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Chapter 2 - Chapter 1: Escape From Death

The light did not blind him. It embraced him , warm and

silent, like hands wrapping around an old soldier's shoulders after the final

war.

 

Suspended above the void, the goddess hovered in radiance.

Her presence bent time itself , ancient, feminine, eternal. Her form shimmered

with stars. Her eyes held galaxies.

 

She spoke not with her mouth, but through thought , her

voice like a lullaby sung through stone and sky.

 

 "Richard Montgomery,"

she said.

 

"You are seen. You are judged. You are chosen."

 

He said nothing. Words would've just cluttered the moment.

 

She descended slightly, her light trailing like flowing silk

behind her. In her palm, fire gathered , blue, cold, alive.

 

 "You died in truth.

Not for gain. Not for glory. But for the life of another , a child you never

knew. You spent your years in service of justice, and though the world rarely

thanked you, we watched. I watched."

 

Flashes of memory flickered in the dark:

Flashlights in alleyways. Chalk outlines. Cigarette smoke

and bloodied knuckles. A child's ribbon found in a dumpster. A mother's

trembling hands at the door.

 

 "You were not a holy

man. But you were honest. You stared evil in the eye, and you never blinked."

 

A vision unfolded between them:

A world cracked by war. Cities drowned in plague and fire.

Great beasts soaring over broken keeps. Nine black thrones atop nine ruined

kingdoms.

 

 "This world is called

Mystara," she said. "It teeters on the edge of annihilation. Nine monster lords

rule over death, life, and freedom. Humanity hides behind walls. Elves fade.

Dwarves wither. Hope dies slowly."

 

 "And you want me to…

what? Stop it?" Richard asked, bitter smile tugging at his lips. "I'm no chosen

one. I'm not even young anymore."

 

 "You will be," she

said.

 

She raised her hand. The fire swirled into a sword-shaped

flame.

Then another spark , softer , like a heartbeat forming in a

star.

 

 "You have no chains

in this new life. No orders. No badge. No name... unless you choose one."

 

 "But the stakes are

real. You may die again. You may watch others die. No divine protection follows

you. Only your mind, your resolve… and what you're willing to become."

 

He stared into the fire. Into the shape of the blade. Into

the storm waiting beyond her words.

 

Then he nodded.

 

 "I don't care if I

die," he said. "But I'm not letting the monsters win. Not this time."

 

She smiled , faint, sad, but proud.

 

 "Then choose. Body,

name, and soul."

 

The flames surged around him, engulfing him in silver-blue

fire.

 

He could feel the weight of age peel off. The aches. The

sorrow. The scars of decades.

 

When the light faded, he stood barefoot in the dark , 18

years old again.

 

Jet-black hair, long and wild. Bangs draped over intense

brown eyes. A lean, silent frame shaped for war.

 

 "Who are you now?"

the goddess asked.

 

He took a breath. Felt the new lungs, the new blood, the new

beginning.

 

 "Zylas," he said.

"Zylas Lencaster."

 

The name echoed like a sword being unsheathed beneath storm

clouds.

 

The first breath in his new body came like a gasp dragged

through water.

 

He awoke on cold stone , naked, shivering, and alone. The

air tasted like mold, iron, and old bones. Somewhere far off, water dripped in

a steady rhythm, like a clock counting down.

 

He sat up slowly, every muscle foreign. His limbs moved like

someone else's. Longer. Younger. Stronger. His black hair clung to his face,

soaked in sweat that wasn't from exertion, but from rebirth.

 

The light was nonexistent.

 

Total, crushing black.

 

He blinked. Nothing changed.

 

He was underground, a basement perhaps? No, much larger, older.

 

He could hear his breathing echoing down a long hallway ahead

of him.

 

He was in a dungeon. Of that, he was certain. The air was

too still. The stone too old. Something about it felt… buried.

 

He rose to his feet, knees trembling under the unfamiliar

weight. He was lean now , tall, quick, but not bulky. Every inch of him built

for speed and precision.

 

He took a breath. And then another. Slower. Deeper.

 

 Think. Don't panic.

 

He pressed a hand to the nearest wall. Felt the texture:

rough, pitted, wet in some places. Mortar long since eroded.

 

Hallways stretched in several directions. All unlit. No

noise. No wind. Just the silence of the dead.

 

But the silence didn't scare him. Silence had been his

companion for years.

 

He crouched low, listening.

 

And then he smelled it.

 

Rot.

 

Not just decay. Not old mildew or rats , but the

unmistakable, throat-clenching stench of reanimated flesh.

 

It was faint. Fading. But it told him what he needed to

know.

 

He went left.

 

Hand trailing the wall, he moved carefully. Step by step,

heart beating like a war drum in his ears.

 

The corridor opened into a wider chamber. He could just

barely make out outlines now , shadows of pillars, broken tools, rusted chains

dangling like dead vines.

 

And then he heard them.

 

Three figures, shambling.

 

Feet scraping. Groaning low. Wet and hollow.

 

 Zombies, he thought.

Low-level. Not mindless, but close.

 

As they stepped into faint visibility, he could see their

armor , rusted breastplates, torn cloaks, melted sigils on what used to be

tunics.

 

Adventurers.

 

Once brave enough to enter. Now walking corpses. Eyes white

with rot.

 

He moved to draw his revolver , only to remember he had

nothing. No weapon. No armor. Just breath and instinct.

 

But instinct was enough.

