Chapter 1 The Grave Robber's Code

726 Words
he Grave Robber's Code Seven years. That’s how long the world tried to bury me. The day the prison gates hissed open, the sky was a bruised purple, heavy with the promise of a storm. The wind didn't just blow; it slapped me across the face with the metallic taste of rust and the stinging chemical burn of disinfectant. It was the smell of a life I was trying to leave behind, but it clung to me like tar. I stood on the cracked pavement, clutching the prepaid burner phone the guards had tossed at me. My legs felt like water. I’d spent so long walking on the rigid, predictable concrete of a cell that the chaotic freedom of the real world felt like standing on the deck of a ship in a hurricane. I had forgotten how to balance. Then, the phone buzzed. It didn’t ring; it vibrated against my palm like a trapped hornet, angry and desperate. The screen lit up. Twelve missed calls. I knew these ghosts. I didn't need to check the caller ID. It was the kings of the gray market, the warlords of the underground. The men who dealt in history’s leftovers. "Where are you, kid?" "Come back. Name your price." "Eighty grand a month. Cash." "A hundred. I’ll throw in a car and a penthouse." They were throwing lifelines. Or maybe they were just baiting a hook. To them, I wasn't a man; I was an asset. A tool that had finally sharpened itself in the darkness. I stood by the curb, letting the wind bite my face until it stung. I listened to their offers, grunting into the receiver like a mute, until I finally pressed the red button. End Call. Silence rushed back in, louder than the traffic. It wasn’t that the money was too little. It was that I was hollowed out. When you’re young and stupid, you think talent is a gift. You think it’s fate. You think it’s the bowl of rice you were born to eat. But after you’ve stared death in the face until it blinked, you realize the truth. It was never a bowl of rice. It was a blade. And if you spend your life licking the edge of a blade, no amount of gold can fill the hollow space it carves out of your chest. I didn’t go back to Beicheng. I didn’t return to the rot of Jinping Dock. I went south. I found a town by the sea, rented a shoebox of a storefront, and opened a sundries shop. Cigarettes. Water. Instant noodles. On the side, I bought old junk when it crossed my path—rusty coins, cracked porcelain, the debris of forgotten lives. When the shop was empty, I’d sit by the shore. I watched the tide chew at the sand. I watched the fishing boats flicker to life in the distance, one by one, like stars falling into a black ocean. People thought I’d buried those years six feet deep. They thought I was hiding. But the older you get, the harder it is to keep the ghosts down. Especially at night, when the wind turns the sea into a sheet of black ink. That’s when the past starts to bleed through. Every fortune I made. Every year I served. Every scrap of glory, every fall from grace. It all came down to two words. Old Goods. Earth Pits. Outsiders have a different word for it, of course. A dirtier word. Grave Robbing. I never had the magic eyes you read about in those kung fu novels. I couldn’t see ghosts or read fate in a tea leaf. I was just unlucky. And too lucky. At the worst possible time. I was poor, angry, and too stupid to bow my head. So life kicked me onto that road before I even knew how to walk. Later, people always asked: How did you start? To answer that, I have to take you back to Hanhe. Hanhe was a speck of dust near the border. In winter, the wind didn't just blow; it flayed the skin off your face. Icicles hung from the eaves like jagged teeth. At dawn, if you spat on the ground, it hit the dirt as a frozen white stone. That was my world. And I was going to burn it down.
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