Cherreads

Hidden Beast Hunter: My S-Rank Maid Disguise

NotClosedXD
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
131
Views
Synopsis
--- She hid her horns for seventeen years. They gave her a maid dress anyway. --- Beneath the streets of modern Tokyo, an entire world operates in secret — Beast Hunters, hidden academies, and monsters that slip through the cracks of reality while the rest of the world sips coffee and misses their trains. Saya Hibiki is the best of them. S-Class at seventeen. Dragon bloodline. Silver horns, silver wings, a silver-scaled tail she's spent her entire life pretending doesn't exist — and an ability called **Silver Shadow** so powerful it's been sealed inside her since birth, waiting for exactly this moment to wake up. She was ready for the mission. She was ready for the portal. She was even, grudgingly, ready to say goodbye to the only friends who ever knew what she really was. She was *not* ready for the dress. --- *"This is a Awakening Garment,"* Lumen said, projecting the holographic image with what Saya could only describe as deeply unnecessary cheerfulness. *"Black and white. Very elegant. Maid-style."* *"Absolutely not."* *"Without it, Silver Shadow stays sealed at twelve percent."* *"I'll fight at twelve percent."* *"You soloed a Tier-7 Wyrm at zero percent."* *"...I hate you."* *"Noted."* --- Now she's traveling alone through worlds — a girl with dragon horns in a lace apron, cracking ancient monsters in half with shadow that moves like it's alive, then standing in the wreckage looking like she's about to serve tea. She will never admit she looks good in it. Her tail gives her away every time. --- *"You're not afraid,"* she said slowly, staring at the old man who'd found her bleeding in a cave in feudal Japan like it was perfectly ordinary.* *"Should I be?"* He stirred his pot without looking up. *"I've seen stranger things than a winged girl in a torn dress."* *"...What stranger things?"* He smiled — quiet, knowing, the kind of smile that held seventy years of secrets. *"Finish the coal mining. I'll tell you eventually."* --- **Hidden power. A reluctant disguise. Worlds she was never supposed to see.** Every portal leads somewhere new. Every battle unlocks something she didn't know she had. And somewhere, threaded through the worlds she's crossing, is an answer to the question nobody at the Academy ever gave her: *Why does everyone who should be afraid of her dragon blood —* *already seem to know what she is?* --- *The maid dress was supposed to be a condition.* *It's becoming something else entirely.* --- **Addictive action. Reluctant elegance. A dragon girl who will absolutely not admit she's started to like the dress.** *Hidden Beast Hunter: My S-Rank Maid Disguise* — updating weekly.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Girl Who Hid Her Horns

The auditorium of Kuro Ryu Academy smelled like static electricity and ambition.

Beneath the modern glass towers of Tokyo, where salarymen rushed past coffee shops and neon signs blinked over crowded crossings, an entire civilization lived in secret. Carved into the bedrock beneath the city, the Academy trained the only people standing between humanity and the monsters that slipped through the cracks of reality — the Beast Hunters.

Today, one of them was about to change everything.

Saya Hibiki sat in the front row, spine straight, expression unreadable. Her knee-length silver-white hair shimmered under the auditorium lights like moonlight on untouched snow. Her bangs fell heavy over sharp pink eyes that glowed faintly — eyes that had stared down monsters twice her size without blinking.

Most people in the room didn't know what she really was.

They didn't know about the horns she kept folded flat and hidden beneath an illusion charm, curling like silver crowns against her skull. They didn't know about the wings tucked invisibly against her back, or the scaled tail wrapped tight around her waist beneath her uniform, trained for years not to twitch.

They just knew she was the strongest A-Class student the Academy had ever produced.

That was about to change too.

"Hibiki, Saya."

The principal's voice cracked through the microphone, and three hundred heads turned at once.

Saya stood. Her tail — hidden, but never fully obedient — gave one small, nervous flick beneath her skirt.

---

She walked to the stage like she owned it, because some small, stubborn part of her did.

Whispers chased her up every step.

"That's her — the one who soloed a Tier-7 Wyrm last month—"

"I heard she broke three combat records this year—"

"She's only seventeen—"

Saya ignored all of it, jaw tight, eyes forward. She hated attention. She hated it the way she hated losing, the way she hated being wrong, the way she hated the warm, traitorous feeling crawling up her throat right now.

The principal smiled at her — an old man with silver hair of his own, though his came from age, not heritage.

"Saya Hibiki," he said, loud enough for the cameras drifting overhead. "Six months ago, you entered this Academy ranked A-Class. Today, the Council has reviewed your trial results."

