Beijing, China — 2031
Lin Hao had never believed in miracles.
At twenty-two, he owned nothing beyond a narrow dormitory bed, a second-hand phone, and a lifetime of silence. Orphaned at ten, raised in a government shelter, and surviving on scholarships and part-time work, he had long since learned a simple truth:
The world did not care.
And neither did he.
At least, that was what he told himself.
Outside his dormitory window, rain fell over Beijing without pause.
For five consecutive days, it had not stopped.
At first, the city welcomed it.
Students danced beneath it. Office workers posted smiling photos online, calling it a "blessing from heaven." Farmers in the outskirts praised the sky. The air felt cleaner. The skyline shimmered silver beneath endless rainfall.
But Lin Hao noticed something others did not.
There was no thunder.
No lightning.
No wind.
The rain fell evenly—perfectly—as if measured.
Day Six brought the cold.
The temperature dropped sharply despite it being late spring. The rain grew heavier, thicker. News outlets began speaking in careful tones:
"Unusual atmospheric behavior."
"Temporary communication interference."
"Citizens are advised to remain calm."
Birds began falling from the sky.
Stray dogs barked at empty air.
By the morning of Day Seven—
The network collapsed.
No signal.
No internet.
No emergency broadcast.
Lin Hao stared at his phone screen until it went dark.
There was no one to call.
No parents waiting.
No family checking on him.
He set the phone down quietly.
The dormitory felt smaller than usual.
The air felt heavy.
Oppressive.
Then—
The rain stopped.
Not gradually.
Not naturally.
It ceased instantly, as if the sky had been turned off.
Silence swallowed the city.
And in that silence—
A voice emerged.
It did not echo through speakers.
It did not vibrate the walls.
It spoke directly into his mind.
Deep. Ancient. Indifferent.
"Primitive Record activated."
There was no explanation.
No comfort.
No command.
Only declaration.
Then the pressure vanished.
For a single heartbeat, Beijing stood still.
And then—
Screams erupted from the corridor.
From downstairs.
From every direction.
Lin Hao rose from his bed slowly.
Not because he was brave.
But because he refused to be helpless.
He opened the dormitory door.
The hallway was chaos.
A student lay on the ground, convulsing violently. Dark veins spread across his neck like cracks in glass. His pupils were dilated, empty.
The boy's head snapped upward.
And he lunged.
Lin Hao did not think.
His body moved before fear could freeze him.
He grabbed the fire extinguisher mounted beside the door.
One strike.
The impact echoed against concrete.
The creature did not fall.
Second strike.
Bone cracked.
Third—
Silence.
The body collapsed.
Blood pooled slowly across the tiles.
Lin Hao stood frozen.
His breathing ragged.
His hands shaking violently.
He had killed someone.
No—
Something.
Then—
Warmth surged through his chest.
Not heat.
Not pain.
Energy.
And the voice returned.
Clearer now.
Closer.
"Welcome to the Primitive Record."
The world would never be the same again.
