The world was tearing itself apart.
The sky split open, divine light clashing against abyssal darkness. Celestial warriors, draped in sanctified radiance, descended upon the battlefield, their weapons of judgnt searing through the fabric of night. Opposing them, abyssal horrors surged from rifts in reality—creatures of black fire and primal madness, shrieking as they clawed toward Heaven’s children.
And at the heart of it all, Kael stood motionless.
His golden eyes, gleaming like molten suns, watched the carnage unfold as if it were nothing more than a carefully arranged board of pieces.
Every sword that clashed, every spell that burned through the heavens—they were not acts of desperation. They were not fate.
They were moves.
And this was his ga.
High above the battlefield, seated upon a throne that pulsed with tendrils of living darkness, the Queen of the Abyss did not command her forces. She unleashed them. Her presence was a wound in the fabric of existence—reality bent and trembled under the weight of her wrath.
Her eyes, twin pools of endless crimson, locked onto the divine legions below.
The gods had dared to challenge her.
They had dared to co for him.
Now they would learn what it ant to summon the attention of the Abyss.
With a flick of her slender fingers, reality scread. The very air groaned and ruptured.
A celestial captain—one of the Archons’ elite—soared toward her, spear crackling with divine fury. He was a paragon of light, a beacon of the gods’ will.
He never reached her.
The mont he crossed into her shadow, the air around him folded inwards.
There was no scream. No explosion. No body.
He simply ceased to exist.
The battlefield stilled for a fraction of a second. A breath held.
The celestial forces hesitated.
The Queen smiled. A slow, wicked curve of her lips, like a predator savoring a trapped animal.
They had forgotten what she was.
Not rely a demon. Not a ruler of hellspawn.
She was older than their pantheon, a relic of the void that existed before their first light dared flicker in the dark.
And now, she had nothing else on her mind but vengeance.
Above the fray, Archon Valerius hovered, wreathed in divine fire. His eyes narrowed beneath his crown of celestial fla.
This was no longer a war of faith.
He had expected to strike down evil. To smite corruption with holy might.
Instead, he had walked into sothing far worse.
A force not bound by divine law. A will not chained by morality or chaos.
This Queen… she was not part of the divine order. She was its anathema.
But worse still—far, far worse—was the one standing at the eye of the storm.
Kael Valerius.
Immovable. Untouched.
He stood as if the very battlefield bent to avoid him.
For the first ti in Valerius’s eternal life, he felt it—uncertainty. Not fear, no. But the first sliver of doubt.
This was not a war he could win through righteousness.
And Kael... Kael was not rely a threat.
He was a variable beyond calculation.
He was waiting.
Waiting for sothing.
Valerius clenched his jaw, divine fla bristling as he sought the pattern, the sche.
Then—
A voice cut through the battlefield.
Cold. Commanding. Final.
"Enough."
Ti shuddered.
The Abyssal forces froze mid-charge, as if bound by an unseen will.
The divine warriors recoiled. Their light flickered, their movents halted—not from fear, but confusion. Awe.
Even the Queen of the Abyss tilted her head, her crimson gaze gleaming with interest.
Her son had spoken.
And the world had listened.
Kael stepped forward, hands clasped behind his back, his coat swaying gently in the wind like a monarch strolling through his garden.
"Did you think this was your war?" he asked softly.
The words carried.
They didn't echo—they pressed into existence, undeniable.
"Did you think you controlled the pieces on this board?"
He didn’t raise his voice.
He didn’t need to.
Valerius felt the weight of those words strike deeper than any spear. Not because they were laced with threat—but because they were true.
Kael’s eyes moved to his mother.
"And you," he murmured, "I am touched by your devotion, Mother. But you are playing exactly into their hands."
A pause.
Sothing shifted in the Queen’s expression. The wrath didn’t fade, but her gaze grew calculating.
She said nothing, but the battlefield paused, as if her will had montarily loosened its grip.
Kael’s smile was faint. Unreadable. Dangerous.
"This was never about . It never was," he said, golden eyes sweeping over the divine host. "This is about them. About the Heavens fearing what they do not understand."
His voice dropped to a near-whisper, but the words slithered into every ear like a serpent of truth.
"And you…" he said, now facing the divine forces, "…are giving them exactly what they need."
The realization blood.
A war born of manipulation.
A conflict that benefited no one… but soone.
A trap.
A carefully laid gambit.
And they had all walked into it.
Kael raised his hand.
Not in aggression. Not in fury.
In authority.
And the impossible happened.
The Abyssal legions, snarling, howling, burning with unholy rage… fell to one knee.
Every. Single. One.
A sea of monsters kneeling in perfect silence.
The divine host, unsure, held their ground—but their formation faltered. Their unity wavered.
Kael's voice rang out again, soft and surgical.
"The gods want chaos. They want justification. They want you to give them a reason to act. To intervene."
He turned to Valerius, gaze steady.
"But I will not give it to them."
Valerius felt himself breathe for the first ti in what seed like centuries.
This… this was sothing else.
Kael Valerius had not won a battle.
He had rewritten the terms of the war.
He was no longer a piece.
He was the dealer.
And all others—Abyssal or divine—were bound by his ga.
From her throne, the Queen of the Abyss leaned back, a soft chuckle escaping her lips.
She did not protest. She did not rage.
She watched her son—her masterpiece—with sothing far more dangerous than pride.
Indulgence.
“My son,” she whispered, her voice echoing through realities. “You truly are my greatest creation.”
Kael did not respond.
He simply stared ahead, his golden eyes calm.
He had won this battle.
But the war?
The war was only just beginning.
And this ti—
He would decide how it ended.
To be continued...
Reviews
All reviews (0)