Rudolf died in a way completely unworthy of remembrance.
There was no truck.
No heroic sacrifice.
No dramatic final words.
He died from exhaustion.
Technically speaking, his body gave up before his ego did.
The clock read 2:47 a.m. His laptop screen was still on, illuminating a half-written document. The file name mocked him quietly:
"Final_Draft_ForRealThisTime_v7"
Rudolf stared at the screen with half-open eyes, fingers hovering above the keyboard. He had been in the middle of a sentence—one he was no longer sure had any meaning.
"And when the world stood on the brink of destruction—"
He never finished it.
His head dropped onto the desk without ceremony. No dramatic collapse. No meaningful last breath.
That was how Rudolf's life ended.
Or at least, how it should have.
Consciousness returned in a way that felt… wrong.
There was no light.
No voice.
No pain.
The first thing Rudolf noticed was silence.
Not peaceful silence—
but the kind that felt newly cleaned, unused, untouched.
"If this is death," he thought, "it's aggressively minimalist."
He tried to breathe.
He could.
That alone was strange.
Rudolf opened his eyes.
A vast sky stretched above him—deep violet layered with slow-moving clouds spiraling in patterns too symmetrical to be natural. He lay on grass far too green to be believable.
Rudolf frowned.
"…Ah."
That was his entire reaction.
He sat up slowly. His body felt light. Too light. No aches. No fatigue. No lingering weight of his old life.
He was wearing a long black coat, its fabric thick and warm. An unfamiliar symbol was engraved on his chest—overlapping circles and unreadable lines that somehow felt… familiar.
The symbol radiated warmth.
Rudolf looked down at himself.
"Alright," he muttered. "Let's assess the situation."
He stood.
In the distance, a city rose proudly—towering walls, crystalline spires, glowing runes embedded into its architecture. Roads laid out with absurd precision. A river curved neatly along its western edge.
Rudolf narrowed his eyes.
"…Why do I know the layout of that city?"
Not vague familiarity.
Not déjà vu.
He knew where the main gate was.
Which district housed the nobility.
Where the first major conflict would occur.
A chill ran down his spine.
Not fear.
Annoyance.
"Don't tell me…" He sighed. "This world."
He laughed quietly—a short, humorless sound.
"That's just great."
He took one step forward.
The ground beneath his foot cracked.
Not like an earthquake. No chaotic tremor. The fissure spread cleanly, precisely, stretching far ahead before abruptly stopping—as if reality itself had realized it had gone too far.
Rudolf froze.
He stared at the neatly split earth.
"…Oh."
He raised his hand.
No glowing aura.
No chant.
No surge of power.
He merely willed it.
The world responded.
Rudolf exhaled slowly.
"Fantastic," he muttered. "I got the troublesome kind of power."
He tested again, imagining a small stone lifting.
It floated.
Silently.
Effortlessly.
He dropped it.
"No system," he said aloud. "No stats. No tutorial. Not even a god pretending to be wise."
He looked up at the sky.
"At least say hello. This is a reincarnation, right?"
The sky did not answer.
But the clouds shifted—just slightly faster than before.
Rudolf squinted.
"…You heard that, didn't you?"
No reply.
He smiled faintly.
"Good. Then we have an understanding."
He began walking toward the city. Each step felt permitted, as if reality itself was making room for him.
Fragments of memory surfaced.
The kingdom's name.
Its political structure.
Its pointless conflicts.
"I remember this," he murmured. "I wrote this."
His pace slowed.
"No," he corrected himself. "I made this."
The word carried weight.
He stopped and closed his eyes.
If this was truly a world he created—
if its suffering and destruction were already embedded into its future—
Then this world had been broken from the start.
Rudolf opened his eyes.
His voice was calm. Detached.
At the city gate, two guards stood watch in silver armor.
They noticed him.
One stepped forward. "Hey! Where are you from?"
Rudolf stopped a few steps away.
He looked at the guard.
And suddenly, he knew.
If he wished, he could erase them.
If he wished, the city could fall.
If he wished, the world could end right now.
The knowledge brought no excitement.
Only certainty.
"If I answer honestly," Rudolf said casually, "would you believe me?"
The guard frowned. "What are you talking about?"
Rudolf thought for a moment.
Then smiled faintly.
"Never mind. I'm tired of explaining."
He walked past them.
Strangely enough, they didn't stop him.
Not out of fear.
But because the thought of stopping him never occurred to them.
As Rudolf passed through the gate, he felt it.
This world wasn't just obeying him.
It was accommodating him.
He looked up at the city's sky.
"Listen," he said quietly. "I don't know who's running you now."
The air trembled—barely.
"But I'm not a hero. I'm not a savior. And I'm definitely not a good person."
He smiled—the smile of an adult who understood consequences far too well.
"If your story tries to force me into a role…"
Rudolf stepped deeper into the city.
"…I'll destroy the story."
A distant bell rang.
And somehow—
The world felt afraid.
