
The smell hit him first. It wasn’t the sterile, ozone-heavy scent of the cryogenic facility in 2144, nor the metallic tang of his oxygen recycler. It was the smell of cheap floor wax, chalk dust, and the lingering, synthetic scent of strawberry body spray that haunted every high school hallway in the late 2020s.
Aris gasped, his lungs expanding with a sharp, burning intake of air. He bolted upright, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird.
"Whoa, easy there, Aris. You’re going to give yourself a concussion before the midterms even start."
The voice was annoying, familiar, and—by all accounts of physics—should have been buried under six feet of concrete in a collapsed sector of Neo-Tokyo. Aris squinted, his vision swimming. The fluorescent lights overhead flickered, buzzing with a nauseating hum.
Sitting on the desk in front of him, legs swinging idly, was Leo. Leo, who had died during the Resource Wars. Leo, who looked exactly seventeen, with that stupidly bright yellow hoodie and a smear of ink on his thumb.
Aris blinked, rubbing his temples. The movement felt sluggish. He looked down at his hands. They were smooth, unscarred by the plasma burns and jagged shrapnel of the future. He gripped the edge of his wooden desk. The texture was raw, real, and painfully solid.
"Aris? You okay, man? You look like you’ve seen a ghost," Leo chuckled, tossing a crumpled piece of paper toward him.
Aris didn't answer. He couldn't. His mind was a battlefield of fragmented memories—the crushing weight of adulthood, the failures of the Resistance, and the final, cold silence of his last breath. He pinched his arm, hard. The pain was sharp and immediate.
I’m back, he thought, his blood running cold. But how?
Before he could process the impossibility of his situation, a jagged, translucent blue window flickered into existence in the center of his vision. It didn't look like a standard holographic interface; it looked like a malfunctioning piece of software from a bargain-bin VR game.
[SYSTEM INITIALIZATION: 99%...]
[ERROR: COMPATIBILITY MODE DETECTED]
[SYSTEM IDENTIFIED: 'GREEN FLAG SYSTEM' - BETA v0.01]
[STATUS: HIGHLY UNSTABLE]
[CRITICAL WARNING: Failure to comply will result in system-wide ‘Reset’ (AKA: Permanent Neural Erasure).]
Aris froze, staring through the blue text at the back of the classroom. A system? Here? Now?
"System?" he whispered, his voice raspy.
"Yeah, the system," Leo said, misunderstanding him completely. "The school system is rigged, I know. But we have to pass History, or my dad’s going to ground me until I’m thirty. Are you listening?"
Aris ignored him, focusing his mind on the flickering interface. It jittered, static dancing around the edges of the box.
[WELCOME, HOST: ARIS VANCE]
[MISSION OBJECTIVE: Win her heart with a gentle gesture.]
[TARGET: ELARA VANCE (No relation)]
[REWARD: +5 Stability Points, +10 Merit Tokens.]
[FAILURE PENALTY: SYSTEM REBOOT (Painful execution of user consciousness)]
Aris felt a vein in his forehead throb. "Win her heart? Are you kidding me?"
"Who are you talking to?" Leo frowned, leaning closer. "And who is 'her'? You mean Elara? The girl who hasn't spoken a word to you since you spilled that science experiment on her shoes in freshman year?"
Aris looked across the room. There she was. Elara. She was sitting by the window, a lock of dark hair falling over a physics textbook. She looked exactly as she had twelve years ago—composed, brilliant, and completely untouchable. Back then, he had spent three years trying to catch her attention, only to fail in spectacular, humiliating ways.
He didn't want to go through that again. He didn't want to be seventeen. He didn't want to play a game designed by a glitchy piece of software that threatened to lobotomize him if he didn't secure a romantic interest.
[SYSTEM ALERT: MISSION TIMER INITIATED]
[TIME REMAINING: 05:00 MINUTES]
[CURRENT STABILITY: 12% - CRITICAL]
[WARNING: The user is currently suffering from ‘Social Regression Syndrome.’ A gentle gesture is required to stabilize the narrative.]
"Narrative?" Aris hissed under his breath. "This isn't a narrative. It's a nightmare."
He stood up, his chair scraping loudly against the floor. Every eye in the classroom turned toward him. He felt the phantom phantom weight of a rifle on his shoulder, his body instinctively shifting into a defensive stance. He looked like he was about to start a brawl, not ask a girl for a pencil.
"Aris, sit down," the teacher sighed, not even looking up from his stack of papers. "If you’re going to act out, do it in the hallway."
Aris ignored the teacher, his eyes locked on the quest timer counting down in his field of view.
4:12.
