Chapter 1: A Tide Reborn

The sound of crashing waves echoed faintly, mingling with the whispers of distant gulls. Darkness embraced Kaizen, yet he felt an odd warmth against his skin—the sensation of sunlight filtered through closed eyelids. His mind swam in confusion, fragmented memories of a world filled with towering cities, glowing screens, and a life he no longer belonged to.

Where... am I?

Kaizen's eyes fluttered open, greeted by an endless expanse of blue sky. The salty tang of the sea filled his nostrils, mingling with the earthy scent of sand. He tried to sit up, but his body felt unfamiliar—smaller, weaker, and oddly lightweight.

Panic surged. His hands shot up to his face, discovering smooth, youthful skin. His reflection in a puddle nearby revealed the face of a child, no older than ten, with disheveled black hair and piercing gray eyes that didn't belong to his past self.

This isn't a dream.

Fragments of another life lingered like fading echoes. His name had been Kaizen in that world, and somehow, it still was. But everything else had changed. No bustling streets, no blaring horns—just the rhythmic lull of the ocean and the distant silhouettes of sails.

"Hey! Are you okay?"

A shadow fell over him. A boy, perhaps a few years older, peered down with curious eyes, his tanned face framed by sun-bleached hair. He extended a hand. Without hesitation, Kaizen took it, pulled to his feet with surprising ease.

"You washed up from the sea? You're lucky the tide didn't drag you out again. I'm Lio. What's your name?"

Kaizen hesitated. Do I tell the truth? But what was the truth now? "Kaizen," he replied quietly.

Lio grinned. "Weird name. But you look weirder just lying there. Come on, the village isn't far. You need food."

Too dazed to argue, Kaizen followed. The village was small, a cluster of wooden huts nestled against the coastline, with smoke curling from chimneys and the sounds of bustling life. Fishermen hauled nets from the shore, children laughed as they chased each other, and merchants bartered with travelers from distant lands.

But beneath the simplicity, Kaizen felt it—an undercurrent of something vast and ancient, like the ocean itself whispered secrets only he could hear.

Days turned into weeks. Kaizen learned to adapt, blending into the rhythm of village life. His body, though foreign, grew stronger with daily tasks: hauling water, mending nets, and helping Lio's family with their modest fishing trade.

Yet, something was different.

His strength increased rapidly, far beyond what a boy his size should manage. Tasks that once left him breathless became effortless. He moved with uncanny agility, his reflexes sharp and precise, as if his muscles remembered things his mind did not.

Late at night, under the vast canopy of stars, Kaizen tested himself. Lifting heavy stones, sprinting along the shoreline, and practicing movements from a martial arts class he vaguely remembered from his past life. The results were undeniable. His growth wasn't natural.

What am I becoming?

Trouble arrived with the morning tide.

A group of ragged men docked their battered ship at the village pier. Their flags bore no allegiance, but their eyes spoke of greed and violence. Pirates.

They demanded supplies, then gold, and when the villagers hesitated, the leader drew his blade, cutting down an elder without hesitation.

Kaizen froze. His heart raced not with fear, but with something else—a surge of heat, like fire coursing through his veins.

When Lio rushed to defend his father, Kaizen moved without thinking.

One moment, he was standing still; the next, he was between Lio and the pirate's blade. His hand shot out, fingers closing around the steel with impossible strength. The metal groaned and buckled in his grip before shattering like glass.

Silence.

The pirates stared, disbelief etched on their faces. Kaizen stared too, at his own hand, unscathed and trembling not from pain, but from the realization of what he'd done.

Without waiting, the pirates attacked.

Kaizen moved like a shadow, dodging strikes with ease, his body reacting faster than his mind could process. He struck back—a punch that sent a man flying, a kick that crumpled another. It wasn't skill. It was raw instinct, something buried deep within him.

When it was over, the village stood in stunned silence. Kaizen's breathing was steady, but his mind raced.

So much for staying low-profile.

The pirates fled, leaving behind whispers and wide-eyed villagers. Rumors spread like wildfire.

A boy with eyes like storms. A shadow with no name who crushed steel with his bare hands.

Kaizen tried to dismiss it, to fade back into obscurity. But fate had other plans. The world beyond the village had noticed, and its tides were shifting.

I just wanted a peaceful life, he thought, staring at the horizon.

But destiny, like the sea, waits for no one.