WebNovels

Umburals

KurayamiIzanami
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
247
Views
Synopsis
Umbrals Dark Fantasy • Sci-Fi Horror • Psychological Thriller Before the Earth had names—before humans even existed—a war of extinction raged across the stars. Two ancient alien races clashed: one, cold and calculated, sought to erase all biological life. The other, the Umbra-Kin, were creatures of living armor and essence-bound flesh. They consumed not matter, but life-force—the very core of consciousness. When their world was destroyed, the Umbra-Kin made a final, desperate choice. They sealed their last offspring into crystalline bio-pods and cast them into space. Most were lost. Shattered. Consumed by gravity. Forgotten. Except one. Shielded by another as it fell through a distant atmosphere, a single egg survived, piercing Earth’s crust in a time before memory. It remained hidden, deep underground, where it grew—dormant, undetected, but very much alive. It bled radiation into the earth—a living virus of essence. Slowly. Silently. It infected the soil, the air, and eventually, the biology of every living thing. Over centuries, this alien pulse rewrote DNA, weaving into the evolution of early creatures and eventually, humans. No one noticed. But something strange had formed inside them: A core. A glowing, invisible organ tied to energy, memory, and potential. It slept for generations. Until it was awakened. In the modern age, ten miners working deep beneath the earth stumbled upon a tunnel that wasn’t on any map. Inside: a massive, ancient door, pulsing with black veins and humming with forgotten power. When they forced it open, it reacted violently—erupting with black sludge and radiation. They were thrown into a deeper chamber where they discovered the impossible. A massive crystalline cocoon, suspended above a pit, leaking black goo and glowing faintly. Inside: the last of the Umbra-Kin. Wounded, dormant—but alive. Its presence reignited the infection already seeded across the planet. The radiation spread rapidly, invisibly. First through the air. Then through the blood. Across Asia and North America, something began to awaken inside people. Some could access their white cores—harnessing strange powers or enhanced bodies. But others… couldn’t control it. They began to change. The first transformations were violent—flesh cracking open, bones reforging into weapons, organs replaced by crystal. They screamed. Killed. Lost control. The world called them Umbrals. At first, humanity believed them to be mindless monsters. But over time, it became clear: Umbrals were still human. They remembered. They thought. Spoke. Felt. The madness that overtook them during their transformation was only the beginning. It was the pain, the overload, the virus merging with something it had once created. When that initial surge passed, many regained themselves—only to find they were no longer fully human. They were hybrids of man and weapon, driven by a new, unbearable hunger: the need to feed on core essence to survive. Many gave in. Some resisted. Others... adapted. Umbrals learned to mimic, to stalk, to strategize. Their intelligence exceeded what it once was. And their numbers grew fast—faster than any military could react. Entire regions collapsed under their rising population. In desperation, human survivors began training core-born soldiers—those capable of stabilizing and weaponizing the white core energy within them. These elite fighters stood between the remnants of civilization and total collapse. But it wasn’t enough. Cities crumbled. Governments fell. The black ooze spread faster than borders could hold it. People began whispering about the cocoon deep beneath the earth—the Cradle Below—still pulsing with life, still remembering its species’ extinction. And it wasn’t sleeping anymore. Now, the world stands on a knife’s edge. The line between monster and man is blurring. Umbrals walk among humans, and humans tap into power that once belonged only to the stars. A second war is coming. Not in the sky,
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - One: Into the Black

Night didn't fall—it slid over the land like spilled ink, slow and smothering. Shadows stretched and curled over the hills, swallowing the last light. The mine waited below like an open mouth.

No birds. No wind. Only the low hum of the floodlights buzzing above the entrance, where ten miners stood in silence.

Something felt off.

It wasn't the cold. It wasn't the tired air. It was something beneath their boots. Something in the earth.

Among them stood a newcomer.

His name was Yong. His boots were clean. His gloves stiff. And his breath steamed in short, nervous puffs.

"The name's Yong," he said, trying to sound steady.

A few nods. One handshake. The rest just returned to their gear, their silence thick. No one told him it was going to be okay. No one ever did. In a place like this, you learned by surviving.

From a rusted stairwell, a voice cut through the stillness.

"Hurry it up! We don't got all night!"

