The morning begins before sunrise.
Cold air cuts through the camp as the tribe gathers in a wide clearing. Fires burn low, and the ground is marked with old scars—this is not a place for ceremony alone, but for judgment.
The protagonist is brought forward.
This is his first true step into barbarian society: **the Trial of Blood and Bone**.
---
### The Trial
Unlike what he expected, it's not a simple test of strength. The elders announce three parts:
1. **Endurance** – Survive in the wild alone until sunset
2. **Hunt** – Bring back proof of a kill
3. **Will** – Do not flee, no matter what he faces
Failure doesn't just mean embarrassment—it means being seen as unworthy of the chieftain's bloodline.
Despite his young body, he accepts without hesitation.
But internally, he's calculating.
> "I don't need to be the strongest… I just need to be the smartest."
---
### Into the Wild
He's given only a crude knife and sent into the forest.
At first, his lack of physical strength becomes painfully obvious. Running tires him quickly. His senses are dull compared to trained hunters. Even the terrain feels like an enemy.
But this is where his past life begins to matter.
Instead of chasing prey like a typical barbarian, he:
* Studies tracks carefully
* Avoids unnecessary fights
* Sets a simple trap using terrain and leverage
It's inefficient by modern standards—but revolutionary here.
---
### The Encounter
Just as his plan begins to work, something goes wrong.
A beast—not the small prey he aimed for—emerges.
Larger. Faster. Hungry.
Panic hits him for a split second.
This is the moment the trial truly tests him—not his body, but his **mind under pressure**.
Instead of running blindly, he:
* Forces himself to stay still
* Uses the environment to limit the creature's movement
* Lures it toward his trap
The execution isn't clean.
He gets injured.
It's messy. Brutal. Close.
But in the end… he wins.
---
### Return to the Tribe
By sunset, the tribe has already begun to whisper.
Many expected failure.
Some even hoped for it.
Then he appears—bloodied, exhausted, but standing.
Dragging proof of his kill behind him.
Silence spreads across the clearing.
This wasn't just survival.
It was **something different**.
---
### The Chieftain's Gaze
His father steps forward.
For the first time, there's no dismissal in his eyes.
Only interest.
Not because his son is strong…
…but because he fought like **something the tribe has never seen before**.
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### Closing Note
Chapter 6 establishes a critical shift:
* The protagonist proves he can survive in this brutal world
* Others begin to notice his **unconventional methods**
* The seeds of reputation—and suspicion—are planted
And most importantly…
He realizes:
> Strength alone won't define him.
> He's going to change what strength *means*.
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