4:11.
If he didn't do something, this "System" was going to kill him. And if he did do something, he was going to be the laughingstock of the school. Both options felt equally fatal, but the threat of "Permanent Neural Erasure" was a powerful motivator. He remembered the feeling of dying—the cold, the darkness, the nothingness. He wasn't going back there.
He walked across the room, his gait stiff, his movements calculating. He moved like a soldier in enemy territory, which only made his approach to Elara’s desk seem infinitely more threatening.
As he approached, Elara looked up. Her eyes were sharp, intelligent, and unamused. "Can I help you, Aris?"
The System chirped—a sound like a dying bird.
[INCOMING SUGGESTION: Offer a gesture of genuine kindness. Avoid: awkward compliments, physical touch, or reciting poetry.]
Genuine kindness, he mocked internally. Right. How about I offer her a tactical briefing on the upcoming collapse of the global economy?
No, that wouldn't work. He looked at her desk. She was struggling with a complex set of calculus equations. He saw the way she was gnawing on her pen, her brows knitted in frustration.
Aris stopped, his shadow falling across her notebook. He didn't say a word. Instead, he pulled out his own chair—not hers, because that would be too bold—and sat down in the empty seat next to her. He reached out, his hand trembling slightly, and took her pen.
She blinked, surprised, but didn't pull away.
"The derivative," Aris said, his voice calmer than he felt. "You’re trying to solve for X by isolating the variable, but you need to derive the function first."
He didn't make a grand romantic gesture. He didn't offer a rose or a love letter. He simply turned her paper, picked up his own pencil, and mapped out the three steps of the equation, his handwriting sharp and precise—far more mature than it should have been for a high school senior. He handed the pen back to her and pushed the paper toward her.
"Try it now," he said.
Elara stared at the math, then at him. The confusion in her eyes shifted into a subtle, piqued interest. "How did you... you were failing this class last week."
"I had a lot of time to think," Aris replied, a hollow smile touching his lips.
[MISSION UPDATE: Objective Complete.]
[STABILITY: 20% (IMPROVED)]
[REWARD: +5 Stability Points, +10 Merit Tokens.]
[NEW FEATURE UNLOCKED: SHOP ACCESS]
A new window popped up, blocking out the rest of the classroom. It showed a list of strange items: Charisma Boost (Small), Flashback Trigger (10 Credits), Temporal Anchor (500 Credits).
"Aris," Elara whispered, the edge of her voice softening. "Thanks. That... that actually makes sense."
She looked at him then, really looked at him, and for a fleeting second, the wall between them didn't feel so high.
But Aris wasn't looking at her anymore. He was staring at the clock on the wall.
17:45.
He had survived the first day, the first mission, and the first glitch. But as he looked at the flickering, unstable blue text that now dictated his existence, he realized the terrifying truth. He was back in his seventeenth-year-old body, but the world was no longer his. He was a piece of software now, living in a simulation of a life he had already lived, trying to keep a broken system from deleting his soul.
He leaned back, his heart finally slowing down.
"Anytime," he murmured, his gaze shifting to the window.
Outside, the world was sunny, bright, and blissfully unaware of the wars to come. But Aris knew better. And as he watched the System’s blue light fade from his peripheral vision, he made a silent vow.
If this "Green Flag System" wanted him to play the hero, he would. But he would play by his own rules—and he would find out exactly who, or what, had turned his second chance at life into a death trap.
[SYSTEM NOTE: The 'Green Flag System' is pleased with your progress. Warning: New target incoming. Difficulty: High.]
Aris closed his eyes.
Failure is mandatory, he thought, but I don't intend to fail.
