Font Size
15px

________________________________________________________________________________

- London, United Kingdom -

- December 20, 1939 — Night -

The fog rolled heavy over London, thick enough to blur the street lamps into pale ghosts. The war hadn’t reached them yet, but the fear of it already had. Posters told people to "Be Prepared," sirens wailed at odd hours for practice drills, and queues for rations wound longer every week.

In pubs, in hos, in Parliant itself, talk of Samrat Aryan was still there—but it no longer shocked the British the way it stunned the rest of the world. His na had been on their tongues for years, ever since the day Bharat slipped from their grip.

To the people, the latest reports from New York Harbor felt less like news and more like a grim confirmation. Aryan was no longer a rumor, no longer so exotic rebel from the East. He was a force. A mutant, they said now. That word—mutant—gave them a fra, sothing that explained away the impossible. It wasn’t Britain’s weakness that lost them India, it was the unnatural strength of one man.

That story soothed them. It allowed them to hold their heads high while the Empire tightened its fists on Africa, the Caribbean, and anywhere else it still could. The Crown Jewel was gone, but the Crown itself still glittered, and the people wanted to believe it hadn’t dulled.

The election only deepened that mood. Chamberlain was out, Churchill was in. His speeches rang on the wireless every other night: booming promises that Britain was still the torch of civilization, that Germany would be crushed, that the Empire would rise again. The people cheered in their kitchens and workhouses, not just because they believed him, but because they needed to.

Yet, beneath the surface, another voice was beginning to spread.

It started small—anonymous leaflets slipped under doors, whispers in market lines. The Royal Family, so said, was not truly British at all. German blood ran through their veins. And wasn’t it Germans now threatening to bomb their hos? Weren’t they already the enemy?

Then ca the masks.

On a damp evening near Piccadilly, a group of n and won in plain clothes set up crates on the corner. They smiled warmly, handing out gas masks to anyone who ca near. Mothers clutched their children closer, grateful but cautious. The officials hadn’t arranged this—everyone knew how slow the governnt was with supplies. So who were these strangers giving things away for free?

One woman pressed a mask into a boy’s hands, kneeling to et his eyes.

"Protect yourself, little one," she said softly, almost like a blessing. "From the poison in the air—and the poison in your rulers."

So muttered thanks. So frowned. But most just took the masks. Fear made people practical.

And then, slowly, a pattern erged. The masks weren’t blank. Inside each was a folded slip of paper. On it, a symbol: a crown wreathed in thorns, and beneath it, a na whispered more and more boldly with each passing week.

Morgan Le Fey.

She was painted as a descendant of Arthur himself, the rightful heir to Britain’s legacy. Where Churchill spoke of war, she spoke of protection. Where the Royals clung to German ties, she claid pure British blood, ancient and unbroken.

Her people moved quietly, not only on the streets but in the offices. Clerks in the War Ministry began misfiling docunts. A few policen looked the other way when certain crates were unloaded at night. A whisper here, a favor there—the kind of small things that seed nothing in isolation, but together they made gaps. And through those gaps, Morgan’s influence slid in like water.

In Whitehall, Churchill thundered about Hitler. In the slums, families fitted their children with Morgan’s masks. And in between, n in fine suits—respected mbers of Parliant, veterans, civil servants—t in secret rooms with figures who did not cast normal shadows.

The Kingsn, once sworn defenders of crown and country, now bent their knee to a queen of their own choosing. And alongside them, in the quiet places of Britain—graveyards, crypts, ruined abbeys—things stirred that had not moved in centuries. Undead knights in rusted mail, eyes glowing faintly, stood watch over shipnts of supplies ant for the people.

To most Londoners, it was just kindness from strangers. Free masks in a ti of fear.

But to those who looked closer, the fog that hung over the city seed heavier than ever—less like weather, more like a curtain, hiding sothing far older and far darker waiting to step back into the world.

anwhile....

