Early years the beginnin.., p.1

Early Years: The Beginning After the End: (Remastered Edition), page 1

 

Early Years: The Beginning After the End: (Remastered Edition)
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Early Years: The Beginning After the End: (Remastered Edition)


  The Beginning After The End: Early Years Original Cover Illustration (2018) Artist: Ramon Macairap Designer: Max Marcil

  VOL. 1: EARLY YEARS

  2016, 2026 TURTLEME LLC

  www.turtleme.com

  This book is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. Any reproduction or unauthorized use of the material or artwork contained herein is prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.

  Aethon Books supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact editor@aethonbooks.com. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Aethon Books

  www.aethonbooks.com

  Edited by J. Wade Dial, Elayne Morgan. Cover design by Max Marcil. Cover illustration by Kart Studio. Original ebook cover by Ramon Macairap. eBook design, layout, and formatting by Kevin G. Summers.

  Published by Aethon Books LLC.

  Aethon Books is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead is coincidental.

  All rights reserved.

  For all my readers, whose support has carried this story from a small weekly web serial in 2015 to a novel, comic, and animation and given me the courage to keep writing and telling stories.

  And for my wife, Grace, the love of my life, who both keeps me grounded and helps me to fly.

  Contents

  1. The Light at the End of the Tunnel

  2. The Encyclopedia of Mana Manipulation

  3. Head Start

  4. My Life Now

  5. Let the Journey Begin

  6. Up the Mountain

  7. How I Wished

  8. Questions

  9. Ones Held Dear

  10. Road Ahead

  11. To and Fro

  12. Meeting

  13. Q & A

  14. What’s to Come

  Chapter 14.5

  15. Next Step

  16. Companion

  17. Family

  18. Peaceful

  19. Proclamation

  20. Everybody Wins

  21. For Them

  Thank you for reading Early Years

  Also by TurtleMe

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Chapter 1

  The Light at the End of the Tunnel

  Inever believed in the whole “light at the end of the tunnel” folly where people, after having a near-death experience, would startle awake in a cold sweat exclaiming, “I saw the light!”

  But there I was, in this so-called “tunnel” facing a glaring light, when the last thing I remembered was sleeping in my room—the royal bedchamber, as others called it.

  Had I died? If so, how? Was I assassinated?

  I didn’t remember wronging anyone, but then again, being a powerful public figure meant others had all sorts of reasons to want me dead.

  The pressure forcing me toward this mysterious light made me forgo the hope that this was all a dream. Instead, I relaxed—that seemed to make things more comfortable—and went along for the ride.

  The journey seemed to take an eternity. I half-expected to hear, at any moment, a choir of children singing an angelic hymn, beckoning me toward what I hoped would be heaven. Instead, as if I were looking through a foggy window, everything around me turned into a bright blur, forcing me to shut my eyes. Indiscernible sounds assaulted my ears, making me dizzy. When I tried to speak, the words came out as a cry.

  The cacophony of indistinguishable sounds slowly mellowed, and I heard a muffled voice saying, “Congratulations, sir and madam, he’s a healthy boy.”

  …Wait.

  I suppose I should have been coming to the conclusion that I had just experienced the miracle of birth firsthand, but I was momentarily overcome by the thought of my own demise. I couldn't be dead, though, if I was just being born, could I?

  Assessing my situation in the rational manner befitting a king, I made note, first of all, that wherever this was, I understood the language. That was a good sign.

  I slowly and painfully opened my eyes once more, and they were bombarded with different colors and figures. It took a bit of time for my infant eyes to get used to the light. A not-so-appealing face moved into my line of sight—a man with long, graying hair on both his head and chin, wearing a pair of thick glasses. He seemed to be the doctor, but he wasn’t wearing a doctor's gown, nor were we in anything remotely close to a hospital room. I seemed to have been born from some satanic summoning ritual, because we were on a bed of straw, on the floor of a small room dimly lit by a few candles.

  I looked around and saw the woman who had clearly just given birth to me. It seemed reasonable to call her ‘Mother.’ Taking a few more seconds to see what she looked like, I had to admit she was a beauty, though that might have been due to my still-bleary eyes. Rather than glamorous, I would better describe her as lovely, in a very kind and gentle sense. She had striking auburn hair and brown eyes, long eyelashes, and a perky nose, and I felt an urge to just cling to her. She exuded an irresistible maternal warmth, and I wondered if all babies felt this instinctive bond with their mothers.

  I peeled my eyes away and looked at the person standing to my right. By the idiotic grin and teary eyes he gazed at me with, I assumed he was my father. Immediately, he said, “Hi, little Art, I’m your daddy. Can you say dada?” I glanced around to see both my mother and the doctor roll their eyes as my mother managed to scoff, “Honey, he was just born.”