Latest Chapter
Chapter 10: The Result of Chaos
The rain lashed against the tall windows of the university library, a rhythmic drumming that usually calmed Tia’s nerves. Today, however, it only amplified the restless thrumming in her chest. She stared at the textbook open before her, but the words—once clear and logical—blurred into meaningless ink blots.Across the table sat Mark, a classmate who had been vying for her attention for three weeks. He was everything a girl was "supposed" to want. He was punctual, his hair was perfectly gelled, he wore pressed shirts, and he spoke in a predictable, polite cadence that rarely deviated from the script of social pleasantries."I was thinking," Mark said, his voice smooth and devoid of any jagged edges, "that we could catch a movie on Friday. Something light. Maybe that new rom-com? I heard it’s quite charming."Tia looked at him, really looked at him, and felt a profound, aching sense of boredom. She tried to picture herself laughing at the movie, holding his hand, and listening to him r
Chapter 9: Confession (The Hard Way)
The morning sun hung over St. Jude’s Academy with an irritating level of cheerfulness. Aris stood by his locker, staring blankly at the translucent blue interface that hovered inches from his face—an interface that had been ruining his life for the past three weeks.[SYSTEM ALERT: Main Quest Updated][Quest Name: The Heart’s Necessity][Objective: Confess your feelings to Elara Vance.][Time Limit: 04:00:00][Penalty for Failure: Permanent loss of the 'Charisma' stat, resulting in social invisibility for one month.]Aris pinched the bridge of his nose, feeling a migraine pulsing behind his eyes. He wasn't a hero, he wasn't a romantic lead, and he certainly wasn't a guy who enjoyed public humiliation. He was just a student trying to survive his final year without his life being dictated by a glitched-out, omniscient RPG menu."Confess," he muttered, his voice barely a rasp. "Why can't I just write a letter? Why does it have to be a 'confession'?"The System didn't respond, but it did f
Chapter 8: Fever Dreams and Cold Compresses
The atmosphere inside the apartment had shifted from its usual domestic hum to something sharper, colder, and infinitely more suffocating. Tia lay curled on the sofa, a mound of mismatched blankets that did little to stop the tremors wracking her frame. Her skin felt like it was radiating localized heat, a thermal anomaly in the otherwise temperature-controlled living room.Aris stood over her, his posture rigid. His eyes—those pale, analytical irises—were darting across the room, processing data points that didn't exist. To a normal person, Tia was simply suffering from a nasty seasonal flu. To Aris, currently trapped in the erratic feedback loop of a fractured sub-routine, Tia was a casualty in a high-stakes extraction mission."Subject core temperature: 103.2 degrees Fahrenheit," Aris muttered, his voice dropping into that clipped, military cadence that always made Tia’s skin prickle. He tapped his temple, a phantom interface flickering behind his retinas. "Thermal regulation syste
Chapter 7: The Library Stakeout
The library of Aethelgard Academy was a sanctuary of hushed whispers, the scent of vanilla-aged parchment, and the oppressive weight of impending midterms. For Aris, however, it was a tactical zone.He sat at a mahogany study carrel in the far corner, his eyes narrowed behind his glasses as he scanned the perimeter. His objective was clear: monitor Tia. She had been acting suspiciously—scouring historical archives, whispering to professors who were notorious for their silence, and worst of all, she had recently topped the magical theory rankings, pushing Aris down to second place. In the binary world of Aris’s internal processing, competition was a glitch that needed to be patched.His internal interface flickered to life, a translucent blue overlay that only he could perceive, hovering inches from his retinas.[SYSTEM ALERT: POTENTIAL RIVAL DETECTED.][TARGET: TIA L. VALERIUS.][THREAT LEVEL: ASCENDING.][MISSION: ELIMINATE THE DISTANCE BETWEEN YOU AND THE TARGET.]Aris blinked. The
Chapter 6: Cracks in the Ice
The library was silent, save for the rhythmic scratching of a quill against parchment and the occasional, inexplicable thud coming from the seat across from Tia.Tia sighed, her eyes drifting from the ancient history textbook to the boy slumped in the chair opposite her. Aris was, by every metric of polite society, a disaster. His uniform tie was knotted in a way that defied the laws of physics, his hair looked as though he had wrestled a whirlwind and lost, and he was currently trying to balance a stack of five erasers on the bridge of his nose.He tilted his head back, his tongue poking out in intense concentration. The erasers wobbled. Tia watched, her patience fraying like a frayed hem."Aris," she murmured, her voice barely a whisper in the hushed room. "We are supposed to be studying for the Alchemy exam. Not... whatever that is."Aris blinked, and the erasers cascaded onto the table with a soft clatter. He beamed at her, unbothered, his eyes crinkling at the corners. "They were
Chapter 5: The Rain-Soaked Misunderstanding
The atmosphere on the university campus had shifted within a matter of minutes. What began as a humid, gray afternoon had transformed into a relentless downpour, the sky weeping in thick, silver sheets that blurred the lines between the gravel paths and the manicured lawns.Aris stood under the narrow, leaking awning of the library building, his fingers drumming an impatient rhythm against the damp stone wall. Beside him stood Tia, her books clutched tightly against her chest, her eyes darting toward the gray curtain of water that showed no sign of retreating. They had spent the last two hours finishing their joint research project, a grueling task that had left both of them exhausted and, apparently, ill-prepared for the fickle temperament of the local weather.A soft, melodic ping echoed in Aris’s mind—a sound that had become all too familiar over the past few weeks. It was the System, the cryptic, unsolicited interface that seemed to view his social life as a video game it desperat
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