Cherreads

Bawake

yarm_ohwhy
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
909
Views
Synopsis
The year was 2052, and somewhere in the month of July, an apocalyptic event struck Earth. Bawake—this cataclysmic epoch marked the beginning of an era so dire, that even Vett Yelplip, a self-aware pessimist, found himself utterly unprepared for its arrival. With the introduction of cybernetic implants to civilians worldwide, humanity unknowingly sealed its own fate. Vett Yellip, a twenty-three-year-old man living at the onset of Bawake, stood in opposition to the human augmentation movement. Yet, on the brink of death, he was granted a mysterious system—a neural implant forged by no human hand. At the onset of Bawake, societies across the globe crumbled, and the world’s network grids were guarded as fiercely as Earth’s own lifeblood. A barrier, created by God long ago, once divided the physical world from the digital one. But now, during Bawake, these boundaries were merging, culminating in the deaths of billions. Millions remain, among them a suave, handsome man journeying through the cosmos in his portable spaceship home. Vett, guided by the OCIS System, wasn’t necessarily in search of a specific goal. Rather, he sought a purpose. A real, genuine reason for existing.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Bawake, Chaos's Incarnate.

With my long, chestnut-parted hair resembling the barren wastelands drowning in silence, I pondered where my life will end up next.

I was walking across a dune, my gaze more desolate than the innumerable grains of sand scattered beneath me.

The reason why I was standed in a dessert, and why I wasn't living the ordinary life once promised by the old modern world was because of…

Bawake, a catastrophic event for almost all Earth's Societies, including the one I lived in, America.

The year was 2052 when it happened.

Bawake—it marked the beginning of an era in Earth's history so woeful, that even I, a self-aware pessimist, found myself unprepared for its arrival.

Optimism had always evaded me, especially after my eighteenth birthday. Enlisting into America's workforce snuffed out whatever remaining spark I had for life's meaning. I carry an odd name—a strange mind, and perhaps, an even stranger fate.

I am Vett Yellip, the most discontented soul in the known cosmos.

Before Bawake, I was a miserable office worker. Run of the mill pretty-boy of the office.

I didn't love it. Didn't hate it either.

But bawake?

I… cherished it like it was my lifeforce.

Bane of Society. Death Dread. Terror Bringer.

Names, titles—there were many. Countless attempts to label this catastrophic apocalypse.

Yet in this precise moment, only one descriptor truly captures the Earth's wretched state.

"Bawake, chaos's Incarnate."

With Earth's death tolls in the billions and fear now as instinctual as breath, the morally upstanding civilians who did survive…

Well, let's just say flexibility became their most sacred virtue.

Then there I was. My skinny tall, but also lean muscular frame striding with subtle confidence through what felt like an infinite desert.

My hair was certainly spectactular. Probably my third best feature. I had long, straight, parted brown hair that flowed down to my lower back—yet never once did it veil the sharp chill of my cold, egocentric visage. Pairing with my brown eyes, my face was... beautifully tree-like.

The attire I wore was designer, something I'd bought before Bawake turned the world inside out.

Worn on my body was a black and green Balenciaga tee, paired with baggy Chrome Hearts cargo pants that swayed with each step like relics from a modern era of style.

It was real fashion, and cinched at the side of my waist draped a Prada belt.

My sculpted cheekbones—near the temples had symmetrical cybernetic lines that ran down both sides of my face.

Two black lines traced from both of my temples to my jawline. 

These parallel lines were my cyberware implants etched into flesh.

Speaking of, my cyberware system was chatting again.

Yeah… he's a real expressive one. I've come to see him as one of my greatest friends…

Him being real or not, didn't really matter to me.

"I know this might breach the system's program, but your outfit is truly exceptional," said the gravelly male voice speaking in my mind.

Responding as if this was a normal occurrence, I replied to him. 

Me and the system were… friends.

"I know. Cost me a pretty penny also. Look... I know I've asked this a million times, but where the hell am I? How do I leave this place...?" I replied, my hair moving loosely across my forehead, never really covering my eyes unless my head moves a certain way.

