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The night after Kael’s unholy coronation, the Imperial City did not sleep.

Throughout the streets, celebrations burned like wildfires—not joyful, but feverish, desperate. Drunken nobles spilled wine like blood, toasting their new sovereign with trembling hands. Not out of reverence.

Out of fear.

The common folk, abandoned by the divine, looked upward no longer. The gods had fallen silent. Their silence had beco absence. And now, where faith once dwelled, a darker certainty had taken root.

Kael was their truth now.

And in the places where light could not reach—beneath the streets, behind crumbling church walls, within the hollow bones of a forgotten faith—the whispers began.

Within the Heart of the Grand Cathedral

The cathedral had once stood as the Empire’s sanctum—a monunt to light, to divinity, to the unbreakable bond between throne and heaven.

Now it was a tomb.

The marble walls wept moisture. The stained glass no longer glowed, its color dulled by dust and silence. And in its deepest chamber, beneath the altar that had once held relics of saints, a gathering took place.

A conclave of remnants.

Once, these were the high priests. Voices of the gods. Bearers of holy law. Now, they were n and won wrapped in threadbare robes, their authority as faded as the frescoes above them.

A heavy candle flickered, casting their faces in amber and ash.

“The people have turned from the gods,” a trembling voice murmured.

“No,” another corrected—sharper, firr. “They have turned to a devil.”

Silence followed, thick as blood.

“Kael has done what no heretic dared,” an elderly priest rasped. “He has replaced the divine. Made himself an altar of flesh.”

From the shadows, a new voice entered. Calm. Steady. Older than even the dust.

“Kael is not a god,” the figure said, stepping into the low light.

He wore violet robes laced with runes unseen in centuries. Around his neck hung a symbol long purged by the Empire—a sigil of the Celestial Concord, the first covenant between gods and mortals.

“He is a pretender who walks upon sacred ground. And the gods,” he continued, his voice ironclad, “do not suffer pretenders.”

The gathered priests turned to him—so in reverence, others in fear. He had not been seen in decades.

“You... you were thought dead,” one whispered.

“I was forgotten,” he replied.

Then ca the question none dared voice:

“Why have the gods not spoken?” one asked, softly. Desperately.

“Because they watched,” the elder priest said, “and they waited.”

“Waited for what?” another asked.

“For him to go too far.”

The candles flickered.

Then—a sound.

A low, inhuman rumble—not from any beast or man, but from the walls themselves, the stones groaning like sothing ancient had just stirred.

The fla of every candle hissed violently, bending inward, as if sucked toward a silent maw.

Then it ca.

A voice.

Not through ears. Not through air.

It spoke through marrow. Through mory. Through soul.

A thousand whispers layered atop one another. A single ssage.

“We are watching.”

The priests froze.

Eyes wide. Breaths shallow. So fell to their knees. Others wept.

For the first ti in generations, the gods had answered.

And their answer... was wrath.

Above the city, where no bells rang and no hymns reached, Kael stood alone. The newly-forged Abyssal Crown sat upon his brow—not as a burden, but as proof.

Proof that the divine had been dethroned.

Below him, the empire moved. Not like a kingdom of order, but like a living beast—newly awakened, newly bound, and loyal only to the hand that fed it.

A low wind moved through the open balcony. It carried the scent of fire and incense, of blood and rosewater. The city celebrated. But Kael did not smile.

He listened.

And the silence of the heavens confird what he already knew:

He was now the voice that replaced the gods.

Behind him, soft footsteps echoed. No soldier. No servant.

Seraphina.

She moved with quiet grace, the Empress no longer in na alone. Clad in a flowing black gown, her silver hair woven in spirals, she stepped beside him—gaze fixed on the distant revels.

“You’ve woken sothing dangerous,” she said.

Kael turned, his crimson eyes eting hers—calm, unwavering.

“Good,” he replied.

She studied him, her expression unreadable.

“The gods will not remain silent forever,” she warned.

Kael leaned back against the marble column, folding his arms.

“No, they won’t.”

A smirk curled his lips—slow and deliberate.

“But when they return… they will find their altars shattered. Their songs forgotten. Their flock… mine.”

Seraphina narrowed her eyes, half in awe, half in dread.

“And when they try to reclaim their throne?”

Kael’s voice dropped, rich with quiet fury.

“Then they will kneel.”

Far Beyond the Mortal Realm – The Shattered Aetherium

Beyond the veil of stars, where no mortal gaze had wandered in eons, stood the Ruins of Aevaris—the first temple ever built. It had once held the breath of creation. Now, it lay broken, drifting in silence across the Astral Sea.

And upon its jagged stones, they gathered.

Not mortals. Not spirits.

Gods.

Their forms were cloaked in light and shadow, vast and ungraspable. So wore faces of beasts. Others bore no shape at all. Only their eyes, endless and burning, cut through the void.

They had watched.

For centuries, they had judged in silence. Watched kings rise and fall. Watched empires burn.

But now...

A mortal had claid what was not his.

And worse—he had been accepted.

One of the gods stepped forward—a being of golden fire and celestial wrath.

“He defies us.”

Another, cloaked in bone and stars, spoke in tones that shattered asteroids.

“He unbinds what we sealed.”

A third, crowned in starlight, said nothing. She rely turned her gaze toward the world below.

Where Kael ruled.

Where temples were silent.

Where no prayer reached them.

A pause lingered.

Then the oldest among them—an ancient being bound in robes of ash and sky—spoke only three words.

“It is ti.”

A pulse surged outward—blinding and soundless.

The Astral Sea roared.

The gods moved.

Not as dreams.

Not as ons.

But as intervention.

Back in the Imperial City – The Night Lingers

Seraphina sat in her private study, staring at an untouched glass of wine. The room was dim, lit only by moonlight pouring through the tall windows. Outside, the final cheers of the city echoed faintly.

Behind her, Kael entered.

She didn’t turn.

“What will you do when they co?” she asked.

Kael stepped beside her, resting a hand on the back of her chair.

“They will not co as gods,” he said. “They will co as rulers trying to reclaim power.”

He leaned closer.

“And I have never lost to rulers.”

Seraphina finally looked up, her voice barely a whisper.

“They are eternal.”

Kael’s smile was shadowed and cold.

“So was the Empire.”

To Be Continued...

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