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Reborn as a Hated Noble Family, We Start an Industrial Revolution

Ryuzaki1
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Night of One Suro at Villa Cempaka

Lembang,

West Java – Indonesia. Friday, 9:00 PM.

Torrential

rain hammered against the floor-to-ceiling glass windows of Villa Cempaka.

Outside, the thick fog typical of the Lembang mountains blanketed the pine

forest, hiding the world from view. Inside, however, the atmosphere was warm

and unmistakably luxurious.

The aroma of

savory Nasi Liwet, salted fish, and the smokey scent of grilled Maranggi Satay

filled the dining room, a space dominated by antique teak wood.

"Come

on, Dad, blow out the candles! The cake is gonna melt!" exclaimed Rafidha

(12), the youngest daughter, pointing impatiently at the massive chocolate tart

in the center of the table.

Sanusi

Sudrajat (55) laughed heartily. Even in his fifties, the founder of the

Sudrajat Group looked imposing in his long-sleeved silk Batik shirt. He gazed

around the long dining table. His wife, Rully (46), smiled gently, a cake knife

in hand. All seven of their children were present tonight—a rare occurrence

given their busy schedules.

"Patience,

Neng," Sanusi said with a thick, soft Sundanese accent. "I want to

pray first. It's rare for us to gather like this on the Night of One

Suro."

"The

Night of One Suro, Dad?" asked Rizki (22), adjusting his thick

prescription glasses. He had just set down his work tablet. "No wonder the

air feels... heavy. The cell service has been dead for a while now."

"So

mystical, Dad," chirped Roihan (18), recording an Instastory. "But

aesthetic. Carry on."

Sanusi

closed his eyes, offering a silent prayer for his family's safety. Then, he

blew out the candles shaped like the number '55'. Thunderous applause echoed

through the spacious dining room.

"First

slice goes to the First Lady," teased Rifki (32), the eldest, sitting at

the head of the table with a sturdy posture built from routine gym sessions.

Rully

accepted the plate with a shy smile. "Thank you, dear. I hope you stay

healthy and keep watching over the kids."

"There

is one more thing," Sanusi said suddenly. He pointed to a dimly lit corner

of the room.

Standing

there was an object Sanusi had won at an antique auction in Jakarta just this

morning. A two-meter-tall Bronze Mirror. Its frame wasn't wood, but a black

metal intricately carved into the shape of three intertwining wolves.

"Cool,

right?" Sanusi asked proudly. "They say it's 14th-century, an Eastern

European relic. I plan to put it in my study."

"It's

creepy, Dad," muttered Rumaisha (15), shivering slightly. "The

wolves' eyes... it's like they're watching us."

Suddenly,

lightning struck.

BOOM!

It wasn't

the sound of normal thunder. It sounded like a bomb blast, deafening and

violent.

The crystal

chandelier above the dining table flickered once. Twice.

Then, total

darkness.

Blackness

swallowed Villa Cempaka. Only the strobe-light flashes of lightning from

outside provided any illumination.

"Rafa

is scared!" screamed little Rafardhan (10).

"Calm

down. Rifki, check the fuse box," ordered Lukman—Sanusi, his voice calm

but firm.

"On it,

Dad." Rifki moved to stand, but froze. "Dad... look at the

mirror."

In the

darkness, the bronze mirror did not reflect the shadowy room. Instead, the

bronze surface was glowing. A reddish-purple light pulsated from within the

mirror, like a heartbeat.

A low

humming sound began to resonate. Vrrrmmm... It grew louder and louder, making

their teeth ache and the glass windows rattle violently.

"Everyone,

get back!" Rizki shouted, his logical brain instantly detecting a physical

anomaly. "That's not a light! That's radiation or—"

Rizki's

words were cut off as the villa's floor tilted. Not physically, but gravity

itself seemed to be forcibly dragged toward the mirror. Porcelain plates slid

off the table and shattered.

"Mom!

Kids!" Sanusi no longer cared about his expensive mirror. His fatherly

instincts took over. He jumped, spreading his sturdy arms wide. "Hold on!

