
Overview
Catalog
Chapter 1
1. Outcast
The classroom buzzed with the usual mid-morning chaos. Students laughed too loudly, traded notes under desks, and pelted each other with wadded-up bits of paper while the teacher fumbled with her laptop. Adam sat in the farthest corner, hunched over his notebook. His handwriting was neat, precise, almost mechanical. He liked order, even if no one else in this school seemed to. The black ink smeared faintly across his fingers, but he didn’t care. Numbers and formulas were safer company than people. If I just stay quiet, if I just focus, maybe they’ll leave me alone today. A paper ball struck the side of his head. Snickering followed. “Snitch.” “Look, it’s rat-boy.” “Better not tell the teacher what you ate for breakfast, Adam.” He gritted his teeth. He’d made the mistake of reporting Sanchez and his gang months ago—when they trashed the science lab during lunch break. Broken glass, chemicals spilled, stolen equipment. Adam thought telling the truth would make him look responsible. Instead, the teachers dismissed it as childish tattling. Sanchez, the golden boy, was “too good” to do something like that. Since then, Adam had become public enemy number one. The door slammed open. Conversations instantly shifted. Sanchez walked in late, as usual. Sunlight seemed to follow him in through the window. His shirt was untucked in a way that looked stylish instead of sloppy, his hair effortlessly perfect, his grin practiced but natural. “Ah, Mr. Sanchez,” the teacher said with forced sternness. “Nice of you to join us.” “Sorry, miss. Basketball practice ran over,” Sanchez said, flashing that smile that could melt concrete. She waved him in without a word of punishment. Sanchez dropped into his seat with an easy grace. His eyes flicked to Adam, and a slow smirk curled his lips. He leaned back, folding his arms. He wore that perfect smile again, effortlessly magnetic. Teachers loved him. Students adored him. Even the principal seemed to give him special treatment. “Hey, Sanchez!” one of the girls giggled. “Tell us the story again about how Adam ratted you out to Mr. Cole.” Adam’s stomach sank. He knew what was coming. Sanchez put a hand over his heart, faking a wounded expression. “Ah yes, our brave little whistleblower. You see, guys, I was falsely accused of heinous crimes—the theft of lab equipment. Tragic, really. And who was my accuser?” His eyes flicked across the room, locking onto Adam like a spotlight. “None other than Adam ‘The Rat’ Rivers!” The class erupted in laughter. A chant started in the back: “Rat! Rat! Rat!” Adam clenched his fists under the desk, nails digging into his palms. He tried to focus on the numbers printed in his book, tried to drown out the noise, but the laughter was everywhere—inside his head, crawling under his skin. Sanchez sauntered past his desk, leaning down just enough to whisper: “You’ll never win. You’ll never belong. You’re nothing.” Adam’s jaw tightened. He forced his eyes on the page, but for a split second, he saw letters shift, the words rearranging themselves into something else: KILL HIM. His breath caught. He blinked, and the book was normal again. By lunchtime, the humiliation wasn’t over. Sanchez and his crew waited for him in the cafeteria line. One of them “accidentally” bumped Adam’s tray, sending his food splattering across the floor. Mashed potatoes and gravy slid across his shoes. “Oops,” Sanchez said smoothly, clapping Adam on the back. “Careful, rat-boy. Don’t slip.” The cafeteria roared with laughter. Adam froze, fists shaking, humiliation boiling into a heat that felt dangerous. Then it happened again—shadows flickered at the edges of his vision. The overhead lights buzzed and dimmed for a heartbeat. Nobody else seemed to notice. Adam stared at the mess on the floor, chest heaving. Not yet, a voice whispered faintly in his mind. But soon. He dropped the tray, turned, and left the cafeteria without a word. Behind