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The Extra's Rise-Chapter 324: Phantom Fleet Command (1)
The skies above Mythos Academy were a brilliant, cloudless blue. Rows of high-tech bleachers gleamed in the midday sun, arranged in a colossal oval that encircled the largest aquatic stadium on campus. This place was typically used for advanced naval exercises—training sessions for maritime or mech-based courses—but today it was transformed into the grand stage for Phantom Fleet Command, the highlight of the Inter-Academy Festival's preliminary events. The festival brought together six different academies, each having sent ten of their most promising students, for a total of sixty participants. They were all teenagers, mostly ranging from fifteen to nineteen, unified by the single purpose of crushing the competition in a watery battlefield unlike any other.
A hush of pre-battle anticipation filled the stands. A few thousand spectators—students, staff, and external visitors—had assembled, wearing color-coded jackets or scarves to show their loyalties: black and crimson for Mythos, white and gold for Slatemark, green for Serpentstone, silver for Pillen, red for Starcrest, and cobalt for Gravehold. On the massive scoreboard suspended above the stadium, an initial listing of the sixty participants scrolled by. It wasn't showing any points yet—those would appear only at the conclusion of the event. Until then, the final ranking would remain a mystery, fueling tension and speculation in equal measure.
At the heart of this aquatic arena spread a body of saltwater nearly four hundred meters across. Its edges were lined with docking slips for mechanical warships, each about fifteen to twenty meters long. These scaled-down but fully equipped vessels were the crux of Phantom Fleet Command: thick, sleek hulls forged from layered alloys to withstand gunfire, mini-torpedoes, and scorching energy blasts. Each competitor in this event commanded a flotilla of six ships—a main flagship plus five support vessels. The technology behind them was advanced but quite real, as were the stakes. Hits could force a hull breach, sabotage thrusters, or disable a ship entirely.
Down at Dock Twenty-Three, Cecilia stood by the hull of her flagship, the Radiant Sovereign. She was dressed in a sleek uniform that bore the black-and-crimson emblem of Mythos Academy. She had golden hair pulled into a neat braid, and the refined posture of someone utterly sure of herself. In her calm, crimson eyes flickered the bearing of a leader.
She eyed her flotilla with satisfaction: the Radiant Sovereign—a 20-meter warship with dual turret cannons and advanced sensor arrays—plus two corvettes for speed, a destroyer with heavier armaments, a support frigate for mid-range shelling, and a specialized scout vessel. Each hull was painted a striking black with gold trim. She was ready to prove that even on water, she was unstoppable.
On the other side of the same stadium, near Dock Seven, Ian adjusted the gloves of his black uniform. Red hair, golden eyes, and the poised confidence of someone who had faced down monstrous foes. Like Cecilia, he had five additional vessels: corvettes, a destroyer, a frigate, and a lighter cruiser. The black-and-crimson color scheme on them echoed Mythos Academy's official palette, with subtle draconic motifs adorning the hulls—a quiet nod to the rumored draconic blood in his veins.
Though the festival was brimming with other top talents—Talia Moor from Gravehold, Gareth Flynn from Serpentstone, Naomi Shea from Starcrest, and others—everyone in the stands suspected that the day's real highlight would be the confrontation between these two unstoppable Mythos students. Some watchers placed bets on which corner of the watery stadium they would meet in, who would gain the upper hand, whether either might be dethroned by an underdog. The scoreboard still displayed all sixty names, but none had overshadowed the rumor that two White-rank teenage powerhouses from the same academy might soon clash.
At precisely midday, a jingle rang out, hushed the crowd, and directed everyone's attention to the center of the basin. A calm, amplified voice—smooth and measured—began the official introduction:
"Welcome, esteemed students and visitors, to the Inter-Academy Festival's Phantom Fleet Command! Each of our six academies—Mythos, Slatemark, Serpentstone, Pillen, Starcrest, and Gravehold—has sent ten participants to test their skills in advanced naval warfare. This is no simulation. These are real mechanical vessels, scaled down, but armed with genuine ordnance. Participants, you have your assigned flotillas. Control them wisely, outmaneuver your foes, seize resource buoys for additional points, and remember: only your synergy and cunning can ensure victory. You may sink or be sunk, but the scoreboard will reveal the champion at the end."
Applause rolled around the stands. The voice paused, then resumed more briskly, "Participants, you have five minutes to board your vessels, finalize your squads, and prepare for deployment. Once the signal sounds, the gates to the central waters will open, and the Phantom Fleet Command will commence. May the best academy triumph!"
A surge of motion followed. Students boarded their designated ships. Each competitor had a small team of three or four classmates or staff who would handle specialized tasks like scanning, engine tuning, or gunnery, but final decisions belonged to the competitor. Both Cecilia and Ian found themselves in the same boat—figuratively speaking—giving last-minute orders to their own crews.
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Cecilia stepped onto the Radiant Sovereign's main deck, her boots tapping the polished metal. She inhaled deeply, enjoying the salty tang of the water. With a purposeful stride, she reached the helm, a compact console bristling with screens and controls. She typed a few commands, verifying reactor output, turret alignment, and communications with her corvettes and support ships. The other five vessels floated in symmetrical formation just beyond, each manned by Mythos students in black uniforms with the academy crest. If she felt any nerves, it didn't show on her face. She'd spent half her life dominating in every competition or test thrown her way. This would be no different.
Across the water, Ian took a calmer approach, leaning against the Draconis Spear's starboard rail, scanning the rest of the participants fanning out around the edges of the watery stadium. He recognized Talia Moor's ships off to the left, their hulls fitted with stealth plating that might hamper targeting. On the right, Gareth Flynn's imposing line of heavier warships flew the serpentine crest of Serpentstone. In the southwestern corner, he spotted a cluster of Slatemark ships, ironically carrying an emblem identical to the crest of Cecilia's family. He felt a flicker of curiosity. Had they come to avenge old grudges or prove some imperial lineage nonsense? He wasn't sure, and it didn't matter. Right now, he only focused on forging a path to enough kills—and eventually a confrontation with the unstoppable golden-haired girl from his own academy.
The overhead voice came once more. "One minute to start. All participants, please stand by."
Silence, except for the faint hum of engines, the soft lapping of water against steel hulls. The hush of thousands of watchers bracing for a show. Then, with an electric buzz, the main gates parted, allowing the docked ships to slip out into the central basin. The event began.