The stench of stale whiskey and piss burned in his nostrils as Ryan jolted awake in a nest of rotting garbage. A rat gnawed at the frayed laces of his busted sneakers. He threw up a hand against the knife-edge sunlight stabbing through the alley, only to freeze at the sight of his own arm—mottled with bruises he didn't remember earning.
An empty bottle of cheap rye whiskey clattered to the pavement when he tried to stand.
"Fuck..." His voice scraped like rusted metal. Ryan staggered toward a oily puddle, catching his reflection in the rainbow-slicked water:
—Strawberry-blond curls crusted with puke
—Patchy stubble over caramel skin just dark enough to get followed in bodegas, just light enough to hear "white boy" on the courts
The body looked like a mix—half Black, half white.
Memories detonated behind his eyes:
This body was also named Ryan Carter.
Twenty-two years old. Homeless. Orphaned and raised in the slums of Iron City.
Died here last night from alcohol poisoning.
And now—somehow—his soul was sitting in the driver's seat.
A holographic screen bloomed in his vision:
[WESTBROOK TEMPLATE SUCCESSFULLY LOADED]
[CURRENT SYNC RATE: 61%]
[LIMITING FACTORS: UNDERWEIGHT (BMI 16.3); MALNUTRITION; BLOOD ALCOHOL CONTENT: 0.25%]
"Did I actually fucking transmigrate?" Ryan clutched his pounding head as deeper memories erupted:
This place wasn't Earth—at least, not the one he knew.
They called this world Alpha Earth. And this stretch of land? Also called USA.
Only here, it stood for something else entirely:
The United States of Atlantis.
Ryan stumbled out of the alley like a ghost in daylight, the sun stabbing into his eyes as flashes of memory twisted through his skull. New world. New body. Same problems. His stomach churned with hunger and leftover whiskey. He wandered without aim, feet dragging him forward through the heat.
Somehow, he ended up at a street basketball court. The street court shimmered in the afternoon heat like a mirage. A group of shirtless Black dudes were running half-court, their muscles glistening under the sun like oiled machines. Dribbles echoed through the open air—a symphony of crossovers and trash talk.
Ryan stood at the edge, frozen. The world around him blurred—Westbrook's final assist, the blinding headlights...
Then—
"Yo! Cracka!"
A basketball smacked him dead in the face.
His head snapped back, and blood spilled from his nose like a broken faucet.
"Throw it back, trash," laughed a dude with cornrows, and the whole group burst into laughter.
"Ain't no room for bums on this court, Casper!"
Ryan blinked, wiped his nose. The ball rolled to a stop at his feet. He stared at it.
Something stirred.
Not just a memory—something physical. Muscle memory. Heat. A rhythm buried deep in his bones.
He picked up the ball. Leather met palm, and suddenly his fingers remembered—spreading to perfect width, locking in with the ease of a perfect one-handed grip.
Then he looked up, blood still dripping, and said in a voice like a rusted blade:
"Apologize."
That got another round of howls.
"Aw shit, whiteboy got demands!" Cornrows smirked. "Beat us 1v1, we'll lick that blood off your nose."
Ryan bounced the ball once.
BANG.
Right hand crossover, hard as hell.
BANG.
Behind-the-back, dust exploding from the cracked pavement.
BANG.
Killer hesitations, footwork sharp enough to cut glass.
The laughter died mid-breath.
Cornrows' smile died.
"Yo, who the fuck is this guy..."
Ryan dribbled slowly toward the free throw line, dead calm.
"Who's first?"
The first challenger was a lanky guy with a teardrop tattoo. Ryan realized he was taller than the guy by an inch—this mixed-race body had good height and wingspan, though it had been wasted by hunger, leaving him gaunt and brittle.
"Eleven. Make it, take it. You start." Tear-Tattoo spat.
Westbrook's DNA ignited.
First possession.
Ryan dropped into a triple-threat stance and exploded off one foot.
The defender froze—just froze—paralyzed by the speed. That wasn't just a quick step.
That was Westbrook's first step.
By the time Teardrop recovered, Ryan was already in mid-air. No flair. No flash. Just pure, uncut violence—one-foot plant, right-hand scoop.
The ball spun once—twice—then kissed the net.
1–0.
Second possession.
Ryan had scored—he could've kept the ball.
Instead, he bounced it to Teardrop.
"Your turn," he said, calm as ice.
Teardrop had skills—nice in-and-out dribble into a spin. Clean separation.
Ryan bit. Got beat.
But his instincts—Westbrook's instincts—pushed him back just one step farther.
That one step was enough.
As Teardrop rose for the layup, Ryan launched. Thirty-one inches of vertical (should be 36, but malnourishment's a bitch) met ball at apex—
SMACK!
A monster block sent the ball flying beyond the three-point line.
Gasps echoed from the sideline—
"That hang time!"
"Shit, is this guy a pro?!"
"Again."
Ryan picked up the ball, nosebleed dripping onto the holes in his torn T-shirt.