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Hades' Cursed Luna novel Chapter 101

Eve

As I pounced, Hades easily dodged me and circled me like a predator once more, his sharp eyes glinting with an unsettling amusement. "Strength is only half the battle," he said, his tone as cold and detached as ever. "Endurance determines who stays standing when the fight drags on. Let’s see if you can handle the real thing."

I barely had a moment to prepare before he surged forward again but this time, he was more unrelenting. He didn’t give me space to think, didn’t allow a single breath of reprieve. His attacks came in a flurry—strikes aimed at my sides, sweeps toward my legs, and quick feints to throw me off balance. It reminded me of the men that he had fought when he had brought me here. I had never thought to think that I would be at the receiving end of his onslaught.

Sweat trickled down my temples as I dodged, twisted, and blocked to the best of my ability. My muscles burned, my lungs felt like they might collapse, and my sliced palms stung with every impact. Still, I gritted my teeth and pushed through, refusing to give him the satisfaction of seeing me falter.

"Good," he murmured as I narrowly avoided another strike. "But you’re slowing down."

His words sliced through my focus, and that brief distraction was all it took. His foot swept out, hooking around my ankle, and I crashed to the ground with a force that rattled my bones.

Pain shot through my knees and elbows as I landed awkwardly, the breath knocked clean out of me. For a moment, I just lay there, dazed and humiliated, the world spinning around me.

Above me, Hades loomed, his shadow falling over my prone form. His expression was unreadable, but the faintest flicker of something of a not so satisfied expression crossed his features. He extended a hand, his voice hard. "Get up."

I stared at his hand, my pride warring with my exhaustion. Every fiber of my being screamed to take it, to let him pull me up, but the memory of his smirk, his taunts, his maddening arrogance, was still fresh in my mind.

"No," I said, my voice hoarse but steady.

Pushing against the ground with trembling arms, I forced myself to my knees. My legs wobbled as I stood, the sting of raw pain fueling me more than anything else. I kept my eyes locked on his, defiance in my gaze.

"I don’t need your help," I added, wiping the sweat from my brow with the back of my hand.

Hades’s lips curved into a faint smirk, but this time, there was no mockery in it—only a trace of approval. He crossed his arms, stepping back to give me space. "Good," he said. "Lesson one of endurance: no one is going to save you. You stand on your own, or you don’t stand at all."

I squared my shoulders, rolling the tension out of them as best I could. My legs still felt like jelly, and my chest heaved with labored breaths.

"Ready to go again?" he asked, his tone almost amused.

"Always," I bit out, planting my feet firmly on the ground. I cringed as my ankle began to ache. Luckily, if he noticed he did not show it.

Hades’s smirk widened just a fraction, and then he moved. This time, I wasn’t caught off guard. This time, I was ready. And as the grueling session continued, I vowed that no matter how many times I fell, I would rise again. Maybe I would be able to look at myself in the mirror again.

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Hades

I watched her walk into the dining hall, Jules trailing dutifully behind her. Despite the bruising session earlier, she carried herself with a composed elegance that belied the exhaustion she must have felt. The only visible evidence of our training was the faint bruise on her cheek—a stark contrast against her pale skin. She hadn’t tried to hide it, hadn’t bothered with makeup or excuses.

It struck me, unexpectedly, that her refusal to cover the mark was somthing indeed, It was a statement. A silent declaration that she wouldn’t shy away from what she endured, no matter how painful or humiliating.

As she approached the table, her eyes briefly flicked to mine, her expression neutral but guarded. I had seen that look before—on new gammas too proud to admit defeat but too wary to let their guard down. It was a mask of resilience, and damn it, she wore it well.

Chapter 101: Implied But Not Explicit 1

"Tell me," I said, setting my wine down with deliberate care, "how do you find your training thus far?" frёewebnoѵel.ƈo๓

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