Ficool

He Was Born Ordinary in a World That Was Not

Elfunserus
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
355
Views
Synopsis
In the year 1370, in a forgotten corner of a struggling village, the Veyra family survives on almost nothing. They are poor-poorer than most. Their home is cracked and collapsing, unable to protect them from winter’s cold or summer’s heat. They own no land, no magic tools, no special bloodline. The only thing passed down through generations is a single, ordinary sword old, dull, and without any blessing or power. When Kairo Veyra is born on March 14, 1370, nothing marks him as special. Yet survival has a way of shaping those who endure. His father, Aric Veyra, is a part-time adventurer not a hero, but a laborer. While others claim glory in dungeons, Aric carries their burdens, hauls their loot, and accepts their scorn for a few coins. He returns home battered and bruised, only to be healed by his wife, Lyra Veyra, a quiet healer whose skills are used without recognition. From the shadows of poverty, Kairo grows. By the age of five, he can read, think critically, and move faster and stronger than children twice his age not through magic, but through hardship, discipline, and observation. Watching his father suffer and his mother endure, Kairo swears a vow: his family will never live like this again. In secret, Aric teaches his son the sword. Not a famous style. Not a divine technique. Just a single philosophy passed down through necessity Sword of One Style: efficiency, precision, and survival above all else. At fifteen, Kairo steps into the world of adventurers, armed only with an ordinary blade and the resolve of someone who has known hunger, cold, and despair. He is mocked for his background, dismissed for his lack of status, and underestimated for his plain equipment. But dungeon by dungeon, battle by battle, his blade speaks. As monsters fall and reputations rise, Kairo’s name spreads not because he is chosen, blessed, or gifted, but because he refuses to break. Wealth comes slowly. Respect comes slower. And with every step forward, he must balance strength with morality, ambition with family, and power with responsibility. This is not a story of destiny. It is the story of ordinary people carving their place into a brutal world, proving that even the poorest family armed with nothing but perseverance and an unremarkable sword can leave behind a legacy that reshapes history. And Kairo Veyra’s journey has only just begun.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - A Crumbling Home

The wind slipped through the cracks in the walls as if the house itself were breathing its last.

Aric Veyra pressed his shoulder against the wooden beam, forcing it back into place with a dull groan. The beam had been straight once years ago but time, rot, and neglect had bent it like an old man's spine. Snow clung to the gaps in the walls, melting slowly as it reached the dim warmth inside, dripping onto the dirt floor below.

The house stood at the edge of the village, where no one bothered to repair roads or replace broken fences. Its roof sagged unevenly, patched with mismatched planks and scraps of cloth. In winter, cold crept in like a silent enemy. In summer, heat pressed down until the air itself felt heavy enough to choke.

Lyra sat near the small hearth, her hands resting gently on her swollen belly. The fire crackled weakly, fed by damp wood scavenged from the forest outskirts. Her breath came slow and measured, not from weakness, but from patience learned through years of hardship.

"You should rest," she said softly, watching Aric struggle with the beam.

Aric shook his head. "If this wall gives out, the cold will take the house before the night does."

Lyra did not argue. She knew that tone the quiet stubbornness of a man who had learned that survival did not wait for comfort.

Outside, the village bustled faintly. Voices carried, laughter echoed, but none of it reached the Veyra home. The world beyond their walls moved forward, while this house remained stuck between collapse and endurance.

Aric finally stepped back, wiping sweat from his brow despite the cold. His hands were rough, scarred from years of labor and dungeon work. He flexed his fingers, wincing slightly.

"I'll fetch water," he said.

Lyra nodded. "Be careful."

Aric grabbed the worn bucket near the door and stepped outside, boots crunching against frozen ground. The path to the well was long, and the bucket always felt heavier on the return trip. Still, he walked it every day. Because if he didn't, no one would.

When he returned, Lyra had risen and was slowly sweeping melted snow away from the hearth.

"You shouldn't be standing," Aric said.

"And you shouldn't be carrying more than your body can take," Lyra replied with a faint smile.

Their eyes met, sharing a silent understanding born of years spent facing the same struggles.

Against the far wall hung a sword.

It was not ornate. No jewels adorned its hilt. The blade was scratched, dulled in places, its leather grip worn smooth by generations of hands. To any passerby, it would look like scrap an old weapon long past its worth.

Aric noticed Lyra's gaze drift toward it.

He walked over and carefully took the sword from its hooks. The metal was cold, familiar. He held it with reverence, not pride.

"This sword," he said quietly, "has been with our family longer than the house."

Lyra smiled faintly. She had heard the story before, but never tired of it.

"My father carried it," Aric continued. "And his father before him. Not because it was special… but because it endured."

He ran his thumb along the blade's edge. "It fed us when words failed. Protected us when walls couldn't. It's not magic. Not blessed. Just steel."

Lyra placed a hand over her belly. "Will you give it to him?"

Aric nodded. "Someday. When he's strong enough to understand what it means."

The fire crackled again, struggling against the cold. Outside, the wind howled, shaking the weak walls.

Within the crumbling home, a poor family endured armed with nothing but worn hands, quiet resolve, and an ordinary sword that had survived where many men had not.

And soon, a child would be born into this world of hardship.

Unaware that his life would begin with nothing

And grow into something far greater.