Form a circle! Don't let go!"

They grabbed

each other's hands amidst the supernatural earthquake. Rifki grabbed Roihan's

collar. Rully hugged Rafardhan and Rafidha. Rumaisha pulled Rizki's arm. Ridha

grabbed Sanusi's hand.

"What

the hell is this?!" screamed Ridha (26), her hair whipping around as if a

hurricane was raging inside the closed room.

From within

the mirror, a voice emerged. It wasn't Indonesian. It wasn't English. The voice

was ancient, heavy, and sounded like a thousand swords being drawn from their

sheaths simultaneously.

[The Lineage

returns. Awakening initiated.]

The mirror

exploded in silent light. There were no glass shards. Only an overpowering

vacuum force.

Villa

Cempaka vanished. The Lembang pine forest vanished.

Their modern

world collapsed, replaced by a tunnel of time that smelled of cold iron and

blood.

Iron Hearth

Castle, Northreach Territory. Kingdom of Aethelgard – Year 844 of the Solar

Era.

Cold.

That was the

first thing they felt.

Not the cool

breeze of the villa's AC, but a damp, bone-chilling cold mixed with the smell

of wet moss, burning beeswax, and overly salted smoked meat.

Sanusi

gasped. His eyes snapped open.

He was no

longer standing and holding hands. He was sitting on a massive, hard mahogany

chair with a bear-skin backrest that towered over his head.

His hands...

these were not the smooth hands of a CEO accustomed to holding Montblanc pens.

These hands were rough, scarred, and calloused. On his ring finger sat a large

silver ring bearing the crest of a three-headed wolf.

His head

felt like it was going to split open.

Pain.

Excruciating pain.

Alien

memories flooded his brain like a flash flood breaking a dam.

My name is

Lucian Sudrath. Duke of Northreach. Former General of the Northern

Expeditionary Force. My first wife died of the plague. I married Aurelia. I

have debts. Oh God, so many debts...

"Urgh..."

Simultaneous

groans echoed around the table.

Sanusi—no,

Duke Lucian—lifted his face. Under the dim light of a rusted iron chandelier

lit by only twelve gloomy candles, he saw his family.

They had

changed.

Rully, his

gentle wife, now wore a dark blue velvet dress that was faded yet regal. Her

face was gaunter, sterner, but the eyes were still the Rully he knew. In her

head, she now held the memories of Duchess Aurelia, a noblewoman seasoned by

palace intrigue.

Rizki, his

skinny, glasses-wearing son, now looked paler. The glasses were gone, but his

gaze was sharp, sweeping the room with terrifying calculation speed. He wore a

simple gray robe. Sir Rianor.

Rifki, the

eldest, now looked like a giant. His shoulders were twice as broad, clad in

hardened leather armor with a greatsword resting against his chair. His face

bore a thin scar across his left cheek. Sir Riven.

And the

others... Roihan (Roland), Ridha (Rhea), Rumaisha (Rumina), Rafidha (Raveena),

Rafardhan (Raphael). They were all there, frozen in their seats, clutching

their heads, struggling to merge two souls into one body.

"Dad...?"

Rumaisha's voice—now Lady Rumina—trembled. She stared at her dress full of

dirty lace. "Where are we? Why is my head full of images of people being

beheaded?"

Lucian

slammed his fist onto the thick wooden table. BAM! The sound jolted them back

to reality, forcing them to focus.

"Calm

down!" Lucian's voice came out deeper, a baritone filled with a military

authority he never possessed back on Earth. "Breathe. Don't fight the

memories. Accept them. Let them flow."

He didn't

know why he said that. It was the original Lucian's instinct—the instinct of a

veteran who knew how to handle shell shock.

Slowly,

their breathing regulated.

Rianor

straightened his back. He looked at his father. "Father. We moved. Isekai.

Transmigration. Whatever the term is, we are in the bodies of House Sudrath.

And based on the data in my head... our condition is critical."

"Critical

how?" asked Roihan—now Sir Roland—reflexively adjusting the collar of his

tunic which felt itchy. "Stocks crashed?"