"You know I can't tell you. A puzzle would be no trick if it couldn't be solved." Said the system, where I, rolled my eyes while responding.

"Yeah yeah, the worlds completely fucked. But lucky for me, I can handle it."

Thinking back on it, the wording could've been better.

But… those words were no lie.

I remember the days—before Bawake—when human life held an equal value. When you could be who you wanted to be, and power didn't dictate your worth. Back then, we were all weak, together.

Daily, I've had the distant thought that Bawake was a gift to someone like me. But then—morality catches up.

Bawake to me was a barrier breaking on itself.

Created by God eons ago, was a divide that once seperated the physical world from the digital one. But now, during Bawake, these dual universes were merging, culminating in the deaths of billions.

Billions perished, millions remained. War gave birth to strange new powers. Greed and theft defined strength. And I...

I stood in the eye of it all.

Well…

It's not like I could do anything about it.

All I could was enjoy my new life for what it was.

Walking through this windless desert, my eyes blasted with a despair so keen, even the underworld pitied and feared my awareness.

Sometimes, when I would look down, I saw them.

Glaring at me as if I was some common enemy.

The weather in Bawake was bizarre, to say the least. The air still carried oxygen—fifteen percent by volume—but it was thin, difficult to breathe for the unimplanted.

Climate change had slaughtered over half of Earth's population within thirty days of Bawake. Anyone without an implant died from lack of oxygen and scorching heat, a few million being the exception.

It wasn't that breathing was impossible—it was just painfully inefficient. The heat, though—that's what killed most. The news had been grim at the fall of America's infrastructure:

"In a week's time, if your body can't self-regulate with the help of implants, the climate will kill you. Fire in summer, ice age in winter." A scientist once said on an emergency US broadcast as Bawke surfaced.

Despite this, though…

I, a lean muscular, but cant forget stylish twenty three year old, sauntered through 200 degree temperatures as if I was basking in a tropical summer afternoon.

But don't be fooled. I wasn't some indomitable human free of suffering.

The system took care of the heat so well, it felt no different than a 70 degree weather. Neuritic technologic implants—pioneered and distributed by the wealthiest of compaines—had unlocked nearly limitless possibilities for humanity's evolution.

As such, climate change struck Earth due to Bawake. So, to combat the dangers of climate change, each cyberware unit encased its host in a full-body mesh of Ceramic Fiber—an invisible, adaptive armor shielding every inch, completely preventing and deflecting heat while keeping your body hot enough to operate. Then, integrated cooling systems ensured that, instead of feeling like they were burning alive, users experienced the comfort of a perfectly air-conditioned room. Of course, settings were customizable. Personally, I dialed mine to 80 degrees. I liked to feel the warmth—like it was still an earthly summer somewhere.

The sun blazed mercilessly overhead.

On another note... my eyes, sunken and furious, told the truth of my present suffering.

While others died from exposure, heatstroke, thirst—I marched on. Inhuman. Unyielding.

My cyberware kept me alive. Hydrated. Awake.

But, this "cyberware," was not typical or man made. 

It was a gift… a talent given from the gods.

Gods—not humans. Whoever granted me this power couldn't have been born of Earth. They had to be superior, sentient beings from an entirely different era… or dimension.

I'd never been touched by a surgeon's scalpel, never laid on a lab table for the implanting process...

Yet somehow, I wielded a hyper-advanced implant that no scientist had ever crafted.

No... this technology was something far more ancient. A mystical system infused into the very fabric of my neural fabric. It allowed me to elevate and enhance my physicality and cognitive abilities at will. But that wasn't even the full extent of the OCSIS. It had a questline, rewards, and functions that could be only described as reality warping. 

Teleportion, which is how I ended up in this dessert, was thanks to the OCSIS moving me through space and time like it was a walk in the park.

When Bawake arrived—when the implants ravaged our society, it wasn't aliens who destroyed the world's government.

It was us, the humans. 

We crammed circuitry into our skulls to become superior beings. And in doing so, awoke something dark.

A new age emerged...

One of techno-magic.

But my cyberware? Mine was unlike the rest.

I, Vett Yelplip, was the wielder of the singularly Original Cyber Implant System.

