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The morning after the celestial on dawned not with fanfare, but with a void.

No birds sang. No bells rang.

The sun rose with its usual light, yet the warmth felt… artificial, as though borrowed from mory rather than born of the sky. Even the wind moved as if uncertain whether it still had permission.

In the capital, the very rhythm of the world had faltered.

It was not the silence of peace—but the quiet of sothing watching.

For the first ti in known history, the gods had been summoned by a united empire, their nas invoked from every altar, every cathedral, every bleeding priest and trembling noble…

And they had turned away.

At the heart of the city, the Grand Cathedral stood exposed beneath morning’s pale light. Its majestic stained glass windows—once radiant with divine stories—now cast jagged, fractured shadows across the marble floor.

The High Altar, where generations of emperors had knelt to receive divine blessings, was unoccupied.

Only a handful of priests remained—those who hadn’t fled, broken, or fallen into madness. Their prayers no longer rose from conviction, but fear. And when they called the gods’ nas, no warmth answered them.

No sign.

No voice.

No judgnt.

Only silence.

And in that silence blood sothing far worse than doubt—irrelevance.

A young initiate nad Davion stood alone before the altar, trembling. His knuckles white as he clutched his prayerbook, now stained with tears and ash.

“What do we do?” he whispered to the Head Priest, who sat slumped beside a cracked pillar, eyes hollow.

The old man answered with a haunted voice. “We wait.”

“For what?”

“For forgiveness… or destruction.”

Davion swallowed.

But in his heart, he knew neither was coming.

Within the inner sanctum of the Imperial Palace, Kael presided over a gathering not of war councils or battle maps—but of empire-makers. The future was no longer shaped on battlefields, but in words, presence, and strategy.

He sat at the head of a long obsidian table. Around him: power.

Seraphina, Empress in na, queen in mind. Her gaze sharp, her posture regal. She had traded robes of mourning for a crimson dress that shimred like blood in moonlight.

General Alistair, his armor newly reforged, bore scars earned in loyalty. But today, his sword lay beside him—useless in the war of gods and belief.

Eryndor, the Shadow Serpent, remained wrapped in quiet shadows. His voice seldom heard, but his presence undeniable—a being who had once served the heavens and now sat at the side of the one who defied them.

Kael’s fingers traced the rim of his wineglass, its surface catching the morning light.

“The church has collapsed,” Seraphina stated, her voice steady. “But the nobility still watch. So with awe. Others with fear.”

“They will follow awe,” Alistair said, “until fear becos more convenient.”

Kael smiled.

“We will give them both.”

He stood, his presence filling the chamber like a storm waiting to break.

“Let the silence speak. Let them look to their gods and see only absence. While they search for light, we will beco it.”

In border provinces and distant fortresses, the story was the sa.

Taverns once filled with hymn and superstition now buzzed with dangerous questions.

“If the gods are real,” one man said, “then why didn’t they stop him?”

“They’re waiting,” replied another, quieter voice. “Or maybe they don’t care anymore.”

“No,” a woman near the hearth muttered. “They’re afraid.”

That word spread faster than any decree.

Afraid.

The gods—afraid of a man.

And in such belief, however foolish, Kael found his newest weapon.

Not sword.

Not spell.

But myth.

From the fortified manor of Lord Valein, the oldest surviving noble outside the capital, a secret gathering convened.

Ten lords. Each representing centuries of bloodlines, now cornered by a single man.

“What he’s done is unnatural,” Valein spat. “He made the gods retreat.”

“No,” corrected Lady Thessa, whose spies whispered from within the court itself, “he made them think.”

Another lord scoffed. “We cannot let him replace the gods!”

“Then kill him,” Thessa challenged. “Go ahead. Try. And when your soul burns in whatever cos after, rember who warned you.”

The room fell silent.

Even among Kael’s enemies, a new truth was forming.

There was no resistance left.

Only hesitation.

Only inevitability.

That evening, as torches lit the city and the scent of incense hung in the air like old promises, Kael stood once more on the Imperial balcony, overlooking a world unsure of its gods.

Beside him stood Seraphina, her hands clasped behind her back, her expression unreadable.

“You’ve won more than the Empire,” she said quietly. “You’ve seized belief.”

Kael said nothing.

She turned to him, her eyes sharp with thought. “But belief is fragile. It can turn.”

He finally t her gaze.

“That’s why I won’t just take it,” he said.

She frowned slightly. “Then what?”

“I’ll beco it.”

The wind stirred.

And for the first ti in generations, the heavens offered no reply.

Far beyond mortal perception, in the black reaches where reality bent and gods dared not tread, a voice purred.

The Queen of the Abyss, her form wreathed in red-black fire, lounged upon a throne carved from the bones of forgotten divinities.

She licked her lips.

“They hesitate,” she whispered.

A figure stepped from the shadows—her advisor, masked and silent.

“He grows stronger with every pause they take.”

She smiled, sharp and knowing.

“Then let them wait.”

She raised a goblet filled with starlight turned to venom.

“My son has no intention of worshiping. Only of replacing.”

In a ruined temple lost to ti, a lone figure sat beneath a shattered statue.

She was a forr priestess—once exalted, now exiled. Her na had been scrubbed from records, but her prayers remained pure.

She prayed not for guidance, but for understanding.

And in the quiet, sothing did answer.

Not a god.

Not a demon.

But a presence vast, silent… and curious.

It listened.

It learned.

It watched Kael.

And for the first ti in a thousand years, it moved.

That night, Kael summoned his scribes.

Not to record laws.

But to draft sothing far more important:

A doctrine.

Not of faith.

But of will.

It would not demand prayer. It would not beg for miracles.

It would declare a new truth:

Power does not descend from the heavens. It is forged here, by those with the will to seize it.

The scribes trembled as they wrote.

And sowhere deep within the capital, the last sacred bell—long untouched—shattered in its tower.

To Be Continued…

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