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KARMA SUTRAS OF SAGE: I AM AN ANT WHO CULTIVATES FOR WORLD DOMINATION

Durlav_Rayamajhi
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Synopsis
In the deepest dark, where empires are built grain by grain, one ant dares to bite the hand of destiny. Born a nameless worker in the bowels of a forgotten hive, Arik is nothing—a cog in the colony’s machine, destined to live, labor, and die without thought. But when a flicker of awareness ignites in his mind, Arik realizes the terrible truth: he is the first of his kind to think. To question. To rage. The Karma Sutras, an ancient system woven into the fabric of existence, awakens within him. Its mandates are cruel and clear: Evolve by completing trials (Feed the queen’s brood. Fight the centipede hordes. Steal nectar from rival swarms). Ascend by defying the cosmic hierarchy (A worker ant cannot kill a soldier. A soldier cannot challenge the queen. A queen cannot defy the heavens). Dominate by rewriting karma itself (Why serve a colony when you can own it? Why crawl when you can devour the sky?). Cultivate and elevate your kind to the world Hierarchy that is dominated by ancient sages, beasts, and creatures of all kinds. But the world above and below is merciless. Predators lurk in every tunnel. The hive’s queen hoards secrets of godhood. Armed with venomous mandibles reforged by karma, a carapace etched with glowing sutras, and a will sharper than any blade, Arik will chew through armies, empires, and divine edicts. Question remain: * Can a creature so small, deemed the frailest thread in life’s tapestry, be crushed beneath indifferent heels—its life a lesson in dismissal? Yet in its scorned fragility lies the cruelest truth: what the universe overlooks as weakness may still carry within it the patience to outlast empires, the quiet might to rise above all of the universe?" * How small must a creature be before the universe notices it’s a threat?
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Birth in the Dark

Deep beneath the earth, in a labyrinth of tunnels carved by countless generations, a single egg trembled.

It was one among thousands, nestled tightly within the brood chamber of the colony, warmed by the constant attention of nurse ants. The chamber was humid, the air thick with the scent of pheromones—chemical signals that dictated every action, every duty, every life within the colony.

Then—a crack.

A minuscule split formed along the egg's surface, widening as something inside pushed against it. A tiny, pale limb emerged, then another, pressing outward until the shell gave way entirely.

The creature that tumbled out was soft, blind, and utterly helpless.

A worker ant.

But unlike the others, this one thought.

Sensation came first.

The newborn ant—no larger than a grain of sand—twitched as its exoskeleton began to harden. The world was in darkness, but not silence. All around, the colony thrived: the rustle of countless legs, the rhythmic vibrations of movement, the ever-present hum of pheromones in the air.

A nurse ant loomed over the hatchling, antennae twitching as it inspected the newcomer. Instinct should have taken over—the newborn should have recognized the scent of its caretaker, should have submitted to being cleaned, fed, and guided.

But instead…

What… is this?

The thought was formless, instinctive, but it was there. A flicker of awareness.

The nurse ant prodded it with its forelegs, mandibles working as it cleaned away the remnants of the egg. The newborn remained still, processing.

Movement. Touch. Scent.

The air was thick with information. Each breath carried traces of the colony's hierarchy—the queen's pheromones, the soldiers' aggression, the foragers' urgency. The newborn didn't understand, not yet, but it noticed.

The First Steps

Days passed in the brood chamber. The newborn's body darkened, its limbs strengthening. Around it, other eggs hatched, but their movements were… different. Predictable. Mechanical.

They did not pause as the newborn did. They did not wonder.

When a nurse ant brought food—a regurgitated droplet of liquid—the others lunged mindlessly. The newborn hesitated.

What is this?

It ate, but the act felt strange. Purposeful.

Soon, it was time to move. The brood chamber was only for the youngest. As its exoskeleton hardened, the newborn was carried—gently but firmly—to a new chamber, where older larvae squirmed, waiting to be fed.

Here, the newborn saw its first glimpse of the colony's labor. Workers scurried in and out, some carrying food, others tending to the larvae. A soldier stood guard at the entrance, mandibles twitching.

And then—

A tremor.

The entire chamber shook. Dirt sifted from the ceiling. The soldier's posture shifted instantly, antennae flicking outward.

Danger.

Somewhere, far above, something had disturbed the nest.

The newborn felt it—not just the vibration, but the change in the air. The pheromones shifted, sharpened. Alarm.

The workers moved faster, herding the larvae deeper into the tunnels. The newborn was pushed along, but its mind raced.

What was that?

It didn't know.

But it wanted to.

Awakening

That night—if such a word could be used in the endless dark—the newborn rested among its siblings. The colony had settled, and the threat had passed.

But something had changed.

The newborn knew it was different.

The others moved without thought. They ate, they worked, they slept—all dictated by scent, by instinct.

But the newborn…

It thought.

And as it curled in the dark, surrounded by the ceaseless rhythm of the colony, a single question burned in its mind:

What am I?

I am Arik?