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Chapter 1 - chapter 1

They say your life flashes before your eyes right before you die.

Mine didn't.

I didn't even get that courtesy.

One second I was walking home. The next, a bolt of strange purple lightning split the sky and struck me before I could blink. There wasn't even a cloud overhead. No thunder. No warning.

And just like that, I was gone.

I hovered above the scene, weightless, staring down at my own body sprawled on the pavement while strangers gathered in a widening circle. Someone screamed. Someone called for an ambulance.

It felt… anticlimactic.

After everything I had survived, this was how I died? Not in battle. Not bleeding out in some back alley. Not at the hands of an enemy.

Lightning.

I might have laughed if I still had lungs.

I endured years of childhood abuse. Torture disguised as "training" to mold me into an assassin. Countless missions that left me half-dead and soaked in blood—mine and others'. I had survived things that should have killed me a hundred times over.

And yet I died on an ordinary day, under a clear sky.

I was, admittedly, a little pissed.

Still, I didn't have regrets. Not really.

Maybe a little sadness.

I would never see the children again.

To conceal my identity—and because I genuinely loved children—I became a kindergarten teacher. My students became something dangerously close to family. I poured everything into teaching them about the world, hoping to give them the tools I never had.

They were so bright. So innocent.

I prayed they would never have to see the darkness I had. Even though I knew that was a foolish wish.

Children grow up. They learn the truth eventually—that the world is hypocrisy wrapped in pretty lies.

Sometimes I wanted to gather them all up and hide them somewhere safe. Keep them untouched by cruelty.

But I didn't.

And every year, when they moved on, my heart broke quietly as I said goodbye—knowing I would likely never see them again.

I had thought about having children of my own.

But an accident in my teens left me infertile.

Adoption was possible. I considered it more than once. But what right did I have to drag a child into a life steeped in blood? My enemies would have used them against me. Or worse—if I died, they would be left alone because of my choices.

So I remained alone.

With one last look at my body, I let myself fade, fully expecting to descend into hell for the sins staining my soul.

******************************************** 

Instead, I opened my eyes to white.

Endless white.

A vast room with no visible walls, no ceiling—just an overwhelming emptiness. In front of me stood a man who radiated something vast and immeasurable.

"I am the God of Creation," he said calmly.

I stared at him.

He informed me—without a hint of embarrassment—that my death had been a mistake. The lightning? A careless accident caused by a young god practicing.

I waited for anger.

It didn't come.

Maybe something was muting my emotions. Or maybe, after everything, I simply didn't care enough to rage at a cosmic clerical error.

He explained that I couldn't be returned to my original world. Doing so would disrupt its balance. However, as compensation, he would reincarnate me into another world.

I could keep my memories. My skills. My strength.

And he would grant me three reasonable wishes.

Three wishes from a god.

It sounded generous.

But I had lived too long as an assassin to believe in generosity without cost. Every deal has a price. Every favor creates a debt.

"I won't owe you anything?" I asked.

"No," he replied. "This is restitution."

I considered my options carefully.

If I had another life… I wanted it to be peaceful.

My first wish was simple.

"I want to be reincarnated into a world where being gay is fully accepted."

Even though gay marriage had been legalized in China, society remained far from kind. I was tired of hiding. Tired of caution. Tired of measuring my words and my gaze.

If I was going to live again, I refused to do so in fear of who I loved.

The god nodded without hesitation.

Encouraged, I continued.

"For my second wish, I want a portable space dimension. Time inside should stand still—nothing rots or decays. It should be stocked with food, weapons, clothing appropriate for the new world, and basic necessities. And… a well of spiritual water capable of healing injuries, detoxifying poisons, and strengthening the body."

I fully expected him to refuse or bargain.

Instead, he said, "Granted."

I blinked.

Apparently, gods were generous when they were guilty.

"For my last wish," I said after a moment, "I want comprehensive common knowledge of the world I would be reborn into—its languages, customs, geography, currency, power structures." 

He raised a brow slightly.

"It may seem small," I added, "some might even consider it a waste, but ignorance is deadly. I didn't want to stumble through my new life like a fool, nor be cheated because I didn't know the value of things. Most importantly, I didn't want to stand out."

I wanted to live quietly.

Peacefully.

After a brief pause, he nodded.

"Very well."

There was no contract. No ominous warning.

Just a faint smile.

"Good luck."

He snapped his fingers.

The white space shattered.

And my soul was pulled into a swirling portal, dragged toward whatever life awaited me next.

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