
The New Year arrived with thunder.
Above the city, fireworks split the night into bursts of gold and scarlet. Ribbons of smoke wound against the stars, glowing softly in the afterglow. The mob below barked as another salvo exploded upwards. Strangers shouted "Happy New Year!" until their voices were a single bay that washed through the avenues.
Confetti swirled on the pavement in the cold air. Children jumped to grab it. Strangers toasted with what they could grab or hugged whoever was closest to them. The entire city, for a moment, came together in joy, took in the promise of fresh starts.
Yukio barely looked up.
He stepped out of a casino that loomed like a cathedral of light, its signboards blazing with colors that put the night sky to shame. A flood of light swept down the facade in electric blues and hot pinks, spilling over onto the sidewalk. The air was crackling with electricity, as though the building itself vibrated with trapped energy.
He shoved the hood of his frayed green sweatshirt back and took slow breaths. A grin tugged at the corners of his mouth small, intimate. There was fire in his chest, though.
"Guess the house lost tonight,"
He growled. His tone was the kind of quiet certainty that a gambler had after he'd ridden a dozen close calls.
"Yeah. I won big."
At eighteen, Yukio didn't seem like a boy who'd just walked out with a fortune. He was gaunt, lightly malnourished, with black hair which always slid into his eyes no matter how often he pushed it back. Blue eyes, hard as glass in sunlight, seemed somehow to clash with the rest of him, tiny and wicked. Two minute silver studs flashed the neon light, winking with each motion of his head.
The rest of him was a boy who hadn't thought about fashion much: baggy jeans, sneakers that had been worn pale months ago, and a hoodie elongated at the cuffs. And yet, something about the way he moved accounted for the difference, he wasn't leaving an empty handed boy.
He pulled out his phone and opened it with quick, practiced fingers. Numbers glared back at him, flashing bold and impossible: ¥173,425,500.
Even with his own eyes, he almost laughed. He understood better than anyone how money never stayed in the pocket of a gambler. But not this time, it wasn't for him.
His thumb rested over the transfer key. Then, without more ado, he transferred the balance away. All the yen were gone into another account.
He wrote a short message, his smile transforming into something more tender.
It's time your lives were made a lot easier. It's all for you.
Yukio shoved the phone into his pocket, breathed in deeply, and melted into the crowd as if nothing monumental had happened.
---
Nozomi cleaned the last of dinner's dishes in their small downtown apartment. The sink continually ran; the single fluorescent light above the kitchen was occasionally flickering. There was a whisper of soy sauce and worn tatami.
Tsutomu sat at the small dining table, working his rough hands over weary eyes. Years on building sites had slumped his shoulders, and the stack of bills in front of him was another load he couldn't carry.
"Electricity again,"
He growled, staring at the latest envelope.
"We'll be behind payment if we don't"
The sound of a phone interrupted him.
Nozomi looked over at the counter. Her phone screen glowed with a message. Drying her water-soaked palms on her apron, she extended her hand to get it.
Her breath caught.
"T-Tsutomu…"
She held out the phone to him, her voice trembling.
"Just look at this!"
He frowned and leaned in. His forehead furrowed as he had trouble seeing the number. Then his eyes opened in shock. He counted the digits once. Twice. A third time.
"That's… no. That can't be. This isn't real."
Neither of them was able to say another thing before another message appeared.
It's time your lives got much easier. All of it is for you.
There was complete silence in the apartment for a moment. Even the hum of the refrigerator seemed to vanish.
Then Nozomi laughed. It wasn't smooth, it cracked, caught between a sob and a gasp but it was laughter, all the same. Tears misted her eyes as she flung her arms around her husband.
Tsutomu's eyes were shining, too. His voice was rough when he struggled,
"That boy. what did he do?"
He groped for his phone, fumbling on the keypad.
"I have to call him. I have to."
Before he could finish the rest of it, the sound of scurrying feet resounded in the corridor.
Megumi slid open the sliding door, rubbing her eyes. Sixteen, obstinate, and sharp-tongued, she had no time for drama at midnight. Her hair was sticking out in every possible direction, her pajamas still rumpled from bed.
