The Holy Empire had fallen into silence.
Not peace. Never peace.
The divine storm had passed, but the world stood still—paralyzed beneath the weight of what had just transpired. Smoke still clung to the shattered bones of the grand cathedral, rising like incense from a corpse. Ash danced in the golden morning light, drifting through broken stained glass windows that no longer held aning.
A God was dead.
And in his place stood a man the world no longer dared to call mortal.
Kael.
He stood at the epicenter of ruin, surrounded by broken marble and fading echoes of a faith that had ruled generations. The throne—once golden, radiant, symbolic of divine right—lay in jagged pieces at his feet, scorched by the abyssal force that had erased Castiel from existence.
The scent of burned sanctity lingered in the air, as if the heavens themselves had bled.
Kael inhaled slowly. The stillness was not quiet. It was heavy, suffocating, filled with the anticipation of a world on the verge of transformation.
He had done it.
He had slain their god.
But victory was never the end. Not for n like him.
Selene moved beside him like a shadow cast in silver. Her eyes, usually serene and cold, were unsettled—tracking the movent beyond the ruined threshold.
“They’re coming,” she said softly.
Kael didn’t need to look.
He already felt them.
The remnants of the empire—its nobles, its clergy, its generals—approaching through dust and dread. They ca not as survivors, nor as mourners. They ca as the broken pieces of a shattered order, pulled toward the only center of power that remained.
Him.
Let them co, Kael thought.
Let them see what has replaced their god.
The first to erge from the haze was the Archbishop of Aurelius. Once the voice of heaven on earth, now a trembling figure in tattered robes. His staff—once radiant—was cracked and blackened, dragging in the dust behind him.
He stumbled forward until he stood a dozen paces from Kael, eyes bloodshot, mouth trembling.
“You…” he whispered. “You’ve destroyed everything.”
Kael tilted his head, regarding him with the patience of a man judging an insect.
“No,” he said. “I’ve revealed the truth.”
The archbishop’s hands tightened around his broken staff. His voice rose, cracking like old stone.
“This is blasphemy! An affront to the heavens! The divine shall strike you down—!”
Kael raised one hand. Not in threat. In dismissal.
“No heavens answered your prayers, priest. No angels descended. No divine judgnt fell.” His eyes glowed faintly, golden irises laced with abyssal flickers. “The god you worshipped was a lie. I simply ended the illusion.”
Silence followed.
The kind of silence that breaks nations.
Behind the archbishop, the crowd gathered—nobles in scorched finery, generals in bloodied armor, priests clutching their relics like driftwood in a sinking ocean. All bore the sa expression.
Fear.
Uncertainty.
And sothing far more dangerous—submission.
General Alistair stepped forward. A man once feared by kings, now stripped of all certainty. He dropped to one knee, lowering his head.
“The empire needs a ruler,” he said quietly.
A declaration, not a request.
One by one, the others followed. Knees bending. Heads bowing.
The proud. The holy. The feared.
Now kneeling before a man who had slain their god.
Even the archbishop—shaking, eyes wide with betrayal—sank to the ground. Not because he believed.
But because belief had no power anymore.
Selene looked over the crowd, her voice quiet but edged with wonder. “They’ve already chosen.”
Kael’s expression didn’t change. He didn’t need their worship. He didn’t even need their obedience.
They were simply… inevitable.
“Power fills a vacuum,” he said. “Faith was their leash. Now, I am their gravity.”
He turned slowly, his gaze sweeping across the ruins of the empire’s holy seat. “This city, this court, this world... they were ruled by myth. Now, they will be ruled by truth.”
A whisper ran through the crowd. No one dared speak.
But in the distance—high above in the remnants of the cathedral’s spire—a raven circled once, then vanished into the clouds.
The mont was immortalized.
A man had claid the divine throne.
And none could challenge him.
Far away, across the Weeping Chasm, past the borders of mortal understanding, in the depths of the Abyss—sothing ancient stirred.
A throne, black and jagged, carved from the bones of extinct gods, pulsed with cold laughter.
Lilith, Queen of the Abyss, sat draped in shadows that whispered forbidden nas. Her legs crossed, her eyes half-lidded as she watched the rippling vision of Kael surrounded by kneeling mortals.
“So,” she murmured, a cruel smile dancing across her lips. “He finally cast aside the last veil.”
She rose with the elegance of a falling star, her gaze fixed on the mortal realm.
“The ga is no longer about thrones,” she whispered. “It is about who rewrites the laws of existence.”
And in that mont, a thousand other eyes opened.
The true players of the cosmos had taken notice.
Back in the city, as the sky nded and the cracks in reality faded, Kael turned to Selene.
“It’s done,” she said.
“No,” Kael replied. His voice was soft, but beneath it, sothing ancient rumbled.
“This was only the prelude.”
And behind his golden eyes—sothing stirred.
Sothing far more dangerous than a god.
Sothing that had been waiting since the dawn of creation.
To be continued...
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