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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 — The Eleventh NightYear 2066.

Chapter 1 — The Eleventh Night

​Year 2066.

Outside his window, the world functioned with terrifying perfection.

​Driverless vehicles glided through intersections in a seamless, silent ballet. Digital billboards recalibrated their glow based on the retinas of passing pedestrians. Drones traced cold, geometric paths across the smog-free sky.

​Everything moved with the precision of a master clock.

​Inside his room, nothing moved at all.

Lufias Irma sat on the edge of his bed, staring at his palms.

​They looked ordinary.

No scars. No tremors. No stains of blood.

​But he remembered exactly how they felt when he died.

Cold. Weak. Too slow.

​He had died ten times.

Ten different cities. Ten different ruins. Ten different sets of rules.

​Always the same conclusion.

Too late.

​The first time, he had woken up screaming, his lungs burning with phantom smoke.

By the third time, he stopped calling it a nightmare.

By the seventh, he avoided sleep entirely, caffeinating himself into a jittery delirium.

​By the tenth—

He was terrified of closing his eyes.

​At school, no one noticed the fracture.

He remained the model student. He answered questions with a calm, surgical precision. He corrected errors in virtual simulations before the AI could flag them. He solved advanced equations without a second thought.

​"Lufias, how did you solve that so fast?"

​He would offer a small, non-committal shrug.

"I just looked at it longer than you did."

​He didn't tell them what was actually replaying in his mind.

The structural failure of a collapsing bridge. The hot sting of a blade across his throat. The sensory shock of plunging into black, viscous water.

​He hated that moment the most.

Not the agony. Not even the terror.

But the precise millisecond before the end—the realization that he had made the wrong choice.

​Too careless.

Too confident.

Too... human.

​That night, he stood before the mirror.

The lighting in his room was soft, neutral. Sterile.

The air smelled faintly of filtered circulation—too clean. Too controlled.

​"If I enter that world again..." he whispered.

"...I won't die so easily."

​He didn't say it like a hero.

He said it like a man who was exhausted. Exhausted of losing.

​He lay down.

He counted his breaths.

One. Two. Three.

​The quiet hum of the building's automated ventilation filled the silence.

Sleep claimed him slowly, like an encroaching tide.

​And when he opened his eyes—

The ceiling was cracked.

​The air was different. Heavy. Stale.

It carried the scent of damp rot and the metallic tang of dried blood underneath.

​He didn't move. Not an inch.

His heartbeat sounded thunderous here. More present. More vulnerable.

​Five seconds. Ten.

No immediate threat. No sudden lunge from the shadows.

​He sat up slowly.

The mattress beneath him was thin and lumpy. The fabric was abrasive against his skin. The air was biting.

​One room. A cramped kitchen corner. A closed bathroom door.

A single window draped with grime-streaked curtains.

​He stepped toward the window, his movements deliberate. He lifted the edge of the fabric just enough to glimpse the street below.

​A man was sprinting across the asphalt.

Barefoot. Panic etched into every frantic stride.

​He didn't make it far.

Two figures tackled him from the flank. The way they moved was fundamentally wrong. Jerky. Spasmodic.

​Insatiably hungry.

​The screaming didn't last long.

Lufias lowered the curtain, his throat feeling like he had swallowed sand.

​"Again..."

​But something inside him had shifted. The panic that usually paralyzed him was gone, replaced by a cold, calculating resolve.

He didn't run for the exit. He didn't hide under the bed.

​He walked to the kitchen.

He opened the cabinet. He counted the cans. He tallied the water bottles. He checked every expiration date.

​His hands trembled slightly. Not from confusion.

From memory.

​He had died too quickly before. He had rushed. He had assumed instinct would be enough to bridge the gap of experience.

​It wasn't.

​He placed each can on the table with rhythmic precision.

"I won't rush this time."

​He dragged the sofa toward the door.

The shriek of wood against floor was loud. Too loud.

​He froze.

​Outside—

A faint dragging noise answered. Something brushed against the pavement.

His heart slammed against his ribs like a caged bird.

​He waited. Breath shallow.

The sound eventually faded into the distance.

​Slowly, he lifted the sofa instead of dragging it.

He wedged it against the door. He engaged the lock.

​He leaned his forehead against the wood, eyes shut.

"I won't die in the first ten minutes. Not today."

​He cleared the center of the room.

He dropped to the floor.

Push-ups.

​One. Two. Three.

The floor was frigid and gritty beneath his palms.

​Four. Five.

By eight, his muscles were screaming.

By ten, his form collapsed.

​His chest burned. Sweat chilled his back.

He lay there, staring at the fractured ceiling.

​This world felt alive in a way 2066 never did.

The air had weight. Every sound carried a consequence. Every silence harbored a threat.

​He rolled over and forced himself back up.

Another set.

​He wasn't trying to become a warrior overnight.

He was simply trying to survive being weak.

​When he finally woke in 2066, the transition was jarring.

The ceiling above him was smooth. Pristine. White.

​The air smelled of antiseptic and perfect filtration.

​His arms were sore.

It wasn't a phantom sensation. It wasn't in his head.

Real.

​He sat up slowly, flexing his fingers.

His grip felt strained, his muscles tight.

​He stood and walked to the sink.

The water ran clear. Predictable. Safe.

​He stared at his reflection.

The same face. The same skin.

​But his eyes were different.

Deeper. More alert. More "awake."

​At school, during his lunch break, he searched the private archives.

"Grip strength optimization."

"Beginner stamina conditioning."

"Fundamental self-defense footwork."

​He memorized the routines. He didn't bookmark them. He didn't save them.

He didn't want anyone to see the data.

​That evening, he trained again.

Push-ups. Squats. Wall sits.

His muscles shook. He didn't stop.

​Not because he enjoyed the pain.

But because he hated helplessness more.

​That night, when he lay down—

He didn't hesitate. He chose the descent.

​Sleep came faster this time.

And when his eyes opened—

The cracked ceiling was waiting.

​Day Two.

​The air smelled of mold and distant decay.

He sat up and exhaled slowly, his hands still trembling slightly.

​But he didn't drown in the fear.

He reached for the kitchen drawer and pulled out a small knife.

​The metal was dull, kissed by rust.

He held it. The weight felt wrong. Unfamiliar.

​He didn't go outside. Not yet.

He stood in the center of the room and practiced his footwork.

​Left foot. Right foot. Shift weight.

Again. Again.

​He wasn't being brave.

He was being a student.

​Outside, something dragged across the pavement.

Slow. Wet.

​He froze. Listening.

His heart rate spiked.

​For a moment, he almost backed away from the window. He almost decided to wait another week.

​Then he forced himself forward.

He lifted the curtain just a fraction.

​A single Walker shuffled across the street.

Slow. Unbalanced. One shoe missing.

Its head tilted, as if trying to remember a sound from a previous life.

​It looked weak. It looked manageable.

It looked like a beginning.

​Lufias swallowed hard.

He wasn't ready.

But he was done waiting.

​And this time—

He would not die because he was careless.

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