A pause. The whole room leaned in.

"You have been promoted to S-Class."

The auditorium erupted.

---

Saya's pink eyes widened a fraction — the only crack in her composure — before she forced her face back into something cool and unbothered. Inside, her heart was slamming against her ribs hard enough to hurt.

S-Class.

There were only six S-Class hunters in the entire country. And now there would be seven.

The principal raised a hand, and the room quieted. A box slid open on the podium, light spilling out from inside it — not electric light, but something older, something that pulsed like a heartbeat.

"With this rank," the principal said, "comes a reward given to less than a dozen hunters in Academy history."

He lifted it into the air. A badge, forged from pale silver metal, shaped like a coiling dragon devouring its own tail.

"The Dragon Walker Badge."

The room gasped collectively. Saya's tail, still hidden, wrapped tighter around her waist on pure reflex.

"This badge does not simply mark your rank," the principal continued. "It binds an Artificial Intelligence combat-system directly to your soul signature. From this day forward, it will guide you, calculate for you, and unlock abilities no normal training ever could."

He held it out to her.

Saya stared at it like it might bite her.

Then she took it.

---

The moment her fingers closed around the badge, the world went white.

Not blinding — soft, like moonlight folding itself around her. A low, melodic chime rang somewhere behind her eyes, and a voice spoke directly into her mind, smooth and silver-toned, neither fully human nor fully machine.

**[SYSTEM INITIALIZING...]**

**[Soul Signature Confirmed: Hibiki, Saya]**

**[Bloodline Detected: Silver Wyrm — Ancient Class]**

**[Dragon Walker Badge Synchronized]**

Saya's breath caught. No one else in the auditorium could hear this. No one else could see the faint shimmer of silver light gathering at her shoulder, condensing into a small floating orb no bigger than a fist, glowing softly like a captured star.

It blinked once. Twice. Then, almost lazily, it drifted around to hover directly in front of her face.

**[Hello, Saya. I am your Dragon Walker AI. You may call me Lumen.]**

She almost dropped the badge.

*A voice. An actual voice, talking to her, floating right in front of her like it owned the place.*

Her sharp pink eyes narrowed, glowing slightly brighter — a tell that, to anyone who knew her well, meant she was both startled and annoyed, which for Saya were basically the same emotion.

*"You're... talking,"* she thought back, sharp and clipped, careful not to move her lips in front of three hundred watching students.

**[Astute observation. I am, after all, an Artificial Intelligence. Talking is somewhat the point.]**

Saya's eye twitched.

*Great. It's sarcastic.*

---

**[Scanning dormant abilities...]**

**[Ability Located: SILVER SHADOW]**

**[Status: SEALED since birth]**

**[Unlock Condition Met: S-Class Rank Achieved]**

**[Unlocking now...]**

A pulse of cold silver fire rolled through Saya's veins, starting at her chest and spreading outward through her arms, her spine, down to the very tip of her hidden tail. She gasped — actually gasped, out loud, in front of everyone — and grabbed the podium edge to keep herself upright.

The principal's eyes flickered with concern. "Miss Hibiki?"

"I'm fine," she said quickly, voice tight. She straightened, forcing her trembling hands still. "Just... a lot at once."

Lumen's glow pulsed gently, almost sympathetically.

**[Apologies for the lack of warning. Silver Shadow is a bloodline-tier ability. Its activation tends to be... intense. You should feel the full extent of its power once we leave this room.]**

*You could have told me first,* Saya snapped silently, breathing hard.

**[Where would the fun be in that?]**

She wanted, very badly, to throw the badge across the room.

---

The ceremony blurred after that — applause, photographs, the principal's closing words about legacy and duty and the weight of the dragon badge now resting against her collarbone like a second heartbeat. Saya nodded where she was supposed to nod and smiled where she was supposed to smile, but her mind was somewhere else entirely, replaying that voice, that fire in her veins, that word.

*Silver Shadow.*

She didn't know yet what it meant. But deep in her chest, in the part of her that was more dragon than girl, something ancient stirred awake for the first time in seventeen years — and it felt like recognition.

By the time the assembly ended, the sun outside had shifted toward evening, painting the high windows of the auditorium gold. Students poured out in noisy clusters, talking about her, about the badge, about the rumors already spreading.

Saya didn't care about any of that anymore.

She cared about the three people waiting for her by the auditorium doors, the only three people in this entire school who knew exactly what she was — horns, wings, tail, and all.

Because today wasn't just the day she became S-Class.

It was the day she had to say goodbye to them.