"Come on,"
She grumbled.
"It's past midnight. Some of us like sleep.".
She stood rooted to the spot when she saw her parents' tear-stained faces. Her mother held the phone to her like it was a holy object.
"What… happened?"
Megumi questioned, raising an eyebrow.
Her father turned around, his voice clogged with emotion.
"Your brother. He… Megumi, he just sent us money. A lot of money."
Megumi elevated an eyebrow.
"Money? What, like a few thousand yen?"
Her mother shook her head and pushed the phone in front of her.
"Look."
Megumi took it and looked. Her eyes went wide as she scrolled, trying to understand the numbers on the screen. The number looked too fantastic to be real, something out of a fantasy drama.
Her mouth dropped.
"This… This is not possible."
She looked back and forth between her parents, hoping one would admit to it being a joke. When neither of them spoke up, she swore under her breath and pulled out her own phone.
She phoned Yukio immediately. The line clicked, and before he could even utter a greeting, she cut in,
"Yukio! What have you done? Explain this at once!"
On the phone, Yukio's voice was calm. Almost chuckled.
"Don't worry, Megumi."
He laughed low and even.
"All will be explained when I return home."
Her eyes narrowed.
"This better not be illegal, Yukio."
But the line was already dead, boiling with her, her parents crying, and the inescapable good fortune still glowing on the screen.
Outside, firecrackers cracked in the distance, resonating in the city like the beat of a new year.
And in the midst of the throng, Yukio continued with a quiet smile, carrying in his heart a secret only he seemed ready for.
But deep in his chest, something stirred,
a pull,
a whisper,
a shift in the unseen threads of the world.
Something had changed.
Something important.
Something irreversible.
Yukio didn't notice the faint shimmer behind his eyes, or how the air around him pulsed once, just enough to distort the falling snow for a brief moment.
He disappeared into the crowd.
And far away,
beyond sound, beyond time, beyond anything a human consciousness could grasp,
a vast, starless void trembled.
A small childlike figure drifted in the darkness, weightless, shape shifting like mist given life. Its eyes glowed with an ancient light that didn't match its youthful silhouette.
It smiled.
Then raised a tiny hand.
Ripples spread through the black like waves across water, distorting reality itself.
A soft, playful giggle echoed.
"It's time,"
the being whispered.
"Time for you to meet your destiny, Yukio…"
The void pulsed once more,
And the unseen threads of fate began to turn.
Latest Chapter
Chapter 46: Quiet Places Where Pain Learns to Rest
The city was alive.That was the first thing Kaede noticed as she walked through the wide stone avenues of Aurumspire.Not alive with danger.Not alive with screams.Alive with people.Merchants laughed as they argued over prices that didn’t matter. Children darted between adults, wooden swords clutched in their hands, their shouts echoing joy instead of fear. Street musicians filled the air with clumsy but heartfelt melodies, notes tumbling together in imperfect harmony.Kaede slowed her steps.She hadn’t realized how long it had been since she’d seen a city like this.Whole.She passed a bakery and caught the scent of fresh bread and honey-glazed pastries. Her stomach twisted, not from hunger, but memory. Gardens. Koi ponds. Sunlit stone paths.Aurelian Vale.Her fingers curled slowly at her side.Cities weren’t supposed to feel like this to her. Cities were places where you stayed alert, where shadows hid teeth, where crowds became stampedes at the wrong sound.But here…Here, peop
Chapter 45: Embers Beneath Elegant Skies
The Luminelle Trading was quiet in a way few places in Aurumspire ever were.Candessa preferred it that way.Her office sat high above the trading floors, removed from the constant murmur of negotiation and calculation that defined the building below. Tall windows arched toward the ceiling, their crystal panes tinted faintly gold by the afternoon sun. Shelves lined the walls, stacked with ledgers, route charts, and meticulously cataloged trade reports that smelled faintly of parchment and ink.Candessa sat behind her desk, pen resting idly between her fingers.The report before her remained unsigned.That alone was unusual.She wasn’t distracted easily. Not by politics. Not by pressure. Not by the endless balancing act that came with running one of the largest trading empires on the continent.Yet her eyes had drifted to the window for the third time in as many minutes.“…Yukio Yoshino,” She murmured quietly.The name lingered in the air like a misplaced note in a perfectly tuned ins
