Martial Era: Starting With The Strongest Talent-Chapter 196: Gaining Sentience

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Chapter 196: Gaining Sentience

"...Why?"

The question had barely left her lips when the grip on her shoulder tightened slightly, grounding her back into the moment. The martial artist leaned closer, his voice sharp and suspicious, completely unlike the fixed responses she remembered.

"So, girl... what are you looking at?"

Remedy’s body tensed as she tried to pull away, but his hand didn’t budge. Her eyes narrowed immediately, the initial shock fading as a more calculated reaction took over now that she wasn’t bound by the memory’s script.

She could respond.

So she did.

"Sir, please stop touching me!"

Her voice rang out clearly through the crowded shelter, cutting through the low murmurs and tension that had already been building among the survivors. The sudden outburst drew attention instantly, dozens of heads turning in their direction.

The atmosphere shifted.

People were already on edge.

Tired.

Frustrated.

Scared.

This was enough to push them further.

"What are you doing to that girl?" one man demanded, his voice rising above the others as he stepped forward slightly, trying to get a better view through the packed bodies.

Another voice followed quickly.

"I knew something felt off when you let her in so easily."

The accusation landed hard, and more voices joined in almost immediately, the tension snapping into open agitation as people started pushing and shifting within the tight space.

"So that’s why, huh? You had your own reasons?"

"You should be out there fighting, not hiding in here!"

The words came faster now, sharper, fueled by fear and anger that had been building long before this moment. The crowd pressed closer despite the lack of space, their frustration turning into open hostility.

The other martial artists nearby didn’t step in.

Whether it was doubt or simply the pressure of the crowd, none of them spoke up, and that silence only made things worse as the accusations continued to pile on without resistance.

Remedy watched it all unfold quietly.

Her breathing steady.

Her eyes sharp.

The martial artist’s expression darkened as the noise grew louder, his grip finally loosening before he pulled his hand away completely. His gaze swept across the crowd, irritation clear as he took a step forward.

Then, his essence surged.

A heavy pressure filled the shelter instantly, pressing down on everyone present like an invisible weight. The voices cut off mid-sentence, the agitation crushed under the sudden display of power.

"That’s enough."

His voice was cold and no one spoke after that.

The tension didn’t disappear, but it was forced down, suppressed under the overwhelming presence he released. The crowd stilled, eyes lowering, bodies retreating slightly despite the lack of space.

Without another word, the martial artist turned away from Remedy, pushing through the congested shelter as people instinctively made room for him. His focus shifted entirely, as if she no longer mattered at all.

Like she had never been the point.

Remedy remained where she was.

Her gaze followed him for a moment before shifting back toward the window, her thoughts racing beneath the calm surface. The reaction had been real. Too real. Too responsive to be part of a fixed memory.

"...They’re changing."

Her voice was quiet, barely above a whisper, but the meaning behind it was heavy. The echoes of her past weren’t just replaying anymore. They were adapting, reacting, developing something beyond their original form.

Something closer to awareness.

****

"...They’re changing."

The realization lingered in the shelter, but outside, something else had already shifted. The light Adam released didn’t just illuminate the street, it disrupted it. The chalk men froze mid-motion, their reactions halting instantly as if something fundamental had been overwritten.

They recognized it.

Not as a threat.

But as something familiar.

Holy Light wasn’t unique to Remedy, but it was born from her soul, shaped by her existence. That meant it belonged here. It fit into the structure the chalk men were designed to protect.

And for a moment, Adam did too.

He didn’t hesitate.

He knew the window was short.

The glow around him remained steady, but he could already feel the resistance building beneath it, the system trying to adjust, trying to correct what it no longer recognized as an immediate threat.

This won’t last.

His stance dropped instantly, center of gravity lowering as his muscles tensed, aura compressing tightly around his legs. He didn’t waste time testing it. He moved the moment the opening appeared.

Rapid Charge activated to its limit.

Adam exploded forward.

The ground cracked beneath his feet as he launched into motion, his body blurring as he tore through the street at full speed. The air itself struggled to keep up, pressure building and collapsing around him.

And for the first time since entering, nothing tried to stop him.

The chalk men remained frozen where they stood, scattered across the environment in different states of motion. Some clung to buildings. Others were halfway out of the ground. A few were mid-lunge, arms extended.

Adam passed through them like they weren’t there, his speed climbing higher with each step as he pushed himself further. The sound barrier cracked behind him, a sharp explosion echoing through the street.

Glass shattered.

Windows burst outward as shockwaves followed in his wake, debris scattering in every direction. The city blurred into streaks of motion as he focused entirely on a single point ahead.

The shelter.

The distance collapsed rapidly as he crossed entire sections of the street in moments, his momentum building instead of dropping. The light around him held steady, maintaining that fragile state of acceptance.

But he could feel it weakening.

The system was catching up.

Adam leaned forward slightly, pushing for one final burst as the structure of the shelter came fully into view. Reinforced walls. Sealed entrance. No time to slow down or wait.

He didn’t even consider stopping.

His aura surged one last time as he drove forward, his entire body aligning behind the motion. The light flared brighter for a brief instant, stabilizing just enough to carry him through.

Then, he crashed into the shelter.