 

He let the first one come close , then ducked low, sweeping

its legs from under it with a fluid motion that surprised even him.

 

His training at the academy, he realized.

 

My body still remembers what I trained for.

 

The second lunged. He sidestepped, grabbed its wrist

mid-swing, and dislocated the shoulder with a twist and a downward elbow.

 

Bones cracked. The zombie shrieked like a kettle on fire.

 

The third moved faster , not normal for a zombie.

 

It slashed with a jagged dagger made of bone.

 

He was too slow.

 

The blade grazed his shoulder. Burning pain. First blood.

 

He gritted his teeth and rolled with the momentum, grabbing

a broken chain from the floor and wrapping it around the thing's neck.

 

A sharp pull. A crunch.

 

It collapsed, thrashing.

 

He stood over them all, panting, blood running down his arm.

 

Then something shifted in the air.

 

His hand moved on instinct , a phantom gesture he didn't

remember learning.

 

And from the darkness… something answered.

 

A weapon shimmered into being in his hand , heavy,

beautiful, ancient.

 

A revolver. Blue steel. The same shape as the one he died

with… but different. Alive.

 

The barrel glowed with inner flame. The grip pulsed like a

heart.

 

He raised it.

 

Aimed.

 

 Boom. Boom. Boom.

 

Each shot struck true , the blue fire licking across the

corpses like holy judgment.

 

And when the last one fell, they didn't rot.

 

They burned. Ashes scattered across the stone, never to rise

again.

 

He stood alone again.

 

In the dark.

 

But now he had a name. A weapon. And three less monsters in

the world.

 

 Zylas Lencaster, he

thought.

 

And I will not die in the dark.

 

Zylas stared at the revolver in his hand, still warm with

power.

 

 Where did you come

from?

 

It hadn't been there when he arrived. It hadn't existed in

the dark. It had simply appeared , no fanfare, no light, no divine voice. Just

summoned by thought. Or need.

 

Yet it felt like it belonged to him. The weight, the

balance, the way his fingers fit around the grip like old friends reunited.

 

 She gave this to me,

he realized.

The goddess. A familiar shape from a familiar life , to help

ease the transition.

 

He holstered it , or tried to. There was no holster. Just a

waistband and blood.

 

He grunted and kept moving.

 

The hallway narrowed. His hand traced stone again, rough and

cold.

 

After a few more turns, he reached a crumbling archway and

beyond it , stairs.

 

They spiraled upward, cut directly into the stone, ancient

and worn by time. Moss grew in cracks. Bones lay scattered like forgotten

warnings. But there was a pull now , not just gravity, but something more.

 

 Up is where the

living are.

 

So he climbed.

 

Step by step.

 

As he rose, the darkness thinned , not quickly, but

steadily. Shadows peeled back. His body became more visible. First his fingers,

then his arms. The long staircase curved like a corkscrew, and every turn bled

in a little more detail: the cracks in the walls, the silver threads in the stone,

the faintest scent of torch smoke.

 

And then… voices.

 

He stopped just below the next landing.

 

Male voices , four of them. Young. Laughing, but with the

kind of edge that men wear when they're hiding fear.

 

Zylas crouched low, pressed himself to the inner curve of

the wall, and listened.

 

 "I'm telling you, the

left path loops back," one said.

 

"Bullshit. That slime pit wasn't there before."

 

"We're wasting time. The Guild says we've got till sunset to

clear one floor."

 

"Shut up. Something's coming."

 

Their voices turned to panic.

 

Zylas peered just enough to see.

 

Four adventurers in mismatched leather stood at a junction.

Young, maybe late teens, armed with dull blades and cheap confidence. Then came

the groans , familiar, low, wet.

 

 Zombies.

 

Three of them again, lurching from the far end of the

corridor.

 

The boys hesitated. They weren't ready.

 

The one in front swung wildly and missed. Another panicked

and dropped his dagger. The third tried to cast a fire spell and fumbled the

chant.

 

One was bitten , badly , on the shoulder.

 

 "Get him out of

there!" someone shouted.

 

 "We can't, he's

turning!"

 

They turned on him.

 

They ran.

 

Zylas didn't think.

 

He stepped forward into the corridor, raised his weapon, and

fired.

 

Boom. Boom. Boom.

 

Each shot ignited with cold blue flame, lighting the stone

walls in flashes of brilliance.

 

Three zombies collapsed into piles of ash.

 

The bitten boy lay groaning, twitching , already turning.

His skin greyed before Zylas's eyes, mouth twitching toward an unnatural snarl.

 

The kid looked up at him, tears in his eyes.

 

 "P-please… I don't…

want to…"

 

Zylas knelt beside him. Quiet. Unshaking.

 

 "You won't," he said

softly.

 

One shot.

 

Ash.

 

Silence fell.

 

He exhaled and looked at what was left.

 

He scavenged what he could:

 

A black, tattered cloak.

 

A small satchel with vials , two red potions, a green one he

didn't recognize.

 

Simple black trousers.

 

Scuffed boots, still sturdy.

 

And a scrap of parchment with a crude map and a Guild stamp.

 

He dressed quickly, fastened the satchel across his

shoulder, and stepped toward the light.

 

Each step up grew brighter now.

 

The scent of rot gave way to dust. The air warmed. Birds

chirped far above.

 

He didn't look back.

 

He stepped into the light , not like a man reborn, but like

a shadow climbing out of a grave.

 

And the world of Mystara opened its eyes.

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