CHAPTER 1: THE SILT OF THE GODS

In the age before time when the void held absolute sway

The world was a stagnant canvas a masterpiece of perfect nothingness. The Tyrant ruled this silence demanding a realm without change or sound. But within that stillness treason stirred. The Bansaday the Great Winged Lion refused to bow to the void. He saw no beauty in rest only in the spark of creation. With divine cunning he ignited a friction between the gods until the heavens tore apart. A Ragnarok erupted not for victory but for destruction.

While the deities perished the Bansaday harvested the debris. From the broken bones of elemental beings and the shattered essence of gods he forged the First Island. It was a secret foundation a laboratory for a revolution built upon the shards of the old world.

The Four Primal Beings

From the ashes of this genesis rose the pillars of our existence:

The Bansaday the Primal Beast who shattered the World Branch to let life ignite.

The Vessel of Maya the Primal Architect who shaped the chaos into civilization and order.

The Tyrant the Tarnished God who turned the world into a prison as he sought to reclaim his lost silence.

Bakunawathe Primal Dragon and Great Broodmother enslaved by the Tyrant to devour the moons and guard the tides of mana.

The Fallen World

The Tyrant rewrote history with blood and deception. He branded the descendants of the spark asmonstersandorphanswhile he ruled from the shadows of the void. His Cursed Hounds including the coral bodied Amanikable and the rotting Dumakulem enforced this iron grip. Meanwhile theNeutral Pillarswithdrew to their duties.

Kan Laon counts the seconds of our decline whileSidapamarks our lifespans upon the world tree. Only Lakapati the Weaver remains with the power to mend the flesh torn by the raw and destructive mana of the Lion.

We live atop a foundation of divine shards in a world that is a cage. Yet the flame of the Bansaday still smolders within the hearts of the Cursed waiting for the day the Lion roars and the chains of the Tyrant finally break.

The sky above the Bastard’s Ward was no longer a window to the universe. It had become a heavy, suffocating ceiling of rotting purple. The Iron Federation had stolen the sun, locking its radiance away within the massive furnaces of their floating cities. Below, the forgotten souls on the ground received nothing in return but an eternal rain of greasy, black ash. It was the industrial waste of a world fueled by spirits. This soot filled the lungs of the living and coated the eyes of the dead until everything dissolved into the same dull gray of hopelessness. In the Ward, color was a crime, and light was nothing more than a fading memory.

Behind the Broken Horn Tavern, a monolithic structure of twisted iron, rust, and blackened timber, time seemed to coagulate. The tavern served as a sanctuary for outcasts, those the world had chosen to erase. Inside, the heavy bass of a fractured jukebox pulsed like the heartbeat of a dying giant. But out here, in the deepening shadows, the silence was absolute. The air was thick with the scent of ozone, iron, and stale blood.

Silarias sat perched on a stack of rotting crates. He was only twelve years old, but the way he occupied his oversized coat gave him the appearance of an old man waiting for the end of the world. His fingers, stained gray by soot and cracked by the biting cold, clutched a shattered holopad.

The small screen was webbed with cracks, yet the images remained clear enough to haunt him. A warrior from a forgotten epoch carved through an army of shadows. Silarias didn’t focus on the victory. Instead, he studied the void between the sword strikes. He sought the silence within the chaos, because in that stillness, he recognized himself.

His own eyes were just as vacant. No fear. No hope. Just a hollow expanse where a childhood should have been. Beneath his left eye, the skin was pulled tight. There, embedded deep within his face, the Anting Anting gemstone pulsed like a glowing coal in a cold hearth. It was a heavy burden, the physical manifestation of a divine curse that had once fractured the heavens.

“Still staring at those fairy tales? You are no hero, Nobody. You’re just the dirt beneath my boots.”

The voice was like shattered glass scraping over sandpaper. Nyx descended from a rusty drainpipe with unnatural, feline grace. As she dropped through the veil of ash, the pollution seemed to recoil from her presence. A faint, golden radiance pulsed softly around her, a royal energy that vaporized the black droplets before they could mar her tattered clothes. She was twelve years old, an orphan with the piercing gaze of an exiled queen. She wore her arrogance like a suit of armor, the only thing keeping the cruelty of the Ward at bay.

With a lazy flick of her fingers, she wove an almost invisible thread of energy. The holopad vanished from Silarias’s hands before he could blink.

“Look at me when I speak to you,” she commanded. her expression was hardened, but deep within her silver pupils, a flicker of something else remained. She was terrified of the boy’s deathly silence. They were both alone, but Silarias’s loneliness felt like a predator coiled in the dark.

Nyx hadn’t left their hideout to steal. She had followed a vibration, a call for help that resonated not through her ears, but through her very soul. The urge to intervene hadn’t been a choice. It was an instinctual pull that momentarily shoved her ego aside.

A sharp, metallic crack shattered the tension between them.

Behind a mountain of scrap metal lay a creature that defied any mundane classification. It resembled a dog, but its proportions were too massive, too ancient. This was Toji. A fragment of primordial power, he was now pinned to the filth by white hot chains forged by the Iron Federation. The links were infused with energy blockers that bit deep into his flesh, leaving trails of charred fur and hissing blood. Every breath the beast took sounded like glass splintering inside a coffin.

Three members of the Hell Hounds, a local gang affiliated with the Federation, stood over him. Their leader brandished a glowing branding iron, a cruel smirk twisting his features.

“Look at this ‘God dog’ crawl,” he sneered, pressing the searing metal against the creature’s flank. “Even the strongest gods shriek if you turn the voltage high enough.”

Nyx froze. Her golden light sharpened into a lethal, brilliant white in a fraction of a second. She was an orphan cast out by an empire she barely remembered, and the sight of another caged being made something inside her snap.

