The darkness of the capsule vanished, replaced by a sensation that ripped Ethan Tan apart from the inside out. It was not pain in any physical sense, but something worse: a tearing of his very essence. His soul, once whole, was being pulled into quarters, stretched across an impossible distance.
He screamed, but he had no mouth. He thrashed, but he had no limbs. He was pure, terrified awareness, shredded into ribbons and stitched into something new.
Then, as suddenly as it began, it ended.
The tearing was gone. He gasped as sensation slammed back into him—solid ground beneath his back, a cool breeze ghosting across his skin, the scents of dust and petrified wood filling his lungs. And something else—an iron tang, faint but undeniable. The smell of old blood.
He opened his eyes.
Above him was a sky of unnatural clarity, a pearlescent dome with no sun, no scattered clouds. Only a single white star, brilliant and cold, traced a slow arc along the world’s edge. Morning, but not a morning he knew. Its light was too sharp, too clinical, painting the landscape in stark, unnatural contrast.
He sat up.
Ruins stretched in every direction, the skeleton of a forgotten civilization. Pillars toppled and cracked, their inscriptions worn into anonymity by time. Rusted shards of armor and weapons littered the ground, relics of a battle so ancient it felt less like history and more like geology. The silence pressed down on him with the weight of tragedy.
A translucent window blinked into existence.
Ethan ignored it. His throat was dry. His mind buzzed. He needed to know who—what—he was here.
“Status,” he whispered.
A larger window unfolded before him, bathed in soft blue glow.
[Title]: First to Tread
[HP]: 150 / 150
[MP]: 120 / 120
[Stats]
STR: 12
VIT: 15
AGI: 18
INT: 12
WIS: 13
He blinked. That couldn’t be right.
Level 1 characters were supposed to start with baseline 10s across the board. Yet here he was, nearly double in Agility and higher across the board. He remembered the Cerberus Tech presentations: “Real-world physique translates into digital form.” But he was no athlete. His body in Kuala Lumpur was wiry, stiff from desk work, nothing like this. These stats didn’t belong to him.
He dismissed the window and pulled up his skills. Empty. Except one.
[Muscle Memory (Passive) – Rank A]
Mastery: 100%
The body remembers what the mind has forgotten. Your movements are guided by an instinct born from a thousand lifetimes of experience you do not recall.
Stolen story; please report.
Ethan’s stomach tightened.
The body remembers what the mind has forgotten. The words felt less like a tooltip and more like a cruel joke whispered at his expense. A Rank A passive, at Level 1. Already mastered. It was impossible. Wrong. Mocking.
He dismissed the window, but the phrase clung to him like static.
He needed context. He needed answers. He stood, moving carefully across the fossilized ground. His steps echoed in the silence, the ruins stretching endlessly under that sterile light.
Snap.
The dry crack of wood beneath his boot echoed like a gunshot.
He froze.
Fifty meters away, a mound of ash-grey rubble shifted. It uncoiled into the shape of a beast the size of a mastiff. Matted fur clung to its frame. Its eyes glowed with predatory red light. A single horn spiraled from its forehead, black as obsidian, edges catching the false sun.
A red tag shimmered above it.
[Spiral Horn Rabbit – Lvl. 10 – Rank D]
Ethan’s blood went cold.
A Rank D monster. Dangerous even to a party of trained novices. And he was alone. Level 1. Unarmed.
The rabbit’s head snapped toward him, eyes narrowing. Its hind legs coiled.
He stumbled back. His gaze darted, desperate, until it locked on a broken sword half-buried in dust. Pitted, rusted, but with an edge. He dove for it, fingers clutching the corroded hilt, and rose into a shaky crouch.
The rabbit squealed and launched.
It wasn’t a hop. It was a cannon shot. A grey blur.
I’m going to die.
His mind blanked with terror. But his body moved.
His right foot pivoted, his torso twisting slim. The horn, aimed at his chest, sliced through empty air. The rabbit shot past, claws skidding as it turned for another run.
Ethan panted, not from exertion but from shock. His body had dodged like a duelist. Like someone else had worn his skin.
The rabbit screeched and charged again. Again, his body flowed — a sidestep, a drop of the shoulder, impossible precision. Once. Twice. Four times. A deadly dance. And his body knew every step.
But dodging wasn’t enough. His arms trembled around the broken blade. He needed to end it.
His eyes darted across the terrain — and landed on a jagged boulder, black and glassy. Obsidian. Taller than him, its edges sharp enough to cut skin at a glance.
Maybe…
He backed toward it, every step measured. The rabbit, frustrated, gathered itself for a final charge.
It launched.
Ethan dove aside at the last instant.
CRACK!
The horn speared the boulder. For one breath, Ethan thought it had worked—then the rock burst apart in a rain of razor shards. Obsidian was too brittle. It had exploded like glass under the rabbit’s mana-coated strike. Shards peppered the ground, glittering like black snow.
The beast shook free with barely a stagger.
Ethan’s heart sank. His plan had failed.
Then he saw it: a tree behind the ruins of the boulder. Ancient. Its bark was grey and stone-like, fibrous lines running deep. A survivor of a dead world, stubborn and unyielding.
He backed toward it, planting himself before the trunk.
The rabbit screeched and charged again. Dust plumed behind its claws. Its horn gleamed like a lance.
Ethan waited. Heart hammering. Breath locked.
Now.
He rolled aside.
This time, the sound was different. A wet, resonant THUNK, followed by the crunch of splintering bone.
The horn had buried itself deep into the ancient tree. The creature squealed, thrashing, but the fibrous bark held. Unlike brittle obsidian, the living wood flexed and trapped. The rabbit’s head was pinned, body bucking in helpless fury.
Ethan scrambled to his feet. His hands shook around the shard. Fear clawed at him, but something colder rose through his limbs. His body moved. Calm. Certain.
Three steps. A precise thrust. Not wild, but surgical. The shard drove behind the jaw, angled upward into the base of the skull.
The thrashing stopped.
The Spiral Horn Rabbit sagged, limp. Blood pooled against the roots of the ancient tree.
Two windows appeared.
Silence returned. Only his ragged breathing filled the air.
Ethan stared at his trembling hands. The bloodied shard clattered to the ground. That killing strike—it hadn’t been his. It couldn’t have been his. He had never learned to fight. Never killed anything larger than a cockroach.
And yet… it had been perfect.
His stomach lurched.
Another window opened.
[ YES ] / [ NO ]
Ethan’s throat tightened. He couldn’t bring himself to touch the corpse. He jabbed at [ YES], desperate to make it vanish.
Ethan sank to his knees.
His first hour in this world, and he had already killed. Already leveled. Already bled.
And yet, the thought that haunted him most was not the monster.
It was the whisper of a truth he didn’t want to face.
His body hadn’t just survived.
It had remembered.

