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Broken Rank: The Anomaly Throne
Broken Rank: The Anomaly Throne
Author: Bady
CHAPTER 1: THE ZERO REGISTRATION
Author: Bady
last update2026-06-04 21:37:58

 

The line at the eastern sector gate did not move for the living. It moved for the ledger.

I kept my hands buried deep inside the pockets of my grease-stained canvas trousers, my fingers curled around a smooth piece of salvaged iron scrap. The air in the Lower Ring’s registry square tasted like sulfur and wet coal, a heavy, gray smog that rolled off the distillation vents from the high towers above. Every few minutes, a sharp, metallic chime echoed from the center of the plaza, followed by a dull murmur from the thousands of laborers packed between the iron barricades.

Step forward, the magistrate’s clerk droned from behind a raised granite pedestal. Name and registration ticket.

A boy three places ahead of me shuffled toward the platform. He was thin, his shoulders permanently hunched from a childhood spent sorting filter screens in the water conduits. When his bare palm touched the copper interface plate on the pedestal, the giant stone obelisk towering over the square hummed with a low, vibrational frequency.

The invisible seal on the boy’s soul reacted instantly. Through the thin skin of his neck, a faint white light began to glow, forming a sharp, geometric tattoo that settled just below his jawline.

Rank Fourteen, the clerk announced, his quill scratching against a massive parchment log without a single hint of interest. Category, Manual Labor. Stone Tier. Move through the eastern transit turnstile. Next.

Fourteen points of soul worth. Enough to guarantee the boy a standard ration card, a shared bunk in the damp mid-level barracks, and a legal exemption from summary execution by the lower-tier corporate guard squads. He was a piece of mapped inventory now, safely logged within the Eternal Rank System that governed the human hierarchy from the mud to the clouds.

I stepped forward as the crowd shifted. My gray eyes remained fixed on the top of the obelisk, where the global leaderboard projected massive, shifting numbers into the dark clouds. The numbers at the peak never changed. The top one hundred humans—the Iron Court—occupied positions so far above the thousand-point threshold that their very names radiated a golden aura capable of bending local gravity.

Move it, anomaly, a guard snapped behind me, shoving the blunt butt of a shock-baton into my shoulder blade. You are delaying the sector quota.

I didn't turn around. I walked up to the granite pedestal, my leather boots clicking against the soot-covered tiles. The clerk didn't look up, his fingers simply pointing to the cold copper plate.

Place your dominant hand flat on the contact interface, the clerk said, his voice rhythmic and mechanical from decades of repetition. Hold your breath until the needle registers the baseline essence density.

I took my right hand out of my pocket. It was calloused, scarred from a decade of handling jagged industrial slag, and completely bare. I placed my palm flat against the copper.

The copper was freezing, but within a second, it became scalding hot. Deep within my chest, beneath my ribs and marrow, something ancient and heavy stirred. It didn't feel like the smooth, rising warmth the other children described during their awakening. It felt like an absolute, icy draft pulling outward, a sudden drop in atmospheric pressure that caused the air in my lungs to turn to frost.

The obelisk didn't hum. It shrieked.

A sharp, grinding groan echoed through the foundations of the square as the granite pedestal began to vibrate violently. The blue essence lines running through the copper interface plate suddenly turned a violent, flashing crimson, sputtering like severed electrical wires.

The clerk dropped his quill, his eyes snapping open as he scrambled backward from the desk. What did you touch? What did you bring to the platform?

I just touched the plate, I said, my voice entirely flat despite the cold pressure expanding through my collarbone.

Look at the register, someone in the front row whispered. Look at the board.

The regional leaderboard terminal above the pedestal didn't display a white Stone-rank or a bronze Warrior-rank. The glass screen cracked from the center out, a jagged line dividing the display as a single, blood-red digit stabilized in the center of the interface.

Zero.

[System Alert: Fatal Runtime Exception.]

[Variable Error: Unmapped soul container detected.]

[Registration Status: Non-existent.]

The needle beneath the copper plate shattered with a sharp ping, sending a small puff of black ozone smoke into the air. On my neck, there was no glowing tattoo. There was no light, no rank number, and no assigned category. My skin remained completely clear, an empty canvas that the system itself refused to categorize.

The clerk’s face drained of color, his hand shaking as he reached under the desk to slam the emergency iron lever. A zero, he stammered, his voice cracking loud enough for the nearest thousand laborers to hear. It is a zero. The node is unindexed.

Before the crowd could react, the heavy iron barricades around the square dropped with a deafening crash. A specialized containment squad from House Vorne—clad in polished silver alloy armor and carrying heavy kinetic suppression rifles—surrounded the platform in a tight, overlapping formation.

The lead enforcer, an officer named Corin who carried a blazing Rank Eighty-Two tattoo on his forearm, stepped through the line. His bronze-tier aura was a heavy, suffocating weight that forced the surrounding laborers to drop to their knees from the sheer atmospheric pressure.

Identify the anomaly, Corin commanded, his blue optical visor locking onto my unmarked neck.

The clerk pointed a trembling finger at me. The machine broke when he touched it, sir. It ran a negative diagnostic loop and returned a zero. He has no soul value. The system is flagging him as subhuman.

Corin didn't ask questions. He didn't run a second scan. The laws of the Iron Court were absolute: anything that the system could not calculate was a danger to the stability of the hierarchy.

Arrest him under Section Nine of the Defective Codes, Corin said, his voice amplified through his helmet's external speakers. Strip him of his identity markers, log him as property of the House Vorne mining conglomerate, and transfer him to the lower deep-stone processing pits immediately. He is no longer a citizen.

Two guards lunged forward, grabbing me by my elbows and slamming my face down against the cold granite of the pedestal. The iron scrap in my pocket fell to the floor, rolling away into the sand as the heavy steel suppression cuffs clamped around my wrists.

The system gave you ten thousand points to define your worth, I whispered, my cheek pressed against the broken copper plate as I looked up at the flashing red digit on the cracked screen. I have zero. Guess which one of us the system is afraid of.

Corin didn't answer. He backhanded me with an armored gauntlet, sending a crushing pain through my jaw that turned the world completely black.

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