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The wind that touched the Hollow Expanse no longer belonged to this world.

It was thinner, older, carrying not sound, but mory—fragnts of sothing vast and angry, a presence that had been buried not by ti, but by fear itself. The very air seed to hum with a sorrowful, ancient refrain, as though the wind was mourning its own existence. Most mortals would never have sensed it. They would pass through the expanse with nary a thought, oblivious to the echo of a long-forgotten war that still haunted this land. But Kael was no re mortal, and this was no longer the age of ignorance.

He stood at the edge of the rift, his cloak fluttering like smoke against a backdrop of swirling shadows. His silver-threaded boots were pressed against air that had forgotten gravity, an absence of weight that only reinforced the unnatural stillness surrounding him. Below, the chasm spiraled into a swirling abyss, opening like a wound in the very fabric of the world. A dark, pulsing force seed to radiate from its depths, as if beckoning him into its forgotten embrace.

And from it ca a voice.

"Do you rember us?"

Kael didn't blink. He didn't need to. His gaze was fixed, unwavering, his mind already calculating the implications of what was to co.

"No," he said, his voice steady, as calm as the deadly silence that enveloped him. "But you will rember ."

Back at the Ashen Citadel, Lilith moved with barely concealed fury. Her wings, vast and dark as a storm, unfolded slowly, casting long, sweeping shadows across the war table where emissaries from the allied realms had gathered. Her tone, once velvet and poison, had hardened to obsidian steel, her every word imbued with an unspoken threat.

"A rift to the Forgotten War has opened. That alone is cause for panic. But Kael stands at its edge—welcoming it."

The emissary of the Dragon Courts, a proud wyrm-blooded prince, narrowed his golden eyes, a low growl rumbling in his throat. "Do you doubt your son, Lady of the Abyss?"

Lilith's gaze hardened, her eyes glowing like dying stars. "I do not doubt him," she said, her voice dark and filled with an edge of fear. "I fear for what he might unleash."

At that, the hall went silent, the weight of her words settling on the room like a cold shroud. Even the most powerful among them understood that there were things Kael could summon—forces that even Lilith, in all her terrifying might, could not control.

Kael moved forward—into the rift.

There was no portal shimr, no grand spectacle of magic unfurling. There was simply Kael, stepping into the rift as though reality itself bent to allow him passage. The world beyond was colorless, endless—a morial void, a place suspended between ti, constructed from the jagged shards of mory fragnts, broken oaths, and lost truths. The very air seed heavy with the weight of forgotten lives, their whispers reverberating through the infinite expanse.

He walked down streets that belonged to no city, his steps eerily silent, as though the ground beneath him had no claim to him. He heard nas that had no speakers, felt the faintest presence of eyes that had long since ceased to see. The void was a morial, a cetery for ideas, battles, and forgotten promises.

And in the distance, sothing stirred.

A titanic figure lood in the distance, towering and terrible. It was a being made of chains and ash, crowned with bleeding halos and nailed wings, the remnants of sothing divine yet forsaken. It was not alive, yet it hated. It did not speak, yet it accused.

It was The First mory, one of the sealed truths from the Forgotten War. Its presence rippled through the void, its very form an accusation against Kael.

"You build empires on corpses. You claim freedom but create chains."

Kael's voice was steady, calm as the storm that brewed behind his eyes. "I create order."

The mory's hands extended, long and gnarled, revealing fleeting illusions of Kael's past—Lucian's fall, Elyndra's corruption, Seraphina's submission, and the fading light of the gods, all laid bare before him. These were the mories the First mory had witnessed, the burdens it had carried across eons.

"You are no savior," the mory intoned, its voice echoing like the rattling of chains. "You are a culmination."

Kael's eyes narrowed, and he raised his hand. Abyssal fire surged from his fingertips—not burning, but unraveling, as if the very fabric of reality were being torn apart at his command. The flas unraveled the illusions, each strand of mory slowly dissipating, unable to resist Kael's will.

"I am not the end," Kael said, stepping forward. "I am the author of what follows."

Within the ruined cathedral of his mind, Elyndra sat in silent prayer. Her hands were clasped tightly, her knuckles white. But her prayer was not to gods, nor to Kael.

She prayed to the truth.

Around her, acolytes of the forr Light wept, their voices trembling with repentance. They begged for forgiveness, but Elyndra offered none. Her erald eyes glowed with an inner fire, the light of divinity twisted by the corruption of her choices. Her faith had been warped by Kael's touch—by his logic, his desires—and she no longer knew if she had lost her soul, or if she had only ever given it away.

"If Kael falls," she whispered, "what remains of ?"

But no answer ca. Only silence. And that silence hurt more than any betrayal.

In the Eastern Vaults of the Empire, Seraphina stood before a relic known only as The Severed Crown—a remnant from a ti when Emperors ruled by divine right and not manipulation. It was a crown of such imnse power that it could bend even the most resistant of wills.

Seraphina pressed her hand against the ancient artifact, feeling the surge of magic rippling through her veins like molten gold. The ancient enchantnt recoiled at first, rejecting her touch with a violent flare of energy—but only for a mont. The relic recognized her ambition, and it relented.

The cracked voice of the Severed Crown filled the air, its tone ancient and trembling. "Do you seek dominion, or survival?"

Seraphina's lips curled into a smile, as cold and calculating as the icy wind that swept through the Empire's halls. "Both."

A courtier, a man clad in regal robes, stepped forward, his face drawn with worry. "Kael will not share his throne."

Seraphina's smile deepened, her eyes glinting with a calculating fire. "He will not need to—if I make it his crown."

Back in the void of the Forgotten War, Kael clashed with the mory—not with weapons, but ideologies. Each step he took was a defiance against the chains of the past, against the weight of guilt and destiny that the First mory tried to impose on him. Every accusation, every illusion the mory cast upon him bled the past into the present—cities before ti, screaming gods, the lifeless corpses of fallen ideals.

And Kael?

He reshaped it.

With every word, the mory tried to drown him in guilt—tried to show him the atrocities of the past, the bloodstains on his hands.

Kael did not flinch. He spoke of necessity, of choice, of the lies of divine righteousness that bound the gods to their throne of false justice. He spoke of freedom—not as a gift, but as a responsibility.

The mory grew smaller, its form flickering like a dying ember. Its accusations faltered before Kael's steady resolve. Each illusion it conjured unraveled before his very presence, and its voice cracked and splintered, unable to withstand the force of his ideology.

And finally, with a breath that echoed across dinsions, Kael extended his hand.

"I do not fear your judgnt. Because I have beco judgnt itself."

The mory fractured, splintering into shards of cosmic light and broken truths. It didn't scream—it wept.

And then it was gone.

Kael erged from the rift, not wounded or shaken—but empowered.

Around him, the Hollow Expanse had shifted. What was once a cursed land, a scar upon the world, was now a gateway—a living conduit for Kael's will. The void no longer hungered for destruction; it hungered for purpose.

And only Kael held the key.

At the edge of the rift, Lilith stood waiting, her expression unreadable, her wings folded tightly against her back. Beside her, Elyndra knelt, her form glowing with the twisted grace of the corrupted. Seraphina watched from a distance, her gaze sharp and calculating, like a hawk sizing up its prey.

Kael looked to the horizon, his gaze piercing through the infinite.

"The Forgotten rember," he said, his voice carrying across the Expanse. "Now we remind them who rules the present."

To be continued...

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