- The Starlight Citadel (The Hub of Multiversal governance), Otherworld -

The great hall of the Hub was never quiet. Its walls were woven from light itself, shifting like the night sky, stars flowing in slow rivers across the ceiling. Yet tonight, all seed still, as though the Citadel itself held its breath.

On a dais at the center, rlin sat cross-legged, his robes pooled around him like fallen clouds. His beard shimred faintly with the silver glow of his magic. For hours he had not stirred, his eyes closed, body so calm it was hard to tell if he was even breathing.

Then, without warning, his chest hitched. His eyes snapped open—blue orbs clouded with strain. His hands trembled before he steadied them against his knees. A low gasp escaped him, the kind of sound that ca only from deep within, where pain and revelation touched.

Roma, rlin’s daughter and the Ruler of the Citadel, seated a short distance away, imdiately leaned forward. Her crown of starlight flickered with unease as she studied her father.

"Father," she asked softly, "what happened?"

rlin’s gaze lingered on the endless cosmos painted across the chamber’s walls. He took a long mont before answering, drawing breath as if each word cost him.

"I... rembered." His voice was hoarse. "mories...a lot of them, and fragnted..."

Roma’s brows furrowed. She had seen her father shaken before, but rarely like this. "Was it one of the hidden realms?"

"No." He shook his head slowly. "Worse. The anomalous universe. The rogue one."

The weight of those words sank like lead. Even for her—an Omniversal Guardian—that universe was more myth than fact, a place scholars spoke of only in cautious whispers.

rlin pressed on. "A long ti ago, two vast powers clashed there. Their collision ripped reality apart, tore the fabric until it was no longer tethered to the multiverse. Later... soone, sothing, repaired it. But even then, no one could touch it. No path, no spell, no anchor could bind it to the greater whole. Not even ."

Roma’s voice carried both curiosity and worry. "Yet you went."

"I sent not myself," rlin admitted, "but an avatar—a shard of . Enough to study, to observe. To perhaps find... a way. A thread to stitch it back." His eyes darkened. "But even there, I was not alone."

Roma tilted her head, her tone sharpened. "Who?"

"Morgan." The na left his lips like a stone dropped into water. "Not the one you know here. Not one I’ve battled before. This was her—yet more. A Morgan who had seized the Darkhold fully, without restraint, without limit. She had drunk its pages dry, and worse—she had absorbed the knowledge and essence of her other selves. Every alternate Morgan, drawn into her like rivers feeding an ocean."

Roma’s breath caught, the faint shimr of her crown dimming. "All of them... united in one vessel?"

"Yes." His hands clenched. "And it was that Morgan who struck . My avatar—my creation—was unmade in an instant. Not rely destroyed, but erased. She knew I was there, knew I was watching, and she ended it as though swatting away a fly."

The silence after those words was heavy. Even the starlit walls of the castle seed to shift uneasily.

Roma studied him carefully. "You said you went to observe... to maintain balance. To connect that universe back to the whole. Now—" She hesitated, then forced the question. "Now you’ve found an obstruction."

rlin’s lips pressed into a thin line. His eyes, though weary, glimred with sothing deeper: recognition of a storm long in the making.

"Yes. Morgan is no longer a threat bound to a single world. She has carved herself into the heart of that rogue universe, and from there, she may yet find her way outward. If she does... if she crosses the veil into the greater multiverse..."

He didn’t finish. He didn’t need to.

Roma’s voice was quiet, but steady. "Eventually, she will co back here...won’t she?

rlin’s gaze t hers, heavy with sorrow. "Yes, she will....to lay her claim over this dinsion. A place from where she could easily access the nexus of all realities."

________________________________________________________________________________

Thanks for reading 🙏 🙏.

If you are liking this story so far please support this novel through the power stones and let know your thoughts in the comnts and please review the book with ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ if you deem it worthwhile.

You are reading Genesis Maker: The Indian Marvel (Rewrite) Chapter 158: Ch.155: Masks in the Fog on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.