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A Knight Who Eternally Regresses Chapter 658

How do you feel?[ ... words ]

A Knight Who Eternally Regresses Chapter 658

How do you feel?[ … words ]

[ … words ]

“Weren’t you going to meet a fairy?”

Jaxon asked. Like he often did when surprised, his tone dropped into informal speech. Even from the rooftop, his voice pierced the air clearly. It carried a certain force—cold flame, perhaps.

Chilly, yet full of heat. Challenging.

His eyes burned, but his voice was low and sharp.

“There was a demon instead.”

No matter what Jaxon said, Enkrid’s tone stayed flat. A little bewildered, perhaps.

“So?” Jaxon pressed.

“…I struck with all I had and killed it.”

Normally, he wouldn’t have spoken that way. These days, he could give more detailed explanations—he no longer had to sound like a madman. He’d systematized his thinking.

But that kind of °• N 𝑜 v 𝑒 l i g h t •° language wasn’t suitable when facing people with energy sharp as a blade. So the old words he’d once said to Ermen came out by habit.

Still, it wasn’t the kind of thing these people would complain about.

“Not wrong,” Ragna agreed, standing up.

With a few steps forward, Ragna drew his sword.

Shiiing.

A sound as clear and cold as frost.

He threw the scabbard aside with his left hand and gripped the sword with both.

“Move aside, sulking pup. It’s my turn.”

While Enkrid had been away, Ragna had apparently acquired a fine sword. The blade shimmered a pale blue, the color of the sky.

It was forged from Valerian steel, Noir iron, and pure silver.

Thick and long—much like his previous heavy blade—it matched his style.

A gift from the heavens, they called him. A genius. And now, the fire in his eyes was visible for all to see. He made no attempt to hide it.

Enkrid stared at Ragna, and Ragna spoke.

“If you can’t block this, you’ll die.”

When you train with a sword, losing a limb is to be expected. That’s how Ragna learned.

He spoke seriously, yet there was a slight curl to his lips—anticipation, joy, and excitement, all mingled in the reckless way of youth.

Just from his expression and posture, Enkrid could read his emotions.

He’d always been good at it, but spending time among fairies—who practiced emotional restraint—had sharpened that sense further.

So when Ragna said it with so much excitement, Enkrid responded with a serious question.

“You’re not going to hold back too, are you?”

Ragna replied with his sword.

There wasn’t even a visible preparatory motion—just a sudden, sharp thrust that split the air.

Clang!

Enkrid raised Penna vertically, blocking with the flat of the blade, and leapt sideways.

Boom!

Air tore as Ragna’s prepared second strike cut through where Enkrid had been.

The opening thrust followed by a cutting slash.

None of it was light. Yet on the surface, it looked like Enkrid was dodging with casual ease.

He predicts and reacts.

If there’s a miscalculation, he recalculates instantly. If that fails, he blocks with force. Even if it looks forced, the result still seems like everything flows his way.

He changes tactics in real time.

It was as if he computed every variable and stayed focused through the chaos.

But is that even possible?

If you’re looking up, you can’t see your feet. What Enkrid was doing was like seeing both at once.

He makes the accidental look inevitable.

He fought with a macro-level understanding of the battle.

Normally, this would be nonsense. But when someone is doing it right in front of you—there’s nothing to say.

Rem saw the result before the fight truly began.

Before Enkrid arrived, if Rem and Ragna fought ten times, they’d draw all ten. It was hard to judge a victor. If Rem had been overwhelmed, Ragna would be too.

The Wavebreaker Sword didn’t allow for counter-strategy. Everything got blocked. Even Ragna wouldn’t be able to break through. It would come down to endurance.

Unyielding.

And once that moment came, the bottomless Will would welcome the fool who tried.

When Rem fought Enkrid, it felt like being dragged into a swamp. Slowly submerged, inch by inch.

That was what Enkrid imagined when he thought of strategy—grabbing the enemy by the ankle and pulling them under, until the battlefield itself was in his favor.

