Chapter 1 Chapter 1: Reborn After a Hundred Years
The pale moonlight cut through the canopy of trees as Ethan Cole jolted awake, gasping, his hands pressing against the cold earth beneath him.
Blood. He was drenched in it.
His eyes flew open, scanning the darkness around him. Towering oaks. Tangled brush. The distant cry of a night bird somewhere deep in the wilderness.
Where am I?
Pain seized every inch of his body like fire racing through his veins, but it was the memories flooding his mind that nearly broke him.
In the early 21st century, the year 2030 the Shadow Realm had descended upon Earth without warning.
One morning, the sky above New York City cracked open like shattered glass, and from the darkness beyond poured monsters. Creatures of nightmare. Unstoppable. Savage. Hungry.
They hit Chicago next. Then Los Angeles. Then every major city on the planet.
Humanity teetered on the edge of extinction.
Then came the discovery that changed everything, the Shadow Realm wasn't some supernatural force. It was a data-driven game world, vast and terrifying, governed by its own brutal rules. Humans who entered it gained power. Real, measurable, extraordinary power, enough to fight back.
Ethan Cole had been one of the first.
He remembered every moment of those early days. The terror. The grief. His mother cut down by a demon beast in the ruins of downtown Dallas where they had lived. His father following weeks later, dragged into the dark. His little sister screaming his name.
Fueled by a hatred that burned hotter than anything the Shadow Realm could throw at him, Ethan had climbed. Fought. Bled. He had clawed his way from Domain One all the way to the peak Domain Ten slaughtering Emperor-level, Sovereign-level, and King-level demon beasts one after another. He had become the highest-ranked player in the Shadow Realm's history.
A Hundred-Star War God.
And then after ten brutal years reaching the tenth domain he had faced the ultimate boss. The Purgatory Messenger: Kasser, one of the three Dark Messengers of the Shadow Realm. Ethan had been on the verge of victory. One final blow away from ascending to the legendary rank of Titled War God, the strongest title the Shadow Realm had ever known.
That was when the sword pierced his heart from behind.
He remembered spinning around, disbelief paralyzing him as the blade twisted.
He remembered the face of the man holding it.
Ryan Carter.
His brother. His best friend since childhood. The man who had entered the game beside him on day one. Who had bled beside him in every domain, laughed with him after every victory, mourned with him after every loss.
Twenty years of brotherhood, shattered in a single moment.
"Why?" Ethan had screamed, the word tearing out of him like something being ripped from his soul. "Why, Ryan?! WHY?!"
Ryan had said nothing. Just watched with cold, unreadable eyes as Ethan collapsed.
And then darkness.
Ethan pressed a fist against the ground and forced himself to sit up.
If I died in the Shadow Realm... then what is this?
The answer came not from logic, but from a surge of memories that didn't belong to him, crashing into his mind like a wave.
Images. A young man's life. His face. His pain.
He shared my name.
The other Ethan Cole, the boy whose body he now inhabited, had been beaten to death just hours ago. A group of hired thugs. A back alley in the slums on the outskirts of River City, Texas. His broken body dumped in the woods like garbage.
Ethan processed it all in seconds, and then the full truth landed.
I've been reborn. One hundred years into the future.
The year was now 2140.
Humanity had been fighting the Shadow Realm for 110 years.
The war had never ended.
According to what the game researchers had long established, the Shadow Realm's portal opened once every ten years, remaining accessible for three months before snapping shut again. Every citizen aged eighteen or older could apply for a government-issued Shadow Realm Bracelet in the month before the portal opened.
The Bracelet awakened a person's inner potential unlocking special abilities shaped by their unique physical constitution. The stronger the body, the higher the compatibility, the more devastating the power.
Now, as of tonight, Zone 12 was going live.
At 10:00 PM, the portal to the Zone 12 beginner dungeon, the Cataclysmic Front would open. By 9:00 AM tomorrow, Server 12 would officially launch and the zone would be fully accessible.
Eleven zones had already been running for decades. Zone 12 was fresh. A new beginning.
And the other Ethan Cole had been part of it, until his life was stolen from him.
The stolen memories filled in the rest of the story, and each detail made Ethan's jaw tighten.
The other Ethan had awakened only a D-rank ability Guardian, which increased armor value by a laughable one percent. Worthless by anyone's standards.
His girlfriend of six months, Jade Monroe, hadn't even tried to hide her disgust. She walked out the same day, straight into the arms of Derek Langford the pampered son of the powerful Langford family, whose older brother ranked tenth on the National Power Rankings in Zone 11 of the Shadow Realm.
Derek Langford didn't share. Derek Langford didn't forgive slights.
He had sent thugs to the other Ethan's apartment to make sure Jade would never be contested again.
The other Ethan had fought back, not to save himself, but to protect his little sister, Lily Cole.
It hadn't been enough.
They had beaten him to death. And then, not satisfied, they had gone back for Lily.
Heaven has not abandoned me.
