Chapter 52: Caged Lightning
Alex stared at the quest notification, his heart hammering against his ribs. The system was asking him to defeat an SS-Class entity. It should have been impossible, suicidal even.
His hands started trembling before he could stop them.
But the rewards...
An additional ability slot would fundamentally change his capabilities. With his Mimicry ability currently limited to holding just one copied power, gaining a second slot would double his tactical options. The instant level up and twenty stat points weren’t insignificant either: that kind of enhancement could mean the difference between survival and death in future encounters.
More concerning was the quest’s appearance itself. The system had remained dormant for weeks at the Academy, only awakening to grant experience when he’d fought life-or-death battles. Now it was actively encouraging him to engage the Arena Warden, suggesting this confrontation was inevitable rather than optional.
’The system wants me to fight. Which means either it believes I can win, or it needs me to attempt this regardless of the outcome.’
Alex pushed himself to his feet, testing his body’s current limitations. The essence suppression made him feel hollow, like trying to breathe through a collapsed lung. Every movement reminded him that his soul core damage from the Void Stalker battle hadn’t fully healed. If anything, the constant drain from the bars was preventing proper recovery.
He approached the iron bars cautiously, studying the intricate sigils that seemed to pulse with their own malevolent energy. The patterns were unlike anything he’d seen in the Academy’s textbooks. Older, cruder, but undeniably powerful. Each symbol was carved deep into the metal, filled with what looked like crystallized darkness that absorbed light rather than reflecting it.
Alex extended his hand slowly toward one of the bars, preparing to test the suppression field’s strength. The moment his palm made contact with the iron, agony shot through his entire body.
The bar didn’t just suppress his essence—it actively *drained* it. He felt his already damaged reserves being pulled from his core like blood through a syringe, the sensation so visceral it made him gasp and stumble backward. His vision went white with pain as the sigils flared brighter, and for a terrifying moment he felt his soul core crack a little deeper.
’Of course,’ Alex breathed, cradling his hand against his chest. The brief contact had left his palm numb and tingling, as if the nerves had been temporarily severed. Whatever essence powered these bars wasn’t just containing him. It was actively hostile, designed to weaken prisoners through casual contact.
He examined his status window again, noting with growing concern that his already low HP had dropped to 65/100 from that brief touch. The bars were literally damaging him just by being near them, a slow but steady drain that would wear him down over time.
The strategy was brutally efficient. Keep the prisoners weak and damaged, trapped in cells that slowly drained their essence reserves. By the time fighters were thrown into the arena, they’d be operating at reduced capacity, making for more dramatic battles as opponents struggled against each other with diminished abilities. And if they refused to fight, they’d simply die slowly in their cells.
Alex settled back against the far wall, as far from the bars as possible while still maintaining visual contact with the arena floor. The stone here was warmer, suggesting some kind of heating system running through the complex. At least his captors didn’t want him freezing to death before the entertainment began.
His mind worked through what he’d observed. The Arena Warden was SS-Class, but it was also clearly intelligent and following orders from some "Master." This wasn’t a mindless beast. It was a jailer, a coordinator, possibly even a reluctant participant in whatever sick games were about to begin.
The creature had shown surprise when Alex attempted to speak its language, suggesting most prisoners didn’t bother learning. That could be an advantage if he could establish some kind of communication beyond the basic command structure they expected.
More importantly, the quest had appeared after his conversation with the Warden. The system wasn’t just randomly generating challenges. It was responding to specific circumstances, specific threats that presented themselves. That suggested it had some level of awareness about his situation, which meant it might provide more targeted assistance if he could figure out how to trigger it.
The sound of footsteps echoed from the corridor, different from the Warden’s heavy tread. Multiple sets, moving with purpose. Alex opened his eyes and moved closer to the front of his cell, careful not to touch the bars as new figures emerged from the shadows.
Three more prisoners were being led into the arena complex by a pair of creatures similar to the Warden but smaller, carrying crude spears instead of axes. The prisoners wore the tattered remains of clothing from different cultures: robes that looked like they belonged in ancient temples, though he couldn’t quite make out their faces.
