The metallic hum of the city resonated through the walls of a small apartment tucked away in one of the lower districts. Inside, Lucas Graves tightened the straps on his worn travel bag, his eyes flicking to the digital clock embedded in the wall. 6:42 AM. They still had time.
Their home was nothing extravagant—just a simple, functional space meant for survival. The walls bore faint cracks, remnants of a structure that had seen better days. A small kitchen occupied one corner, with an outdated food processor barely holding itself together. The single couch in the living room was well-used, its edges fraying, while a modest round table sat beside it, covered in stacks of books on cultivation—most of them borrowed, since they couldn't afford originals.
"Lucas, if we miss the train because of you, I swear..." Ellie's impatient voice cut through the silence as she leaned against the doorway, arms crossed. Her jet-black hair was tied up into a loose ponytail, and her sharp blue eyes carried the same frustration as always.
Lucas smirked, adjusting his wrist communicator. "Relax, we've got time."
Ellie scoffed. "Says the guy who nearly got us locked out of the last city because he was 'taking his time'."
He chuckled, slinging his bag over his shoulder. They weren't rich. They weren't powerful. As cultivators, they were at the bottom of the hierarchy—weak, barely above commoners. Their Qi reserves were too shallow to be considered true martial artists, and with no prestigious background to their name, most guilds and sects ignored them.
Still, they had survived.
Stepping outside, the city stretched before them, a vast expanse of steel, glass, and energy. Towering skyscrapers clawed at the artificial sky, their surfaces shimmering under the glow of floating lanterns and neon signs. The sky itself was an endless dome, a protective barrier shielding the metropolis from the harsh storms of the outer wastelands. Airships drifted lazily above, while streamlined vehicles zipped along magnetic highways suspended in the air.
Farther ahead, the train station loomed like a colossal metal beast, its tracks suspended by intricate energy circuits that pulsed with faint blue light. Trains hovered soundlessly, their sleek silver bodies lined with glowing engravings—symbols of the advanced Qi-infused technology that powered them.
Lucas and Ellie pushed through the morning crowd, their footsteps lost in the sea of voices and announcements blaring over the speakers. Their train was already boarding. A sleek, bullet-shaped transport with reinforced plating, designed for long-distance travel between cities.
They entered the cabin, finding their assigned seats near the middle. The interior was clean, efficient—rows of cushioned seats, dim overhead lights, and massive windows showcasing the sprawling city outside.
Ellie plopped down beside him, exhaling. "Maybe this city will be different."
Lucas leaned back, watching the skyline fade as the train began its ascent onto the elevated tracks. "Maybe."
She glanced at him, her voice softer now. "You ever wonder what it's like to be strong? Like, really strong? The kind of cultivator that people actually respect?"
Lucas smiled faintly. "Yeah… all the time."
Ellie sighed, resting her chin on her hand. "One day, huh?"
He didn't respond. The rhythmic hum of the train, the gentle rocking motion—it was lulling him into a light drowsiness. The conversation drifted, fading into the background as his eyelids grew heavy.
Then—chaos.
A deafening boom shook the entire train. Lucas' eyes snapped open just as the cabin lurched violently to the side. Screams erupted as passengers were flung from their seats. His stomach twisted as the world seemed to tilt unnaturally.
The lights flickered. Sparks rained down from overhead circuits. The reinforced windows cracked under the force of whatever had just struck them.
Lucas barely had time to react before another impact sent the train into a violent spiral. The metal screeched, grinding against the rails as the back half of the train was ripped away.
Wind roared through the gaping hole where the last cabins had been. He saw passengers—some still strapped to their seats—torn from the train and sucked into the void. Their screams were swallowed by the night.
Ellie!
His head whipped around. His sister was struggling to hold onto the armrest, her eyes wide with terror. Their hands met for a brief second before the train took another hit. A shadow loomed outside—a monstrous figure, its form obscured by the flickering emergency lights.
Another explosion rocked the train. The floor beneath them split apart.
Lucas felt weightless. Time slowed.
Ellie's voice reached him, but it was distant, muffled. He saw her fingers, reaching for his. Inches apart.
Then—darkness.
The last thing he felt was the crushing weight of impact. The last thing he heard was the faint sound of his sister's voice fading into nothingness.
There was nothing.
Not darkness. Not silence. Not even the cold embrace of death—just an endless, formless void that stretched beyond all understanding.
Lucas couldn't see. Couldn't feel. Couldn't even think properly. He just existed, a fragment of awareness floating through an abyss without direction, without weight. Without purpose.
Time had no meaning here.
Had it been seconds? Hours? Years? Or had he always been here, an aimless speck drifting through eternity?
At first, there had been memories. Faint whispers of a world long lost—the city skyline bathed in neon light, the hum of the train, Ellie's voice calling his name. But those too had begun to unravel, dissolving like mist in the vast nothingness.
And then… even those whispers were gone.
What remained was a terrifying emptiness.
A void so absolute that it consumed all thought, all identity, leaving only the faintest thread of self-awareness. The edges of Lucas' very existence felt as though they were fraying, his soul unraveling piece by piece, merging with the abyss.
Was this death?
No afterlife. No reincarnation. Just a slow erasure.
A feeling beyond loneliness, beyond fear. A vast nothingness that swallowed everything he had ever been.
But then—
Something changed.
A ripple in the void. A disturbance.
At first, it was subtle, like the faintest vibration running through his soul. But it grew stronger, a strange tugging sensation, like an invisible force had hooked into his very essence.
Lucas had no body, no form, yet he felt himself moving.
It was sudden. Unnatural.
The force pulling him grew stronger, shifting from a gentle tug to a relentless drag.
Panic flickered through his formless consciousness. He couldn't see what was happening, couldn't resist, couldn't even scream.
The nothingness around him ripped apart.
It was as if some unseen hand had seized him and was yanking him from the abyss, dragging him through an unseen current. The void that had once been still now raged around him, pulling him faster and faster toward some unknown destination.
The silence shattered.
A deep, resonant hum filled the void, vibrating through what little was left of him. It wasn't a sound in the way he remembered—it was something older, something vast and unexplainable. A force beyond comprehension.
The pull became a plummet.
Lucas had no eyes, yet he could feel it—the sensation of being dragged down, deeper, farther than he had ever been. Faster. The void around him stretched, warped, twisted into something that felt like it should not exist.
Then—
Everything stopped.
For a single, impossible moment, there was stillness.
No motion. No sound. No thought.
And then, in that silence—
A heartbeat.
Faint. Slow.
But unmistakable.
Thump.
Like a distant drum calling him back fro
m the edge of oblivion.
Then, another.
Thump.
The void trembled. Reality lurched.
And with it—
Lucas Graves ceased to exist.