"Worse,"

Rianor answered flatly. "We are bankrupt. The territory is starving. And

Father's enemy, Duke Varkas..."

Before

Rianor could finish his sentence, the double doors of the dining hall were

thrown open roughly.

BANG!

The

bone-chilling night wind blew in, carrying snowflakes from the dark corridor.

Three

figures walked in without invitation.

At the front

was a short, fat man with a greasy face, wearing a bright red silk robe that

contrasted sharply with the castle's poverty. Behind him were two soldiers in

full plate armor bearing the crest of the Iron Boar on their chests. Their

hands rested on their sword hilts.

Lucian's

memories instantly recognized the man.

Baron Gorm.

The loan shark. Duke Varkas's lapdog.

Gorm walked

with an arrogant stride, his boots clicking clack-clack-clack on the cold stone

floor. He stopped right at the end of the table, directly facing Lucian. He did

not bow.

He smiled,

revealing yellow, sparse teeth.

"A

very... humble dinner, Duke Sudrath," Gorm sneered, his eyes glancing at

the dried meat on their plates with disgust. "Is rat meat in season up

here in the North?"

Riven's

blood boiled. His right hand moved to grip the hilt of his greatsword. But a

sharp glare from Lucian stopped him.

Gorm

chuckled, then tossed a leather parchment scroll onto the table, landing right

in front of Rianor's plate. The scroll landed with an insulting slap.

"Duke

Varkas sends his regards," Gorm said, his voice dripping with venom.

"The sun has set, My Lord. The deadline for the war debt from ten years

ago expires today."

He leaned

forward, staring at Aurelia (Rully) with a gaze that made Lucian's stomach

churn.

"Pay

50,000 Gold Coins right now," Gorm hissed. "Or hand over the deed to

the Northern Iron Mine... and Lady Rhea must come with me to Duke Varkas's

estate tonight as collateral."

Silence.

The

atmosphere at the dining table turned suffocating.

Back on

Earth, this would be the moment to call a lawyer or security.

But in

Aethelgard, the law was written in steel and blood.

Rhea—a

former national fencing athlete—slowly reached for her dining knife. Her eyes

narrowed, locking onto Gorm's fat, exposed neck. In her mind, the human anatomy

appeared clear as day, like a practice target.

However, it

was Rianor who moved first.

Calmly,

Rianor picked up the parchment scroll. His slender fingers broke the red wax

seal. His eyes moved rapidly, scanning line after line of the ancient

handwriting.

Rianor's

genius brain worked twice as fast.

One side of

his brain read the ancient Aethelgard language.

The other

side—the brain of a Cum Laude Business graduate—analyzed the figures with

modern mathematical logic.

The corner

of Rianor's lips curled up slightly. A thin, cold smile.

"Why

are you smiling, Book Rat?" snapped Gorm, offended.

Rianor

closed the scroll slowly. He turned to Lucian.

"Father,"

he said in a tone that was formal yet relaxed. "This document is legally

flawed. The interest calculation uses the compound method which is prohibited

under Royal Decree Article 12, and the stamp expired two days ago."

Rianor

turned his head toward Roland.

"Roland,

it seems our guest needs a lesson in... negotiation etiquette."

Roland

Sudrath stood up.

The

charismatic aura of a "Student Senate Chairman" blended with the

cunning of a noble diplomat. He smiled, a smile that was sweet but deadly.

"Sir

Gorm," Roland greeted softly, walking around the table to approach the

envoy who was starting to look confused. "You barged into our home without

knocking, insulted our food, and just now you threatened to kidnap my

sister?"

Roland

stopped right next to Gorm. He patted the fat man's shoulder as if brushing off

dust.

"Brother

Riven," Roland called out quietly.

"Yes?"

Riven stood up. His height reached 190 cm; his shadow completely swallowed

Gorm's small frame.

"Close

the door," Roland ordered coldly, his eyes never leaving Gorm's face which

was beginning to pale. "Our guest doesn't seem to want to go home just

yet."