WebNovels

Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Weight of Ash

The taste of copper was the last thing Vilky D. Grey knew of Earth.

​It was a metallic, cloying heat that pooled in the back of her throat.

​She lay on the cold linoleum of the dormitory floor. Her lungs felt like they were filled with wet sand.

​Above her, Tina stood with a plastic bottle of industrial drain cleaner. The "golden girl" of Goldwood High looked radiant even while committing murder.

​Stephanie stood in the corner. She was crying, but she didn't move to help. She was the one who had unlocked the door.

​"You're a freak, Vilky," Tina whispered. Her voice was melodic. "No hair, no blood, no future. I'm just tidying up the world."

​Vilky tried to speak. She wanted to tell them that she had already memorized the chemical composition of the fluid burning its way through her esophagus.

​She wanted to tell them she had calculated eighteen different ways to kill them if her body wasn't failing her.

​But the Aplastic Anemia had won. Her heart gave a final, sluggish thump and stopped.

​Darkness didn't come. Instead, there was a void.

​It was a place of absolute stillness. In the center of the nothingness sat a woman.

​She was beautiful in a way that defied nature. Her hair was like spun shadow. Her eyes held the weight of a dying sun.

​"You were betrayed," the woman said.

​Her voice didn't travel through air. It vibrated in Vilky's non-existent bones.

​"I was," Vilky thought. Even in death, her mind was a cold machine.

​She processed the woman's appearance. The way her dress seemed to bleed into the floor. The faint scent of ozone and lilies.

​"I am Demolia," the woman stated. "I was a queen of magic. I was poisoned by the man who swore to protect me. My heart is a husk, and my soul is a prisoner."

​Vilky watched her. She didn't feel fear. Fear was a chemical reaction she no longer had the organs to produce.

​"I offer you a trade, little genius," Demolia said. "I will give you a world where your mind is your only limit. I will give you a core that can rewrite reality itself."

​The witch leaned forward. Her gaze pinned Vilky to the void.

​"In exchange, you will spend ten years becoming the god of that world. You will gather the power to pull me from this grave.

If you fail, I will feast on your soul for eternity."

​Vilky didn't hesitate. She didn't ask about the morality of the world. She didn't ask for mercy.

​"Acceptable," Vilky said.

​The void shattered.

​Pain was the first sensation.

​It wasn't the dull, systemic ache of her old body. This was sharp. Localized.

​A heavy hand slammed into her jaw. Her head snapped to the side.

​Her vision blurred. She tasted blood. Real, hot, iron-rich blood.

​"Get up, you useless bitch," a male voice roared.

​Vilky opened her eyes. She was lying on a dirt floor inside a cramped, dim cottage.

​The air smelled of stale ale, unwashed wool, and rot.

​She looked down at her hands. They were small, but they weren't pale and bruised like before.

​They were calloused. Soft but sturdy. She felt hair against her neck. Long, tangled, chestnut hair.

​She wasn't Vilky anymore. She was Elara.

​The memories hit her like a flood. She didn't drown in them. She filed them.

​Elara. Twenty-two years old. Wife to Thorne, a failed blacksmith turned village drunk.

​Oakhaven. A borderland village in the Kingdom of Exilic.

​The memories of three years of beatings, starvation, and humiliation played back in her mind at high speed.

​Thorne stood over her. He was a mountain of a man with yellowed teeth and a beard matted with grease.

​"I told you to have the stew ready by sundown," he growled.

​He kicked her in the ribs. The air left her lungs.

​Vilky felt a pulse in the center of her chest. It was cold. It was the Ventum Core.

​A mental HUD flickered in her mind.

​Ventum Charge: 15/100.

​Status: Identity Cannibalism Available.

​She looked up at Thorne. He saw a broken woman. He didn't see the genius who had just finished cataloging every weakness in his stance.

​He reached down and grabbed her hair. He yanked her upward until she was inches from his face.

​His breath was a toxic cloud of fermented grain.

​"Maybe I haven't been firm enough with you lately," he sneered. His eyes wandered to the bed in the corner.

​Vilky didn't struggle. She reached up and cupped his face with her hands.

​Her touch was light. Almost tender.

​Thorne paused. A confused, cruel smile touched his lips. "Finally learning your place, are you?"

​"I am," Vilky whispered.

​She pulled his head down. She pressed her lips against his.

​Thorne's eyes widened. He expected a kiss of submission.

​He didn't expect the vacuum.

​The Ventum Core ignited. A searing, violet light flared behind Vilky's eyelids.

​She felt a tether snap into place. Thorne tried to pull away, but his body was frozen.

​He wasn't just losing his breath. He was losing his essence.

​Vilky watched through her closed eyes as his memories poured into her.

​She saw him as a child, stealing bread. She saw him as a soldier, running from a battle.

​She saw the exact moment he decided Elara was a target he could finally win against.

​His muscles began to atrophy under her touch. His skin grew grey and translucent.

​The soul is a heavy thing. Consuming it felt like swallowing molten lead.

​Thorne's scream was silent. It died in the back of his throat as his vocal cords dissolved.

​His physical form began to flake away into ash. The ash didn't fall to the floor. It was drawn into Elara's skin.

​The process took less than a minute.

​When it was over, Vilky stood alone in the center of the hut.

​Thorne was gone. Not dead. Erased.

​Ventum Charge: 45/100.

​New Identity Acquired: Thorne the Blacksmith.

​Vilky wiped her mouth with the back of her hand. She felt the surge of energy from the Core.

​It was a predatory hum. It demanded more.

​She closed her eyes and focused. She willed her body to change.

​Her bones cracked and elongated. Her muscles swelled. Her skin coarsened.

​Within seconds, she stood six feet tall. She looked down at her hands. They were Thorne's hands. Heavy, scarred, and powerful.

​She walked to a cracked mirror on the wall. The face looking back was the man who had just beaten her.

​She tested his voice. "I told you to have the stew ready."

​It was perfect. The same gravelly timbre. The same slight slur from years of drinking.

​She had his strength. She had his knowledge of the forge. She had his social standing in the village.

​Vilky sat on the edge of the bed. She didn't feel sick anymore.

​She felt like a wolf that had finally found its teeth.

​She began to scan the room. She used her photographic memory to note every detail of the cottage.

​She needed to know where the money was hidden. She needed to know who Thorne owed debts to.

​She found a small pouch of copper coins under a floorboard. Twenty pieces.

​It was nothing. A pittance.

​She needed to move higher. Oakhaven was a gutter.

​A memory from Thorne's mind surfaced.

​The tax collector was coming tomorrow. He was a minor official from the capital.

​He traveled with two guards and a chest of silver.

​He was also known for his "appreciation" of the village women.

​Vilky looked at her hands. Then she looked at the reflection in the mirror.

​She shifted her form back into Elara. The transition was agonizing, but she didn't make a sound.

​She was the battered housewife again. But her eyes were different.

​They were the eyes of a girl who had died in ash and been reborn in fire.

​She had ten years to resurrect a goddess.

​The tax collector would be the first step on the ladder.

​She walked to the hearth and began to stir the cold stew.

​She needed to be ready for the morning. She needed to be the perfect victim.

​The door to the hut creaked in the wind.

​Vilky smiled. It was a cold, sharp expression that Elara's face had never worn.

​"Welcome to the journey," she whispered to the empty room.

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