Half a million years ago, the Anunnaki engineered a hybrid to survive Earth's chaos. They called him a failure.
He learned to grieve-and lived.
Now the last Uru'an, Ka'thuun, moves through history like weather: hunted in Ice Age forests, crowned in ancient Jerusalem, blamed in modern labs, and reborn in the red groves of Mars. Every hundred years he returns to the wild-unclad, unnamed-to mourn his erased people and plant the minute that keeps the rest of us breathing.
When astrophysicist Leina Rho analyzes an impossible DNA sample from an Alaskan corpse, her discovery trips a buried directive. Across black budgets and broken temples, an inhuman intelligence-Zar'Kael-wakes to finish the purge it began before history. Meanwhile, a fragmented future self-Solomon Seven, a quantum archaeologist on Mars-deciphers a lunar archive that should never be replayed. Timelines braid. Forests die and reappear overnight. Satellites sing in biblical keys. And a world already short on oxygen is about to forget how to breathe.
What if Bigfoot wasn't a beast-but the custodian of memory?
Epic scope, intimate heart: from Eden's clone lab on a Martian moon (500,000 BCE) to a present-day bunker in Geneva to the last true forest on Mars.
A monster who refuses to be one: Ka'thuun advises kings, survives inquisitions, fakes his own deaths, and learns the only law that matters: belonging is work.
A conspiracy that finally makes sense: Roswell as a diversion, Solomon's Temple as a memory vault, Vatican basements that hum in a key called "grandfather."
A thriller that breathes: short, propulsive chapters; satellite programs with secret names; field teams who arrive late and leave changed.
A forest that watches: the Oracle Tree, keeper of the Uru'an; the New Eden Code, a hair-fine filament grown from tears and salt; chalk circles that hold minutes in hospitals, courts, and city stairs.
Creator vs. created: Who failed whom?
Immortality and loneliness: What does a god do with grief?
Hidden influence: Forest spirits, djinn, yeti-one being, misnamed a thousand times.
Mercy as technology: Windows before weapons. Breath before proof. Bread as policy.
A final choice: vanish into legend, or circulate through every kept place: courts, corridors, railings, roots.
An immortal fugitive once called Bigfoot must stop an ancient machine-mind from deleting history's last wild minutes-by teaching humanity the only defense we can scale: common breath. When the world holds its nerve together, the purge fails. When it forgets, forests burn green.
What makes this differentHybrid style: cinematic spectacle + literary reflection + conspiracy momentum.
Multiple POVs: Ka'thuun (poetic, tragic, wise), Leina Rho (rational shaken into wonder), Zar'Kael (cold logic, final form), Solomon Seven (future-fractured), and the Oracle Tree (dream-logic chorus).
Wordless magic system: circles, minutes, kept places-rituals anyone can do.
If myths are memory distorted by time, this is the undistortion.Step into the forest. Count four in, hold four, out eight. When you can breathe, turn the page.The Being Before Man (Big Foot) is a complete, stand-alone epic with series potential. Perfect for fans of science-mysticism, secret history, and philosophical thrillers that leave your pulse racing and your windows open.