First, I want to echo what other folks have been saying. Putting every sentence on a new line is really not the way to go about things. It pulls a lot of the weight from your storytelling, makes what you've written tough to read, and is generally messy. Stick to standard, 5-8 sentence paragraphs that begin and end with new thoughts or break when they start to get too large and unwieldy.
You also have a number of simple mistakes that are worth reviewing. Every now and then you'll name a specific noun without writing the necessary 'the' before it which, while understandable, isn't a very god stylistic choice. You also have a few spelling errors and other, small sentence construction problems.
More pressing than all of this, though, is your overall story structure. It seems like there's a story you want to tell, but that it requires a fair amount of backstory that your worried readers won't be able to pick up later. The result is that you have a three-chapter prologue that moves very, very quickly through a bunch of scenes and events without letting any of them have any real weight. This makes your story feel rushed and isn't an especially strong opening. A good rule of thumb is that if, in the same chapter, you have a break that says, 'The next day' and then just a paragraph later another one that says, 'Several days later,' then you're moving too quickly or not pacing the chapter especially well.
I think your best option to fix this is start where you actually want to start: Chapter 1. Your story is about Ananke on the opposite side of the World Crack. Everything that that leads him there,everything that happens in 0.1 and 0.2 (not the prologue, which I think you could cut altogether) is just prelude. All of it can be summarized early on with some clever, well-paced introspection from Ananke and snippets inserted here and there throughout the rest of your story. An excellent example of how to do this, in line with the kind of story you're writing, is Christopher Buehlman's Between Two Fires, where one of the protagonists, the disgraced knight Thomas, has his fall from grace explained across numerous chapters in flashbacks and dreams, allowing Buehlman to get started with the real story from page one.
Finally, you have a few more issues with clarity in your scenes, especially when there are several characters. That's a problem for later down the road, though. I'd focus on the other issues first, because overall, I think you have a really interesting idea on your hands. It just needs a fair amount of polish.