Ankit looked over at his father and said quietly, "I don't really know yet. Just some guesses. When I have proof, I'll tell you."
He kept those guesses to himself. The idea that novels about spiritual awakening might be coming true was too much to share for now.
Kamal would only worry and overthink, and Ankit wanted to spare him that burden until he had clear evidence.
Kamal nodded, understanding. "Okay, let me know when it's possible."
They drove home, where Ankit's mother and sister greeted them warmly. His sister immediately threw a tantrum, complaining they went out to play but left her behind.
Their mother soothed her gently, explaining they went for work, not fun.
After dinner, Ankit headed to his room and collapsed on his bed, replaying the day in his mind.
He made mental notes: energy or spiritual qi awakening; no full dependence on that mysterious voice; and the need to figure out how to use the energy."
If this is like the spiritual qi in those novels," he murmured to himself, "then I have to create a cultivation system to properly use it and do godlike things."
He spent the night searching through cultivation novels, gathering ideas. They were inspiring but vague—he needed to experiment and practice himself.
Exhausted, he finally fell asleep.The next morning, Ankit's mother tried waking him, but he was still too tired. She let him sleep in for two more hours.
When Ankit finally woke, freshened up, and meditated, the yellow specks appeared again.
This time, with intense focus—though his head began to ache—he managed to move them slightly, a few centimeters at first.
"So it can be moved, I thought I have to beg for moving it," he joked quietly to himself.
He kept trying throughout the day, pushing the specks farther, eventually moving them over 25 centimeters by afternoon. Exhausted but pleased, he declared, "Today's work is done. Tomorrow, more."
Turning to Free Fire, Ankit remembered the new guild feature—a key to future tournaments and growth. He was serious about building a guild with a lasting name.
After discussions with his squad, they picked "Initials" to represent their determination to be first and always remain there.
Ankit created the guild and became leader. Yash was vice-leader, Sumit and Amit elder members. Gyan Gaming and other friends joined, with Gyan promoted to elder.
An idea struck. To protect against hacks or bans, Ankit started making additional accounts—"Returner 1" and "Returner 2."
He planned to top-up these secondary IDs like his main, and possibly sell them in the future. His sister could also use one when she was older.
Playing across three IDs kept him secure and flexible.His friends adopted the idea, though most made only one extra account due to the challenge of managing many IDs seriously.
Within ten days, both secondary IDs hit Heroic rank with max points, securing positions one through twelve on the global leaderboard.
Other players edged close to max rank points around 3,900, but Ankit's squad already topped the 4,000 max.
Ankit shared with his friends and Gyan Gaming that they should also try take top position with all their all IDs, who respected it but kept to their main ID for focus.
Ankit didn't force them knowing that they can't play like him all day.
The growing guild, account backups, and steady progress marked Ankit's long game—prepared, cautious, and ambitious beyond just gaming victories.