Silarias stood up. He didn’t move with the awkwardness of a child, but with the terrifying precision of a machine being activated. He didn’t look at the men. He looked at the dog. The divine stone deep in his chest began to thrum rhythmically, a heavy, dull thud that seemed to warp the very space around him. The black rain abruptly stopped falling. The droplets began to hover, then drifted upward, held suspended by a gravity he was pulling toward himself.

“That dog,” Silarias said. His voice was low and resonant, carrying an authority that belied his small frame. “It does not belong to you.”

The leader of the Hell Hounds turned, a mocking grin on his scarred face. “And what are you going to do about it, Nobody? You’re nothing.”

Silarias took a single step. The mud beneath his foot detonated as if a grenade had been triggered. He wasn’t a shadow; he was a kinetic impact. Before the leader could even register the movement, he was airborne. His jaw shattered with the sickening sound of breaking porcelain under the boy’s small fist. The man slammed into the scrap pile and slumped there, a puppet with its strings severed.

The other two lunged, drawing their metal clubs, but Silarias was already upon them. He caught the iron bars with his bare hands. The metal groaned and buckled under his grip. The Anting Anting beneath his eye flared like a blood red star. A cold, predatory smile crept across the boy’s face. It was the smile of the Cursed Liberator.

As Silarias dismantled the men with mechanical efficiency, Toji let out an icy, haunting cry of agony. The chains reacted to the surging anger in the alley, searing deeper into the dog’s hide.

Nyx saw it, and her mask of arrogance dissolved. Her light imploded, transforming into a dark, pulsing shadow. “Let go! Let him go!” she screamed. From her fingertips, black threads of pure obsidian rage lashed out. They were razor thin but vibrated with the lethal sharpness of a monomolecular blade. They coiled around the glowing chains.

In that instant, the fusion occurred. As Silarias hurled the final gang member into the mire, Nyx felt a white hot explosion of agony. As she severed the chains, she felt the heat of the metal in her own marrow. The Blood Bond was forged in the filth of the Ward. With one final, desperate surge of will, she tore the links apart. A loud metallic snap echoed through the alley. Toji collapsed as a faint silver light manifested briefly around his neck as a warning. Nyx fell to her knees, her lungs searing. Silarias walked toward her, his eyes returning to their dull state, the internal storm quelled for now.

In the distance, the Federation sirens began to wail. The hunt was on. But Silarias simply grabbed a wet cloth and began tending to Toji’s wounds. Every touch left a golden spark in its wake. The Nobody was no longer a spectator. He was the spark in the ash that would set the world on fire.

The silence that followed the struggle was not peaceful. It felt like a vacuum, pulling at their senses. Silarias stood among the wreckage of flesh and iron, his chest heaving. The black rain, which he had snatched from the sky like spears, began to fall once more, slow and rhythmic. The mud did not wash his hands. It mingled with the blood into a thick, tar like sludge that settled into the joints of his metal gauntlets.

He stared at his hands. They were trembling. Not from terror, but from the residual energy surging through his veins like an electrical current that had lost its ground.

“Nobody…”

Nyx’s voice was barely a rasp. She remained on her knees in the dirt, her fingers still locked in the position used to weave her shadow threads. Her eyes, usually burning with royal pride, were vacant. The Blood Bond with the entity had drained her. A twelve year old was not meant to endure the agony of a fallen god, let alone carry it.

Silarias forced his legs to move. Every step felt as though he were wading through liquid lead. He reached for a sack of scrap felt he had scavenged earlier and began sliding the wounded Toji inside with an eerie, detached calmness. The dog remained motionless, but the heat radiating from its body was so intense the bag began to smolder.

Once the beast was secured, he turned to Nyx. Without a word, he extended his hand.

“I can walk perfectly fine,” she snapped, but her body betrayed her. The moment she attempted to stand, her legs buckled. Silarias caught her before she hit the muck. He didn’t wait for her protest. With a raw strength that far exceeded his stature, he hoisted her with his left arm and slung the smoking bag containing Toji over his right shoulder.

“We have to move,” he said grimly. “The Federation’s smoke is already in the streets.”

The trek back to the Broken Horn was grueling. They navigated the lightless veins of the Ward, avoiding the main thoroughfares where the searchlights of the Iron Federation sliced through the fog like the eyes of a hungry predator. Silarias moved through narrow corridors where rats grew as large as hounds and the inhabitants were merely shadows that retreated further into the gloom at his approach.

His heart thudded against his ribs like a trapped bird. It was the cadence of the Anting Anting, reacting to Toji’s proximity. The stone beneath his eye felt like a white hot needle being driven slowly through his skull. He didn’t feel the weight of the creature on his back as a burden, but as a destiny he had never requested.

Nyx had drifted into a feverish unconsciousness, her head resting against his shoulder. Her golden hair was matted with ash, a tarnished crown in a world of rust. Silarias watched her for a moment. She was an orphan, just like him. They possessed no names of fathers or mothers, only the titles the Ward had spat at them. The Princess and the Nobody. But tonight, for the first time, those titles felt like masks on the verge of shattering.

The rusted silhouette of the tavern loomed ahead. The jukebox within played a distorted bass that made the puddles shiver. Silarias knew that once he crossed that threshold, there was no turning back. He was no longer just a beggar watching warriors on a screen. He was the boy who had stolen a God from the Federation.

He felt the gaze of Master Juro through the walls before he even reached the handle. The scent of cloves and heavy smoke seeped through the iron seams. Silarias braced his muscles, put his shoulder to the door, and prepared for the heat within.

He had no idea he had just taken his first step into a war that would consume worlds. All he knew was that the bag on his back was heavy, the girl in his arms was cold, and for the first time in his life, he had something worth fighting for.

With one final effort, he kicked the door open.

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