him, the laughter followed like a curse. ******************* Walking home, the sun dipped lower, painting the sky orange. Kids in groups passed him on bikes, yelling jokes to each other. He kept his head down, clutching his backpack straps tighter. Nobody called his name. Nobody waved. That was normal. At home, the house was as silent as it had been that morning. His mother’s shoes weren’t by the door, and his father’s jacket wasn’t on the hook. Both worked late shifts, sometimes overnight. They always said it was “for him,” but Adam wondered if it was just an excuse to avoid being here. He microwaved leftover noodles, the hum of the machine filling the kitchen. When the timer beeped, he ate standing by the counter, staring blankly out the window into the dim backyard. The neighbor’s kids were outside, laughing as they kicked a soccer ball. Adam’s chest tightened. He turned away, throwing the rest of the food into the sink. Upstairs, his room felt safer. Controlled. His bed was neatly made, the shelves lined with books organized by subject: physics, astronomy, programming. Piles of dismantled computer parts cluttered one corner — his attempt at building something that worked better than people. He sat at his desk, booting up his laptop. Online forums were the only places he could talk without being laughed at. Here, people respected him — or at least his intelligence. > User: DarkMatter89 People are cruel because they fear what they don’t understand. Adam stared at the post he’d just written. His hands hovered over the keyboard, but no one replied. They never did. He shut the laptop. The silence grew heavier. --- Later, in the bathroom, Adam studied his reflection. His pale face stared back, framed by messy hair and crooked glasses. He leaned closer. “Pathetic,” he muttered under his breath. “You let them walk all over you. You let him humiliate you.” His reflection almost seemed to sneer back. For a split second, the lips curled — a cruel smile that wasn’t his own. His stomach dropped. He stumbled back, blinking rapidly. But it was gone. Just him again. He gripped the edges of the sink until his knuckles whitened. I’m imagining things, he thought. Stress. That’s all. But as he turned off the light and left the bathroom, he swore he heard a faint whisper behind him. Weak… but not for long. He froze in the dark hallway. His heart thudded. The air felt colder than it had a second ago. “Who’s there?” he whispered, but the house was silent. When he finally crawled into bed, he buried himself under the blanket, eyes squeezed shut. Sleep came in restless fragments. In one of those fragments, he dreamed of standing in the forest, alone, with hundreds of eyes glowing faintly in the shadows around him. None of them blinked. None of them moved. And when he woke in a cold sweat, he was certain — something had been watching him.
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Latest Chapter
His Dark Reign 209. Quiet becomes dangerous
They didn’t move right away.That was the mistake.Not because staying still was wrong, but because the quiet that followed was too clean. Too intentional. The kind of silence that wasn’t absence—but preparation.Adam felt it first.Not pain this time, not pressure—but a thinning. Like the air inside him had been subtly replaced with something lighter, less resistant. The chamber no longer pulsed. It listened.He opened his eyes slowly. “We’ve been marked.”Lilith froze. Kaleb’s head snapped toward him instantly. “How?”Adam swallowed, the taste of copper still faint on his tongue. “Not with surveillance. Not with force.” A weak breath escaped him. “With patience.”Outside the medical bay, the arguing voices had stopped. Not faded—stopped. No footsteps. No murmurs. Even the hum of machinery seemed muted, like the world had collectively decided to hold its breath.Kaleb stepped toward the door, hand hovering near the weapon at his side. “I don’t like this.”“You shouldn’t,” Adam said.
