King of the Pitch: Reborn to Conquer - Chapter 1 : The Abandoned One
Cough... cough...
The man wheezed, blood splattering into his trembling palm.
His vision blurred. His body shivered.
A soft wind seeped through the cracks of the broken wooden hut, brushing against his feverish skin like cold knives.
He stared at his bloodstained hand.
What went wrong...?
Why...?
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Why?
Born in the slums, he had nothing.
No name. No parents. No love.
All he ever wanted was a family.
Someone to care. Someone to stay.
But dreams didnāt feed the starving.
So, he trained.
Day and night, under the scorching sun and freezing rain.
He bled. He endured. He rose.
At just eighteen, he stood at the top of the world.
A living legend.
They called him the Emperor.
The King who would rule for eternity.
A symbol of invincibility.
But at twenty, everything crumbled.
A sickness cameāone that no healer could name, no medicine could cure.
It hollowed his strength.
And what followed was worse.
The family he built.
The comrades who once marched beside him.
The people who once cheered his name...
They turned on each other.
Turned on him.
They didnāt fight for him.
They fought for his legacy. His wealth. His throne.
And when he could no longer standā
They abandoned him.
No warmth. No farewell. No mercy.
They left him in this rotting shack to die slowly...
To feel the sting of betrayal.
To taste the bitterness of solitude.
To rot away like forgotten trash.
"Cough... cough!"
Another spasm wracked his body, and blood ran down his chin.
His heart raced. His breath hitched.
Death was coming.
He could feel it.
And yetā
Beneath the pain...
There was no fear.
Only rage.
Only hatred.
"If there is another life..."
"I will never trust again."
"I will never love again."
"I will ruleāand burn the world if I must."
The Emperorāonce hailed as the savior of millionsā
died nameless, betrayed, forgotten...
In silence.
...
He woke up.
"What...? What happened?"
His eyes fluttered open, stinging from the sudden light.
He blinked, trying to make sense of what he was seeing.
He touched his body.
Fingers trembled as they ran across his chest, his arms, his legsā
His legs.
They moved.
Not perfectlyābut they responded.
He could feel them.
But... he died.
He remembered it.
The blood.
The cold.
The hatred that scorched his chest until his last breath.
So why was he alive?
His head snapped left, then right.
The room around him was strangeātoo clean, too foreign.
Smooth white walls. A giant transparent rectangle that looked like glassābut with moving images and sound inside. People were inside that thing.
"What kind of magic is this...?" he whispered.
Everything felt off. The air smelled... artificial. The faint humming of a machine played like a background tune he didnāt recognize.
Even his breath felt wrongālabored, shallow.
His limbs were weak. Fragile.
Not unlike the dying body he had in the end...
His gaze dropped.
He sat in a chair. But it wasnāt like any throne or seat he knew.
This one had wheelsātwo large ones on either side.
A wheelchair?
Just then, a voice called out.
"Julian, Iām coming in."
The door creaked open. A woman entered.
She looked to be in her mid-thirties, with tired eyes and a warm smile.
"How are you, Julian?" she asked gently.
"You feeling okay? You gave me a scare yesterday."
Her voice... sounded like a motherās.
Kind. Gentle. Concerned.
Julian?
Is that... me?
Julian... Julian Ashford...
The name echoed in his mind like a whisper from another life.
No... Iām not Julian.
I amā
Who was I?
He remembered the journey. The eighteen years of relentless training. The comrades, the betrayal.
The throne.
The hut.
The blood.
But no matter how hard he tried, he couldnāt remember his old name.
And then, like a dam breakingā
Memories not his own rushed in.
Not all. But enough.
This body belonged to Julian Ashford, the only child of a wealthy family.
Born with a rare disease that left his body frail and near-paralyzed.
Seen as a disgrace, he was cast asideāgiven a private estate in Los Angeles, California.
Assigned a caretaker.
Taught through home-schooling.
A golden cage.
Just like the broken hut he once died in.
Another life.
Another abandonment.
Was it fate?
Was that why heād been reborn in this body?
"Julian...? Juliannn!"
The womanās voice pulled him from the whirlpool of thoughts.
She stepped closer, panic creeping into her features.
"You hit your head when you fell yesterday. Do you remember anything? Your name? Your home?"
Julian raised a trembling hand to his head.
His fingers brushed against something rough and tightā
A bandage.
Still fresh. Still damp with ointment.
He hesitated. Drew in a breath. Then forced a small, faint smile.
"Ah... I forgot everything."
Her eyes widened.
"Oh no... We need to call the doctor."
She quickly picked up a small object from the tableārectangular, smooth, glowing with a strange light.
Julian stared as she spoke into it.
And thenā
A voice came out.
Not hers.
Another person.
Speaking clearly... from the object.
What kind of artifact is this?
A crystal that sends voices through the air?
His mind reeled. This wasnāt magic. This was something elseāfar stranger.
Julian turned away and caught sight of a mirrorāno, glass. Perfectly smooth, mounted on the wall.
He reached for the wheelchairās wheels, pushing with shaky hands.
The effort drained him.
But the chair rolled forward.
It took all his strength, but he reached the mirror.
And when he lookedā
He froze.
The boy staring back at him looked like a walking corpse.
Skin pale as ash.
Cheeks sunken.
Hair thin and messy, like it hadnāt been washed in weeks.
And the eyesā
Those eyes...
Empty. Lifeless.
Like they belonged to someone who had already died once.
Is this really me now?
He raised a hand to his face.
Cold. Fragile. Real.
"Okay, the doctorās on the way," the woman said, placing the strange artifact back down.
She forced a smile, her voice laced with concern.
"Letās get you something to eat, Julian. And maybe a little sunāyouāre as pale as a ghost."
She stepped behind him and gently placed her hands on the wheelchair.
Julian didnāt resist.
He was too busy watching everything.
The light on the ceiling.
The smooth floor beneath them.
The quiet hums and beeps of machines around the room.
He was used to swords and scrolls.
This world? It felt like another kind of sorcery.
And yetā
He was curious.
Very curious.
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