The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality-Chapter 7: New Home(1)

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Chapter 7: New Home(1)

The mist wasn’t empty.

It coiled around the mangrove roots like slow, pale smoke, tasting of wet earth and decay—a stark, overwhelming contrast to the sterile dust of the desert they had left behind.

Krug sat beneath the rotted husk of a giant tree, his back pressed against the damp wood. The Shepherd’s Stick stood planted in the mud beside him, its red gem pulsing with a low, steady light that pushed against the encroaching shadows.

He didn’t sleep. A Shepherd didn’t close his eyes when the flock was blind.

Around him, the tribe had surrendered to exhaustion. Twenty-one lizardmen lay curled in the mud, breathing the heavy air of survival. Even Vark, the massive enforcer, was slumped against a root, his chest rising and falling in a rhythmic rasp.

Krug listened.

The swamp was alive.

In the desert, silence was the enemy. Here, noise was the constant companion. Insects chirped in a deafening chorus. Small things splashed in the shallows. The wind rustled the high canopy, sending leaves drifting down to the black water.

Life.

The Architect’s promise made manifest.

Rustle.

A sound broke the pattern. Heavier than a leaf. More deliberate than a bug.

Krug didn’t move. His hand tightened on the staff. The red light flared, casting long, dancing shadows.

Two figures emerged from the mist.

Runt and Tor. They moved low, scales slick with moisture, blending almost perfectly with the gloom. They stopped just outside the circle of light, bowing their heads.

"Report," Krug whispered. The word barely disturbed the air.

Runt stepped forward. The small scout looked different. In the desert, his eyes had been dull, glazed with thirst. Now, they were wide, reflecting the red glow of the staff. Fear was there, yes, but also something else.

Hunger.

"We walked," Runt said, his voice a quiet hiss. "Five hundred paces. Maybe more."

"Find anything?"

"Green," Runt struggled to find the words. "Roots. Mud. Water."

"Food?"

Runt didn’t just nod; he reached into a woven grass pouch and produced a handful of wriggling grubs. He popped one into his mouth, crunching down with audible satisfaction.

"Bugs," Runt said, swallowing. "Many bugs. Fish in the small pools. Roots that bleed sweet water. It is... rich."

Tor, the larger scout, stepped closer. He didn’t share Runt’s enthusiasm. His frill was flat against his neck, vibrating with agitation.

"Tracks," Tor rumbled. "Small tracks. Rats. Snakes. Birds."

Krug looked at him. "And the large ones?"

"None," Tor said. "No wolf-lizards. No swamp-cats. No bears."

The statement hung in the humid air.

Krug frowned. Abundance should breed conflict. Predators should be fighting over every inch of this paradise. The weak should be hiding. The strong should be roaring.

"Are you sure?" Krug asked. "Perhaps they sleep."

"No dung," Tor said, shaking his head. "No territorial markings. No nests. The mud is clean."

Runt wiped his mouth. "Maybe they left? Maybe the water rose and chased them?"

"Or maybe they were eaten," Krug murmured.

The scouts flinched.

Krug looked out into the darkness. The immediate area was a paradise compared to the Wastes. Food. Water. Cover. It was everything a tribe needed to grow strong.

But a paradise without competition was a lie. In nature, voids were never natural. If the wolves and bears were gone, it wasn’t because they had left. It was because something else had taken their place.

Something territorial.

"The water," Krug asked. "Did you see the big water?"

"Yes," Tor said. "To the east. The trees stop. The ground drops. Just... water. Big. Black. Still."

"Did you drink?"

"No," Tor said. "It smells... old."

Runt shivered. "Too quiet there. The bugs stop singing near the big water."

Krug nodded slowly. He understood now. The silence of the deep water was the answer to the emptiness of the land.

The ecosystem wasn’t empty. It was suppressed.

"We have found a home," Krug said, his voice firm. He needed to anchor them. Fear could be a tool, but panic was a poison. "The Architect has given us a garden."

"A garden with teeth?" Runt asked, glancing nervously at the mist.

"All gardens have teeth," Krug said. "That is why we have the Shepherd."

He stood up, pulling the staff from the mud. The movement woke Vark. The enforcer’s eyes snapped open, instantly alert.

"Threat?" Vark rasped, hand going to the bone club at his side.

