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Silence, heavy and absolute, pressed against Josh’s eardrums. It wasn't the quiet of an empty room; it felt like the static of an old TV, but there was no noise.

Josh’s heart hamred a frantic rhythm against his ribs, a stark contrast to the silence. He stared blankly ahead, his eyes trying to focus on the impossible. A pale, translucent blue script hovered in the air, defiant of gravity, overlaying the ancient, moss-slicked bark of the trees behind it.

We’re not on Earth anymore.

The thought didn't arrive as a question. It hit him with the weight of a physical blow. He read the floating prompt for the fifth ti, desperate for the words to change, for the text to dissolve into the familiar neon of a street sign or the glow of his alarm clock.

[Welco to Eldanar.]

His mind flared, a chaotic storm of synapse and panic. What? What, or who brought us here? Why us? He spun around, boots crunching on foreign soil, looking for a cara crew, a projector, a prankster, anything. But there was nothing. Just trees that looked too old to be real, air that slled too rich with ozone and pine, and the terrifying, silent presence of the text.

Is this a hallucination? A stroke? Or... images of health pools, and level-up screens from countless nights wasted on MMORPGs raced through his head. A ga interface?

An arrow at the base of the text pulsed insistently, a rhythmic heartbeat of blue light. It was annoying, demanding attention like a pop-up ad that wouldn't close. When Josh’s gaze finally locked onto it, the words shifted, the text sliding away like oil on water to reveal a fresh set of instructions.

[System Access Granted -You are now connected. Vital data such HP, MP, and Status Updates, will remain anchored to your peripheral vision. To access the deeper architecture of your soul (Stats, Skills, ssages), simply focus your will upon the concept.

Try it now.]

Josh’s jaw went slack. He reached out a hand, fingers trembling, and passed them through the light. There was no resistance, no warmth. Just empty air.

“I’m really here,” he whispered, the sound of his own voice startling him. He could taste the tallic tang of adrenaline and the damp, loamy earth on his tongue. Beside him, he heard the jagged, shallow rasp of Brett’s breathing.

Swallowing his shock, Josh drew a slow, steadying breath. He closed his eyes, visualizing the nu in his mind, feeling foolish and terrified all at once. Open Stats, he commanded silently.

In an instant, the floating text dissolved and reassembled. It didn't fade; it shattered and reford into a crisp, translucent panel edged in glowing blue runes. It looked exactly like the heads-up displays he’d spent half his life staring at, except this one felt undeniably, intrusively real.

[Status Window

Na: Joshua Watson Age: 22 Level: 1 Class: [-]

SP Available: 10

Health (HP): 100/100 Mana (MP): 100/100

Attributes:Str: 10 | Dex: 10 | Con: 10 Int: 10 | Wis: 10

Skills: 0/10]

Josh scanned the numbers. Ten across the board. The definition of average. The System began to populate the window with helpful tooltips, paragraphs of text explaining what ‘Strength’ and ‘Intelligence’ ant, but Josh swiped them away with a ntal flick. He didn't need a tutorial to tell him how an RPG worked. He’d been min-maxing characters since he was twelve years old.

He knew what the numbers represented. Strength was the difference between swinging a sword and swinging a toothpick. Constitution was the difference between taking a punch and waking up in a hospital bed. Wisdom and Intelligence... those were for the people who wanted to bend reality.

“Oi, Brett.” Josh’s voice cracked, and he cleared his throat, trying to inject a stability he didn't feel. “Brett, look at .”

Brett didn’t move. He was staring into the middle distance, his eyes darting rapidly back and forth, reading text that only he could see. He looked pale, his skin clammy in the dappled sunlight.

“Brett?” Josh reached out, gripping his friend's shoulder.

Brett flinched. “I see it,” he whispered, his voice trembling. “I’ve got... I’ve got stats. It says I have SP to spend. It’s asking to pick a class. Warrior, Ranger, Mage, Healer...” He finally looked at Josh, his eyes wide and wet with unshed tears. “Where are we, Josh? Who the hell dragged us here? Is this... are we dead?”

