My Unique Adaptation Skill in Another world-Chapter 22 - 21: Final Lessons

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 22: Chapter 21: Final Lessons

Day sixteen began with bruises.

The morning sparring session left Leo gasping, his aura reserves nearly depleted, his muscles screaming protest, but he was improving.

"Very good," Iori said, lowering her katana after disarming him for the third time. "Your recovery is faster, you’re no longer leaving yourself as open after committing to a strike."

Leo retrieved Defiance from where it had clattered across the deck. "I’ll take your word for it."

Iori sheathed her blade. "You’re wasting less energy than before, but still too much."

That was something, at least.

They continued through the morning, footwork drills, aura circulation exercises, controlled sparring that pushed Leo’s limits without breaking him. Iori corrected his form constantly, adjusting his stance with sharp taps of her sheathed katana, forcing him to think about every movement.

By midday, Leo’s shirt was soaked through with sweat, and his side ached despite the medic’s work.

"That’s enough for now," Iori said. "Get some rest, we’ll go again this evening."

Leo collapsed onto a nearby crate, breathing hard. Around him, the crew went about their work, occasionally glancing his way with expressions that ranged from sympathy to amusement.

Kaine walked past, paused, and tossed Leo a water skin. "You’re doing better than most would."

"Doesn’t feel like it," Leo muttered, catching the skin and drinking deeply.

"That’s because you’re comparing yourself to her." Kaine nodded toward Iori, who was speaking with the captain near the helm. "You really shouldn’t do that, she’s been training since before she could walk, you’ve had what, two weeks of training?"

"Three, if you count the hunt."

"Three weeks," Kaine repeated. "And you held your own against things that would’ve killed most people."

"Well when you put it like that, I guess it does make sense, but—"

Leo wanted to argue, but Kaine was already walking away.

The evening session focused on precision.

Iori had Leo practice striking specific points on a training dummy, throat, joints, weak spots in armor, each strike had to be deliberate, controlled, efficient.

"You’re still flooding the attack with too much aura," Iori said, watching him work. "Concentrate it at the point of impact, everywhere else should be minimal."

Leo tried multiple times and failed.

It was harder than it sounded, his instinct was to push aura through his entire body when attacking, a habit born from desperation and reinforced through the zone, breaking that pattern required conscious effort every single time.

"Think of it like a spear," Iori said. "All the force concentrated at the tip, the shaft is just there to guide it."

Leo adjusted his approach, focusing aura into his arms and the blade itself, letting the rest of his body stay relaxed.

The next strike felt different, cleaner, and more controlled.

"There it is," Iori said, nodding. "Good, do it again."

He did, continuosly until the motion started to feel natural.

By the time they stopped, the sun had set, and stars filled the sky overhead.

"You’re getting it," Iori said. "Slowly, but you’re getting it."

Leo wiped sweat from his face. "How much better am I? Actually?"

Iori considered for a moment. "When we started, you were wasting about ten times the aura I would use for the same movements, now you’re down to about eight times."

"Eight times," Leo repeated. "That’s still terrible."

"It’s progress," Iori corrected. "And progress is what matters. You’re not going to master efficiency in a few weeks."

Leo looked down at his hands, they were shaking again, fine tremors from aura depletion.

"Get some food and sleep," Iori said. "We’ll continue tomorrow."

Day seventeen brought rain.

Not the violent storm that had marked their entry into the zone, just steady, persistent rain that drummed against the deck and turned everything slick.

Training continued anyway.

Iori seemed to take perverse pleasure in making Leo practice footwork on the wet deck, forcing him to adjust his balance constantly while she pressed attacks that would’ve sent him sprawling if he misstep.

"Your weight distribution is still off," she said after knocking him down for the fifth time. "You’re favoring your injured side, make sense but a habit to get rid if you don’t want people exploiting your injuries in fights"

Leo pushed himself up, rain streaming down his face. "It still hurts."

"Then account for it, not give into it."

They went again.

This time, Leo focused on the ache in his side, used it to gauge how much weight he could safely put on that leg. The next exchange lasted longer before Iori swept his feet.

"Better," she said. "Again."

By the afternoon, Leo was moving more naturally despite the injury. The pain was still there, but he’d learned to work around it instead.

It felt like progress.

Day eighteen arrived with clear skies and calm seas.

Their final full day of training before reaching Crescent Bay.

Iori pushed harder than ever, testing everything Leo had learned over the past weeks. She used no aura but was relentless, forcing him to rely on technique and efficiency rather than raw power.

Leo held his own longer than he ever had before.

Not because he’d suddenly become strong, but because he was thinking clearly now. Reading her movements, anticipating openings, managing his aura reserves instead of burning through them recklessly.

