The Villian Who Broke The Story
Chapter 7: Gravity Room Training
The moment Kael increased the chamber to double gravity, his body immediately reminded him of one simple truth.
He had overestimated himself.
The force hit like a collapsing wall.
His knees gave out instantly.
Kael slammed face-first into the reinforced floor, the impact knocking the air from his lungs so violently that for a moment he couldn’t even process the pain.
He just lay there.
Breathing—or trying to.
Every inhale felt wrong.
Every exhale felt heavier than it should have.
His chest strained against the pressure, ribs protesting as if someone had dropped an invisible boulder across his back.
So this is what weak feels like.
Kael pressed his forehead against the cold metal flooring, jaw clenched.
He had known Kael Draven’s body was mediocre.
He had seen the numbers.
Average mana.
Average frame.
Average physical conditioning.
But numbers in a status window and the reality of inhabiting them were not the same thing.
This body was worse than average.
It was undertrained.
Lean, tall, and noble-maintained in all the ways that made a body look respectable without making it useful.
Not fragile.
But soft.
It was the kind of build polished for image, not war.
And under pressure, the difference was humiliating.
For a brief, bitter second, it reminded him too much of his first life.
Too much time sitting.
Too much time thinking.
Too little time worth anything physical.
Pathetic.
Kael stayed on the ground for several long minutes, forcing his body to breathe under the pressure.
There was no dramatic breakthrough.
No sudden burst of strength.
Only strain.
His lungs burned.
His limbs felt filled with lead.
Every muscle in his body protested the demand being forced onto it.
But eventually—
his fingers moved.
Then his elbows.
Then one knee.
Slowly, painfully, Kael dragged himself upright.
His legs trembled beneath him the moment he stood.
His balance nearly failed again.
But he stayed upright.
Barely.
"...Good enough."
The words came out thin and breathless.
He forced one step forward.
Then another.
Walking at double gravity felt like dragging a corpse made of iron.
Each step was miserable.
His calves screamed first.
Then his thighs.
Then his lower back.
Then his lungs.
Everything hurt.
Everything resisted.
And yet—
after several more minutes, breathing became fractionally easier.
Not easy.
Not comfortable.
Just less impossible.
Kael paused, chest rising and falling hard.
Then narrowed his eyes.
There it is.
The shift was subtle.
Tiny enough that anyone without his awareness might have missed it.
His body was changing.
Not healing.
Adjusting.
Micro-adaptations.
His circulation had improved first.
Then his breathing efficiency.
Then the strain distribution across his legs and spine.
The gravity had not lessened.
His body had simply become slightly better at surviving it.
A grin tugged at the corner of his mouth.
So it works.
Not theory.
Not hope.
Proof.
Infinite Adaptation was real.
It wasn’t flashy.
It wasn’t dramatic.
It wasn’t some absurd instant transformation.
It was worse.
It was efficient.
A body that learned from suffering in real time.
Kael stood there in the center of the chamber, sweat running down his neck, and slowly exhaled.
Then he turned toward the control panel.
He had already adapted to 2x gravity faster than any normal first-year should have.
Which meant there was only one real question left.
How far could he push it?
Kael reached for the setting controls and increased the pressure.
3x Gravity
The chamber paused.
A warning screen flashed across the control panel.
WARNING
Maximum first-year output reached
3x gravity exceeds recommended stress threshold for E-rank students
Potential outcomes: skeletal damage, organ strain, internal hemorrhage
Continue?
Kael stared at the screen for a second.
Then pressed confirm.
The pressure tripled.
And the world broke.
Kael hit the floor so hard the impact cracked something.
He didn’t even have time to brace.
One second he was standing.
The next, the full weight of the chamber crushed him flat.
His skull struck reinforced steel.
Pain detonated through his head.
A sickening crack echoed through the room.
Then black.
When consciousness returned, it did so slowly.
No dramatic awakening.
Only pain.
Then awareness.
Then sensation.
Kael’s eyes opened to the metallic floor beneath him.
For several seconds, he didn’t move.
He simply lay there, staring blankly as his mind caught up with what had happened.
Warm liquid ran past his temple.
Blood. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
A lot of it.
His vision was blurred.
His head rang.
His limbs felt like they belonged to someone else.
He should not have survived that.
A normal E-rank student wouldn’t have.
That thought came and went quietly.
Because something else was happening.
Kael could feel it.
His body was... rebuilding.
Slowly.
Painfully.
But undeniably.
Minute contractions ran through damaged muscle fibers.
Hairline fractures tightened.
Torn capillaries sealed.
Internal strain redistributed itself.
It was not regeneration.
The difference mattered.
His wounds were not simply closing.
His body was correcting itself.
Adapting around the damage.
He lay there in silence, breathing shallowly as the process continued.
One minute passed.
Then two.
Then three.
By the third minute, the bleeding had slowed.
By the fifth, his breathing stabilized.
By the tenth, he could move his fingers without trembling.
By the twentieth, the headache had dulled from blinding agony to a heavy pulse.
And by the forty-fifth—
Kael sat up.
Slowly.
Carefully.
His shirt clung to his back with sweat and dried blood.
His head still hurt.
His body still ached.
But something had changed.
He could feel it immediately.
Lighter.
Not healed.
Improved.
Kael pushed himself to his feet.
This time, under triple gravity, his knees did not immediately collapse.
They bent.
Shook.
Held.
Kael stood there in silence, breathing hard.
Then took one step.
Heavy.
But possible.
Another.
Still painful.
Still miserable.
But possible.
A grin spread across his face.
He had done it.
Not mastered.
Not conquered.
Survived.
And in surviving, he had forced his body to become something better than it had been an hour ago.
Kael exhaled slowly.
Then spoke.
"Status."
A translucent screen appeared in front of him.
Status Window
Name: Kael Draven
Race: Human [???]
Class: None
Rank: E+
Potential: ???
Strength: E+
Agility: E+
Stamina: D-
Mana: E+
Affinity: Darkness
Kael stared at the screen.
Then smiled.
His stamina had risen.
Not by much.
But enough.
Enough to prove the principle.
His body had adapted under stress and improved in response.
That alone changed everything.
Normal people trained for progress.
Kael could force it.
Pain was no longer just pain.
Damage was no longer just damage.
So long as it failed to kill him—
it became growth.
His eyes lingered on the strange line beneath his race.
Human [???]
That hadn’t been there before.
Interesting.
Something in his body had changed enough for the system to register instability.
Not enough to identify.
But enough to notice.
Kael filed that away for later.
Then looked at the rest of the screen again.
No class.
No blessing.
No relic.
No bloodline awakening.
And yet—
he had already started changing.
Kael laughed quietly to himself, wiping dried blood from his temple.
"So I’ve gotten stronger."
The grin on his face sharpened.
It was a small gain.
Pathetic by late-game standards.
Meaningless by the standards of monsters.
But it was real.
And more importantly—
it was his.