"Scouts return," Krug said. "We are safe for now. The land is good. But we are not alone."

Vark’s eyes narrowed. "Enemies?"

"No," Krug said, looking toward the east, toward the unseen lake that swallowed the sounds of the night. "Not enemies. Neighbors."

He looked back at Runt and Tor.

"Rest. We build walls at first light."

The scouts scurried off to find a dry patch of mud. Vark settled back against the tree, but his hand stayed on his weapon.

Krug remained standing. He looked at the red gem of his staff. It pulsed slowly, a beacon in the dark.

Food is here,* Krug thought. *Water is here. Life is here.

But death is watching.

He could feel it. A heavy, oppressive weight pressing against his senses. It wasn’t the searing heat of the sun or the biting wind of the sandstorm. It was colder. Deeper.

The swamp was holding its breath. And Krug knew, with the certainty of the faithful, that sooner or later, it would scream.

***

High above the fog, in the silent, temperature-controlled sanctuary of the Architect’s interface, Zephyr watched the world render.

The scout data uploaded in real-time. The grey fog of war rolled back, replaced by detailed topographical lines and resource markers. To a casual observer, it was a glitch. A paradise surrounded by hell.

[New Zone Discovered: The Green Basin]

[Resource Density: High]

[Water Source: Abundant (Purification Required)]

[Food Sources: Insectoid, Piscine, Flora]

Zephyr leaned forward. His fingers danced across the holographic keyboard, pulling up window after window of analytics.

"Too clean," he muttered.

In Theos Online, starting zones were balanced. You got wood and water, but you also got wolves. You got fertile land, but you had to fight goblins for it. Scarcity drove conflict. Conflict drove progression.

Here, the scarcity was zero.

He zoomed in on the resource nodes Runt had marked. Massive groves of Ironwood trees. Clay deposits perfect for pottery. Medicinal herbs growing like weeds.

It was a maximized starter base. A gift.

And Zephyr didn’t believe in gifts.

He opened the [Analysis] tab.

[Insect Population: Critical Mass]

[Amphibian Population: High]

[Apex Predators: 0]

[Mid-Tier Predators: 0]

"Zero?" Zephyr frowned. "Impossible."

Ecosystems didn’t leave voids. If there were this many bugs and frogs, something had to be eating them. Snakes. Birds. Larger lizards. The food chain was broken at the top. The biomass was pooling at the bottom, unchecked.

Unless.

Unless the top wasn’t missing.

Unless it was just incredibly efficient.

He scrolled the map to the east. The detailed topography ended at the water’s edge. Beyond that lay a large, ominous black void.

[Lake: Unexplored]

He highlighted the water.

"System," Zephyr commanded. "Extrapolate predatory patterns based on current fauna distribution."

[Processing...]

Lines of red light began to appear on the map, tracing movement vectors. The rats skirted the water’s edge. The birds nested high, away from the banks. The larger fish stayed deep, never surfacing.

The entire local ecosystem was engaged in a massive, collective act of avoidance.

They weren’t living in the swamp. They were hiding in the corners of it.

[Analysis Complete.]

[Conclusion: Single Apex Predation Model Detected.]

Zephyr’s eyes narrowed. "Show me the threat."

The interface pulsed. A new window opened, centered on the black void of the lake.

[WARNING: High-Level Hostile Entity Detected.]

[Signal Strength: Massive.]

[Location: Submerged (Central Lake Bed).]

A chill that had nothing to do with the air conditioning ran down Zephyr’s spine. The signal wasn’t just a blip. It was a sun. The sheer magical density of the creature dwarfed anything he had seen so far. It made the Sand Worms of the desert look like garden snakes.

He checked the power scale.

[Estimated Threat Level: Catastrophic.]

[Recommended Action: FLEE.]

"It’s not a gap," Zephyr whispered, understanding dawning on him. "It’s a farm."

The monster in the lake didn’t hunt every day. It didn’t need to. It let the biomass build up. It let the bugs and the rats and the fish multiply until the swamp was bursting with life.

And then it fed.

The lack of mid-tier predators wasn’t an accident. They were just the first course.

Zephyr looked at the small, glowing dots representing his tribe. They were huddled at the edge of the water, celebrating. They thought they had found a sanctuary.

