The Vengeful Extra's Ascension-Chapter 236: Back Home!
The final days of the exchange passed with a strange duality, simultaneously swift and impossibly dense as they did everything they could to have fun before the time came for the group to head back to the Human Kingdom.
Nocturna did not slow for them during this either, if anything, it seemed to accelerate.
Albedo and Elara spent the first morning separated, not by command but by instinct. There were things best absorbed alone. Albedo followed the deeper currents of mana through the city’s martial districts, watching demon veterans spar with an intensity that made even Zeus’s battles look restrained.
He saw techniques that discarded wasted movement entirely. Strikes that borrowed momentum from space itself. Defensive forms that did not block, but reframed an attack so it simply no longer applied.
He did not copy them. He internalized the philosophy behind them, noting all of it down for himself to practice and put all of that into his arsenal. Havoc and Ruin hummed softly the entire time, as if committing every observation to memory alongside him.
Elara, meanwhile, vanished into Nocturna’s conceptual districts, places where infrastructure itself was debated and iterated upon in real time. ,She watched demon architects argue over mana flow optimization, ritual engineers dismantle their own arrays to prove they could rebuild them stronger, and scholars cross-reference wars fought centuries apart to find repeating failures.
She did not interrupt, instead spending her time listening intently.
By the second day, the rest of the Zephyr Academy students had begun to move with more confidence through the palace and capital.
Lucian sparred with demon youths who pushed him hard enough that his Transcendence Gift flared repeatedly, forcing growth through sheer adversity. Veronica spent hours observing command hubs and tactical chambers, eyes alight as she mapped how battlefield control scaled when armies numbered in the tens of thousands.
Zeus, predictably, found the most dangerous-looking sparring pits and earned a reputation within hours.
Dorian somehow managed to offend three minor demon nobles and charm five others, and no one, including himself, was entirely sure how.
Fade walked the city with quiet reverence, often stopping to exchange words with elven-descended demons or scholars who remembered treaties signed long before her people’s current era.
Where she went, respect followed, not because she demanded it, but because she carried herself as someone who understood history’s weight.
And always, watching from the edges, Raven remained.
She did not intervene.
She did not comment.
But no one doubted for a second that she was there.
The final evening came with little fanfare.
Nocturna’s sky dimmed into slow, drifting constellations as the artificial cycle settled into rest. The teleportation chamber beneath the Onyx Citadel activated once more, its ancient sigils flaring with restrained power.
This time, there was no crushing pressure.
Only presence.
The Zephyr Academy students assembled in loose formation, packs secured, weapons bound and dormant. They stood taller than when they had arrived. Not stronger—sharper.
Headmistress Raphaeline stood at the forefront, immaculate as ever. Her black wings were folded neatly behind her, violet hair cascading down her back as she surveyed her students with unreadable eyes.
Behind her, the rulers of Nocturna approached.
Kael Nocturna arrived first, boots striking obsidian with measured weight. His gaze swept over the group, lingering just long enough on several faces to leave an impression that would not fade easily.
Ysvara followed at his side, serene and unyielding, silver runes along her gown glowing faintly in the low light.
"You leave with your lives," Kael said casually. "That alone makes this exchange a success."
Zeus laughed. "High praise coming from you."
Kael grinned. "I don’t waste words."
Ysvara inclined her head toward Raphaeline. "Your students adapt well to pressure. That speaks highly of your leadership."
Raphaeline smiled faintly, "They had excellent teachers."
That earned a quiet chuckle from Kael.
Lilian appeared next, lounging against one of the pillars with her arms folded behind her head, crimson eyes bright with mischief.
"Well," she said, "try not to get boring after you leave. That’d be disappointing."
She glanced at Elara. "You’re welcome to come back and steal our libraries anytime."
Elara blinked and then chuckled, "I, thank you?"
Celeste arrived in a ripple of distorted space, landing lightly atop a floating slab of stone with a grin sharp enough to cut.
"Next time," she said, pointing at Albedo, "we spar properly."
Albedo smirked. "Looking forward to it."
Raven stood off to the side, arms crossed, gaze unreadable as ever. When Albedo looked her way, she gave a single, precise nod, full blown acknowledgement.
Fade stepped forward last, her silver-green hair catching the glow of the runes as she inclined her head to the group.
"This exchange will be remembered," she said. "By my people as well."
Her eyes met Albedo’s briefly. There was curiosity there. And calculation.
"May our paths cross again under circumstances of choice," she added.
Raphaeline raised one hand.
The teleportation circle began to hum.
Ancient runes flared to life, space compressing and folding inward as mana gathered in controlled torrents. The students stepped into position, standing shoulder to shoulder.
Kael’s voice carried over the rising energy. "Grow strong," he said. "The world is not getting kinder."
Ysvara’s followed, softer but no less firm. "And remember—what you endured here was only a beginning."
Lilian waved. Celeste grinned. Raven watched.
The light surged, Reality folded and the sensation of transit was familiar now, disorienting and brief.
Then, they were home.
The cool, steady mana of the Human Kingdom settled around them like a familiar cloak. The teleportation chamber of Zephyr Academy materialized into view, its stonework pale and orderly compared to Nocturna’s living obsidian.
Several students staggered slightly as gravity and ambient pressure recalibrated.
Zeus cracked his neck. "Huh. Feels... small."
Veronica adjusted her gloves. "Controlled," she corrected. "Predictable."
Raphaeline stepped forward, wings unfolding slightly as she turned to face them.
"Welcome back," she said. "You have done well."
There was relief in the room. And something else.
Anticipation.
As the group began to disperse, some heading toward dormitories, others immediately launching into animated discussions, Albedo remained still for a moment longer, breathing in the academy’s familiar air.
"Finally," he murmured, turning toward the exit. "Time to go home."
His thoughts were already ahead of him, of a small silver-haired girl that would be waiting for him at home.
Gwen.
He started walking, steps light, heart steady as he left the Academy grounds and headed to his home to meet her.







