The Emperor’s transformation had reached its peak. His body—caught between divine ascension and abyssal corruption—had beco an unstable monstrosity. The world itself rejected his existence. The great cathedral, once a testant to imperial power, began collapsing around them as Kael made his final move.
The world was watching.
And the Holy Empire was about to witness the death of its God-King.
The Emperor staggered forward, his form no longer human.
His once-golden armor had lted into his flesh, fused grotesquely with the divine-abyssal energies tearing him apart. One half of his face still bore the faint resemblance of a man—the sovereign who had once ruled continents with divine certainty.
The other half?
A grotesque parody of godhood.
A halo of broken gold hovered behind his head, cracked and bleeding threads of abyssal light. One arm had elongated into sothing monstrous—twisted tendrils of divine fla coiling around a claw that shimred with the impossible geotry of the void.
And yet, despite the horror, his eyes still burned with defiance.
He would not yield.
Even now, even in the face of oblivion, Castiel clung to delusion.
Kael stood motionless, silent, observing the death of an illusion.
There was no pity in his gaze.
Only inevitability.
A man who lived his life believing he was divine could never accept mortality. Even now, as reality turned against him, Castiel sought aning where there was none.
The Emperor let out a ragged breath. His voice, layered with discordant tones—divine grace and abyssal corruption—echoed through the shattered cathedral.
“This is not… my end.”
Kael’s voice was a low murmur. Unshaken. Cold. “Yes. It is.”
From the fractured windows of the cathedral, Kael could see the capital spiraling into chaos. Citizens ran through the streets like ants under a magnifying glass. The skies cracked with unnatural darkness, bleeding strands of abyss into the heavens. Towers leaned. Stone wept light. The veil of reality thinned, as if the realm itself were splintering under the weight of what the Emperor had beco.
Palaces shuddered. Bells rang without hands. The Holy Empire’s very foundation groaned in pain.
Selene moved to Kael’s side. Her silver hair whipped violently in the maelstrom of divine-abyssal energies. Her breathing was steady, but her eyes trembled as she stared at what remained of Castiel.
“He’s becoming a singularity,” she said softly, barely audible over the storm. “If this continues, the collapse won’t stop with the capital. It’ll consu everything.”
Kael didn’t respond imdiately. His gaze remained fixed on the Emperor.
Because this was the mont.
Not of triumph.
But of judgnt.
Castiel was spiraling. His power was too much, unraveling in chaotic bursts. But the man—what remained of him—still clung to the illusion of control. He staggered toward the broken throne behind him, as if the symbol of power could sohow grant him stability.
Kael’s lips curled faintly.
How tragic.
“You truly believe,” Kael said, voice sharp as a blade in still water, “that you can resist the inevitable?”
Castiel convulsed, the divine light in his chest pulsing violently. His corrupted form trembled with rage.
“I am…” he hissed, as golden blood dripped from his mouth, “…divinity. I am eternal. I am… the fla of the Empire.”
Kael took a step forward.
And with that single step, the battlefield changed.
Reality itself seed to pause.
For the first ti, Castiel flinched.
Kael raised his hand.
A crimson sigil ignited in his palm. Ancient. Primal. Absolute.
The Symbol of Annihilation—a mark that predated gods, older than the Abyss, older than the stars.
The sigil pulsed like a living wound, glowing with molten gold and blood-black threads that spiraled across the floor beneath Kael’s feet. The very air recoiled from its presence.
In the ruins above, the celestial observer—hidden among shattered arches—stiffened. His radiant eyes narrowed.
“…That power…”
His voice was a whisper only the cosmos could hear.
Kael ignored him.
His focus remained on Castiel—on the man who once ruled with divine certainty.
Now trembling before a truth too vast to comprehend.
For the first ti, the Emperor’s expression changed.
Not defiance.
Not arrogance.
Fear.
“You were never divine, Castiel,” Kael said, his voice neither mocking nor angry. Just final.
His fingers closed into a fist.
And the sigil answered.
A soundless shockwave erupted from Kael, rippling through stone and fla and divine essence alike. The cathedral cracked at its very foundation. The altar split in half. The windows shattered inward in perfect silence.
Castiel scread—not with pain, but in raw denial.
The golden fla in his chest flared one final ti, desperate to hold back the inevitable.
But Kael’s command had already taken root.
This was not magic.
This was erasure.
Power beyond comprehension. A force that did not destroy—but unmade.
The Emperor’s halo shattered into dust. His claw dissolved, stripped of all divine aning. His body unraveled, layer by layer, as if reality itself had revoked his existence.
Still, he stared at Kael. Wide-eyed. Disbelieving.
“You…” he choked out, voice flickering between a man and a monster. “…You were never just… a man.”
Kael’s expression was unreadable.
But in his golden eyes, sothing old—sothing buried—stirred.
Selene’s breath hitched.
For a mont, even she could see it.
That Kael was not simply powerful.
He was inevitable.
Castiel’s lips parted. His voice—barely more than a breeze—sought to speak one last truth.
But the mont never ca.
He was erased.
Not slain. Not broken.
Unwritten.
The broken throne behind him cracked apart, its gold turning to ash. His last light was devoured by the Abyss.
And then… silence.
The sky stopped bleeding. The abyssal fractures nded. The air stilled.
And in the center of the ruined cathedral, Kael stood alone.
The God-King was gone.
Forever.
Below, the capital ca to a stunned stillness. Soldiers dropped their weapons. Nobles fell to their knees. Clerics wept as their divine connection vanished. The Holy Fla, once worshipped, was gone.
Reality had chosen its victor.
Selene turned to Kael. Her voice was quiet, raw with awe and sothing she didn’t yet understand.
“…It’s over.”
Kael did not move. His eyes were locked on the shattered remnants of the throne—where a god once sat.
But he knew.
This was not the end.
He had not just slain a man.
He had slain a symbol.
A god.
And the world would not accept it quietly.
A soft sound echoed in the distance—like the fluttering of wings, too vast for flesh.
The celestial being, high above, stepped into the light.
He was not one of the Archons.
He was older.
His wings were not of feathers, but starlight. His gaze did not judge—but observed.
“You’ve severed a thread ant to last a thousand more cycles,” the being said, voice devoid of emotion. “You have altered the order.”
Kael looked up.
“I never believed in your order,” he replied.
The being tilted his head. “You are… interesting. But dangerous.”
“I am what you feared Castiel would beco,” Kael said calmly. “But I am not your mistake.”
The being said nothing. Then vanished like a dream forgotten at dawn.
Selene stepped closer, her eyes never leaving Kael.
“Then what are you?”
Kael finally turned to her.
Sothing in his presence had shifted. Not grown. Revealed.
“I am not the end,” he said.
His gaze turned skyward.
“But I will be the one who decides what cos after.”
The silence that followed wasn’t peace.
It was the breath before a deeper war.
Because the gods were watching now.
The Abyss whispered.
The stars shifted.
And in the heart of a dead empire, Kael stood—not as a man.
But as the one who had slain a god.
To be continued...
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