They hadn’t.

They had walked right onto the dinner plate.

He checked the entity’s status.

[State: Dormant (Digesting)]

"It’s full," Zephyr noted. "For how long?"

Digestion didn’t last forever. And when that thing woke up, twenty-four exhausted lizardmen wouldn’t be a fight. They would be a snack.

He had to move them. But where? The desert was death. The Grey Wastes were death. This swamp was the only place with water.

They couldn’t leave.

Which meant they had to survive living next door to a god of death.

Zephyr’s hand hovered over the **[Divine Intervention]** button. He couldn’t fight it. He didn’t have the Faith Points for a smite that big. He couldn’t shield them forever.

He had to warn them. He had to turn that ignorance—that soft, dangerous comfort—into hard, cold fear.

Paranoia was better than extinction.

"Wake up, Krug," Zephyr said, his voice grim. "Class is in session."

***

Krug listened to the wind, trying to decipher the secrets of the swamp, when the Voice hit him.

It wasn’t a whisper. It wasn’t the warm hum of the desert.

It was a tolling bell.

A sharp, ringing clarity that vibrated through every bone in his body, snapping his eyes open.

ALERT.

The word wasn’t spoken in the crude tongue of the lizardmen. It was a concept, a sudden download of pure urgency.

Krug gasped, clutching his chest. The Shepherd’s Stick flared violently, the red gem turning the color of fresh blood.

"Krug?"

Vark was on his feet instantly, club raised. The sudden flash had woken the others. Twenty heads lifted from the mud, eyes blinking in confusion.

Krug didn’t answer. He couldn’t. The Voice was still speaking, pouring knowledge into his mind.

The water isn’t a cradle.

The water is a mouth.

Krug reeled as the Architect showed him. He didn’t see the numbers or the map that Zephyr saw. He saw images. A shadow beneath the surface. A hunger that swallowed entire generations. Something ancient. Something that slept.

And it was right next to them.

"Up!" Krug roared.

The command shattered the peaceful chirping of the insects. It wasn’t the calm voice of the priest. It was the terrified shout of a man realizing he is standing in a dragon’s den.

The tribe scrambled to their feet. Runt dropped his half-eaten grub. Tor brandished his knife.

"What comes?" Vark bellowed, scanning the treeline. "Wolves? Cats?"

"Older," Krug hissed.

He slammed the staff into the soft earth. He pointed the glowing tip not at the trees, but at the lake.

"The water," Krug said. "Do not touch the deep water."

The tribe looked at the lake. It was calm. The moon reflected off the black surface like a mirror. Mist drifted lazily over the reeds. It looked peaceful.

"It is... empty," Hiss’rak said, squinting. "There is nothing there."

"Because it ate everything," Krug said.

He turned to them, his eyes wild. "The Architect has shown me. This land is good. The food is plentiful. But the price is high."

He walked to the edge of the camp, marking a line in the mud with his staff. A boundary.

"Here," Krug said. "We do not cross this line. We do not swim. We do not fish in the deep. We take from the shallows, appearing small. We do not wake the sleeper."

"What sleeps?" Runt whispered, stepping back from the water’s edge.

Krug looked at the dark expanse. He could feel it now. The pressure he had sensed earlier—it wasn’t just the atmosphere. It was the presence of a predator so large it distorted the air around it.

"A god of hunger," Krug said.

A silence fell over the camp. The joy of finding a home evaporated, replaced by a cold, creeping dread. They looked at the trees. The thick roots. The hanging moss. Suddenly, the abundance didn’t feel like a gift. It felt like bait.

Vark lowered his club, but his grip didn’t loosen. "We fight?"

"No," Krug said. "We exist. Quietly."

He looked up at the sky, at the stars that were watching them.

"We are guests in its house," Krug told them. "Be small. And pray it stays asleep."

The tribe huddled closer together, away from the water. They didn’t sleep again that night. They watched the lake.

And as the moon climbed higher, casting long, pale beams across the black water, they all saw it. Or thought they saw it.

A ripple.

Small. Insignificant. Far out in the center.

But in the reflection of the water, for just a second, the stars seemed to blink out.

The monster was dreaming. And the tribe of the Architect held its breath, praying that the dawn would come before the nightmare woke up.

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