Ficool

Chapter 1 - Ch-1 The Quest for Survival

Mumbai never slept; it only held its breath.

A sprawling labyrinth of towering glass and suffocating slums, the city was fueled by raw, unyielding ambition.

Humanity had touched the stars, yet the scars of the past—the ghost of Hiroshima and the terror of the atomic age—lingered like a curse. Progress and destruction were two sides of the same coin.

And in the heart of India, one man was trying to forge a shield.

Deep beneath the city, inside a clandestine atomic research facility, Professor Bhaskar stared through a reinforced glass pane. The massive containment chamber hummed with lethal, contained energy.

At fifty-something, Bhaskar looked worn down to the bone, yet his eyes burned with a singular, feverish purpose.

Beside him, his assistant, Prakash Bhute, wiped a bead of cold sweat from his brow. His fingers flew across the control terminal.

"Sir… radiation levels are spiking past the redline," Prakash warned, his voice tight.

Bhaskar didn't flinch. He didn't even blink.

"If we succeed today, Prakash, we don't just study radiation," Bhaskar said, his voice a steady anchor in the chaotic room. "We leash it."

Inside the chamber, radioactive isotopes lashed out against the prototype of the Aegis Protocol—a localized, super-protective shield designed to neutralize nuclear fallout. It was their life's work.

The cure for mankind's greatest weapon.

Their final test.

The system hummed steadily. Stabilization was in reach.

Then—CRACK!

The reinforced steel doors blew inward, twisting into a wreckage of metal. Gunfire deafened the sterile lab.

Before Prakash could even turn his head, a bullet caught him. He crumpled, the life leaving his eyes before he hit the floor.

"PRAKASH!" Bhaskar's scream was lost in the chaos.

Sparks showered from the shattered control panels. The automated voice droned over the blaring klaxons:

[WARNING. CONTAINMENT BREACH. EXPERIMENT FAILURE.]

Lethal radiation violently flooded the chamber, shattering the containment glass. A blinding wave of raw, unfiltered atomic energy consumed the room, vaporizing everything in its path.

But in the epicenter of the destruction, a shadow stood unmoved.

The shadow belonged to Ranga.

A phantom in the underworld. A master assassin known for his cold, mechanical precision.

But this time, he had miscalculated.

The radioactive shockwave slammed into him, a tsunami of atomic fire. Ranga staggered, dropping his weapon. He didn't burn. Instead, his body began to warp.

Veins bulged, turning a sickly, glowing black. His bones snapped and realigned with sickening crunches. His skin hardened, crystallizing into a grotesque, chitinous armor.

"WHAT… IS THIS?!" he gurgled, falling to his knees as his jaw unhinged.

Humanity was being burned away, cell by rapidly mutating cell. In the radioactive ashes of the lab, a monster was taking its first breath.

The Cockroach was born.

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Miles away, in the cramped quarters of a quiet Mumbai apartment, the world was silent.

For a few seconds, nothing existed.

Then—a violent, desperate gasp shattered the stillness.

"Hahhh—!"

The boy bolted upright, his lungs screaming for air as if he'd just breached the surface of a freezing ocean. His heart hammered furiously against his ribs. His vision swam with static.

"…Where… am I…?"

The voice was thin. Trembling. Unstable.

Before he could even swing his legs over the bed, a spike of agonizing pain drove into his temples.

"Gahhh!" He clutched his skull, tumbling off the mattress and crashing onto the floor.

Memories didn't just return; they invaded. They smashed into his consciousness like a derailed train.

Blinding headlights on a rain-slicked highway. The sickening crunch of metal. His own blood on the dashboard. His death.

Then, jarringly different images overlaid them:

A crowded classroom. Aunt Maya's warm, exhausted smile. Uncle Bhim's stern, loving lectures. The crushing weight of poverty. The relentless bullying.

"STOP—!"

Boy slammed his fist onto the floorboards, gasping.

"I'm not—this isn't—!"

His breathing became erratic. Sweat rolled down his face, stinging his eyes.

"These… aren't my memories!"

But they wouldn't stop. They wove together, twisting and overlapping, forcibly stitching Sushil's cold, pragmatic mind with Pavitr's timid, gentle soul. Two lives, two timelines, fusing into a single consciousness.

He dragged himself across the floor, his trembling fingers reaching for the edge of a small mirror leaning against the wall. He pulled himself up.

He froze.

A stranger stared back. Young. Scrawny. Wide-eyed.

"No…"

He raised a hand to his cheek. The reflection mirrored the movement flawlessly.

"No… no… NO!"

He stumbled back, hitting the wall.

"This isn't my body. I died… I remember the impact. I know I died!"

The silence of the room was his only answer. Because it was the horrifying, undeniable truth. Time bled away. Minutes or hours, it didn't matter.

Slowly, the erratic heaving of his chest subsided. The panic attack crested and broke. Sushil sat cross-legged on the floor, staring at his new hands.

He had always been analytical. Even now, facing the impossible, his brain sought logic.

"…If I died," he whispered into the dark, "…then this body was empty."

He flexed his fingers.

"…And I'm inside it."

A pause. His expression slowly shifted. The raw terror was fading, hardening into a sharp, piercing understanding.

"Okay… if this is real…"

He pushed himself up off the floor. His legs felt strangely light. A moment ago, this body had felt alien, weak. Now? He felt a humming, coiled energy deep in his muscles. Perfect balance. Total control. It was as if his body already knew how to move in ways his mind hadn't grasped yet.

"That's… weird…"

He leaned his hand against the wall to steady himself—

And stuck.

He blinked.

"…What?"

He yanked his hand back. It made a soft, tearing sound, like industrial tape pulling away from a surface. He pressed his palm flat against the plaster again. Stuck.

He experimentally placed his foot on the wall. Then the other.

For three seconds, he was crouched perfectly parallel to the floor, defying gravity.

He dropped back down, landing without a single sound.

A long, heavy silence filled the room.

"…Okay. That is NOT normal."

Sushil sat back on the edge of the bed. His mind was still racing, but the chaos had streamlined into focus.

"Let's think," he muttered, ticking points off on his fingers.

"Point one: I died."

"Point two: I woke up in a teenager's body."

"Point three: This body has… powers."

He paused, staring at his palms. He sighed.

"…So either my brain is having a spectacular final hallucination in a ditch somewhere…"

Another pause.

"…or this is real."

He looked up at the ceiling. The absurdity of it all finally caught up to him. A dry, humorless chuckle escaped his lips in the quiet room.

"…Of course. Only after I die do things actually get interesting."

The residual fear was gone, replaced by a cold, calculating calm.

The memories of the boy—Pavitr Prabhakar—settled quietly in the back of his mind. He felt the boy's lingering sadness, his feeling of inadequacy, his quiet desperation to survive in a world that chewed him up every day.

Sushil stood up and walked to the window. The sprawling, glowing grid of Mumbai stretched out before him, vast and indifferent.

"…You couldn't handle the weight of it all, could you?" Sushil said softly.

There was no mockery in his voice. Just understanding. The world was cruel to the soft-hearted.

But Sushil wasn't soft.

A small, sharp smile pulled at the corner of his mouth. It wasn't arrogant, but it carried a dangerous edge of determination.

"Don't worry, Pavitr," he whispered to the Mumbai night. "I'll handle it."

His eyes gleamed in the dim light, reflecting the city that was now his playground.

"Let's not waste this second chance."

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