When she finally disarmed him, it was after a genuine exchange rather than overwhelming superiority. 𝒇𝒓𝙚𝒆𝔀𝓮𝓫𝒏𝓸𝙫𝓮𝓵.𝓬𝙤𝙢

"Not bad," Iori said, and there was genuine approval in her voice. "You’re starting to think like a duelist instead of a survivor."

Leo caught his breath, retrieving his blade. "What’s the difference?"

"A survivor reacts, a duelist plans." She sheathed her katana. "You’re learning to control the fight instead of just responding to it, excellent work."

They spent the rest of the morning refining details, grip adjustments, timing on weight manipulation, efficient transitions between Defiance and Resolve.

By afternoon, they were both tired but satisfied.

"This is the last full session we’ll have," Iori said as they sat near the bow, watching the horizon. "Tomorrow we reach Crescent Bay."

"Back to civilization," Leo said.

"Such as it is." Iori’s expression was thoughtful. "It’ll be different from the outpost, much bigger, and dangerous in different ways."

"Looking forward to it," Leo said, half-joking.

"You should be." Iori glanced at him. "You need a proper teacher, hopefully the academies in the capital can provide that."

" But only until the jubilee celebration is over, for now you’ll still be with us, if you want" she smiled faintly.

"Thanks," Leo said, meaning it.

They sat in comfortable silence for a while, watching the sun descend toward the water.

After a while, Iori stood, stretching. "Get some rest. Tomorrow will be a long day."

She walked away, leaving Leo alone with the sunset.

He stayed there until the light faded, thinking about everything that had changed since he’d woken up in this world. The hunt, the zone, the training.

He was still weak by this world’s standards, but he wasn’t the same person who’d run desperately through the forest, panicking and barely surviving.

Day nineteen dawned bright and clear.

Leo woke early, dressed, and went topside to find the crew already bustling with activity. The atmosphere was different today, anticipation mixed with relief.

"Land!" someone called from the crow’s nest. "Dead ahead!"

Leo moved to the railing and looked.

At first, it was just a dark line on the horizon. Then, as the ship drew closer, details emerged.

Crescent Bay.

The city rose from the coastline like something out of a dream, or a fever vision. Massive stone walls encircled the port, easily fifty feet high, covered in defensive enchantments that glowed faintly even in daylight. Beyond the walls, buildings climbed upward in tiers, stacked on top of each other in impossible configurations that defied normal architecture.

Towers reached toward the sky, connected by bridges and walkways that seemed too delicate to support their own weight. Flags and banners hung everywhere, representing dozens of different factions, guilds, and merchant houses. The harbor itself was enormous, easily ten times the size of the outpost’s port, filled with ships of every size and design.

And the people.

Even from this distance, Leo could see them, thousands of people moving through the docks, the markets, the streets, humans, beastkin, elves, dwarves, and some other races all packed together in organized chaos.

It was the first real human civilization he’d seen since arriving in this world.

The scale of it hit him like a physical weight.

"Overwhelming, isn’t it?" Kaine said, appearing beside him.

"That’s one word for it," Leo managed.

"Crescent Bay is one of the largest trade cities on the continent," Kaine continued. "If you can’t find it here, it doesn’t exist. Goods, services, people, information, everything flows through this port eventually."

The ship maneuvered toward the docks, and the city grew larger with every passing minute. Leo could see details now, market stalls overflowing with goods, street performers entertaining crowds, guards in polished armor maintaining order. The noise reached them even over the water, a constant hum of voices, music, movement, life.

"First time in a big city?" Iori asked, joining them.

"First time in any city," Leo admitted. "In this world, anyway."

Iori smiled faintly. "Try not to get lost, and stick close"

The ship glided into the harbor, crew members working the rigging to slow their approach. Around them, other vessels did the same, merchant ships unloading cargo, passenger vessels depositing travelers, military ships standing at attention near the naval district.

They docked at a pier reserved for VIP arrivals, marked with the Empire’s crest and guarded by soldiers in ceremonial armor. The moment the gangplank lowered, officials appeared, harbormaster’s representatives, customs inspectors, people whose job was to process important arrivals quickly and efficiently.

Iori handled them with practiced ease, presenting documents and answering questions while her guards coordinated the unloading of their belongings.

Leo stood at the railing, taking it all in.

The smells hit him first, salt and fish from the harbor, spices from nearby market stalls, smoke from street food vendors, the underlying scent of thousands of people living in close proximity. It was overwhelming in a way the outpost had never been.

"Ready?" Iori asked, appearing beside him.

Leo took a deep breath. "Yeah. Ready."

They descended the gangplank together, stepping onto solid ground for the first time in weeks.

Crescent Bay awaited.