Chapter 44: Ledgers, Ink, and Quiet Victories
Candessa Luminelle hated mornings like this.Not because she disliked work, far from it. Work was clean. Honest. It obeyed logic, numbers, preparation. If something failed, it could be traced back to a mistake, corrected, improved.Politics, however, was a different beast.She sat at the head of a long polished table inside the Aurumspire branch of the Luminelle Trading Firm, sunlight streaming through tall arched windows and glinting off neatly stacked ledgers. The room smelled faintly of parchment, ink, and expensive wood polish.Across from her sat five people.Two minor nobles.Three senior distributors.All of them smiling.And all of them, Candessa knew, waiting to see what she’d do next.“Once again,” She said calmly, fingers laced atop the table, “Thank you for attending on such short notice. I’ll get straight to the point.”She gestured to the stacks of documents beside her.“The Arcflame Lighter has exceeded projected sales by forty-three percent in less than a week.”A mu
Chapter 43.5: The Shape of What Waits
The chamber existed outside time. It had no walls only horizon. A vast, circular expanse of polished obsidian stretched endlessly, reflecting the stars above like fractured mirrors. Constellations shifted slowly overhead, forming symbols older than written thought. At the center of the chamber stood a single elevated platform. And upon it. Fukui, God of Fortune. He sat cross-legged, elbows resting on his knees, chin propped in his hands. His emerald hair shimmered faintly, unbound and unbothered. He looked… bored. “So,” He said, peering around. “This is the trial?” Around him, twelve thrones slowly manifested, each carved from a different divine material, crystal, flame, shadow, starlight, stone, void. One by one, figures emerged and took their seats. The Divine Council. They did not speak yet. Their presence alone bent the fabric of the realm. Reality thickened. Probability tightened. Fate itself felt constrained, as if held in a clenched fist. Fukui sighed d
Chapter 43: When the Ash Settles
Yukio barely registered the ground beneath him. His boots scraped stone as he was dragged through the streets of Aurumspire, his vision swimming between blurs of gold-lit buildings and passing faces that flickered with brief curiosity before looking away. His head throbbed in a dull, constant rhythm, like something was knocking from the inside. “Hey! Watch the steps,” He muttered weakly. Kaede tightened her grip around his waist. “Shut it. You’re not allowed to complain right now.” Michibiki kept pace beside them, eyes sharp and alert despite the chaos buzzing around her mind. Every so often she glanced back over her shoulder, checking the street behind them, her hand hovering just a little too close to where light magic would form. The city went on around them. Merchants haggled. Guards stood watch. Adventurers laughed loudly outside taverns. No one really cared that a half-conscious A-Rank adventurer was being hauled through the street. Yukio huffed a weak laugh
Chapter 42: Signs Written in Ash
The moment they crossed the threshold, the air changed. It wasn’t just colder. It was heavier, thick with something that made Yukio’s chest tighten with every breath. The stone corridor ahead stretched downward at a shallow angle, walls carved from ancient rock streaked with dark stains that looked far too organic to be mineral deposits. The faint glow of Aurumspire’s warding runes behind them faded quickly, swallowed by shadow. Michibiki stopped after only a few steps. “…This isn’t normal mana,”She said quietly. She raised one hand, fingers weaving a practiced sigil. “Light Magic: Blessing of the Luminous Veil.” Soft light burst outward, wrapping around each of them like a translucent cloak. The pressure in the air eased just slightly, enough that Yukio could breathe without feeling like something was pressing on his lungs. Kaede flexed her fingers, watching the light cling to her skin.“Good call. Feels like the place is trying to crawl inside my mouth.” Yukio forced a smal
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