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DEEP NINJA SHINGI

DEEP NINJA SHINGI

Last Updated: 2026-03-06 02:52:17
By: EAErGautam
In development
Language:  English12+
5.0
4 Rating
12
Chapters
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Total Words
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Synopsis

DEEP Ninja world


Chapter1

Chapter 1: The Awakening
(≈2 100 words)

The cold came first.
It licked the length of his spine like a steel blade left out in moonlight. He felt each vertebra wake against the grit beneath him, sand fused with flakes of rust that used to be a city. A single breath scraped his throat; the air tasted of old coins and distant smoke.

He opened his eyes to a sky the color of wet cement. No sun, only a white glare filtered through ash clouds. Something tall leaned over him—half a Buddha, its stone face sheared away so the right cheek became a hollow bloom of gravel. Wind rattled prayer flags bleached to the same gray as the heavens. The flags snapped, then sagged, as if too tired to preach.

His fingers twitched. Without permission they curled into a shape: thumb and middle finger touching, the other three upright. A mudra. The gesture felt older than the broken statue above him, older than the bones inside his skin. He didn’t know its name, yet the body remembered what the mind refused.

A pulse of pain throbbed behind his eyes—someone had driven a spike of forgetting through his skull. He rolled to his side, gravel grinding into his cheek, and vomited nothing but yellow bile. The spasm left him hollow, ears ringing. In that ringing he heard a woman whisper: Yumi. The name dissolved before he could grab it.

“Get up,” he told the stranger who must be himself. His voice cracked like damp wood. He pushed onto all fours, then to his feet. The world tilted; the Buddha tilted; everything was falling and standing still.

He wore a jacket stitched from matte-black scales, once waterproof, now sliced open along the ribs. A sheath hung at his hip—empty. The missing weight felt like a stolen organ. He patted the jacket’s inner pocket and found a cloth pouch the size of a bird’s heart. Inside: three brown seeds smooth as pearls, and a square of rice paper so thin he could see the grime on his fingertips through it. No writing. Just the paper, waiting.

A mechanical growl drifted on the wind. Engines, maybe two kilometers off, beyond the line of crushed concrete where apartment ribs jutted. The sound triggered something behind his breastbone—an iron lever thrown. Danger. Direction. Decision.

His legs moved before he could question them. Three silent steps took him behind the fractured Buddha. The stone still held winter in its pores; he pressed his back to it, slowed his breathing the way a child closes a book—gently, so the pages don’t crease. Count four on inhale, pause, count four on exhale. With each cycle the heartbeat softened, footsteps of a stranger walking away down a hallway.

The engines grew louder, then split—one veering left, one right, one idling where the road used to be. Voices rose, casual and cracked like old radios.

“Sweep north to the riverbed. Boss wants scrap before dusk.”
“Copy. If we find sleepers, we cuff or cut?”
“Cuff if pretty, cut if ugly. Simple math.”
Laughter, greasy and slipping.

He closed his eyes. The dark behind his lids felt safer, but it was also a screen where pictures flickered: a hand smeared with ink drawing symbols on parchment; the same hand snapping a man’s elbow

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