Rem had seen it. Ragna felt it.

I’m going to lose.

His genius condensed the process into outcome. If the fight continued like this, he would eventually lose.

As soon as that thought came, Ragna shifted his stance.

He’d shown this move to Rem before. A technique that was nearly impossible to counter.

He tensed every muscle in his body and poured all his Will into a downward strike.

It was a simple, textbook greatsword slash—but for the one on the receiving end, it wasn’t.

It was like lightning hurled by the gods.

It was a technique modeled after Enkrid’s way of pouring Will into a blow—reforged in Ragna’s own style.

To Ragna, it was just a mighty slash.

He widened his stance, raised both arms overhead. All in a blink. The preparatory motion was so short, it made blocking that much harder.

In a battle where your life hangs on a single swing, even a seasoned warrior could only focus on what lay a step ahead.

That’s why knights called their battle sense “foresight.”

Even with knightly insight, this kind of moment couldn’t be predicted. Even if it was—it would be too late. Try to dodge, and the sword would follow.

Ragna’s footwork was deceptively fast. Even compared to Rem, who played across the vast western plains.

Retreating wouldn’t be enough. When Rem faced it, he’d rushed forward just before the sword came down—to halve the force of the strike.

It was dangerous. They’d almost killed each other. After that, they stopped sparring. One of them was bound to die if it continued.

Now Ragna was about to swing that same strike at Enkrid.

It was a moment where anyone would think: There’s no opening.

“…Damn.”

Audin murmured.

Just as Ragna was gathering momentum, Enkrid stepped far back.

It was hard to say whether Ragna had completed his stance first or Enkrid had withdrawn first. It was almost simultaneous.

Ragna could still chase him and swing. It was the move he’d developed using Oara’s Continuous Sword technique.

But the power would be diminished. Enkrid had retreated just enough.

A tactical retreat.

He’d read and predicted the form of the fight. It reminded some of Acker’s Spiderweb Swordsmanship, but it was even more refined.

Acker’s method trapped and pinned down the enemy—but what Enkrid had just done was to nullify everything, no matter what the enemy tried.

Is he just thinking faster?

No. He had two tracks of thought.

Rem noticed. So did Jaxon. And now Ragna and Audin noticed too.

Their eyes sparkled.

Ragna finally swung. Enkrid responded by sweeping his short sword sideways.

Two blades imbued with Will collided with a tremendous sound.

BOOM!

It was as if air itself shattered.

Lightning struck from the sky—only to be stopped by a volcanic eruption from below.

Sky-blue streaks and pale moonlight-colored lines clashed and parted.

Neither wanted to take the full brunt of it, so the blow only glanced.

It was a spar. Each took a step back.

As they passed one another—one to the left, the other to the right—a gap opened between them.

That was the end of the fight.

Ragna had spent nearly all his Will. He needed to recover. Enkrid did not.

“Shall we continue?”

Enkrid asked, raising Penna upright in front of his face.

Ragna stared into Enkrid’s blue eyes for a moment, then let his sword droop and stepped beside Rem.

Seeing Rem and Ragna standing side by side was comical in a way—especially to those who knew how much their relationship had soured while Enkrid was gone.

“Now then, our two sulking brothers can step aside,” Audin said, walking forward.

His eyes blazed with the same hunger. Joy, excitement, and anticipation burned in his gaze.

Had he always been like this? Or had Enkrid changed him?

It didn’t matter anymore.

They were all brimming with competitive spirit, desperate to fight like madmen.

Golden light shimmered from Audin’s body. It clung like sand, flowing over him and back up his legs. The golden grains covering him were a sign of his divine power.

“This is my current strength,” he declared.

Audin moved.

From his clenched fist, light exploded.

Whoosh—! The light condensed into a single point and shot toward Enkrid’s face.

It was a punch—his left foot pivoted, hips twisted, and the blow was unleashed. With divine power and a hardened body behind it, the strike looked like a spear made of light.

