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The stars were wrong.

Above the Imperial capital, the constellations twisted, spiraling unnaturally across the heavens like threads pulled loose from fate’s tapestry. The skies had always obeyed divine order—fixed, rhythmic, comforting. But now they trembled, like the world was holding its breath.

Kael stood at the highest point of the Obsidian Spire, a monolithic structure raised overnight by power not born of stone or labor, but conjured from the bones of fallen archons and the will of sothing deeper. Umbrael hung at his side, silent, but pulsing. Not with hunger—but warning.

He was being watched.

Not by demons. Not even the gods.

By sothing older.

“I feel it,” Seraphina said softly from behind him. She had long discarded her imperial silks for sothing darker, regal and sharp, woven from night silk and stitched with threads drawn from the shattered veils of the celestial gate.

“Feel what?” Kael replied, not turning.

“That gaze. As if the sky is not sky at all—but a mirror. And sothing is pressing against it.”

Kael smiled faintly. “Then let it watch. I intend to break it soon.”

Far beyond the capital, deep within the ruins of a forgotten temple buried beneath the Shattered Expanse, the Veiled Ones gathered. Eryndor stood at the altar, his divine-scale armor faintly glowing in the dim starlight.

“The Sovereign of Fla and Void has taken the throne,” said a demigod, veiled in twilight feathers.

Eryndor hissed thoughtfully. “Not a throne. A claim.”

“He’s disrupted the Celestial Pattern. The lattice is cracking.”

“And that’s precisely why I must move,” Eryndor said. “If Kael is allowed to rise beyond the mortal and divine planes, there will be no correction. Only... collapse.”

A silence fell, but not out of fear. Out of anticipation.

One among the Veiled Ones stepped forward. “Will you kill him?”

“No.” Eryndor’s eyes flashed serpent-gold. “I will test him. The stars demand a price. Let’s see if he’s willing to pay it.”

In the capital, Kael descended into the newly reconstructed Grand Strategium—no longer a council chamber, but a war engine. Charts of cosmic currents, divine power alignnts, demonic faction shifts, and celestial decay rotated midair, all connected by living glyphs feeding off his will.

Selene stood at the edge, her twilight armor still dripping starlight. “The Archons that remain have retreated to the silent sanctuaries. They refuse to acknowledge your sovereignty.”

“They will,” Kael replied, eyes on the map. “Once their gods fall silent for good.”

“And the Church?”

Kael turned his gaze toward her. “Burning from within. Elyndra is breaking.”

In the northern sanctum, Elyndra knelt before a shattered altar. Her breath ca in shallow gasps, sweat and ash staining her saintess robes. Her erald eyes no longer glowed with holy light—now they flickered between devotion and despair.

She gripped the divine relic at her neck—one of the last unbroken keys of the Celestial Accord. But it no longer answered.

“I gave everything,” she whispered. “And still, you abandon ?”

In the silence, a reflection shimred beside her—her darker self. Clad in shadow, a perverse mirror of who she once was.

“Stop pretending it was ever for the people,” the reflection said. “You wanted him to choose you. And he did. Just not the version you kept pretending to be.”

Elyndra wept—not from weakness, but rage.

Kael’s voice echoed in her mind.

“The gods used you. I shaped you. And only one of us ever gave you truth.”

She scread, and the relic cracked in her hand. Light bled out like a dying star.

Back in the Strategium, Kael felt the ripple in the divine lattice.

“She’s nearly ready,” he said.

Selene’s expression darkened. “You’ll bring her into the fold?”

“I don’t need her to submit,” Kael answered. “I need her to realize there is no other path.”

Suddenly, the celestial map convulsed—an unfamiliar presence entered the weave. Umbrael hissed with energy.

Eryndor.

He had arrived.

On the edge of the Imperial skies, a fracture ford—a clean split between the stars, revealing a spiral of shifting colors and impossible geotry. From it descended a figure cloaked in living shadows and serpentine scales.

The Shadow Serpent.

Eryndor landed without a sound in the courtyard of the Spire. Nobles scread and fled. Soldiers fell to their knees. Kael walked to the edge of the tower, watching him descend like a curse made flesh.

No herald. No army. Just two Sovereigns, face to face.

“You broke the lattice,” Eryndor said. “You ascended beyond the terms agreed. Mortal was never ant to rule divine.”

Kael stepped forward. “And you were never ant to speak for the stars. Yet here you are.”

Eryndor’s smile was cold. “You defy everything—gods, demons, fate. But the stars? They are truth itself.”

“I don’t believe in truth,” Kael said. “Only control.”

What followed was not a duel of blades, but of wills.

Reality began to bend around them. Ti stuttered. Space cracked.

Kael’s mind, already reinforced by Abyssal thought-weaving, locked with Eryndor’s. Visions flooded the space between them: tilines where Kael never existed, worlds where Elyndra ruled, realms where Lucian beca god-king—and all of them… unstable.

“You’re a paradox,” Eryndor growled. “The stars cannot contain you.”

“Then they’ll break,” Kael replied calmly.

With a single step, he pulled Eryndor into a taphysical battlefield—a place between existence and echo. There, Kael shattered one of the seven veils of starlight around the Serpent, revealing a hidden truth: Eryndor feared him.

“Why test ?” Kael asked. “Why not destroy ?”

Eryndor bled starlight. “Because… if you survive, you’ll beco the answer. The only one.”

Kael narrowed his eyes. “To what question?”

Eryndor’s voice was soft. “What cos after gods.”

Then he vanished—gone not in defeat, but in preparation.

That night, Kael stood before his throne again.

He said nothing, but the realm felt it—an on, a shift. The first ripple of the Starborn War had begun.

Far away, in a secret chamber sealed for millennia, a voice whispered awake.

“He’s broken the third seal...”

“Begin the awakening…”

In the Abyss, Lilith’s eyes opened wide in delight. Her son was no longer simply conquering.

He was rewriting reality.

To be continued....

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