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THE SHATTERED LEDGER
THE SHATTERED LEDGER
Author: Tan clipps
Chapter 1: The Weight of Spirit-Ash
Author: Tan clipps
last update2026-07-05 19:09:59

The first thing Julian noticed wasn't the dark, but the taste. It tasted like burnt pennies and dry rot.

He coughed, a hard, hacking reflex that made his entire chest feel like it was collapsing inward. His face was buried in loose, coarse dirt—no, not dirt. Spirit-ash. It had a faint, sickly gray glow to it, casting dim shadows across the rock floor. He tried to push himself up, but his arms felt like wet cardboard. They trembled, his elbows giving out twice before he managed to get his knees under him.

Where am I?

The thought felt heavy, sluggish. Just a minute ago—or was it a lifetime ago?—he remembered the hum of a computer, the soft glow of a desk lamp, and the mundane comfort of a clean apartment. He remembered being a person. Someone with a name people didn't spit on. Now, looking down at his arms, all he saw were bony, dirt-caked wrists and skin so pale it looked translucent under the ash-glint.

He swallowed hard, trying to clear the grit from his throat, and whispered the word that had been burning in the back of his mind since he woke up.

"Interface."

A soft, chime-like sound echoed in his head. A translucent screen flickered into view, floating just a few inches from his face. It was the Heavenly Ledger—the universal system everyone in this damn world was born with. Julian felt a tiny, desperate spark of hope in his chest. Maybe this was the reset. Maybe he had a clean slate, a chance to figure things out.

Then he actually read the numbers.

[Name: Julian] [Data Root: Fractured / Unranked] [Karma Points: -10,420] [Status: Suppressed by the Sovereign (Exp Gained: -90%)]

Julian stared at the negative sign next to his Karma. Ten thousand. Negative ten thousand. His stomach dropped, leaving a cold, hollow sensation behind. In a world governed by a cosmic ledger, negative karma wasn't just a bad score; it was a curse. It meant you were a walking plague.

"Hey! Move it, jinx!"

A rough shoulder slammed into Julian’s side, sending him sprawling back into the ash. He hit the ground hard, the breath whistling out of his lungs.

It was one of the other miners, a gaunt man with sunken eyes and a jagged scar running down his jaw. The man didn't even look back at Julian; he just aggressively wiped his sleeve where they had made contact, his face twisted in pure disgust.

"Don't come near my pile," the miner muttered, throwing a chunk of raw ore into his basket. "I’m not letting your bad luck ruin my quota today. Die somewhere else."

Julian didn't argue. He didn't have the breath for it anyway. He looked around the cavern—Sector 4, according to the faded carvings on the wall—and saw dozens of other men and women, all bent double, scraping at the rock faces. They all kept their distance from him. A neat, empty five-foot radius followed him wherever he crawled. To them, he wasn't just a slave; he was a parasite waiting to drag them down with him. The isolation was physical. It felt heavier than the mountain sitting above their heads.

He managed to drag himself toward a small, ignored outcrop of rock near the edge of the tunnel. There was a tiny glint of spirit-ore embedded in the crack. If he could just get a few pieces, maybe he wouldn't get whipped at the end of the shift. He reached out, his thin fingers stretching toward the dull blue shimmer.

A heavy shadow fell over him.

Before Julian could even look up, a massive, iron-toed boot came down directly on his right hand.

Crack.

The sound of his own knuckles grinding against the sharp, jagged rock echoed inside his skull. The pain didn't hit immediately—it took a second, a horrific, freezing second, before the white-hot agony flared up his arm.

"Oh, look at that. Didn't see you down there, rat."

Julian looked up through a blur of sudden tears. Standing over him was Mastiff, the low-level overseer for Sector 4. The man was huge, his thick leather vest stained with sweat and grease, a heavy iron whip coiled tightly at his hip. Mastiff didn't look angry; he looked bored. He put more weight on his heel, deliberately grinding Julian’s fingers deeper into the sharp stone.

Julian’s jaw clamped shut so hard his teeth clicked. He wanted to scream. Every nerve in his body was begging him to howl, to beg, to push back. But he knew what happened to slaves who made noise. They became examples. So he swallowed it. He choked on his own breath, his face turning purple as he forced the scream down into his chest, his left hand clutching the dirt so hard his nails bent backward.

Mastiff watched him for a moment, waiting for a reaction. When Julian only gave a muffled, pathetic wheeze, the overseer let out a short, disappointed laugh and finally lifted his boot.

"Pick up the pace," Mastiff said casually, spitting onto the back of Julian's ruined hand. "The quotas don't care about your broken fingers."

Julian pulled his hand back against his chest, cradling it. Three of his fingers were already swelling, turning a dark, angry purple. He couldn't even close his fist. The sheer, suffocating powerlessness of the moment hit him harder than the physical pain. He was nothing here. Less than nothing.

Suddenly, his vision flickered. The blue light of the ledger turned a violent, bleeding crimson. A massive system notification popped up, covering his entire field of view.

[System Warning: Your current existence value is lower than the dust you mine.]

Julian let out a dry, bitter laugh that sounded like a cough. Even the universe thought he was trash.

Before he could close the screen, the entire cavern began to tremble. It wasn't a cave-in. The vibration didn't come from the rock; it came from the air itself.

HOOOOONNNNGGGGG.

A massive, deep horn resounded through the abyss, so loud it vibrated right through the soles of Julian’s feet and rattled the teeth in his gums. The sound carried a terrifying, oppressive weight that seemed to suck the oxygen straight out of the tunnel.

Every single miner stopped. Mastiff froze, his smug smile instantly vanishing, his face turning an ash-pale white.

The supreme ruler. The first transmigrator.

Victor had arrived.

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