Chapter 1: The Night That Split the World
Rain fell like it had something to prove.
Heavy. Relentless. Unforgiving.
The kind of rain that drowned out sound… that made the world feel smaller than it was.
Inside a quiet hospital, tucked away from the noise of the storm, two cries pierced through the night at the exact same time twin
For a brief moment, they were together—wrapped in identical blankets, placed side by side. Same small hands. Same restless movements. Same life… just beginning.
And then a decision was made.
Time skip 17 years later
The ball left Adrian Vale's fingertips with perfect rotation.
Swish.
No rim. No hesitation Just precision."Again," his trainer said.
Adrian didn't respond. He didn't need to.
Another pass came. Another shot. Another clean make.
Swish.
His movements were quiet, efficient—almost emotionless. Every step measured. Every decision already made before the ball even touched his hands.
Across the gym, glass windows reflected his image back at him.
Composed. Controlled.
Perfect.
"Your release is a fraction late on the left side," the trainer added, watching closely.
Adrian nodded once.
"I'll fix it."
He always did.
That was the difference between him and everyone else.
Not talent Not effort.
Expectation failure wasn't something Adrian experienced it was something he corrected
Later that evening, Adrian stood alone at the free-throw line
No trainer. No noise.
Just silence.
He bounced the ball once.
Twice.
Shot .
Swish.
He tared at the hoop a second longer than by usual.For some reason… it didn't feel like enough.
ACROSS THE CITY JAY CARTER
"Run it back!"
Jay Carter wiped sweat from his face, chest rising and falling as he grabbed the ball off the cracked concrete.
The scoreboard didn't matter.It never did.What mattered… was that he lost the last possession
And that wasn't sitting right with him.
"Game point," someone called out.
Jay rolled his shoulders, exhaling slowly.
"Check."
The ball hit his hands, and everything changed.
No overthinking.
No hesitation.
Just instinct.
He drove right—fast.
The defender slid.Jay crossed left—low, explosive.
The defender stumbled.
A second defender stepped up.
Jay didn't slow down.
He welcomed it.
He rose off one foot, twisting midair—
Contact.
The ball kissed the glass.
Dropped."Game.
The court erupted—shouts, laughter, trash talk—but Jay barely heard it.
All he felt… was that rush.
That moment.
That proof .He bent over slightly, hands on his knees, catching his breath.
Then he looked up at the dim streetlight above the hoop…I'm still not there yet," he muttered.
Because no matter how many games he won
It never felt like enough either
