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The Useless Extra Knows It All....But Does He? - Chapter 326

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  3. The Useless Extra Knows It All....But Does He?
  4. Chapter 326 - Chapter 326: Chapter 326 - "NO!"
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Chapter 326: Chapter 326 – “NO!”
“NO!”

The word cut through the suspended silence—short, flat, unmistakable.

For a heartbeat, nothing reacted.

Then the world exhaled.

The tension that had wound itself tight around the arena loosened all at once, spilling outward in murmurs that rippled through the broken stands like water released from a cracked dam.

“See? I told you.” “That was the only sensible choice.” “He’s human—what did you expect?” “No one would throw their life away like that.” “Smart. Very smart.”

The voices weren’t cruel. They weren’t mocking.

They were relieved.

Relief carried the faint aftertaste of disappointment.

Among the dwarves, shoulders eased. A few elders lowered their gazes, not in anger, but in something quieter—resignation, perhaps. Elder Thrain closed his eyes for a brief moment, the deep lines in his face tightening as though he had expected nothing else, yet still found the outcome heavy. When he opened them again, he looked older somehow, his jaw set as he gave a slow, almost imperceptible shake of his head.

It was over.

Of course it was.

High above, Durgan Blackvein watched it all with a grin already in place, as though the answer had never been in doubt. Yet for the briefest instant—so quick most would have missed it—something flickered behind his eyes.

Not anger.

Not surprise.

But disappointment.

It vanished as quickly as it came, buried beneath a low chuckle and a casual tilt of his head, his posture loosening as if the moment had simply confirmed a long-held belief.

“Figures,” his expression seemed to say, even if his mouth never formed the words.

Within the dwarven suppression device, the Tower Master’s breath slipped free.

Relief crossed her features openly this time, softening the tension that had held her spine unnaturally straight. Her shoulders eased, her hands relaxing within her sleeves as if a weight had finally been lifted from them.

For a second—just one—something else passed through her eyes.

Something unreadable.

Not doubt.

Not approval.

Something quieter. Deeper.

She looked at Luca then—not as a master assessing a disciple, not as a strategist measuring outcomes—but as someone who had just watched a line remain un-crossed.

Below her, Luca stood where he had been all along.

Blood still traced the side of his face. His grip on the dagger had not loosened. His breathing remained uneven, shallow, his legs trembling beneath the strain of simply staying upright.

Yet around him, the atmosphere had changed.

The crowd had already begun to move on, attention shifting away, interest settling back into safer places. The story they would tell themselves had already taken shape: a boy who knew when to stop, when not to gamble with death, when to choose survival over legend.

A reasonable ending.

A disappointing one.

The wind stirred, carrying ash across the ruined arena floor, brushing past Luca without acknowledgment. No one cheered. No one protested. There was no outrage to answer, no courage to challenge.

Only acceptance.

And in that acceptance, something quietly hollow settled into the space where the impossible had almost happened.

Durgan clicked his tongue.

“Tch.”

He rolled his neck once, the movement slow and loose, eyes drifting from Luca back to the seven dwarven elders who still hovered warily in the air, their auras half-raised, half-exhausted.

“So,” Durgan said, voice casual, almost bored, “do you want to continue our little dance?”

The question hung there, sharp and dangerous.

The elders stiffened instinctively. Mana stirred. Gears within the half-formed constructs groaned faintly, as if preparing to wake again. The crowd leaned forward despite itself—expectation creeping back in, grim and hungry.

And then—

“I’m not done yet.”

The voice was hoarse. Uneven. But it cut through the moment with unsettling clarity.

Every head turned.

Luca stood where he had been left—bloodied, unsteady, very much still human. His chest rose and fell with visible effort, and for a second it looked as if speaking alone had cost him more than he could afford. But his gaze was steady now, fixed not on the elders, not on the crowd—

On Durgan.

“That ‘no’,” Luca continued, his voice rough but deliberate, “wasn’t for what you said.”

Murmurs rippled again, sharper this time.

“What…?” “He’s still talking?” “Is he insane…?”

Luca lifted the dagger slightly—not in threat, not in reverence, but simply to remind everyone that it was there.

“I already have this,” he said. “So I don’t need to consider your demand at all.”

Surprise spread visibly across the arena.

Dwarven elders stared down at him, expressions shifting—confusion first, then realization slowly threading its way through hardened features. The nobles blinked, recalculating. Reporters leaned in again, sensing the story twisting in a direction they hadn’t anticipated.

Luca swallowed, his grip tightening briefly as another wave of dizziness washed over him.

He must think I’m young, he thought distantly.

That I’d be pressured. Cornered. That I’d accept the shape of the choice he framed for me.

His eyes flicked upward—just for a heartbeat.

To the Tower Master.

She was watching him intently now, relief long gone, something far more complex settling into her gaze.

And that—

That mattered more than anything else.

“My master,” Luca said aloud, and this time his voice carried—not loudly, but firmly, “is not something you get to bet on a whim.”

The words landed heavier than any shout.

“There’s no world,” he continued, breath steadying as resolve replaced strain, “where I gamble her life on a trial you designed to break people.”

The arena shifted.

Not physically—but perceptibly.

Something about the air changed as understanding spread. Slowly, grudgingly, people began to realize what had been done—how the offer had been shaped, how the pressure had been turned inward until refusal looked like cowardice.

It hadn’t been fair.

It had only been framed that way.

A murmur of a different kind rose now—less judgment, more recognition.

“…He’s right.” “That deal was twisted from the start.” “It wasn’t bravery they were asking for… it was surrender.”

Durgan studied Luca anew.

This time, the amusement didn’t fully mask what flickered behind his eyes.

Interest.

