Lucian stood before the gathered Archons, and for the first ti in their tiless existence, they looked… human.
Their radiant forms flickered like dying stars, robes dimd, and thrones that once radiated authority now seed like brittle ornants. The walls of the Sanctum, etched with celestial glyphs, pulsed erratically—as if the divine realm itself had begun to doubt the sanctity of its rulers.
Lucian relished it.
Where once he had walked these halls in awe, now he stalked them with a predator’s calm, like a wolf returned to the den that had exiled it.
“You look like frightened ghosts,” he said quietly, his voice echoing through the chamber like the slow toll of a funeral bell. “All this divinity… and yet not a single one of you could stop him.”
The Arbiter—oldest among the Archons—sat forward, his aged face carved with celestial lines and a weariness that stretched beyond ti. His eyes t Lucian’s, filled not with arrogance, but with sothing closer to fear.
“You are corrupted,” the Arbiter said. “You reek of Abyssal blood.”
Lucian’s lips curved into a half-smile. “Corruption?” He raised a hand, black fla coiling around his fingers. It burned cold—unnatural, alien. But behind that fla was sothing more complex than re darkness. “You mistake evolution for corruption.”
Erylias, the Keeper of Edicts, stepped forward, clutching her staff of law. Her voice trembled. “You were once our hope, the chosen. We elevated you—”
“You used ,” Lucian snapped, his voice cutting through the room like lightning. “You made your puppet. Then discarded when I no longer fit your design.”
“And Kael?” Orndal asked, the Archon of War. His once-golden armor was dim, tarnished by the recent confrontation. “You would now fight for the one who humiliated you? Destroyed your cause?”
Lucian turned slowly to face him. “No. I do not fight for Kael. I fight to end him.”
The room fell silent.
He walked forward, toward the empty space before the Archons’ thrones, and stopped.
“I’ve seen the truth,” he said softly, dangerously. “Kael is not a man. He is an inevitability. A force. One you cannot fight through sermons or divine decrees.”
He looked around, letting his gaze linger on each of them.
“You think yourselves gods. But your thrones are empty. Your faith is dying. And Kael didn’t need to kill you—he only had to show the world what you truly were.”
Erylias’s lips trembled. “Then why are you here?”
Lucian’s smile was slow, deliberate. “Because I am your only chance. Not to save your throne,” he gestured toward the flickering halos above their heads, “but to replace it.”
“You would sit upon a throne built from our ashes?” the Arbiter asked, quietly.
Lucian didn’t answer with words.
He let the silence carry his answer.
The black fla pulsed in his hand, then twisted into sothing terrifying—both divine and demonic, celestial and infernal.
“You need ,” Lucian said. “Because Kael will not make war. He will make belief obsolete. And if belief dies, so do you.”
“And in return?” the Arbiter asked, voice tight.
Lucian raised his chin.
“I want what little faith remains. Give it to . Pour it into . Make your weapon.”
Erylias gasped. “It will kill you.”
“No,” Lucian whispered. “It will complete .”
The black fla surged upward, swallowing the chamber in flickering shadows.
And for the first ti in centuries, the Archons bowed—not out of reverence, but necessity.
—
Far across the mortal plane, the Imperial Palace glead beneath the cold moonlight, its spires piercing the night sky like fangs.
Kael stood at the edge of the Emperor’s once-private balcony, hands clasped behind his back. Below, the city pulsed with life, unaware of the gods who had just knelt in fear.
Behind him, the Empress stood barefoot on marble tiles, sipping wine. She was dressed in imperial red, though her tone was far from ceremonial.
“He lives,” she said.
Kael didn’t look back. “Lucian was always ant to live. He just never understood why.”
Selene appeared next, erging from the shadows like a blade drawn in silence. “You’re letting him beco sothing worse than what he was.”
“He already is,” Kael replied. “The question is—what will he do with it?”
The Empress narrowed her eyes. “He hates you.”
“He should.”
“And yet,” Selene added with a curious smile, “you’re giving him the rope. Willingly.”
Kael turned then, his golden eyes glowing faintly in the moonlight. “I’m giving him what he thinks is a rope. What he doesn’t know is that it’s already around his neck.”
The Empress raised an eyebrow. “You believe you can control him?”
“No,” Kael said. “I believe I already have.”
—
In the heart of the Imperial Temple, where symbols of the old faith once glowed, priests and priestesses gathered in hushed confusion. Holy relics failed to respond to prayer. Statues wept not tears of gold, but silence.
Sothing had broken.
So called it the Day of Doubt.
Others whispered a darker na:
The Unbinding.
Already, the temples of the Archons were seeing decline. Sermons rang hollow. Blessings faded. And in the streets… people began speaking Kael’s na in reverence, not rebellion.
Not with faith.
But with certainty.
He had beco more than a man.
He had beco real.
—
Lucian stood alone in the Gardens of mory, just beyond the Sanctum. The ritual was complete. The last vestiges of Archonic faith now coursed through his veins—divine embers shackled to a demonic core.
His body was pain. His mind, fire.
But his purpose had never been clearer.
Kael had to be destroyed—not simply killed, but unmade. Rendered a cautionary tale in the eyes of history.
For that, Lucian would need more than strength. He would need belief. Not just of the gods, but of the people.
He would beco a savior.
The last, desperate answer to Kael’s rising dominion.
He gazed up at the stars.
“You took everything from ,” he whispered. “Now I will take everything from you.”
—
anwhile, within the Imperial Throne Room, the Empress t with the High Council.
Kael sat on the Emperor’s abandoned seat—though none dared question it anymore.
He was not Emperor in na, but in all else.
The room was filled with advisors, nobles, generals—and fear.
“Reports suggest Lucian now moves in the north,” one lord said, sweating. “A gathering of cultists follows him. Preachers turned to his cause. There are rumors… of miracles.”
Kael tilted his head. “What kind of miracles?”
“Divine fire. Dreams of salvation. A healing of the plague in the province of Vyran.”
The Empress frowned. “He’s building a myth.”
“No,” Kael corrected. “He’s building a church.”
The words fell like stones into water, sending ripples of dread through the room.
“A god must have worshippers,” Selene murmured. “And he’s giving them just enough hope to worship him.”
Kael stood.
The room silenced instantly.
“He wants to play god?” Kael asked softly.
No one responded.
Kael’s eyes narrowed. “Then I’ll show him what happens to gods who rise too fast.”
—
Later that night, alone in the sanctity of the imperial study, Kael gazed into the Emberglass—a relic that showed the spiritual state of the world.
It pulsed with dual light now.
One gold.
One black.
Lucian’s fla.
His own.
The battle was no longer of armies, or steel.
It was belief vs. belief.
Divinity vs. certainty.
Hope vs. inevitability.
Kael closed his eyes, whispering to himself.
“Let him rise. Let him preach. Let the people gather.”
His hand clenched into a fist.
“And when they kneel before him—I will burn their altar to the ground.”
To be continued…
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