The Imperial City trembled under the weight of an unseen force.
From the skies above, a thunderous hum cascaded through the air like the breath of a slumbering god roused from eternity. Light itself bent as the heavens split open, casting down a pillar of golden radiance that scorched away the overcast gloom. In the heart of the Imperial Palace courtyard, reality was pierced—and through that divine fracture descended Solmiel, the Dawnbearer, Archon of Judgnt, herald of the celestial order.
Clad in living light, his radiant armor blazed brighter than the sun, his every step a quake in the firmant. He did not fly—he descended as if ordained by a higher law, his golden spear resting across his back like a symbol of silent condemnation. His gaze alone silenced the winds. His very presence commanded the world to kneel.
And kneel it did.
Across the capital, thousands fell to the ground—soldiers, rchants, nobles, even priests—so in awe, others in abject terror. Children wept without knowing why. Birds fled the skies. Holy wards throughout the city flickered uncontrollably, resonating like strings pulled taut in divine recognition. All knew, instinctively, that this was no angelic envoy. Solmiel was not a ssenger.
He was a sentence—carried out.
But within the throne palace, Kael Noctara Velkrith remained unmoved.
He strode down the obsidian steps of the palace with deliberate grace, flanked by his ever-faithful Elyndra and Seraphina. His imperial robes, blacker than shadow and stitched with eldritch runes of shimring midnight blue, whispered power with each motion. Ancient glyphs pulsed faintly across his sleeves, reacting to the unnatural light outside like serpents hissing at the sun.
His golden eyes—serene, calculating—locked upon the Archon with the sa detachnt one might reserve for a wild beast observed from within an unbreakable cage.
At his back, the full court had assembled: generals forged in conquest, nobles sculpted by ambition, and mystics whose souls bore the brand of Kael’s dominion. They stood not in defense, but in witness. For all knew this eting was no skirmish.
This was theology turned tangible.
Kael stepped into the divine radiance without hesitation. Unlike the others, he did not shield his eyes. He did not bow. He did not even blink. Instead, his lips curved into a smile that dared the stars to flinch.
"How rare," Kael said softly, voice laced with amused disdain. "The heavens dispatch their golden hound in person. Tell , Solmiel—was this ant to awe the masses, or simply to entertain ?"
The crowd gasped at the audacity, but Solmiel’s expression remained unchanged—unmoving, unreadable. Only the faint flicker of his blazing eyes betrayed a ripple of annoyance.
"Kael Noctara Velkrith," the Archon intoned, each syllable reverberating through the bones of every soul present. "You stand before divine judgnt. Your ambition has overstepped its mortal bounds. Your hands drip with blood unjustified. Your soul bends the natural order to your whims."
"Mm," Kael mused, unbothered. "And yet, here I stand, unpunished."
"You have defiled the sacred balance," Solmiel pressed, stepping forward. The courtyard trembled. "You consort with the Abyss. You twist hearts, fracture nations, and sow corruption in the na of control. The heavens shall not abide it."
"And what a tragedy that would be," Kael said dryly, stepping closer. The air between them buzzed with raw force. The divine pressure radiating from the Archon could atomize steel—but Kael's steps did not falter. If anything, they grew quieter… heavier. Inevitable.
"You speak of balance," Kael continued, his voice deepening. "But I ask—where was your balance when kingdoms were left to die under false prophets? When famine spread under 'divine silence'? When your gods watched tyrants burn children in temples to prove loyalty?"
Solmiel’s golden light flared—but he did not answer.
"You see, Archon," Kael murmured, now within arm’s reach, "the heavens do not serve justice. They serve control. And control is sothing I no longer need permission to take."
A hush spread like wildfire. The court dared not breathe.
Then Kael raised one hand.
The air twisted. From the depths of his aura, a black fla flared into existence, voidlight pulsing in sync with his heartbeat. It expanded outward, devouring Solmiel’s radiance like a shadow overtaking a dying star. What once felt divine now seed… vulnerable.
Elyndra's lips parted in reverence. Seraphina’s gaze sharpened—not in fear, but in fascination.
Even the high lords of the court instinctively stepped back.
Solmiel’s light flickered, not from weakness—but from the presence of sothing that should not be. Sothing outside celestial doctrine.
"It is true," the Archon said at last, voice quieter now. "You are no longer mortal."
Kael’s smile returned, but it was colder. "I never was."
Suddenly, the Archon moved.
With blinding speed, Solmiel summoned his divine spear, runes along its shaft igniting in holy tongues. The weapon sang as it struck—a sound like thunder infused with prayer. It shot toward Kael’s heart faster than thought.
It stopped. Mid-air.
A black sigil—serrated, ancient, wrong—manifested between them. It was not summoned. It simply was. The spear trembled as if resisting the very idea of what it faced.
Kael tilted his head.
"Pathetic."
With a re twitch of his fingers, the spear shattered into fragnts of divine light, each shard evaporating into the void before it could hit the ground.
The shock was total.
Solmiel staggered—not from pain, but from revelation. This was not resistance. It was dominion.
"You defy the heavens," he whispered.
"No," Kael corrected, stepping forward, his presence now eclipsing the Archon’s. "I surpass them."
Golden halos of holy fla surged to life around Solmiel in desperation. Angelic script swirled into existence, invoking divine law. But Kael raised his voice—and that alone shattered the spell.
"You ca here thinking you would end . That your light would expose my sins. But now you understand… it is not the darkness you should fear."
He turned, his gaze sweeping the stunned assembly.
"All of you—look well. The gods have delivered their verdict. And in doing so, they exposed their impotence."
Kael turned back to Solmiel, eyes burning with sovereign will.
"Return to your architects of illusion. Tell them their reign ends here."
For a long mont, Solmiel said nothing. Then, in a flare of golden energy tinged with silence, he vanished—no threats, no oaths. Only retreat.
The silence that followed was deafening.
Kael stood alone in the now-shadowed courtyard, his robes rustling softly in the breeze. The nobles stared, spellbound. The divine had co—and faltered.
Elyndra knelt first.
Then Seraphina.
Then, one by one, the court followed suit—nobles, generals, mystics, all bowing to sothing no longer mortal. Not just a man.
A force.
Kael said nothing more. He turned, ascended the palace steps, and reclaid his throne.
He did not need to declare victory.
The world had already borne witness.
The gods had sent their judgnt—
And they had failed.
To be continued...
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