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The Royal Military Academy's Impostor Owns a Dungeon [BL]-Chapter 443: Fate
Chapter 443: Fate
Before the return of hope, the stairwell had become a nightmare.
What was supposed to be a safe route—standard, reinforced, evacuation-grade—had become a shaking coffin.
Students pressed close to the walls, some crouched with their arms over their heads, while others clutched each other as the ground groaned beneath their feet. The building vibrated with every aftershock, as if it were caught mid-scream.
A sharp metallic crack split the panic.
Then came the crystal.
It didn’t burst in with a bang. It didn’t explode. No, it rose.
A jagged spike of glowing mineral split through the bottom floor like a spear of judgment, threading through the space where a student had just been.
Had she not tripped, she would’ve been skewered like those very monsters they’ve been fighting with.
She really could’ve died.
Screams erupted, followed by the heavy boom of falling debris.
Then darkness.
Dust filled the air like smoke. Someone coughed. Another choked back a sob.
Lyka Vela sat frozen, her hand still extended toward the friend she’d tried to pull along. Her legs had locked in place. Her lips trembled.
No one could see anything.
No light.
No exit.
Just silence, breath, and panic.
Until—
"All students inside, back away from the north wall!"
A voice rang out like salvation through the thick wall. Clear. Calm. Amplified.
"!!!"
Lyka gasped. Her fingers gripped the railing as dust drifted down around them. Students looked up, some daring to move toward the voice.
"Repeat—back away! We are opening an emergency exit!"
There was movement.
Then a thundering roar.
A portion of the wall peeled back like it was made of tinfoil. Metal shrieked. Bit os crystals shattered. Then, suddenly—
Light.
Blinding daylight poured in, cutting through the dark like a miracle. The fresh morning air swept through the broken wall like a cleansing tide.
And standing just outside, towering and powerful, was a mecha. Dark blue alloy and glinting with faint light. One arm raised, shielding the exposed stairwell.
Inside the cockpit—just out of sight but unmistakable—was Kyle Nox. It had to be him. That signature mecha was known throughout the mechanics division, especially to one person who had practically built her academic career fantasizing about being its exclusive mechanic. freewebnσvel.cøm
Students blinked.
Then someone sobbed as others cheered for their rescue.
Lyka stared, unable to look away.
She stared at the mecha like it was a divine revelation.
Kyle Nox.
In a custom S-class mecha. Tall and radiant like a knight descended from the stars.
The tremors of the quake still shook the building, but Lyka? Lyka only felt the thundering of her heart.
She clutched her chest.
Was this what people meant when they said fate intervened? When the heavens conspired to create the perfect opportunity?
She’d heard of this before—read about it, even. A disaster striking, a damsel caught in peril, and then—bam! A powerful figure crashing in to rescue her, their eyes meeting through smoke and debris as the universe held its breath.
Yes. Yes! That’s what this was!
She limped toward the makeshift platform, ignoring the pain in her ankle. The crowd around her moved as if in slow motion. All these background extras didn’t matter. The scene was hers.
Of course, he showed up now, of all times. Of course, he broke through the wall.
He probably felt something.
Sure, he hadn’t seen her yet. And yes, their interactions had only been fleeting—just a few polite exchanges during the balls they’d both attended as children. But that didn’t matter. He would remember. Soon. Just as she had never forgotten him. This was fate. They were meant to meet again like this. Meant to rise above disaster, hand in hand. Meant to rebuild something beautiful from the rubble. Meant to—
Lyka pressed a hand to her cheek. She was blushing. Oh god.
This quake might just be the best thing that has ever happened to her.
Even her injury—yes, this was a perfect excuse to speak to him later. To thank him. Maybe hold his hand while he helped her walk. Or maybe he’d carry her. Bridal-style. Like a prince.
She clutched her ankle more delicately. Practiced a grateful expression. Practiced again.
Just in case.
This was going to be their beginning.
Meanwhile, Kyle and Ollie—still nestled together in the narrow cockpit—barely moved from their shared seat.
Ollie sat snugly between Kyle’s legs, practically wrapped in the pilot’s coat, the curve of Kyle’s arms bracketing him on either side as he worked the console. Their heads occasionally brushed when Ollie leaned forward to adjust a scan or when Kyle turned slightly to glance at a side panel.
The space was tight, their bodies aligned by necessity—but there was a quiet synchronicity to it now, like they’d done this a hundred times before.
Their breathing evened out in the silence between orders, the low hum of the mecha surrounding them like a protective shell.
"Looks like everyone made it," Ollie murmured, his pillow perched on his knees, legs lightly bumping Kyle’s with each shift.
Kyle gave a short nod, his chin just brushing Ollie’s hair. "Let’s head to the next zone. There might still be students trapped there."
The mecha turned.
And Lyka, unaware that the cockpit had housed two people all this time, stared up at her ’destined love’ as he flew off into the dust and sun, taking her heart with him.
Her knight.
Her fate.
Her Kyle.
(And definitely not Ollie, who she still thought was tucked away in some other dorm like a background NPC.)
If only. For after evacuating the students, Kyle and Ollie proceeded to the next assignment without delay. The mecha shifted course with smooth agility, scanning the campus for distress signals.
From the cockpit, Ollie kept glancing at Kyle.
Not because of any technical reason.
No, this was a problem of the heart.
Because all of a sudden, everything about this guy felt...different.
The sharp jawline.
The confident piloting.
The unwavering focus.
The way his arms moved.
Why did his arms have to move like that?!
Ollie swallowed. Then turned away. Then looked again.
He was being subtle.
Or so he thought.
But Kyle knew.
Of course, he knew. He wasn’t insensitive, in fact, he’d been the opposite since he’d rearranged his priorities. He’d been watched since they left the dormitory.
At one point, Ollie made a hiccupping sound. He almost turned. Almost. Because if he did, he might do something dangerous. Like tease him. Or—worse—smile.
The blonde hiccupped again.
Kyle bit his tongue.
He could pretend nothing was happening. Pretend he didn’t know that the blonde was scrutinizing who-knows-what about him.
And Ollie?
He was slowly spiraling.
Kyle just seemed so—so responsible. So manly. So tall. So composed. So—
Wait.
Why was he always seated between his legs like this?!
"I—I think the readings are stable here too," Ollie said, voice cracking as he stared at the screen like it held the meaning of life.
"Good," Kyle replied evenly, not missing a beat. "Then we’ll move to the next signal again."
The bearer of stars nodded. Eyes wide. Heart louder than the alarms outside.
And for some reason, the restrained adjutant reveled in the sound.
Maybe he was dangerous. Maybe his mop was right to be afraid.
Maybe he did have a tendency to bite.
Because every time Ollie made those little hiccupping sounds, Kyle had to resist the urge to turn around and do something reckless.
Like pulling him even closer, just to see if he’d tremble again.
And if he did?
Maybe he’d do more than just bite?
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