The persistent, rhythmic beep of the cardiac monitor was the last sound Li Ming truly registered. At ten years old, the
world had already decided his fate. Brain cancer, they called it – an insidious, microscopic invader that had stolen his
childhood, replacing playground dreams with hospital visits, and lively laughter with the dull ache behind his eyes.
He felt a profound weariness, an ancient exhaustion that no child should ever know. His small hand, thin and pale,
rested on the pristine white sheet. His parents' hushed sobs, a constant, heartbreaking background, were fading, just
like the fluorescent lights above. There was no grand epiphany, no heroic last stand. Just a quiet surrender to the
encroaching darkness. A final, flickering thought of wishing for more, for a chance to just live, before the last beep
flatlined into a continuous, mournful wail.
Then, nothing. A vast, echoing void where consciousness dissolved, time ceased, and identity became a forgotten
whisper. It was an endless, dreamless sleep, devoid of sensation, memory, or even the concept of self.
Until a spark.
It wasn't a light, but a feeling – a profound, inexplicable warmth. A pressure, then a distinct, rhythmic thrumming that
was alien, yet strangely familiar. It was the beat of a heart, not his own, but now intricately linked to him. Muffled
sounds began to penetrate the inky blackness, shapeless blurs of light pierced the gloom. He felt confined, utterly
helpless, but undeniably alive. There was a sudden, violent expulsion, a gasp that wasn't his, but now was, filling tiny
lungs with a foreign, cool air.
He was a baby, swaddled in silk, smelling not of antiseptic and stale hospital air, but of fresh earth, ancient forests,
and a faint, invigorating spiritual energy. Over him, faces materialized from the hazy visual soup. A woman, ethereal
and beautiful, with eyes like deep pools of starlight, held him with a tenderness that brought an unfamiliar peace.
Beside her, a man, tall and imposing, yet radiating a gentle strength, gazed down with an intensity that spoke of
immense power barely contained.
"Our child," the woman whispered, her voice like chimes in a soft breeze. "Yu Chen. My little Starfall."
And so began his new life.
As Yu Chen grew, he began to piece together the tapestry of his existence. He was part of the Yu family, an ancient
and reclusive clan living deep within the remote Starfall Peaks, a region shrouded in mist and natural barriers that
deterred all but the most determined, or foolish. The family compound itself was less a dwelling and more an intricate
fortress carved into the mountainside, powered by forgotten spirit arrays and protected by spiritual guardians. From
his earliest memories, he understood that his family was different.
Their elders moved with an innate grace that spoke of mastery, their casual gestures often hinting at terrifying,
dormant power. His parents, Yu Ming and Qingling, while loving and attentive, carried themselves with the gravitas
of individuals who commanded respect not just from their clan, but from unseen forces. He once overheard his
grandfather, a man whose presence alone could quiet a bustling hall, speaking of the continental powers.
