him grew taut, as if invisible strings had pulled just a little tighter.

Astron didn’t move.

Didn’t flinch.

He simply looked back.

Violet eyes meeting gold.

One indifferent.

One unreadable.

Victor’s voice returned—quieter now, but with weight behind it.

"You…"

He didn’t finish right away.

Just that single word, laced with something difficult to parse. Not hatred. Not anger. But something carved deep beneath the surface—curiosity, perhaps. Wariness. Dislike, maybe.

Or something else entirely.

Astron said nothing. Didn’t blink. He simply waited. Watching. Reading.

Victor continued.

"You’re not what I expected."

It wasn’t praise. Nor was it contempt. It was a statement, just like before—factual, precise. But this time, the atmosphere around them bent slightly, like heat rising between two blades drawn but not yet swung.

Irina’s gaze flicked between them, tension prickling at the edge of her senses. Lilia frowned faintly. Lucas and Ethan exchanged a quiet glance.

Julia… didn’t look away.

Her eyes were still on Victor.

Julia’s lips curved—not into her usual smirk, but something smaller, sharper. A glint of anticipation flickered in her eyes.

Now this was getting interesting.

She didn’t interrupt. Didn’t step between them.

She wanted to see where it would go.

Astron, still unblinking, tilted his head a fraction. His voice came calmly, devoid of heat or pride.

"What was it you expected?"

Victor didn’t answer right away.

He studied Astron with the kind of gaze that measured weight, not worth. That examined lineage, posture, the shape of a name.

Then, at last, he spoke—each word precise, carved, like glass set into a polished frame.

"I expected what you are," Victor said coolly. "An orphan. A common-born psion, scavenged from nowhere. Untrained. Unmannered. Lacking discipline. Lacking class."

Chapter 978 - 226.4 - Future 1

Chapter 978 - 226.4 - Future 2

Chapter 978 - 226.4 - Future 3

Comments

The readers' comments on the novel: Hunter Academy: Revenge of the Weakest