Cherreads

Rebirth-Transcending All Beings

Zed2000
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
142
Views
Synopsis
"I wish to transcend even you, god. To reach a place even you couldn't reach!" "So let me take your place." But before one fixates on a goal… We must return to why they had one in the first place. This is just the story of an ordinary boy, reborn into an extraordinary fate. A path that's never been tread. A destiny carved for a conqueror. With a mysterious system and a power bestowed by a mysterious individual with unknown intentions. Vergil will rise. To challenge the heavens. To rewrite what's been preordained. To mock all as the Clown that entertains god.
Table of contents
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Death?

"The pretence of fairness was invented by God to make the living equal. Humans, however, changed that," The Absolute Being.

---

Lightning flashed across the sky, illuminating the gravestones. In that heartbeat of light, Vergil felt that the world would never be fair. Only those with power have everything.

And people like him would be relegated to being the dregs of society. "Is it so wrong to be average?" he muttered, rain dripping down his body as the cold pierced his skin.

He hated how insignificant the question sounded, how people undermined it.

"No... I'm worse than that."

He swallowed, admitting what he truly was. He hated this part of him.

His voice cracked on the last sentence–he didn't want to admit it. "Everyone says we're born equal."

"Yeah, sure. Tell that to someone who has actually lived a fucked-up life." Vergil's jaw clenched.

He never cared about money or status. He couldn't give a damn about the glory or fame.

It was something innate that he wasn't born with. That spark. That light known as talent.

"Why... why was it like this?" He blurted out, his voice cracking. The rain didn't answer. It never did.

His knees hit the earth, mud soaking into his cheap pants. He clutched the soaked grass, fingers trembling, as he remembered his times in school.

Across the school field, he watched others smile and play, leaving him alone like always. He could take it. He had no friends, but he endured.

Yet when his papers were compared to others, envy overtook him as the teacher sighed at his work.

"He should just study harder."

"Leave him be, he's an orphan."

"I heard his father ran away. What do you expect from trash like that?"

He wanted to punch them, to put them in their place but it would only lead to problems he couldn't handle. So he let their voices echo in the back of his mind, the thunder crackled, mocking his pitiful state.

The ones who looked down on him, pretending to feel pity–they were the worst of all. "They could all go to hell."

The words he had muttered left his mouth, and guilt, anger, and jealousy knotted in his chest.

The rain began to fall heavier on the cemetery.

Nothing would change who he was. Yet the thought of being in their place lingered at the back of his mind.

'As long as the winners exist, the losers will too.' He remembered the words that a man once said to him.

He looked up at the black sky, hoping for an answer, only to find nothing. "What god?"

If one had existed. It had abandoned him, or rather, never cared about his significance.

He was born with nothing and he would always be nothing.

He ran his fingers over the eroded name on the gravestone, the coldness penetrating his skin. A lullaby played in his mind, warm and distant, but it soothed him during his darkest times.

"Oh, mother." His voice vanished under the rain, the words leaving his mouth as if he was confessing his secrets. "Would you... Hate me too for being like this?"

He almost wished the grave would answer.

"Vergil, you're enough." He knew the voice wasn't real, but he let himself believe it anyway. "You tried and that was more than enough."

He wished she had lived. Wished she could be there for him, yet her name was only fading.

He brushed the grave more gently than he had ever touched anything before, sighing as he looked at a puddle reflecting his distorted face.

A frail young boy with messy black hair stared back at him. Dark circles made him look perpetually exhausted of life.

'Huh… trash.' He muttered to himself. "Can't even deny it."

The laugh broke out–resembling a strangled sound as it was only answered by the heavy downpour.

Splash.

For a moment, he thought he had heard something. 'Was the rain playing tricks on him?' The cemetery was empty. 'Maybe I'm too tired.' Vergil sighed.

The footsteps drew closer. One step then silence. He turned, and saw nothing.

A shiver ran down his spine.

"Am I hallucinating?" He whispered, as a breath brushed against his ear.

A gloved hand covered his mouth. "Mm–! Mmmph!"

He began to thrash, muscles screaming as he gasped for air. A needle stabbed his neck. A burning sensation entered his body.

"Who–are." Before he could finish, his eyes returned to darkness.

---

Eventually, his consciousness came back to him.

He tried moving but his limbs were strapped. He lay flat on something. Cold.

Above him, a blinding light hummed at his face, forcing him to squint his eyes, yet he could see shapes moving around. Blurred, white and also masked.

'Doctors?' he thought to himself. No, something was wrong.

The metal clinked on steel trays, and the smell of alcohol was strong enough to sting his eyes.

The figures observing him. And his hope turned to dread.

"Boss, he's awake." The voice said, bored.

He turned his head slowly, his muscles failing him at the simple act.

"Wait, please," Vergil begged. "I've not done anything."

A masked surgeon spoke this time, flipping through a clipboard. "Organs intact. Blood type compatible. The heart, liver, and kidney were viable. The rest can be sold for extra cash."

"The kid's healthier than he looks," one of the goons commented.

'Compatible?'

The word compatible cut any hope he had left. Two assistants chuckled from the shadows, their masked faces unreadable.

"The father's debts have passed to the son." One of the explanations was as if he were explaining an expensive dinner bill.

Vergil's eyes widened. "Why… tell me why, you bastard father," he screamed inside. His father had left him to fend for himself, after his mother died during labour.

The one calling himself boss leaned in, blocking the light whilst grinning. "What a pathetic family. So it's only fair. It's good you're worth something."

Vergil tried to scream, but for what reason? Nobody would save him. And then the sound came out of his mouth.

A warped laugh came out of his throat; even Vergil didn't know if he had gone crazy or was laughing at how hopeless his situation was.

The surgeons hesitated, giving uneasy glances. "Is he broken or mentally insane?" one muttered.

"Doesn't matter," another spoke, as the fluids gleamed under the light.

The boss flicked his fingers. "Keep the boy awake, think of it as a premium package. If you have someone to blame, he can curse his runaway father."

As the needle bit into his neck, the liquid entered his body, numbing him.

The only thing that stayed was the sensation.

The scalpel touched his skin–cold at first, then it burned. His blood poured out slowly.

A saw shrieked against his bone as it tore at his skeleton. He couldn't do anything–he couldn't even let out a single noise.

He had always imagined dying in a quiet place, at peace. But this was worse. 'A death lower than a dog. I can't accept it.' Yet one thought took over all others. 'Stop... please.' Vergil didn't want this. To die in such agony.

At this point, he didn't know if he was begging god or the kidnappers.

As the warmth spread beneath him, pooling and sticking to his back like goo.

Badump. Badump.

And there it was, his own heart, each beat slower than the last, in the surgeon's hands as his vision faded away.

Yet despite all he had suffered, each beat that his heart took called for him. He tried to move his fingers to take back what was his, fighting the darkness that clawed at him.

'No... no... no. This can't be real.' For once, he wanted to be more than average. Even if it was just in his refusal to die.

The warmth left his limbs as his vision tunneled.

'I want to live!' His voice echoed throughout his mind.

But nothing answered.