“Well then,” Durgan said, tilting his head slightly, a faint light glinting in his gaze, “what do you want, boy?”

Luca exhaled.

A faint, crooked smirk tugged at his lips despite the blood streaking his face.

“Return my master,” he said simply. “Right now.”

He lifted the dagger a little higher, letting its unassuming form catch the light.

“For this.”

A few incredulous laughs escaped the crowd.

“He’s joking, right?” “That can’t be serious—” “Is he really negotiating?”

Durgan looked at him as though he were, indeed, joking.

Luca didn’t blink.

“And,” he continued, voice steady despite the tremor in his legs, “I’ll challenge you in the Thousand Hammer Crucible anyway.”

The reaction was immediate.

“What—?!” “He’s lost his mind!” “After all that—still?!”

Luca turned his head slightly, eyes lifting once more to the Tower Master. This time, there was no defiance there—only concern. Respect. Care.

“Just…,” he muttered, more softly now, the words meant for her alone, “my master won’t have anything to do with it.”

The silence that followed was different from before.

Not relieved.

Not disappointed.

Unsettled.

Because now, no one could tell anymore whether the boy standing in blood and ruin was reckless—

—or terrifyingly sincere.

For the first time since he had descended upon the arena like a calamity,

Durgan Blackvein did not immediately respond.

His amused smirk lingered—but it no longer sat quite right on his face.

He stared at Luca, really stared at him now, the way a veteran smith might stare at an unfinished blade that had just revealed an unexpected edge. The dagger. The terms. The refusal to play the game as it had been framed. The willingness to step into hell anyway—on his own conditions.

“…Hah,” Durgan exhaled quietly, more breath than laughter.

Behind Luca, movement stirred.

Sylthara was the first to reach him.

She stepped close, close enough that the heat rolling off the battlefield brushed against her obsidian skin. Her golden eyes searched his face—not for resolve, but for cracks.

“Luca,” she said, voice low but urgent, one hand lifting as if to steady him should his legs finally give out. “The dagger is enough. You know that. The dwarven pledge alone can bring her back safely.”

Kyle moved in from the other side, his jaw tight, his usual careless posture gone. He didn’t touch Luca, but he stood close enough that his presence alone was a brace.

“She’s right,” he said, frowning hard. “You’ve already won this part. Tower Master comes back. End of story.” His voice dropped, raw despite the attempt at lightness. “That trial… it’s not something you ‘challenge’ just because you feel like it.”

Luca didn’t answer immediately.

His eyes drifted—not to Durgan, not to the elders—but downward, to the dagger still clenched in his bloodied hand.

They’re right, he thought.

The realization came without resistance.

Why do I need to do it?

The question echoed in him, heavy and reasonable. Anyone watching him now would think the same. That he was reckless. That he was chasing something unnecessary. That he was letting pride or madness push him forward when logic had already given him an exit.

His grip loosened slightly.

Everyone must be thinking I’ve lost my mind.

Then—beneath that thought—another surfaced.

Quieter. Sharper.

But this is the opportunity.

His chest tightened.

He could feel it—had been feeling it for a long time now. That invisible wall he kept striking against. Not in strength alone, but in clarity. In direction.

I’ve hit a bottleneck.

Not just in my path as a warrior… but in my techniques. My understanding.

Every fight lately had been won by pushing harder, burning brighter, forcing his way through. But the further he went, the less that brute insistence answered the questions clawing at him.

He couldn’t see the path ahead anymore.

And the Thousand Hammer Crucible—

It wasn’t just a trial of endurance.

It was a crucible in the truest sense.

A place where things were either reforged… or shattered beyond repair.

I was going to use this dagger, he thought, eyes dimming slightly, to obtain Black Mythril.

The rarest metal. The one thing that couldn’t be bought. The foundation for something greater.

If I give this up… if any of this goes wrong…then when I…

His thoughts faltered there.

He shook his head once, sharply, as if to physically cut off the chain before it dragged him too far.

Selena’s voice cut in then—cool, precise, unmistakably hers.

“Are you sure about this?”

She had stepped forward without anyone noticing. Her posture was straight despite the lingering injuries, pale fingers clenched lightly at her side. Her eyes didn’t search his face the way Sylthara’s did. They didn’t plead like Kyle’s.

They measured.

Luca met her gaze.

There was no hesitation left now.

He nodded.

Just once.

Selena studied him for a second longer, then looked away, the familiar frost settling back over her expression.

“Then,” she said evenly, “I’ll support you.”

Kyle turned toward her so fast it was almost comical.

“Hey—what?!” he snapped. “You’re just going to—?”

He stopped mid-sentence.

Because something in her expression—calm, unyielding, already resolved—clicked into place.

Kyle exhaled hard, running a hand through his hair.

“…Ugh,” he muttered. “Fine. Just—don’t die.”

He glanced sideways at Luca, lips twitching despite himself.

“If you’re dead, I’m pretty sure nobody’s going to marry my sister. And I really don’t want to deal with that.”

Sylthara didn’t argue further.

She simply inclined her head once, a warrior’s acknowledgment, her hand withdrawing from Luca’s arm with deliberate trust.

Luca looked at them.

At all of them.

The tension in his shoulders eased—not because the danger was gone, but because he wasn’t carrying it alone anymore.

A small smile surfaced on his lips.

Brief. Genuine.

Then it faded.

His spine straightened. His gaze lifted.

And once again, his attention returned to the dwarf hovering above the shattered arena.

Durgan Blackvein.

“So,” Luca said, his voice steady despite the blood, the exhaustion, the weight of everything pressing down on him.

“What do you say?”

The question didn’t challenge.

It didn’t beg.

It waited.

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