The day shift passed them by. Hollow-eyed. Caked in coal dust. They moved like men who had left pieces of themselves behind—deep underground. One brushed past Yong and whispered something that didn't sound like English. Or maybe it wasn't meant for him.

Yong's group filed into the mine. One by one. Lamps on. Lights flickering. Into the black they went.

Three hours disappeared.

Time didn't pass here—it bled. The deeper they went, the heavier everything became. Air like syrup. Dust that clung to your skin like fingers. Walls that sweated. Machines that groaned like they didn't want to keep going.

Nobody talked. Nobody needed to. The mine listened.

At last, Yong collapsed against a wall, soaked through and shivering. His pulse thundered. His limbs shook.

He drank from his canteen like it was his last drop.

"How do you all do this cursed job without going mad?" he whispered.

Zhang, older, stronger, eyes like dead coals, didn't even look up.

"You stop thinking about the surface," he said. "And you stop listening to the things that aren't supposed to be down here."

Then—a voice. Not Zhang's. Not anyone's in the immediate circle.

"Hey! Over here—look at this!"

Metal clanged to the ground. Footsteps echoed. Helmet lights jerked and danced down the shaft.

A man stood at the far end, pointing.

The rock wall had given way.

Behind it: a tunnel. Tight. Rough. Chiseled by no modern tool. Just… there.

"It's not on the map," the man said. "I swear to God, it wasn't here before."

The group closed in, hesitation thick in their throats. Some leaned in. Some stayed back. Even the machines seemed to hush.

The tunnel wasn't just unmarked. It was wrong. The light didn't behave right inside it. It bent. Swallowed whole.

Yong stepped forward. His lamp flickered.

Inside, the dark didn't feel empty. It felt awake.

"Ohh…" someone breathed.

A miner muttered a prayer.

No one said it, but the feeling settled deep in every gut: this tunnel wasn't meant to be found. Not by them. Maybe not by anyone still breathing.

And yet—

they had found it.

And it had opened for them.

"Let's go tell the boss," Yong said suddenly. "Let him know what we found—"

"No," one of the older miners snapped. "Let's just check it out. You know we'll get paid more if we pull in extra. This year's quota's garbage. We bring in more coal—we get that bonus."

A pause.

"Yeah!" someone shouted. Others echoed it. "He's right! We'll get more if we haul more."

Yong's stomach turned.

"I don't think this is a good idea," he muttered. "And it's dark as f—"

"Yong!" Zhang snapped. "Yong, you with us?"

Something pulled at the edge of Yong's thoughts—like a thread coming loose in his mind.

"W-What? What happened?"

"We're going in," Zhang said. "Come on—before we get left behind."

"O-oh… okay—"

They stepped into the mouth of the unknown.

The rock closed around them quickly. Cramped. Uneven. Walls sweating black moisture. No tools had made this place. It felt grown—like the cave had shaped itself for them.

Breath became harder. The tunnel narrowed. Lights flickered like they were being smothered.

Then—the tremble.

At first, it was a distant hum, like the groan of something waking up. But then it surged. The walls shook violently. The air screamed with falling dust and snapping stone.

"It's caving—!"

"Hold on—!"

"Go back!"

But it was too late.

The tunnel collapsed.

The way they came was sealed in a storm of falling rock. The floor cracked beneath their boots and vanished.

Ten miners fell—into the dark.

They didn't hit rock.

They hit something thicker. Heavier. Like water—but wrong.

Black. Cold. Alive. A liquid that swallowed sound. That crawled into your skin and whispered as it did.

Yong gasped—his lungs burned. Around him, the others flailed, shouted, disappeared. No light. No direction. Just down.

And then—a vortex.

A swirling maw in the black depths below. It pulled them in—ten specks in an endless whirlpool.

And then:

nothing.

Three hours later…

The chamber they lay in was wide, half-submerged in black sludge. Ceiling lost to shadow. The walls slick with a film that pulsed like skin. Their helmet lights glowed dimly, flickering.

Yong woke first.

He sat up, soaked and shivering.

Something moved on his arm. A streak of black ooze. It slipped off him—by itself. Back into the stone.

He wasn't alone.

The others were still there. Some coughing. Some unconscious.

And then—

A voice.

Not through the ears. Through the bones. Through the blood.

"You've opened it…"

"…now walk deeper."