’They’ve been collecting fighters from multiple locations across this rift.’
The implications were staggering. This wasn’t just a local operation. Whoever was running this arena had enough power and reach to cherry-pick combatants from across the dimensional space. Alex watched as the new prisoners were deposited in cells around the arena, each one showing signs of the same essence suppression he was experiencing.
But one of them caught his attention immediately. Not human—that much was clear from the way it moved, too fluid, with joints bending at angles that spoke of a fundamentally different skeletal structure. Its skin had a pale, almost translucent quality that seemed to shimmer under the arena’s dim lighting, and when it turned, Alex caught a glimpse of eyes that were solid black, no pupils or iris visible.
At first glance, it looked like the kind of ’alien’ you’d see on TV back on Earth humanoid, smooth-skinned, black-eyed but the longer Alex stared, the more wrong it felt, as though those shows had only ever been crude echoes of the real thing."
The creature was roughly humanoid in shape but clearly from somewhere else entirely. Its clothing was unlike anything Alex had seen. Form-fitting material that looked organic, like it had been grown rather than woven. Intricate patterns covered its surface, and as Alex watched, some of the designs seemed to shift and change, as if they were alive.
What struck him most was how the creature moved. Despite being in the same essence-suppressing environment, it didn’t show the weakness and disorientation that Alex felt. Its steps were measured and precise, and when it examined its cell, the movements were methodical, almost scientific in their thoroughness.
The alien prisoner’s cell was positioned at an angle where Alex could observe it without being obvious. It ran its elongated fingers along the iron bars with the same caution Alex had used, but when the essence drain hit, the creature barely flinched. Either it had natural resistance to the suppression field, or its physiology operated on fundamentally different principles than human essence manipulation.
The creature’s solid black eyes swept the arena, cataloging details with the same analytical precision Alex recognized in himself. When their gazes met briefly, Alex felt a chill that had nothing to do with the cave’s temperature. There was intelligence there, cold and calculating, but utterly alien. No recognition, no shared humanity to build rapport on.
’At least I know I’m not the only one taking this seriously.’
The Arena Warden returned, its massive form filling the corridor entrance as it surveyed the newly arrived prisoners. Its burning gaze lingered on each cell, and Alex noticed it spent significantly longer examining the strange alien creature.
"Mek kresh-thuul vorthani," the creature rumbled, its voice carrying easily across the arena. "Zhel-mori nakul. Kresh-vel thurvani mek."
**[Translation: "Four warriors now present. The Master is pleased. Tomorrow you prove your worth."]**
Tomorrow. Alex felt his stomach clench as the timeline became clear. Whatever entertainment their captors had planned, it would begin within hours. He glanced at his status window, noting that his essence reserves had dropped another point just from proximity to the bars.
The Warden operated the mechanism controlling the cell doors, and Alex heard the grinding of gears as additional bars slammed into place across each entrance. Whatever minimal freedom they’d had to test their prison was now gone entirely.
As the creature disappeared back into the corridor, leaving the prisoners alone with their thoughts, Alex began planning. The quest demanded he defeat an SS-Class entity while operating at severely reduced capacity, cut off from his primary abilities and slowly being drained by his environment.
He’d faced the Void Stalker and emerged victorious despite the overwhelming power differential. This was just another challenge to overcome, another obstacle between him and the strength he needed.
Alex’s lips curved into a cold smile as he settled into a meditation posture, conserving what energy he had while his mind worked through possibilities. The arena wanted entertainment.
Fine.
Let’s see how entertained they were when their prize fighter became their nightmare.
The other prisoners might see this as a death sentence, but Alex saw opportunity. In his previous life, he’d been harvested like livestock, powerless to resist. Here, even weakened and trapped, he still had choices. He still had agency.
And most importantly, he had a system that seemed designed to reward exactly the kind of impossible victories that others would call suicide.
They thought they could use him. Again.
They were about to learn how wrong they were.
Even if his hands wouldn’t stop shaking.