The thought rose through Ethan like a slow-burning flame, and with it came something colder. Sharper.
His eyes hardened in the darkness.
Ryan Carter the name cut through him like glass, I gave you everything. Twenty years. My trust. My back. And you put a sword through my heart.
You will bleed for that.
And you, Derek Langford, the rage coiled tight in his chest you sent thugs to murder a man and terrorize a girl. I will make you pay back every drop of it, a hundred times over.
He wasn't the other Ethan anymore. He was a Hundred-Star War God reborn a hundred years of the future pressed into a young man's battered body. He knew every secret of the Shadow Realm. Every trap. Every meta-strategy. Every boss pattern from Domain One through Domain Ten.
When Zone 12 opened tonight, the world would never see another player like him.
Let them underestimate me, he thought. Let them laugh at the slum kid with the D-rank ability.
They have no idea what's coming.
With the memories of the other Ethan guiding him, he knew where to go Slum District 189, on the eastern outskirts of River City. A crumbling six-story apartment building that leaned at a crooked angle, as if it were slowly giving up on standing.
He staggered out of the woods, teeth gritted against the pain, and made his way down toward the city lights.
Over a hundred years of war had reshaped the entire country.
River City was one of 150 third-tier cities across the United States part of a restructured network of fortified urban centers built to keep humanity alive. Every city was ringed by energy protection walls, powered by the collective efforts of Shadow Realm players who channeled the energy of slain demon beasts back into the real world.
Beyond the walls was a wasteland ruled by monsters.
Inside the walls, a brutal new social order had taken root.
Your rank in the Shadow Realm determined everything, your housing, your resources, your dignity. The powerful lived in gleaming towers in the city center, draped in wealth. The weak were pushed to the outskirts, crammed into slums built from the ruins of old neighborhoods, barely surviving on whatever scraps trickled down.
The other Ethan had lived and died in those slums.
That was about to change.
He was almost at the building when he heard it.
A cluster of neighbors stood near the entrance, speaking in hushed, heavy voices.
"Such a shame about that girl."
"What can you do? The Langfords own half this city. The moment her brother crossed Derek, they were both finished."
"Pretty thing like that... poor kid."
The words landed like a punch.
Ethan didn't stop. Didn't hesitate.
He shoved through the crowd and took the stairs three at a time, ignoring the screaming protest of his injuries.
Sixth floor. End of the hall.
He heard her before he reached the door a girl's voice, raw and desperate.
"Let go of me! LET GO!"
Something detonated inside his chest.
He snatched a loose brick from the crumbling hallway floor and kicked the door open.
Two men. Shirtless. Thick-necked. Turning toward him with the lazy confidence of men who had never been challenged in their lives.
On the bed, wrists bound, eyes red and terrified
Lily.
His sister now. Every memory he'd absorbed said so, and something deeper than logic confirmed it.
The closer of the two men blinked. Then his face twisted with shock.
"Ethan Cole?!" The man stumbled backward. "You you're supposed to be DEAD!"
Ethan recognized him from the other Ethan's memories. One of Derek Langford's hired dogs. One of the men who had beaten a defenseless kid to death and then come back to finish the job on his little sister.
Ethan's voice was quiet. Flat. Absolutely without mercy.
"Sorry to disappoint you."
He swung the brick.
The crack of it against the man's skull echoed in the small room. The big man crashed to the floor like a felled tree, blood sheeting down his face, gurgling in shock.
Ethan swung again. Twice. The screaming stopped.
The second man lean, wiry, pants half-undone bolted for the door.
Ethan caught his ankle and dropped him hard.
He pinned the man to the floor, brick raised, and watched the last of the man's bravado dissolve into absolute terror.
"It was Derek Langford! HE ordered it, not me! Please I'm begging you don't"
"You chose who you work for," Ethan said quietly. "Now you'll die for them."
He didn't look away.
When it was over, he set the brick down carefully. Stood. Exhaled once.
Then he walked to the bed, crouched beside Lily, and began working at the ropes around her wrists with steady hands.
Lily was shaking violently, her eyes wide and glassy with shock as she stared at him, at the face she knew, the eyes she didn't.
"Ethan?" Her voice cracked. "You're... you're alive?"
The moment the rope fell free, she collapsed into his arms, clutching the front of his bloodied shirt, sobbing in great shuddering waves.
He wrapped an arm around her and held her firmly.
"I'm here," he said. "I've got you. You're safe."
He let her cry. He didn't rush her. But even as he held her, his gaze was cold and clear, fixed on some invisible point beyond the walls of that ruined room.
Derek Langford. Ryan Carter.
The accounting hadn't started yet.
It would. Soon.
When Lily's trembling finally slowed to something manageable, Ethan helped her to her feet.
"We can't stay here," he said. "Not tonight."
She nodded without a word, wiping her eyes with the back of her hand.
He guided her to the door, checked the hallway, and led her down the back stairwell, quietly, carefully, slipping out through the rear of the building and disappearing into the shadow of River City's streets.