  Taking a closer look at my father, I could see why my lovely mother was attracted to him. Aside from the few loose screws he seemed to have, expecting a newborn to articulate a two-syllable word—I decided to give him the benefit of the doubt and believe he had been overcome with the joy of becoming a father—he was a very charismatic-looking man with a cleanly-shaven, square jawline that complemented his features. His hair, ashy brown in color, was kept trim, while his eyebrows were strong and fierce, extending sharply like two swords. Yet his eyes held a gentle quality, perhaps imparted by the way they drooped a bit at the outside corners, or the deep blue, almost sapphire, hue of his irises.

  I heard my mother’s voice ask, “Doctor, why isn’t he crying? I thought newborns were supposed to cry.”

  While I finished studying my presumptive parents, the bespectacled gentleman who called himself a doctor dismissed my mother’s worry, saying, “There are cases where the infant does not cry. Please continue resting for a couple of days, Mrs. Leywin. Mr. Leywin, I’ll be available in case you need me for anything.” And that marked the first day of a new life.

  The weeks following my journey out of the tunnel were a new kind of torture for me. I had little to no motor control, other than being able to wave my limbs around, and even that got tiring quickly. I soon realized that babies don’t really have much control over their fingers. When you place your finger on a baby’s palm, they don’t grab it because they like you; they grab it because it’s like getting hit in the funny bone. It’s a reflex. Forget motor control; I couldn’t even excrete my wastes at my discretion. I was not yet the master of my own bladder.

  The satanic demon-summoning place seemed to be my parents’ room. As best I could tell, I seemed to have traveled back in time to be born into my own world, in the days before electricity had been invented. At least, that was what I hoped—but my mother quickly proved me wrong.

  My idiotic father had been swinging me around one day and bumped me against a drawer, scratching my leg. And my mother healed it.

  No, not like ‘a bandage and a kiss’ healing—this was a full-blown, shining-light-with-a-faint-hum-from-her-freaking-hands type of healing.

  Where the hell am I?

  My mother and father—Alice and Reynolds Leywin—seemed to be good people. Hell, possibly even the best. I suspected my mother was an angel; I’d never met such a kindhearted, warm person. She frequently took me with her to what she called a town, carrying me on her back in a baby cradle-strap of some sort. This town, called Ashber, was more like a glorified outpost in my opinion, seeing as there were no real roads or buildings. We walked along the main dirt trail, which featured tents on both sides with various merchants and salesmen selling all sorts of things—from common, everyday necessities to things I couldn’t help but raise a brow at, like weapons, armor, and rocks… shining rocks!

  Probably in an attempt to help me learn the language faster, my mother talked to me while shopping for the day's groceries and exchanging pleasantries with various people passing by or working in the booths. But it was never long before my body turned against me once again and I fell asleep… Damn this useless infantile form of mine.

  Iwoke in my mother’s lap. She was caressing me absently, intently focused on my father. He was reciting a chant, and continued for well over a minute, something that sounded like a prayer to the earth. I leaned in closer and closer, almost falling off my living seat, expecting some magical phenomenon like an earthquake splitting the ground or a giant stone golem emerging. After what seemed like an eternity—and for an infant with the attention span of a goldfish, it was—three boulders, each the size of an adult human, emerged from the ground and slammed against a nearby tree.

  What in the name of… That was it?

  I flailed my arms in anger, but my idiot father interpreted that as excitement. With a big grin on his face, he said, “Your daddy is awesome, huh?”

  Whatever magic he had accomplished with the boulders, he was undoubtedly much better at fighting. When he put on his iron gauntlets, even I was impressed, despite my experience fighting top-notch experts in my past. With quick, firm movements that were surprising for his bulky build, his fists carried enough force to shatter boulders and topple down trees, but were fluid enough to not leave any openings for an opponent. In my former world, he would have been classed as a high-tier fighter, leading a squad of soldiers, but to me, he was just my father.

  The days passed quickly, and I drank in as much information as I could, listening intently to my parents and observing everything I could see. Every day, I devoted myself to honing my new body, mastering the motor functions residing deep within me.

  That comfortable regimen soon changed.

  Chapter 2

  The Encyclopedia of Mana Manipulation

  Iwas a king. In my former life, I could have had my country’s army assembled and kneeling at my feet with the snap of a finger. I’d outdueled competitors from other countries as well as my own people to settle disputes and maintain my position. In terms of swordsmanship and controlling ki, I was second to none, for in my previous world, personal strength was essential to being a ruler. Yet I couldn’t think of a moment in my two lives when I’d been prouder than I was now.

  I can crawl!

  Until now, although I was thirsty for knowledge about this new world, I’d had to make do with the stories Mother would tell me while trying to make me fall asleep, and I often grumbled in complaint when she stopped too early. My father would sometimes sit me on his lap while idly talking to me about his past exploits, which gave me some hints as to what kind of world this was and what it was filled with.

