SSS Rank: Strongest Beast Master

Chapter 122: The Threat They Fear



Jonah's win left a strange silence. The crowd clapped, but it was weak and confused. His win wasn't a triumph. It was a message. As he walked out, he felt whispers follow him, a tide of confusion and guesses.

He didn't have to wait long to feel the political troubles. The Headmaster's guard was waiting for him at the exit.

Back in the familiar, quiet study, the Headmaster was not smiling. His face looked grimly satisfied, like a general who had just won a necessary but costly battle.

"You followed your orders perfectly, Jonah," he said. "Perhaps too perfectly."

Jonah frowned. "I don't understand. I did what you asked. I won without revealing my full strength."

"Precisely," the Headmaster said, turning to look out his high window. "And in doing so, you have deeply unsettled some very powerful people. The Bureau loyalists who remain in the government, the old-guard military commanders… they understand power. They understand a monster that rages."

He turned back, his old eyes pinning Jonah with their intensity. "A monster that rages is a predictable threat. You can build a bigger wall, forge a stronger sword. It is a problem with a simple, if difficult, solution."

He gestured vaguely in the direction of the arena. "But what you showed them today was not a monster. It was a mind. A strategist who can dismantle an experienced, Rank Three opponent without taking a single step, without throwing a single punch… that is not a threat they understand. And that which they do not understand, they fear."

The Headmaster let the words hang in the air. "You are no longer just a valuable asset to them, Jonah. You are a threat to the established order. Watch your back. They will not challenge you in the arena. They will come for you in the shadows."

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Jonah's head was still spinning from the Headmaster's warning when he finally made it back to the sanctuary of his workshop. The political games, the secret threats… it was exhausting. He just wanted to focus on his next match, on Ariana, on the secrets of the serum.

He dismissed Echo and Specter back into his Beast Space and immediately felt the cost of the battle hit him. A wave of dizziness washed over him, and the world tilted for a second. He stumbled, catching himself on the edge of a workbench.

"Whoa there," a familiar voice said.

Vanessa was there, a tablet in her hand and a worried frown on her face. She quickly helped him stand firm, her touch surprisingly strong. "Are you okay? You look pale."

"Just… tired," Jonah managed, collapsing into a nearby chair. "It was a long match."

"It wasn't a long match, Jonah," she replied, her voice changing from worry to her usual, sharp way of thinking. She tapped her datapad, and a complex graph of swirling energy patterns appeared. "It was a short match with a huge mana cost."

She pulled up a chair and sat opposite him, her expression serious. "I was monitoring your energy signature from the stands. Your baseline mana consumption for maintaining two active Progeny is already high. But the processing power required to coordinate Echo's sonar with Specter's illusions, and then project and maintain multiple, complex, multi-sensory illusions in real-time… Jonah, your mana consumption spiked to a level I've only ever seen in Overlord-Rank Mages during a full-scale assault."

She looked him straight in the eye. "It was a brilliant strategy. But you can't maintain that pace. You burned through nearly eighty percent of your reserves in under ten minutes. If Kaelen had been smarter, if he had just waited you out, you would have collapsed from exhaustion."

He knew she was right. The dizziness was already fading as his body slowly started to recover, but the psychic drain had been immense. He felt mentally scraped raw.

He ran a hand through his hair, the weight of it all pressing down on him. "I didn't have a choice," he said, his voice barely a whisper. "The Headmaster… he gave me a direct order. Win, but don't show them a monster. Don't use Maul."

He looked up at her. "Everyone thinks my power is in my beasts. They see Maul, and they think that's what I am. A glorified Tamer. A boy with a big, angry pet."

His voice was tight with a frustration he hadn't realized he was holding onto. "The Headmaster wants me to be a weapon they can control. Ariana wants to see if my symbiotic path is valid. The Bureau wants to brand me as a dangerous freak. Everyone wants me to prove something to them, to fit into a box they've already built for me."

He looked at Vanessa, his oldest friend, the first person who had ever seen him not as a poor boy from the slums, or a lucky Awakened, or a Saint, but just… as Jonah.

"I just want them to see that the power isn't just in the Progeny," he confided, the words tumbling out. "It's in the Weaving. It's in the control. It's in the mind behind it all. I had to show them that I am more than just my monsters."

Her thinking face softened. Now, she showed true understanding. She didn't offer empty words or easy reassurances. She understood him on a level no one else could, a level of shared secrets and the complicated mechanics of his soul-deep power.

She reached across the table and gently placed her hand over his. Her touch was warm and grounding.

"I know," she said softly. Her voice was not one of pity, but of absolute, unshakable partnership. "I've always known."

For a long moment, they just sat there in silence, the buzz of the workshop's machines filling the space between them. For the first time since walking into the arena, Jonah felt the tension in his shoulders begin to ease. He wasn't just a political tool or a living weapon. He was Jonah. And she saw him. That was enough.

That was everything.


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