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Chapter 2 - Awakening

Darkness faded into blurry light, and Ethan Nakamura, or whoever he was now, slowly became aware of his surroundings. His body felt strange—small, weak, and uncoordinated. He tried to move, but his limbs felt too heavy, too foreign, as if they didn't belong to him. Panic bubbled beneath the surface of his consciousness, but his body refused to obey the urgency in his mind.

The first thing he noticed was the sound. Faint, soft cries echoed around him, a chorus of other babies. He blinked slowly, trying to open his eyes, but his vision was blurry, the light too dim to make out any details. The ceiling above him was low, and the gentle flickering of light suggested a small, enclosed space.

He shifted slightly, feeling the fabric around him. A blanket, soft and comforting, though his arms struggled to move beneath its weight. I'm in a crib, he realized with growing confusion. The bars of the crib loomed above him, their wooden structure like the walls of a cage.

Where am I?

More sounds filtered in—distant voices, the shuffle of footsteps, the occasional soft murmur of someone nearby. The language was unfamiliar, and yet… not entirely foreign. He strained to make sense of it, his brain sluggish from the fog of disorientation. It took a few moments before the realization hit him. The language wasn't unfamiliar at all. It was Japanese.

His mother.

Of course, he thought. His mother had been Japanese, and while he had grown up speaking English, she had spoken Japanese around the house often. She had taught him some basics as a child, though he was never fluent. The cadence of the words, the structure of the sentences—yes, it was definitely Japanese.

But that only raised more questions. How did I end up in Japan?

He tried to move again, his body stiff and uncooperative. His tiny, chubby arms barely responded, and the weight of the blanket felt like a heavy burden on his small frame. He tried to focus on the voices in the background, hoping to glean some kind of information from their conversation, but it was all too muffled, too far away for him to understand.

His mind raced back to his last memory—the alley, the mugging. He had fought. Fought hard, despite his weakened, disabled body. But in the end, he had lost. The brute had beaten him to death, of that he was certain. The last thing he remembered was the woman he had saved, her silhouette vanishing as his world went dark.

So why am I still alive?

Over the next several hours—or what he thought were hours—he drifted in and out of sleep. His body was exhausted, his mind sluggish, but every time he awoke, the same overwhelming confusion settled in. He was in a crib, surrounded by the cries of other babies. The voices around him spoke Japanese. And, most disturbingly, his body was that of an infant.

How is this possible?

On the second day, or at least what he guessed was the second day, things began to fall into place. His vision had improved slightly, enough for him to see the dim outlines of the room around him. There were other cribs, other small figures wriggling and crying within them. The voices—the caregivers—came and went, attending to the infants with quiet efficiency. The environment was soft, warm, and nurturing.

An orphanage, he realized with a sinking feeling. He wasn't just in a crib. He was in an orphanage, surrounded by other infants. As his body began to cooperate more with each passing hour, he was able to observe more—how the caregivers dressed in simple clothing, the worn-down furniture, and the constant presence of other children.

It wasn't much to go on, but his mind was sharp, despite his current physical limitations. Slowly, painfully, he began to piece it all together.

I've been reborn.

It was absurd. Impossible. And yet, it was the only explanation that made sense. He had died in his old life, and now he was here, wherever "here" was, in the body of a baby. His new reality was as strange as it was terrifying.

He lay in his crib, staring at the ceiling, his mind racing with questions. Why? How? But for now, there were no answers. Only the steady, rhythmic cries of the other infants and the soft murmur of the caretakers.

As the days passed, he continued to listen to the language around him. Though it wasn't clear, the familiar cadence of Japanese helped ground him. He had been to Japan a few times for martial arts tournaments in his old life, and his mother had spoken the language in their home. It was comforting in a strange way, reminding him of the connection to his old life, even in this new and terrifying reality.

One day, something shifted. The kind, elderly woman who had been caring for him—whom the other caregivers called Obaa-chan—picked him up from his crib. She was old but lively, her eyes filled with warmth and mischief. She had taken a particular liking to Haruto, always trying to make him laugh, cooing gently as she cradled him in her arms.

She carried him with ease, humming a soft tune as she swayed gently. Her face was kind, wrinkled from years of life, and she always seemed to have a soft smile ready for him. Today, she leaned in close, whispering softly as she tended to him.

"Haruto-chan," she said, her voice full of affection.

Haruto froze. There it was—his new name. That was him. He wasn't Ethan Nakamura anymore. He was Haruto. Haruto Takeda, if he could assume anything from the way things worked in Japan.

It was a small piece of the puzzle, but it was something. His new name, his new identity. He was Haruto now. But even that realization didn't answer the larger questions. Where exactly was he? And why was he here?

The foreign language, the orphanage, and the strange circumstances—it all pointed to a new life in Japan, but something about it still felt… off. Something he couldn't quite place.

Haruto's thoughts swirled, trying to make sense of it all. He was alive, in some form or another, in a world that looked and felt similar to what he knew. Yet, everything was foreign. His memories of being Ethan Nakamura were still fresh, but now, they felt distant, like a life he had left behind long ago.

He lay still in the crib, his tiny hands occasionally twitching as he stared up at the ceiling, trying to reconcile his past life with his new reality. One thing was certain: this wasn't a simple second chance. This was something entirely different, something far more complicated than he could have ever imagined.

And he had no idea what was waiting for him in this new world.

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