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Lumen: Anthro World

Loneone
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In a world where anthropomorphic beings live ordinary lives, Freddie Bearlyn blends in by standing slightly apart. He’s observant, quiet, and more comfortable watching patterns than becoming part of them. College is meant to be routine—classes, campus noise, late-night diners, familiar faces. Normal. Until the world begin to behave strangely. What starts as a vivid dream follows Freddie into waking life, where reflections linger too long and darkness takes on his own shape. A presence emerges—neither monster nor guardian—something that has always existed alongside him, waiting for recognition. As Freddie moves through daily life with new friends and fragile moments of comfort, the city after dark reveals something else entirely. Streets feel wrong. Silence presses closer. And the shadow grows more present—less an enemy than a mirror. Because in a world full of familiar forms, the most dangerous thing to face is the part of yourself that has been watching all along.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

Morning arrived the same way it always did, quietly and without a ceremony. Sunlight slipped through the window and stretched across the floor, warming the edges of the room before anything else had a chance to move. Outside, the world was already awake. Footsteps passed by, distant voices murmured, and the steady rhythm of life carried on as nothing unusual was waiting to happen.

A bear with an odd hue of yellow fur covering his entire body stirred awake, the sunlight bearing down his face. The light caught in his cyan eyes as they slowly opened, giving them a brief bright gleam before he squinted and turned his head away. He released a low breath, somewhere between a sigh and groan, as if waking itself was already tiring.

He lay there for a long moment, staring at the ceiling. Lean and slim for his kind, his frame filled the bed—and at a five-foot-seven he looked almost unremarkable at first glance. Many bears of his species were... different from him. Most were more taller, bulkier, more imposing—but not him. He had been born this way, with his two parents—or atleast one parent—passing along with his smaller frame. His expression carried a constant weariness, one that never quite left him—even after a full night's rest. It wasn't sadness exactly, nor anger, just the look of someone who has seen enough days blur together to stop expecting them to be different.

With a slow movement, he rubbed his eyes and sat up, shoulders slightly slouched, preparing himself for whatever the day had already decided to bring. Today, however, carried a different weight—his first day of college at a different state. He glanced at the clock, then at the neatly packed bag; he still had some time on his hands. Soon, he would have to leave, catch the train, and step into a world larger than the quiet apartment he had known all his life.

The journey will soon begin.