
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 123. The answer from beneath
He reached the ragged line that separated their world from Adam’s. For a single second he could see Adam more clearly than he ever had when Adam was “Adam”: not the boy bullied and quiet; not the vessel for Malrick’s cunning; but a young man with a stubborn, furious core.“Adam!” Kaleb shouted. His voice carried oddly, doubled — in Lilith’s ear and then inside Adam’s head, magnified by the thin thread. The sound anchored.Adam’s fingers closed around Kaleb’s reaching hand like iron into iron.And when they met, the fracture bit.The entity flared in anger. Its tendrils whipped, carving away chunks of the psychic world. The raw hunger made walls bleed and memories detach from their frames like wet posters peeling off a wall. Faces the entity had summoned from the crowd of eyes swam forward and snarled. The world wanted to punish them for the contact.But the second voice — the one that had called Adam’s name — surged again.This new voice did not sound like a human voice. It sounded li
Last Updated : 2025-12-04
His Dark Reign 122. The answer from beneath 1
The entity expanded its attention like a tide. Its hunger spread through the liminal layer and the fracture both, a slow, irresistible gravity, and the air answered by tightening around every bone in the town. Shadows lengthened their teeth. The watching eyes in the sky blinked in unison, expectant.Then a second sound threaded into the pressure — quieter, lower, older than the world, and not a voice so much as a remembering. It did not shout; it unlatched memory. The sound was like ocean-floor stone grinding on stone, like the first language of the deep. It answered the entity not with challenge but with recognition.It said one name.“Adam.”The word rolled across the fracture as if carved into basalt. The ancient entity paused. Something like a ripple of irritation—then attention—moved through it. It hadn’t expected a reply that old, one originating from a place that remembered before doors. For the first time, the presence felt watched.In the psychic plane, where Adam hung betwee
Last Updated : 2025-12-04
His Dark Reign 121. The one who remembers the first door
It drifted awake slowly, as if rising from beneath the crust of a long-dead star.There was no light in the place it occupied. Light was something that belonged to worlds with boundaries, rules, and mercy. It had known those once—before the first door opened and the first scream was harvested. Before time learned to move. Before language had teeth.Now, awakening felt like sinking upward.The entity—older than form, older than choice—pressed its consciousness through the fractures it had been clawing at for centuries. And this time, something answered. A ripple. A pulse. An invitation.Adam.The boy’s name drifted through the ether like a tether made of bone-dust and human fear. Not because Adam called it—Adam had no idea what he touched. No, it was Malrick’s lineage, Malrick’s arrogance, Malrick’s hunger that created the wound in reality. A wound the entity could finally slip a finger through.It stretched.Reality stretched with it.And the entity remembered.A thousand worlds it ha
Last Updated : 2025-12-04
His Dark Reign 120. The breath between worlds
The world did not snap back into place after the collapse — it shuddered, twitching like something half-alive, half-dead.The liminal layer trembled, its gray horizon buckling in and out like a heartbeat out of rhythm. Buildings that had once been stable silhouettes flickered, stretching too tall, then compressing.Lilith felt the air thicken, not like fog but like breath — slow, labored, hot.“Something’s waking,” she murmured, her voice barely carrying through the static-laced air.Kaleb stood beside her, tense but steady. “Not Adam?”“No,” she whispered. “This is… older.”Cracks spread beneath their feet — not in the ground, but in the layer itself. Like glass that had been struck from the inside.Between the cracks, Lilith could hear something breathing. Long, wet inhales. Quivering exhales. A presence shifting in the dark below.Kaleb grabbed her arm as the ground pitched. “Hey—stay with me. Don’t fall into whatever that is.”She didn’t answer — she couldn’t.Because right then,
Last Updated : 2025-12-03
His Dark Reign 119. The moment the world flinched
The world didn’t shatter all at once.It flinched first.A tremor rolled through the cracked sky like something enormous had brushed its fingers across the fabric of reality. Every bird froze mid-flight. Every wolf lifted its head. Every human felt their spine tighten in a way that no instinct, no training, no ancestral memory had prepared them for.Because nothing in history had ever existed like the thing that was coming.Kaleb felt it first. His claws sunk into the wet earth as the psychic shockwave rippled through him. Lilith staggered beside him, hand gripping his forearm, her breath catching in her throat as the entire field around them vibrated like a drumhead struck by an invisible fist.And inside the collapsing psychic realm, Adam screamed.Not out of fear.Out of battle.Out of the effort it took to hold back the dark entity that was clawing its way through him toward the real world.The nightmare-arm that had burst through the sky thickened, veins pulsing, dripping black i
Last Updated : 2025-12-03
His Dark Reign 118. The vessel breaks
The beam of white, devouring light hit Adam like a celestial spear—silent, perfect, merciless. The fractured realm reacted as though stabbed through its core. The sky shattered in a ripple of cracks, each one emitting the sharp ring of broken crystal multiplied a thousandfold.Lilith screamed his name, fighting the pull of the collapsing ground as she threw her weight toward him. Kaleb lunged too, fingers brushing empty air before a shockwave hurled him backward, tumbling across a floor that kept re-forming beneath him in jagged, uncaring slabs.Adam didn’t fall.He hung suspended within the pillar of light, body rigid, head thrown back, mouth open in a soundless gasp. The glow carved through him, not burning, not wounding—claiming. As though the realm had marked him with a brand, and now the brand wanted its due.Lilith crawled forward, hair whipping around her face in the violent wind spiraling from the beam. Her eyes were wet, furious, refusing to accept this. “Adam! Look at me—loo
Last Updated : 2025-12-02
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