WebNovels

Kalayaan: The Regressor of 1898

thenooneguy
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
1.2k
Views
Synopsis
What if you could rewrite history? Elijah Reyes, a brilliant Filipino historian and military strategist, never believed in fate—only in facts. But when a mysterious lightning storm pulls him from 2025 into the war-torn world of 1898, he awakens to a Philippines on the brink of transformation—and destruction. The Spanish Empire is collapsing, the Katipunan dreams of freedom, and the Americans prepare to betray their promises. With only his modern knowledge, a relic bullet from the future, and the fire of patriotism burning in his heart, Elijah must navigate the bloodstained path of revolution. Trust must be earned. Allies like Emilio Aguinaldo and Antonio Luna must be united. Betrayals must be prevented. And history itself must be bent—before the American invasion crushes the Filipino dream once again. But victory comes with a price. And as Elijah changes the fate of a nation, he must ask: How much of himself will he lose in the fight for freedom? A gripping tale of time travel, war, and redemption, Kalayaan: The Regressor of 1898 is an epic reimagining of Philippine history—where one man stands between colonization and liberation.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Storm of Time

The rain came down like bullets. Hard, fast, and relentless—pelting the tin roofs of Tarlac as thunder cracked across the sky like an angry whip. Elijah Reyes pulled the collar of his jacket tighter as he stood under the skeletal remains of a ruined Spanish-era watchtower. His boots sank into the mud, but he didn't care. His eyes were fixed on the distant mountains, veiled in mist, and his mind was far from the present.

He had come here to feel something.

He was 32. A military historian, professor, and strategist who had served briefly as a consultant for the Armed Forces of the Philippines. For years, he had devoured battle maps and documents from the Philippine Revolution and the Philippine-American War—his obsession and his frustration. Every time he read about General Luna's assassination, the botched defense of Manila, or the betrayal by the elite classes, he felt it like a knife.

They could have won. If only they had united. If only they had prepared.

Lightning flashed, illuminating the ruined tower in stark white. Elijah took out a small, rusted bullet he always carried—a relic he found on this very hill, a remnant of a forgotten skirmish. He clenched it in his palm.

"What if I had been there?" he muttered. "What if someone who knew came back and guided them?"

Another bolt of lightning struck—this time closer. The ground shook. His vision blurred. Pain stabbed into his skull as his body convulsed.

And then… nothing.

He awoke to birdsong.

Elijah blinked slowly, his head pounding. He was lying on dry earth—no mud, no tower, just a small field beside a dirt road. The sun was high, the air clean, and everything seemed... clearer. Crisper.

He sat up. His clothes were different—coarse linen pants, a cotton camisa, and no phone, no watch. Only the bullet remained in his hand, now gleaming like new.

Panic surged, but before he could react further, he heard voices—Tagalog, accented with the old provincial tone. Two men in rolled-up trousers and straw hats approached, carrying bolos and crates of supplies.

"Hoy! Ikaw!" one of them called. "Bagong rekrut ka ba? Dala ka agad sa kampo!"

Elijah stared.

"Ano? Nganga ka pa d'yan. Bilis!"

The other man smirked. "Siguro natulala. Baka galing sa Maynila."

Elijah rose slowly. Around them, a banner fluttered on a nearby tree branch: Katipunan. Red with a white K.

His legs nearly gave out.

This wasn't a dream.

This was 1898.

As he walked with the men toward what they called "Kampo ni Heneral Luna," Elijah's mind raced. Somehow—by miracle, curse, or divine irony—he had been transported to the eve of the Philippine-American War. He knew what would happen: the Treaty of Paris, the American betrayal, the endless battles, the deaths. He knew every tactical blunder, every missed opportunity.

And now, he could change it.

But history was no longer a story in his textbooks.

It was real. And it would bleed.