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Enthropy:God Of The Broken Sun

Pokongt_Emmanuel_5486
28
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 28 chs / week.
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Synopsis
The day the sun shattered, the laws of life died with it. A blinding storm of radiation tore through the Earth, melting every machine and burning the sky into glass. When the world stopped spinning, fragments of data fell like rain — merging with human minds. Now, survivors awaken with Code Fragments, strange echoes of destroyed satellites that bend reality itself. Noah Mensah, a young astrophysicist stranded in the ruins of Accra, becomes host to the Singularity Protocol — a fragment so powerful it can rewrite gravity. But every time he uses it, his body breaks a little more, and the human part of him slips away. Cities crumble into floating islands, time folds over itself, and the last fragments of humanity fight to decide what “alive” still means. In this world of broken physics and corrupted souls, Noah must face a single truth: ⚡ To save what’s left of Earth… he must become what destroyed it. ⸻ “Each time I bend gravity, I feel less human.”
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Chapter 1 - The Sun That Broke The Sky

Chapter 1: The Sun That Broke the Sky

The sun should never have flickered.

Not twice.

Not like that.

At first, people thought it was another solar flare warning—one of those boring alerts from the Space Weather Center that never meant anything. But then the light dimmed. Not gradually—violently, like someone had unplugged the universe.

Noah Mensah was halfway up the university observatory stairs when his phone died, his smartwatch went black, and every screen in the city screamed one final message before burning out:

[SOLAR EVENT DETECTED – SEEK COVER IMMEDIATELY.]

Then came the silence.

No wind. No hum of power. No sound but his heartbeat slamming against his ribs.

When he stepped outside, the sun wasn't round anymore.

It was cracked.

Glowing fractures spread across its surface, like molten glass under pressure, leaking threads of light that twisted through the sky like bleeding veins. Each pulse made the air feel heavier—denser. Gravity itself seemed confused.

"Dr. Mensah!"

A voice from below. His assistant, Aisha, clutching her tablet, her eyes wide.

"What's happening? The readings are—"

The ground heaved. The tablet shattered against the floor.

For one frozen second, Noah saw something impossible:

The city of Accra floating upward—cars, dust, people—lifting an inch into the air before slamming back down in a rolling wave of force.

Then came the white light.

It wasn't light that illuminated. It rewrote.

Noah tried to scream, but his voice dissolved into static. His thoughts fractured into sound, his body vibrating with a thousand overlapping frequencies. He could see data—binary rain streaming across his vision, strings of code bursting from collapsing satellites in orbit and embedding themselves into human minds.

And then… darkness.

When he opened his eyes, the world had changed.

The sky was black, except for drifting shards of what once was sunlight—golden fragments suspended midair, pulsing like dying stars. His skin tingled with electricity. His smartwatch was fused to his wrist, melted into a vein of silver that throbbed with light.

[Code Fragment Detected.]

Designation: Singularity Protocol.

Warning: Host integrity—unstable.

Noah staggered to his feet, the words burning in his head though there was no sound, no screen. Just thought.

A dead bird floated in front of him—literally floated, suspended midair as if gravity had forgotten it existed. His breath caught. When he reached out, the air rippled around his hand, bending, warping, yielding.

He clenched his fist—and the bird fell.

The force that answered him wasn't strength. It was gravity itself, obeying his will for a fraction of a second. His mind screamed at the impossibility, but another part—deeper, colder—was already analyzing it, cataloguing, adapting.

The scientist in him wanted to understand.

The human in him was terrified.

[Protocol Activated.]

Stage One—Singularity Core Alignment: 2%.

Entropy increasing. Humanity decreasing.

The voice wasn't mechanical. It was his own—echoing from inside his head, stripped of emotion.

He looked up again. In the distance, the horizon shimmered—skyscrapers bending, twisting like reflections on liquid metal. People were running, shouting, dissolving into streaks of light.

And through the chaos, the broken sun pulsed again.

Each flicker came with a whisper—not in words, but in meaning.

A command buried in radiation, carried by light itself.

"Adapt… or be erased."

Noah's knees hit the ground.

The earth trembled beneath him, humming like a living thing.

He could feel it—something—calling to him through the code that now laced his veins.

The world had ended.

But something far greater was just beginning.

End of Chapter 1.