Crash!

Enkrid blocked it too.

The spear of light didn’t end with one blow. It scattered, storming forward like falling starlight.

Fists, feet, sometimes claw-like fingers tried to grasp his body.

Enkrid blocked and moved, again and again.

To the untrained eye, it looked like a one-sided assault from Audin. He pressed forward, while Enkrid gave no ground.

When Audin finally closed the distance, Enkrid dropped Penna, grabbed Audin’s arm, twisted it, and slammed his knee into Audin’s chin.

Crack!

Audin blocked with his palm, but couldn’t stop Enkrid from stepping back and reclaiming Penna.

Every movement flowed like water.

From dropping the blade to reclaiming it—it all seemed calculated.

Yes, battle involved chance and luck—but Enkrid made it feel like everything was part of the plan. Even failed calculations looked premeditated.

He split his thoughts, accelerated them, and fought by computing every variable in an instant.

I can’t win, Rem thought again.

Audin likely felt the same.

Even if he had the most solid divine power among them, there were clear limits.

From the side, Rem watched. His axe trembled.

The sentient weapon spoke to him.

I get it. But you’re not trying to kill him, so I won’t interfere. This is play, after all.

The axe believed it could kill—but Rem had no such intention. The axe misunderstood his desire to win for a desire to kill.

But they were not the same.

If Rem unleashed the axe’s full power, he might find a way.

But he didn’t want to.

Even though he had lost—he didn’t feel bitter. On the contrary, it was exhilarating.

Audin seemed to feel the same.

“I lost,” Audin said—he was the only one of the three to admit it out loud.

Then, dripping sweat, he asked:

“How do you feel?”

Looking now, Enkrid had endured just as much. His entire body was soaked in sweat.

So were Ragna and Rem.

Audin’s question held many meanings.

They all thought back to when Enkrid had first arrived as their squad leader.

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A Knight Who Eternally Regresses

A Knight Who Eternally Regresses

Eternally Regressing Knight, The Knight Only Lives Today, The Knight Who Only Lives Today, อัศวินวันเดียว, 오늘만 사는 기사
Score 8
Status: Ongoing Type: Author: , Artist: , , , Released: 2023 Native Language: Korean

He does not remember how many times he has died. The number has faded like an old scar, present but unreadable. What he remembers is the weight of his sword. The burn in his lungs. The face of the enemy who keeps killing him. And the dawn that keeps bringing him back.

Though it may be a dream, weathered, crumpled, and fading, he held on without surrender.

This is the story of a knight trapped in a single day. Not a grand day filled with dragons or world ending battles. Just another brutal, bloody day on the front lines where soldiers fall and knights bleed out in the mud. He dies to a spear through the chest. He wakes up at sunrise. He dies to an arrow between the eyes. He wakes up at sunrise. He dies to exhaustion, to betrayal, to a wound that should have been avoidable.

He wakes up at sunrise. Every single time.

But the knight does not break. He does not rage against the heavens or beg for an explanation. Instead, he does something far more terrifying. He learns. Each repeated day becomes a lesson carved into his bones. Each death shaves off a fraction of a second from his reactions. Each sunrise brings him one step closer to surviving until the sunset.

Through each repeated day, running towards tomorrow's light, he became a knight, resolute and bright.

There is no system window telling him how many tries he has left. No goddess descending to explain his curse. No guarantee that this life will be the one where he finally sees the next morning. All he has is his blade, his will, and the endless patience of a man who refuses to stay dead.

His enemies do not know what is hunting them. They see a knight who fights a little too well, dodges a little too fast, and seems to know their moves before they make them. They do not realize they are fighting someone who has killed them a hundred times already in futures that no longer exist.

This is not a story about a hero destined to save the world. It is a story about what happens when an ordinary knight refuses to let go of a single day, no matter how many times it kills him. The dream may be weathered, crumpled, and fading. But so is he. And he is still holding on.

I became a knight, resolute and bright.

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