  From what I had learned so far, this world seemed to be a fairly straightforward one filled with magic and warriors, where power and wealth decided one’s rank in society. In that sense, it wasn’t too different from my old world, except for the lack of technology and the slight difference between this world’s magic and the ki, or life force, of my previous world.

  My father, Reynolds Leywin, was a former adventurer—which was apparently a viable occupation in this world—and had quite a lot of experience in his field. He had taken part in several expeditions to search for treasure and fulfill missions he and his team acquired from the Adventurers Guild. He’d eventually settled down when he met my mother at the kingdom’s border in a city called Valden. He proudly told me how my mother, Alice, had fallen head over heels for him at first sight when he had visited the town’s Adventurers Guild Hall, where she had been working, but I suspected it was the exact opposite considering how my mother slapped him across the back of the head and told him to stop telling me lies.

  I’d learned my full name by now: Arthur Leywin—Arthur after my great-grandfather, from the days when the Leywin house was far more powerful. My parents called me Art for short; as a former king, I thought that sounded a little too cute, but after getting a glimpse of myself one day in the metal sheet they used as a mirror, I had to admit my physical features would make anyone think of me as ‘cute.’ I had my mother’s glowing auburn hair, while my eyes were a bright azure color, inherited from my father. I couldn’t know how my facial features would turn out as I grew older, but as long as I kept myself in good fighting shape, it should be okay.

  I’d spent weeks attempting to crawl but had achieved only an uncoordinated scuffle in place. When I finally succeeded, I managed to sneak into the family’s library while my mother was hanging the laundry out to dry. Once she noticed I was gone, it took her only a few minutes to find me. It wouldn’t have mattered even if I’d had hours inside the room, though, because once I opened up a book I realized that, while I understood the spoken language, I couldn’t read.

  I felt as frustrated as my out-of-breath mother sounded when she scolded me with a sigh, saying, “I swear, you’re going to be as much of a handful as your father.”

  By the end of the week, I had picked up enough words from my mother’s nightly story-reading to do some studying of my own in the library. Within a few weeks, Mother had grown used to finding me holed up in the corner of the library with books around me. Whether she was suspicious, I didn’t know, but she did let me stay there as long as she was close by and the door was open.

  I’d spent the afternoon finishing up the fifth volume of an encyclopedia of Dicathen, my new world. I closed the encyclopedia and situated myself more comfortably on the ground. Basically, I just lay on my belly, because crawling and sitting upright were so damn tiring.

  Pondering over what I had just read, I realized this world was rather underdeveloped. From what I could infer, there wasn’t much in the way of technological advancement. The only sources of transportation appeared to be horse-driven carriages, which varied in size for local and overland use, and ships with sails, for navigating rivers.

  Weapons were freely allowed, and not regulated unless you were visiting the royal family or some other high-ranking authority. It continued to baffle me to see people carrying weapons while shopping for groceries, like they were luxury designer bags. In town with my mother, I had witnessed a man carrying a gigantic war axe so tall, its handle dragged on the ground behind him as he walked.

  In my previous life, on Earth, there were soldiers and guards who carried weapons openly; however, they weren’t for the purpose of killing, but rather to deter people from committing crimes. Here, though, I had recently witnessed a thief stealing a few items from the armory store, then being slashed in the back by a large, bald mercenary carrying a polearm. Moreover, the bystanders even went as far as to applaud the oversized skinhead while the thief lay there dying.

  One similarity between this world and my previous world was the system of monarchy. The continent of Dicathen had several kingdoms, each ruled by a king and his royal family. Unlike Earth of my time, though, the kings here were chosen based on lineage; the title passed down from the king to his son and so on.

  Crowns had once been inherited on Earth, too, but centuries ago, the hierarchical systems had adopted a new approach to leadership. Earth rulers were still kings; however, they weren’t born or elected, but trained. Wars had become an almost obsolete form of settling disputes between countries. Of course, there were still smaller-scale battles, and armies were still needed for the safety of the citizens, but disputes concerning the wellbeing of a country were based on either a duel between the rulers of the countries—limited to making use of ki and close-combat weapons—or, for smaller disputes, a mock battle between platoons, where limited firearms were allowed. Therefore, a king on Earth was no longer the stereotypical fat man sitting on the throne ignorantly commanding others; to protect his country’s safety and honor, he had to be an unparalleled fighter.

  Scanning through the encyclopedia, there didn’t seem to be much information on continents other than the one we were currently on. I found this a bit odd, since there were ships that carried goods and passengers across the continent by river, but I assumed that the maritime technology wasn’t yet developed enough to sail across oceans.

  One thing that was hard to get used to was the existence of magic in this world. If we were talking about superhuman powers, sure, the countries on Earth relied on such people, but the capabilities of magic in this world seemed to be on another level.

 

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