Last Updated : 2026-01-30
His Dark Reign 208. Fault Lines
Adam drifted in and out of consciousness, the world arriving in fragments—pressure on his back, the faint sting of antiseptic, Lilith’s fingers threaded tightly through his, refusing to let go even when his grip went slack. Every breath felt borrowed, negotiated rather than automatic.Inside him, the chamber was no longer stable.It hadn’t collapsed. That would have been easier. Instead, it had shifted—its geometry subtly altered, its walls no longer smooth, no longer obedient to the assumptions that had shaped them. Stress fractures pulsed faintly along its structure, glowing and fading like fault lines beneath the skin of reality.Adam became aware of this before he became aware of his surroundings.You have changed the internal balance, Malrick said, its voice quieter than before. Not weaker—just more careful.Adam swallowed, throat dry. You noticed.I am bound to you, Malrick replied. Any instability you introduce reverberates through me.“Good,” Adam murmured aloud, eyes flutteri
Last Updated : 2026-01-25
His Dark Reign 207. The shape of defiance
The storm finally moved.Not away—never away—but inward.The clouds above the city began to rotate faster now, no longer suspended in that unnatural stillness. Thunder rolled in low, grinding waves that vibrated through concrete and bone alike. Rain followed, heavy and erratic, striking the ground in bursts that felt less like weather and more like punctuation.The world had resumed motion.Adam felt it immediately.Not relief—pressure redistributed.The Entity’s withdrawal was not absence. It was repositioning. The vast coherence that had pressed so tightly against the world loosened just enough to allow turbulence to return, and with it came consequences. Systems that had been artificially smoothed began to wobble. Corrected tensions snapped back into place with violent enthusiasm.Across the city, power grids surged. Elevators stalled between floors. Bridges groaned under suddenly remembered stress. The quiet calm fractured into chaos—not catastrophic, not apocalyptic, but sharp en
Last Updated : 2026-01-24
His Dark Reign 206. What blinks first
The waiting became a pressure of its own.Not the crushing weight Adam had learned to endure, but something thinner, sharper—anticipation stretched to a knife’s edge. The Entity did not advance. It did not withdraw. It observed, holding its recalibration in suspension, as if testing whether patience itself could be weaponized.Adam felt that test keenly.Each breath required intention now. Each thought had to be chosen, sorted, grounded. The stillness the Entity favored pressed against him like deep water, urging surrender through comfort rather than force. He understood the seduction of it—how easily humanity could mistake this enforced calm for salvation.Lilith refused to let that happen.She sat close enough that her knee brushed his, an anchor of her own making. She talked—not constantly, not nervously, but deliberately. About trivial things. About memories that carried uneven edges. About arguments that had ended badly and choices that still hurt to remember.Human noise.Messy.
Last Updated : 2026-01-23
His Dark Reign 205. The weight of stillness
The light did not last.It vanished as abruptly as it had appeared, swallowed by the thick, unmoving cloud cover above the city. But the moment lingered—etched into the air, into memory, into the delicate balance Adam now carried inside his chest. He felt the echo of it ripple outward, a faint disturbance in the vast coherence pressing against the world.The Entity noticed.Not with alarm. Not with anger.With recalculation.Adam sat perfectly still, back against the cold wall, eyes half-lidded as his awareness stretched carefully outward. Every thought had weight now. Every emotional spike tugged against the invisible constraint binding him to the fracture. He could feel the world’s systems—natural and artificial alike—subtly orienting around him, like iron filings drawn toward a magnet they didn’t know existed.Lilith watched him with a tension that bordered on pain. She could sense it too—not in the way Adam could, but enough to know that something fundamental had shifted. He was p
Last Updated : 2026-01-23
His Dark Reign 204. The Anchor Holds
The silence after the alignment was worse than the chaos before it.It pressed down on the city like a held breath, heavy and expectant. The sky remained sealed in its bruised stillness, clouds unmoving, light filtered through them in a way that made time feel stalled—neither day nor night, just an endless in-between. People spoke in whispers without knowing why. Animals refused to cross certain streets. Somewhere, glass cracked for no apparent reason.Underground, Adam lay still.Not unconscious. Not asleep.Held.Lilith knelt beside him, every muscle locked tight, afraid that if she shifted even an inch, something essential would snap. Her hand hovered over his chest without touching now, as if contact might disturb a balance too delicate to risk. She could feel it anyway—the weight pressing through him, through the ground, into the world itself.An anchor.Kaleb stood a few steps back, shoulders tense, eyes never leaving Adam. The surge he had unleashed moments earlier still echoed
Last Updated : 2026-01-23
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