“I don’t think we’re dead,” Josh said, though he checked his own pulse just to be sure. It was racing. “The prompt called this place Eldanar.”

Brett’s face twisted, a flash of anger cutting through the fear. “Stop with the Easter-egg nas! I can read just fine. I an how? Why us? Is this place safe? What are we supposed to do now?”

Josh felt a knot of panic tighten in his stomach. He looked around the forest. The shadows between the trees seed to stretch and curl, hiding things he wasn't sure he wanted to see. He felt exposed. Vulnerable.

But as the sun climbed higher, filtering through the alien leaves in shafts of gold, a strange sensation began to rise in his chest. It wasn't fear. It was... relief?

He thought about his life back ho. The alarm clock at 6:00 AM. The warehouse job that made his back ache. The endless cycle of bills and boredom. He had felt adrift, burned out, longing for sothing that felt real.

This was real. Terrifying, yes. Lethal, probably. But undeniably real.

He forced a smile, running a hand absently over the worn denim of his jeans, jeans that suddenly felt woefully inadequate for a forest trek.

“Look, Brett, I wish I had the answers,” Josh admitted, his voice dropping low and earnest. “I don’t know what is going on. I don’t know if there’s a log-out button, if we can go ho. But look at the options it gave you.”

The narrative has been illicitly obtained; should you discover it on Amazon, report the violation.

He stepped closer, forcing Brett to et his gaze. “You’ve always been the strategist. The sharp tongue, the sharp mind. You were the one who organised the guild bank, the one who negotiated the alliances.” He poked Brett in the chest. “And ? I’ve been the hamr. The idiot who breaks down the door so you can walk in safely.”

Brett’s breathing hitched, but he was listening.

“Rember those late-night raids back in the day?” Josh continued, the mory vivid. “I’d lock shields with the boss, keep it focused on , while you stood in the back unleashing damage or figuring out the puzzle chanics. I was the tank. You were the DPS or the controller.”

Josh gestured to the empty air around them. “Feels like life’s just handed us the perfect roles, doesn’t it? Maybe we were brought here because we’re good at this.”

Brett’s scowl softened into sothing thoughtful. His shoulders, tense as bowstrings monts ago, slumped with a slow exhale. He rubbed the back of his neck, a nervous tic Josh had seen a thousand tis before exams or job interviews.

“Yeah,” Brett said quietly. “I suppose... I suppose I could handle the thinking. Maybe the talking. As long as you handle the smashing.”

“That sounds strangely comforting,” Josh said, nudging him with an elbow. “Exactly. We’ve been a team forever. You handle the magic or the negotiations, and I’ll stand in front of you with a sword and shield. We cover each other’s backs. Deal?”

He held out his hand.

Brett looked at the outstretched hand, then back to the invisible screen floating before him. The panic hadn't vanished, but it had been wrestled into submission. He clasped Josh’s hand firmly.

“Deal,” Brett said. “But if we get eaten by a dragon in the first hour, I’m haunting you.”

Josh laughed, a rough sound that broke the tension. “Noted.”

He turned away, letting his vision drift back to the blue interface. He focused his mind, and the Class Selection screen dominated his view.

[Warrior:The bulwark. The frontline defender.

Ranger:Silent. Deadly. Distance.

Mage:Master of the arcane. Reality bender.

Healer:Restoration. Life.]

Josh didn't hesitate. He wasn't patient enough for a Ranger. He didn't have the academic discipline to be a Mage. And he wasn't selfless enough to be a pure Healer.

He looked at the description for Warrior.

[You thrive in the chaos of close-quarters combat... stand as a bulwark between danger and your allies.]

That was it. That was what Brett needed him to be.

He ntally pressed the icon.

[Confirm Class: Warrior? Yes / No]

Josh selected Yes.

Imdiately, a rush of warmth flooded his limbs. It wasn't like an adrenaline spike; it was heavier, deeper. It felt like hot liquid gold was being poured into his veins, settling into the marrow of his bones. His perception shifted. The world didn't change, but his understanding of it did.

