The sky was watching.
Kael felt it.
A pressure that didn’t belong to any realm he knew. Heavy, ancient, incomprehensible. Not just divine, but sothing beyond even that. Unseen gazes clung to the world like a second skin, pressing down on creation itself.
The Trial was over.
The gods should have retreated.
But they hadn't.
Because sothing had changed.
Because he had changed it.
The Throne of the Forsaken had never been ant to be claid—only survived. A relic of a forgotten war before the gods rose to power. A throne that even the Primordials, those who sang reality into being, had left untouched.
And yet… Kael had sat upon it.
The world hadn’t ended.
But sothing far worse had begun.
Vaelios stood in silence, the light of the divine dull against the darkened chamber where Kael now reigned. The silver-eyed Archon, usually a monunt of composure, looked... unmoored.
Kael's gaze swept over him.
"You seem unsettled," he said calmly.
Vaelios inhaled, his breath tight, as if even the act of breathing in Kael’s presence had beco difficult. “This… was not supposed to happen.”
Kael’s lips twitched into a smile. “And yet, here we are.”
The Archon’s jaw clenched. Shadows curled at his feet—an anomaly. His kind were creatures of light and law, not shadow and fear. But the divine itself was fracturing under the weight of the impossible.
“Do you even understand what you've done?” Vaelios asked, voice controlled but strained, the undertone trembled—less like anger, more like fear.
Kael stepped down from the dais of the throne, footsteps echoing like judgnt. “Why don’t you enlighten ?”
“The Throne of the Forsaken,” Vaelios said slowly, deliberately, “was not built to be ruled. It was a containnt, Kael. A prison. A scar on existence left by sothing that once tried to unmake the gods. Even we… we do not speak of it.”
Kael’s tone remained amused, but his eyes glinted like blades. “And now it belongs to .”
“It should not exist.”
“But it does. Just like .”
Vaelios took a step forward. The golden glow behind his pupils flickered—uncertainty eating into the divine foundation.
“You are wielding a throne not ant to empower,” he said. “It warps the soul. Breaks reality to its will. No one survives it for long, Kael. Not even you.”
Kael’s voice dropped to a near whisper. “Perhaps that’s true... for soone lesser.”
A silence fell between them—deep, suffocating, cosmic.
And then Kael laughed.
Not loudly. Not mockingly.
But cold and real and certain.
“Then let them fear .”
For the first ti, Vaelios faltered. He saw it clearly now—not just ambition. Not just madness. A divergence.
Kael had beco sothing else.
Not a god.
Not a demon.
Not mortal.
A variable the cosmos had never accounted for.
“You’ve ensured,” Vaelios said quietly, “that the heavens will never leave you alone.”
Kael looked at him, unblinking. “Let them try.”
Far away, in the deepest circle of the Abyss, darkness pulsed in ti with Kael’s breath.
The Queen of the Abyss sat upon her throne of obsidian and bone, her taloned fingers twitching in fascination. Veils of shattered starlight hung around her, part garnt, part shadow.
Around her, high-ranking demons knelt, heads bowed, not daring to look upon her as she watched.
Not Kael.
But what he had beco.
A smile, slow and predatory, spread across her lips.
“He took it…”
The words were whispered like prophecy.
Her claws drew symbols in the air—sigils forbidden even in the Abyss. Dark energy humd, reacting not to her command, but to Kael’s will, rippling through the layers of unreality.
“My beloved has claid the throne that should not exist.”
One of the demon lords risked a glance upward—and imdiately burst into flas, consud by the Queen’s amusent alone.
She didn’t notice.
She was enraptured.
“Even the gods didn’t see this coming,” she murmured. “Not even the sleeping ones… the Primordials. But now… they will stir.”
She leaned back into her throne, the black crown on her brow humming with unstable delight.
“The balance is broken.”
And then, softly, to no one and to everything—
“And now, they will learn that he is beyond them all.”
Back in the Imperial Palace, dusk bled across the sky in unnatural shades—colors that didn’t belong to this realm.
Kael walked alone through the marbled halls, his presence sending servants scurrying like shadows.
He no longer needed guards.
He was the storm.
Waiting by an archway, cloaked in robes marked with ancient glyphs, was Mircea.
The sorceress did not smile.
She watched him, eyes narrowed, lips pursed like she was trying not to say sothing dangerous.
"You felt it," she finally said.
Kael didn’t pause. “Of course.”
She fell into step beside him, her heels clicking softly. “They’re watching.”
“Let them.”
“I don’t an the gods.”
“I know.”
Her breath caught. “Then you know what this ans.”
Kael looked ahead, toward the throne room, now his by conquest and declaration—and by sothing greater.
“The Primordials,” he said.
Mircea went silent.
She had studied them her entire life—fragnts in broken tos, whispers in the dark, warnings in the mouths of mad seers.
“No one’s even sure if they’re real,” she muttered.
Kael’s eyes glead. “They are.”
“And if what you did woke them up…” She shook her head. “Kael, they don’t rule. They don’t care. They unmake.”
Kael finally turned to her, gaze unreadable.
“I know.”
She blinked. “Then why—”
“Because this world deserves better than the chains of fearful gods. And if I must conquer what they feared… to remake this reality correctly…”
He leaned in, his voice velvet and steel.
“Then I will.”
Mircea stared at him, both terrified and in awe.
“You really are insane.”
Kael smirked, the edge of divinity curving around his mouth like a blade.
“I prefer ambitious.”
Above the stars, beyond mortal skies, sothing vast turned its eye.
It had no form. No voice. Only will.
It had watched universes die.
And now, it turned toward Kael.
Not to destroy him.
But to see what ca next.
To be continued…
Reviews
All reviews (0)