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The old gods sent their champions. Kael answered with a new truth.

The heavens shuddered.

Blades of light rained down like burning cots, each strike cracking the sky and splitting the earth beneath. The Celestial Army had descended upon Arkenhall—not as saviors, but as executioners. Entire spires were turned to ash in their wake. Sanctified flas consud the outer walls. Mortals and shadows fought beneath a sky afla.

But where most would kneel beneath such divine fury—Kael stood alone.

His black cloak billowed in the stormwinds, untouched by the chaos. The ground beneath his boots fractured—not from pressure, but from the distortion of reality itself around him. Every breath he took bled unnatural energy into the air, warping it, defying the sacred laws the gods had written into the world.

From above, Archon Lythael descended—radiant and terrible.

Her six golden wings unfurled like a judgnt passed. Her silver armor shone with celestial inscriptions that shimred with ancient power, and in her grip was a sword forged from the light of fallen stars. The divine around her bowed their heads. Her re presence cald the storm for a mont.

She was the sword of Heaven.

But even as the air trembled from her approach, Kael did not look away.

His smirk cut through the light like shadow.

“You were always too late,” he murmured.

Lythael's eyes narrowed. “You do not understand what you’ve unleashed.”

Kael took a step forward. The ground scread.

“I understand perfectly,” he said. “You were ant to rule with grace. But you ruled through fear.”

She moved first.

In a blur that fractured the very wind, she launched toward him. Her blade, infused with divine wrath, cut through space—a single stroke that could unravel soul, mory, and aning in one.

Kael did not move.

One hand rose, and in a resounding flash—steel t steel.

The impact ruptured the clouds overhead, sending shockwaves rippling outward in concentric bursts. The sky scread as if in protest. Energy cascaded across the battlefield in waves that sent both mortal and immortal staggering.

And then—

The heavens scread.

The echo of their clash beca a roar, rolling through the city like a storm unchained. Arkenhall’s towers shivered. The banners of gods and n alike were torn from their perches. The earth quaked—not from magic, but from the sheer collision of belief and will.

Kael grinned.

“Is that all?”

Lythael roared—a sound forged from fury and holiness.

She unleashed a flurry of divine strikes, her body a blur of golden light. Her blade carved through the air faster than mortal eyes could follow. Every swing was a hymn of punishnt. Every blow carried the weight of a god’s sentence.

And yet—Kael was faster.

He flowed between her strikes like ink through water. Every movent was effortless, almost lazy in its precision. His blade parried hers not with strength, but with supre confidence—like a chess master knocking away novice moves.

He didn’t need to overpower her.

He was undoing her rhythm.

Then, with a flick—he struck.

One clean arc.

Lythael barely blocked it in ti—but the force of it sent her spiraling backward, crashing through the air like a falling angel. Her wings snapped open, barely slowing her descent before she righted herself mid-air. Her armor was cracked. Her breathing heavy.

For the first ti in centuries—an Archon was losing.

Below them, the city burned with divine war.

Selene, the Fallen Heroine, moved like vengeance incarnate. Her twin blades glimred in the twilight as she cut through divine knights with brutal elegance. Her eyes were steel, her purpose crystal. This was not redemption. This was vindication.

Mircea, the Shadow Alchemist, stood upon Arkenhall’s wall. With a single wave of her hand, glyphs ignited in the sky—webs of unstable magic, symbols stolen from forbidden books. The sigils detonated across the battlefield, distorting ti, breaking divine formations into ash and noise.

Seraphina, Empress of the Broken Throne, led mortal armies through alley and courtyard. Each command she issued turned chaos into strategy. Her soldiers did not fight as pawns—but as wolves guided by a queen who understood divine weaknesses. She did not believe in gods anymore.

She believed in Kael.

And through their combined force, the Celestial Army faltered.

Lythael steadied herself, eyes burning brighter now. “You speak of freedom, Kael. But what you offer is chaos.”

Kael’s eyes glead. “No. I offer choice.”

“You defy the will of creation.”

“I rewrite it.”

A long silence passed.

And then—Lythael scread.

Her body erupted in divine fire, wings expanding, halo intensifying until it seared the very air. Light warped around her. Her sword lifted high, now a burning pillar stretching into the heavens.

This was no longer just a fight.

This was divine execution.

Power rained down from the stars as the Archon unleashed the Rite of Annihilation—a forbidden technique ant to erase heretics from reality itself.

Buildings evaporated. Ti staggered. The world turned white.

But Kael?

He exhaled. Calm.

Then he raised a single hand—

And the world shuddered.

Reality bent.

Shadows crawled forth—not as absence of light, but as hunger. They wrapped around Kael’s form, twining upward into the sky, coiling like serpents of anti-creation. They devoured not just the light—but the divine order itself.

The stars dimd.

The constellations bent.

And then—for the first ti in recorded history—

The sky over Arkenhall went black.

Lythael’s power struck.

But it never touched him.

It dissolved—unmade by sothing deeper than darkness.

Lythael stared in horror. “What… what are you?”

Kael stepped through the last remnants of her divine fla, untouched, unshaken. His shadow stretched long behind him—longer than a man’s. Almost… inhuman.

“Not a god,” he whispered.

“Sothing beyond.”

Then his sword struck.

It wasn’t fast.

It wasn’t elegant.

It was inevitable.

The blade drove into her chest, piercing armor, faith, divinity.

And the Archon scread.

Not from pain.

But from clarity.

She fell.

Not broken.

But disillusioned.

The battlefield froze.

Both sides watched as Archon Lythael, Ever-Vigilant, fell from the sky—her wings tattered, her halo flickering like a dying sun.

The celestial host faltered.

And Kael stood alone beneath the black sky, silhouetted against a world that would never be the sa.

He looked to the heavens, where stars once glead like promises.

“They sent judgnt,” he said softly. “And I sent it back.”

To be continued…

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