[Congratulations, Warrior. Skills Unlocked]

He didn't have to read the text. The knowledge was simply there, downloaded directly into his cortex.

One-Handed Weapons (Basic): Suddenly, he understood the geotry of a kill. He knew how to turn his wrist to deflect a blow, how to step into a swing to maximize force.

Two-Handed Weapons (Basic): You understand the weight and balance of greatswords, warhamrs, and polearms. Your swings deliver powerful arcs and crushing force.

Shield Wielder (Basic): His left arm felt heavy, itching for a weight to counterbalance his body. He knew how to angle a flat surface to turn a lethal stab into a glancing scratch.

Armour User (Basic): He understood weight distribution. How to move so that steel plate didn't chafe, how to breathe when a leather cuirass constricted his chest.

Tough (Basic): Your body has grown accustod to punishnt. You shrug off cuts and bruises more readily than most, reducing the damage you take in combat.

“Whoa,” Josh breathed, flexing his hands. The air felt different against his skin—thicker, manageable.

[System Advice: Stat AllocationAs a Warrior, your survivability is paramount. Constitution governs your health and stamina. Strength governs your damage. Dexterity governs your defence.

You have 10 Free SP.

Josh looked at his stats again. HP: 100. Str: 10. Con: 10.]

If he was going to be the wall between Brett and whatever lived in these woods, 100 HP wasn't going to cut it. He needed to be tough. He needed to be unkillable.

With a focused thought, he began to assign the points.

He dumped 4 points into Constitution. The effect was imdiate. His lungs felt like they expanded, taking in deeper, richer draughts of air. The lingering fatigue of the transition vanished. His heartbeat slowed to a powerful, rhythmic thud, like a war drum. HP climbed to 140.

He put 4 points into Strength. His muscles tightened, the fibres knitting together more densely. He felt a phantom weight on his shoulders that he could now easily shrug off. He felt... solid. Grounded.

He put the final 2 points into Dexterity. The world seed to sharpen slightly. His reflexes felt coiled, ready to snap. He wasn't going to be a ninja, but he wouldn't be tripping over his own feet, either.

Int and Wis? He ignored them. Magic could wait. Survival ca first.

[System ssage: Starter Gear Generated - A gift for the displaced.]

A heavy thud at his feet made him jump back. A leather satchel had materialized out of thin air, settling into the dirt.

Josh dropped to one knee, untying the drawstrings with hands that were steady and sure. The sll of smoked at wafted up, real food. He pulled out strips of jerky, a wheel of hard cheese, and a dense loaf of bread that was still warm. A waterskin, slling of leather and herbs, sloshed heavily.

But beneath the provisions lay the tools of his new trade.

His heart raced as he reached in. He grasped a hilt wrapped in dark, grippy leather. He pulled it free, a gleaming steel sword. It wasn't a wall-hanger or a prop. It was balanced, the edge honed to a razor shine. It felt dangerous. It felt right.

Next, he pulled out a round wooden shield, painted in blue-and-white checks. It was sturdy, rimd with iron. Finally, he retrieved a cuirass of boiled leather, stiff but padded, with buckles that glead in the sun.

Josh sprang to his feet. He stripped off his coat, tossing it aside as a relic of a past life. With the practiced ease of the Armour User skill, he slipped the cuirass over his head. He tightened the straps at his ribs, feeling the leather mold to his torso, offering a comforting embrace of protection.

He buckled the sword belt around his hips, the weight of the scabbard settling familiarly against his thigh. He slid his left arm through the shield straps, gripping the handle.

He turned to Brett.

Brett was watching him, mouth slightly open. “You look...” Brett paused, searching for the word. “You look like you belong here.”

Josh grinned. He felt the weight of the sword, the tightness of the armor, the thrum of the System in the back of his mind. He looked north, where the trees grew thicker and the shadows deeper. A prompt hovered there, pointing the way.

[Recomnded Destination: Ashenfall. Half a day’s journey North.]

“This is going to be fun,” Josh said, and for the first ti in years, he ant it. The fear was still there, lurking, but it was drowned out by the roar of anticipation.

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