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Chapter 1 - Chapter One — The Weight Beneath the Earth

Chapter One — The Weight Beneath the Earth

Death was not dramatic.

There was no thunderclap. No heroic sacrifice. No last words. Just exhaustion.

A dim apartment.A flickering screen playing a movie he'd seen before.A strange pressure in his chest. Darkness. He had expected nothing afterward.

Instead—

He woke into cold air and screaming. The scream was his. Thin. High. Uncontrolled. He tried to breathe properly and inhaled smoke and damp soil. His body convulsed. His thoughts fractured.

Something was wrong. He tried to lift his hand. It did not respond the way it should.

Too small.

Too weak.

Too… light.

Panic rose instinctively, but the panic was diluted, distant — like trying to shout underwater.

He forced himself to think. Where am I? Sound came first. Not traffic. Not electronics.

Wind.

Crackling fire.

Low voices speaking a language he did not recognize. He tried to open his eyes wider.

Shapes blurred above him. Rough wood beams. Animal hides.

A face leaned over him — weathered, unfamiliar, eyes sharp with concern.

The face was not modern. The air was not modern. He tried to speak.

What came out was another infant cry.

His mind stalled. No. That wasn't possible. Memory surged back violently.

His last life.

An ordinary one.

He remembered work stress. Cheap coffee. Late-night streaming. Superhero movies playing in the background while he scrolled through his phone. He remembered thinking cosmic battles were absurd. He remembered thinking gods were fiction.

And now—

His body was that of a newborn. The realization did not arrive as panic. It arrived as cold clarity.

Reincarnation.

The word surfaced without emotion. He wanted to deny it. But denial required alternative explanations. There were none. He tried to steady his breathing. It was erratic. Weak.

And then—

The air itself seemed to change. The wind outside stopped. The ground trembled faintly — not an earthquake, not movement, but a pressure shift. The infant body he occupied reacted before his mind could process. Every muscle tightened. His chest constricted. His heartbeat accelerated violently. And then something passed through him.

It was not heat.

It was not light.

It was not sound.

It was pressure.

Immense.

Silent.

All-encompassing.

For a fraction of a second, it felt as though the entire world inhaled. His bones vibrated.

Not metaphorically. Actually vibrated. His organs spasmed. His vision flashed white.

If this body had belonged to his previous life, it would have ruptured instantly.

But this body—

Did not break. It fractured internally. Cells destabilized. Nerve signals scrambled.

For one terrifying moment, he felt himself dissolving.

Then—

Stabilization. Not healing. Not protection. Adaptation. The violent pressure did not vanish.

It synchronized. Like metal being hammered into shape under unimaginable force.

His lungs seized. He couldn't breathe. His mind dimmed.

And just before unconsciousness claimed him— He instinctively inhaled.

Slow.

Shallow.

Controlled.

Why controlled?

He didn't know.

But the breath steadied something. The vibration inside his body lessened. The pressure became distant. He exhaled slowly. The tremor subsided. His heart resumed a normal rhythm.

The world returned. Sound flooded back. Human voices shouting. The woman holding him clutched him tighter, whispering in a language he did not understand. He did not scream this time.

He listened.

Outside, the world was vast and untouched.

No engines.

No distant hum of civilization.

Only wind across open land.

He drifted into sleep.

---

When he woke again, the air was clearer. The sky visible through an opening in the structure above was painfully blue.

No smog.

No aircraft lines.

No towers on the horizon.

Just endless land.

His mind worked more steadily now. He tested his fingers. They moved slightly. Uncoordinated.

Weak. But responsive. Reincarnation. He accepted it faster than expected. Panic would waste energy. Energy mattered. Especially when he felt— That.

It was faint now.

But beneath his awareness, deep below perception, something vast lingered. Not a sound.

Not exactly a vibration. More like a presence. Heavy. Sleeping. Massive beyond comprehension.

It was not outside him. It was beneath everything. Beneath the ground. He swallowed reflexively.

His memory from his previous life searched for reference points. Was this just imagination?

A newborn's confused perception? But the sensation returned when he focused.

A low, distant pressure. Like standing above a buried engine the size of a continent.

He did not know what it was. He only knew it existed. He tried to shift his attention inward.

His body felt… dense. That was the only word. Denser than it should be.

As if every cell had thickened slightly.

Not stronger. Not faster. Just reinforced. His muscles were still infant-weak. His bones fragile.

But beneath that fragility was a faint latticework — something structural, subtle, forming.

He inhaled again.

Slowly.

The breath steadied the internal sensation. He exhaled. The density aligned. Was that intentional?

Or instinct? He tried again.

Inhale.

Pause.

Exhale.

The faint inner tremor decreased. Interesting. He had no glowing energy. No system interface.

No voice in his head explaining mechanics. Only sensation. Pressure in. Pressure out.

And breath reduced instability. That was data. He filed it away.

The world outside the shelter shifted as people moved about their daily tasks.

Primitive clothing. Primitive tools. Stone and bone. This was not medieval.

Not even ancient empire. This was far earlier. He had no calendar. No date.

No certainty. Only one undeniable truth: He was in a time before recorded history.

Which meant survival was not guaranteed. He closed his eyes again and focused inward.

The density inside his body felt slightly more stable than when he first woke.

Was that from breathing? Or simply time passing? He didn't know.

But he would test it. Carefully. He would not assume power. He would not assume safety.

He remembered something from his old life: In every fictional world, those who thought they were chosen died first. He had no interest in being chosen. He wanted stability.

Understanding.

Control.

If there was something altering his body — whether from environmental pressure, radiation, or unknown planetary phenomena — then it could also kill him if mishandled. He inhaled slowly again.

The internal lattice responded faintly. Not stronger.

Just… synchronized.

A cultivation path did not announce itself with fireworks. It began with awareness.

And he was aware. The woman holding him hummed softly. Outside, wind crossed endless land.

Deep beneath the earth, the massive sleeping presence remained unmoving.

He did not know what it was.

He did not know why the pressure had passed through him at birth.

He did not know why his body had survived.

But he knew this:

Interference without understanding leads to destruction.

For now— He would observe. He would adapt. He would refine breath and sensation.

He would grow slowly. No rushing. No reckless experimentation.

If this world contained forces large enough to shake his cells apart at birth—

Then patience was survival. And survival was the first stage of power.

He closed his eyes.

Breathed in.

Held.

Breathed out.

The density within him settled a fraction more. The first thread had formed—

Not through ambition.

But through endurance.

And far beneath him—

Something vast continued to sleep.

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