The OCIS did not reside on any controlled network, rather, the connection was obscured.

I laughed bitterly as I wandered through the dunes—mocking the world, and my own ridiculous place in it.

The OCIS was the cause of my cyberware appearing a month before I was left stuck in a dessert.

Within its magical contents that open from thin air is a shop, inventory, a stats page, and an assistant with the personality of a real companion.

Its interface would appear in front of me, vanishing the moment I processed the message.

"Huh… the algorithm says I need food or I'll collapse soon. Crazy to think I've gone three weeks without a meal." I said, the green window closing when I read it.

Taking a deep breath, I stared down at the sand underfoot. "Just a regular man," I muttered.

Then I raised my head, smiling viciously.

"Mundane to the core."

Then I shouted toward the sky, "Earth… I swear—ONE DAY I'LL FIND HIM—THAT FAR AWAY STAR CALLED PURPOSE! NO MATTER HOW MANY WORLDS I HAVE TO TRAVEL OR HOW MANY TIMES I HAVE TO EVOLVE… I WILL SEE YOU."

I laughed like a madman.

Then… my expression darkened.

"Earth… you failed me gloriously. And somehow—I'm grateful."

As I said this, I heard a noise. Not a friendly one either.

Dozens of stomps and maniacal screams coming from humans. I heard their footsteps and shouts rushing closer over a giant sand hill I faced.

I couldn't see them yet, but I knew exactly what they desired. I had crossed paths with their kind before, during the few weeks I'd been stranded in this barren desert.

Raiders.

Desperate scavengers. Deranged and predatory. Likely hunting me for food and resources. 

My stomach growled. I hadn't eaten in a week. My water filtration system, courtesy of the OCIS, was my only lifeline.

That's… a story for another time.

As the raiders approached the top of the hill, my thoughts weren't on them.

They were on me.

And if that meant I had to kill once more...

I would, without hesitation.

I surged up the hill at a blistering 60 mph, running with a speed that defied ordinary human limits.

Being propelled by the system's physical enhancements, I reached the summit where I finally saw them.

Thirteen deranged souls. Americans, judging by their ethnicities. They were all white. Tattered clothing and cheap cyberware, I felt bad for them. Their inferior tech seemed to have eaten them from the inside. 

They were running at me wielding metal daggers, swords, and bats. Stained with dried blood, I couldn't help but think those weapons had been used to take innocent lives.

I met their charge with silent saunter.

No fear.

Only a calm, menacing stare.

I showed them the face of a man who'd killed before—and would do it again.

Wishing for a painless death, they would pray if they dared attack this grimacing gaze. 

I wasn't always like this.

But my system changed me. Sharpened my awareness. Refined my instincts.

It also nerfed what mattered most.

Empathy. 

Connection. 

Love.

They were embers—still present, but barely glowing.

Still... I was enjoying myself.

Tilting my head slightly, I said coldly:

"Even if you were me from a parallel universe, all of you are not real to me."

And to think I was empty before.

Their charge intensified. Blunt and sharpened blades drawn for battle.

'I'll give them a chance,' I thought.

I waved gently. "I come in peace. Please stop your assault, I don't want to fight," I called out.

But they didn't relent. Bloodlust blazed in their eyes, wild and ravenous, like a twisted tiger stalking its starving prey.

But fortunately for me, I was far stronger than any tiger.

Glaring once again at their blades, still gleaming with the residue of past killings, I suddenly wondered... were they even human anymore?

As I braced myself to fight back, I heard a chorus of frantic screams, their voices dripping with a deranged hunger.

"You look delicious, all that compacted muscle—YUMMM, DINNER'S LOOKING GOOD TONIGHT!" one man shouted, his enthusiasm echoed by the others, their comments as grim as the last.

My eyes narrowed.

"You want me for dinner? I mean… I don't blame you," I said, my tone ice-cold as I shifted into a taquedano stance. "But… I kinda like being alive."

Thinking in my head, and about the fact they thought they could eat me... I with anger instulted them. 

Fucking frivolous insects. I don't care if this is justice or not. I guess we're both just survivors...

Either way, I won't be the one who dies on this beatiful day.