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Chapter 3 - Chapter 3: The Physics of a Beatdown

The shift whistle blew, a shrill, mechanical scream that echoed off the damp stone walls like a dying bird. It was the sound of ownership. It meant: Stop dreaming, cattle. Time to bleed for the quota.

​Around me, three hundred men groaned. It was a symphony of misery I hadn't heard in twenty years. Honestly? I preferred the silence of the void. At least the void didn't smell like three hundred unwashed armpits.

​I stood up. My joints felt suspiciously fluid. In my old life or future life, whatever temporal headache this was getting up involved a series of pops, clicks, and a solid thirty seconds of cursing God. Now? I just... stood. My 21-year-old knees didn't even complain. It was disgusting. I felt like a coiled spring trapped in a body made of wet cardboard.

​"Sector 4, move out!" a guard bellowed. He was a Tier 4 Static, a common grunt with dense muscles and night vision. He held a shock-baton like it was Excalibur. "Quota is up. Merrick wants the haul in the hopper by 1800. You lag, you bleed."

​I fell into line between Jaren and Lyra. The shuffle to the mines was a ritual. Heads down. Eyes on the boots. Don't look at the guards.

​But I wasn't surviving anymore. I was smurfing.

​I kept my head up, scanning the crowd for the Resonance.

​Most of us were Dims (Tier 5). No glow. Just meat.

Some were Statics (Tier 4). A faint hum. Labor mules.

Then there were the Volatiles (Tier 3).

​I spotted him immediately. Bront.

​He was a walking landslide. Grey, cracked skin like dried river mud, pulsing with angry orange light. Earth Resonance. In the hierarchy of the mines, Bront was a king. He could punch through rock without a pickaxe.

​In my first life, Bront broke my arm over a spilled water ration. I spent three weeks mining one-handed, terrified he'd come back.

​Now? I looked at him and felt... bored. I saw the vectors of his movement like lines of code. He favored his right leg. He telegraphed his weight shifts. He was a very loud, very stupid equation.

​"Keep your head down, Kael," Lyra whispered, nudging my ribs. "Bront's looking for a victim today."

​"Let him look," I said.

​Lyra stopped walking. "What is wrong with you? Did you hit your head? You're acting like you have a death wish."

​"I just woke up, Lyra," I grinned. "Realized the view from the floor sucks."

​We reached the mine proper. Sector 4 was a labyrinth of silica dust and ozone. I grabbed a pickaxe. It felt light. Too light. It felt like a toy.

​"Hey! Dim!"

​The voice boomed. I sighed. Tutorial Boss time.

​I turned. Bront was looming over Jaren. The orange veins in his neck were pulsing.

​"You're in my spot, Runt," Bront spat.

​Jaren shrank back. "I... Overseer Merrick assigned me "

​"Merrick assigns the quota," Bront interrupted, grabbing Jaren by the tunic and lifting him one-handed. "I assign the spots. Move to the slurry pit, or I break your legs."

​The slurry pit. The toxic runoff. A death sentence.

​"Please," Jaren squeaked.

​"Not my problem," Bront grinned, his skin shifting, hardening into jagged plates of rock.

​The cavern went silent. Three hundred slaves watched. This was the moment. In the original timeline, I looked away. Jaren went to the pit. He got sick. He died three years later.

​It started here.

​I stepped forward.

​"Put him down, Bront."

​Bront froze. He turned slowly. "What did you say, Dim?"

​"I said put him down," I repeated, walking calmly. "You're blocking the workflow. It's inefficient."

​The lackeys laughed nervously. Dims didn't talk back to Volatiles.

​Bront dropped Jaren and stepped toward me. He was a foot taller and eighty pounds heavier. He cracked his knuckles, the sound like grinding gravel.

​"You got a death wish, Kael?" Bront sneered. "I'll grind you into paste."

​I tapped into the System.

​[Target: Bront. Designation: Tier 3 Volatile. Threat: Low. Suggestion: Kinetic structure is rigid. Use impact resonance.]

[Warning: User's physical conditioning is Garbage Tier. Recoil will hurt.]

​Shut up.

​"No death wish," I said. "Just an observation. Your stance is wide. Your center of gravity is high. And you telegraph your punches like you're sending a letter by carrier pigeon."

​Bront roared. He swung a massive, stone-encased fist at my head.

​To the onlookers, it was a blur. To me, it was underwater.

​I stepped in. I slipped inside his guard. I placed my left hand flat against his stone chest plate. Not a strike. A touch.

​Kinetia: Impact Storage.

​I released the energy I'd stored from the walk over. I snapped my fingers against his chest.

​CRACK.

​The sound was like a gunshot. A ripple of pure force slammed into his armor, finding the microscopic flaws in the stone frequency.

​A spiderweb of fractures exploded across Bront's chest. He gasped, the air knocked out of him.

​SNAP.

​Pain shot up my own arm like a lightning bolt. My unconditioned muscles screamed at the sudden release of force. I gritted my teeth, forcing my face to stay neutral. Ow. Note to self: Do pushups later.

​Bront stumbled back. "What...?"

​"You're stiff," I lectured, fighting the urge to rub my throbbing shoulder. "Stone protects you from cuts, but it transfers shock perfectly. You're basically a giant bell, and I just rang you."

​Bront panicked. He swung a wild haymaker.

​I ducked. I grabbed his wrist my fingers straining against the weight and tapped his elbow.

​His arm snapped straight. I pivoted and swept his leg.

​Bront hit the floor. The ground shook.

​He tried to scramble up. I didn't let him. I placed my boot on his cracked chest plate and pressed down.

​"Stay."

​Bront looked up at me. The glow in his veins flickered. "How? You're a Dim. You don't glow."

​"Yeah," I said, leaning down so only he could hear. "I'm nothing. Which means you just got beaten by nothing. Think about what that makes you."

​I pressed harder. The stone cracked audibly.

​"Jaren keeps his spot," I said. "And from now on, your tribute goes to me. Fifty percent."

​"Protection fee?" Bront sputtered.

​I smiled. It was the smile of the Praetor. Cold. Arrogant.

​"Exactly. Protection from me."

​I stepped back, fighting a wave of dizziness. My stamina bar was flashing red in my head. God, this body is weak.

​"Get up. We have a quota."

​Bront scrambled away, looking at me like I was a demon.

​I turned around. The entire cavern was staring. Jaren's mouth was open. Lyra looked terrified.

​I picked up my pickaxe, hiding the tremor in my hand.

​"What are you all looking at?" I shouted. "Dig! Unless you want Merrick to come down here and ask why the belt is empty!"

​The slaves hurried back to work, but the rhythm was frantic now.

​I walked over to the vein.

​System Notification:

[Combat Tutorial Complete. Kinetic Proficiency Increased. Reputation with 'Barracks 4': TERROR.]

[Physical Status: Right Arm - Mild Sprain. User is advised to stop showing off.]

​I smirked, striking the rock. My arm throbbed with every swing, a dull ache that reminded me I was mortal.

​"Show off," Lyra muttered, stepping beside me. "Since when do you know Kinetia?"

​"They saw a Dim get lucky," I lied.

​"You shattered his armor," she whispered. "Who are you?"

​I looked at the purple crystal in the wall.

​"I'm just a guy who's tired of eating sawdust, Lyra," I said. "Now dig. We're going to be rich."

​One bully down. My arm felt like jelly. Only an entire planetary empire left to go.

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