The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

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Towa Aseer
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The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The dawn began to stretch thin and golden across the plains of Aseer, a delicate balm after the brief, brisk twilight. The night had been littered with the uneasiness of all that had occurred, a collective breath held against the lingering fears of what the foreboding of the past might wrought in this new age. Yet, for a moment, all found a peaceful reprieve. All, save Zarek the Sol Khan.

He had worn a path in the cool flagstones of the Solstone Palace's secret chambers, his claws clicking a soft, agitated rhythm against the stone. He was a great, leonine figure, his mane the colour of sun-bleached wheat, his amber eyes clouded with a storm of doubt. Before him, an ornate chest carved from petrified ironwood lay upon a stone plinth. Ancient Aseerian runes, symbols of binding and containment, writhed across its surface, seeming to hum with a contained, hungry energy. Within it lay the Nighthour. A relic of immense power, a Divine Instrument created with the art of Beast Wielding, the Aseerians' most sacred craft. Its very presence felt like a cold spot in the chamber, a drain on the burgeoning warmth of the morning.

Across from him sat Imani, a sleek panther of a woman, her white fur like an ashen flame in the torchlight. As Leader and Guildmaster of the Orion Consortium, she possessed a stillness that Zarek, for all his royal might, lacked. She was his wife, his queen, and more often than not, his anchor.

"The Migration is but a few moments away..." Zarek said, his voice a low rumble that vibrated through the stone. He finally stopped his pacing, his broad shoulders slumped with a weight none but he could truly feel.

"And you have chosen to place our son at its helm?" Imani questioned. Her voice was level, yet it carried the sharp edge of a finely honed blade.

"I have," Zarek countered, his gaze snapping to her. "After you so... graciously decided to tell him of the Saiko." The sarcasm was thick, coated in resentment.

"The man he loves lies a mere breath away from death," Imani responded, unmoved by his tone. "He deserved to know, besides. I did not tell him everything."

"He is not ready to be Khan," Zarek stated flatly, turning his back to her and staring at the chest as if it held all the answers he dreaded.

" Nor does he desire to be," Imani replied, her voice softening slightly. "That is your vision for him, Zarek, not his own."

"He wishes to gallivant across Vescrutia with the Consortium..." Zarek sneered, the words dripping with disdain for what he saw as glorified wandering.

"Are you downplaying my work?" Imani said, and the warmth fled the chamber. Her voice had dropped to a low, dangerous purr.

"No... I am simply saying..." Zarek backpedalled, turning to face her again, seeing the ice in her emerald eyes.

"Listen," Imani said, rising from her seat and closing the distance between them. Her tone was stern, but laced with a compassion and understanding that disarmed him. "I know you care for your father's legacy. The Light Fang's name has stood upon the Solstone Throne for thousands of years, so much so that the festival flowers that were once used to decide the new Khan have become a ceremony of welcoming to another of our bloodline... however..."

She reached up, cupping his powerful jaw with her paws. Her calloused warrior's pads were surprisingly gentle against his cheek. "Our child is a Beholder, a gifted one at that, with a love and curiosity for this world that should not be denied."

A deep sigh escaped Zarek's chest, a sound of profound weariness. "He is my only heir..." he said, his voice cracking as he ran his paw alongside hers, gripping it tightly as if it were a lifeline.

"And what would he be inheriting?" she asked softly, her eyes narrowed with purpose. "The memories, the duty that haunts you? Perhaps it is time for someone else to carry the torch, my love. The Scathing Paw is another notable clan, I'm sure a Khan can be sired from them."

The suggestion, though logical, struck him like a physical blow. A Khan not of the Light Fang? Unthinkable. "It is deeper than that... you know this, Imani," Zarek responded, his voice low and grave. He gently lifted her hand from his face, holding it within both of his as his eyes drifted back to the container, to the source of his all-consuming dread. "The Nighthour... it has been taking everything in me to keep it stable. The Variant Towa encountered, the shadowy blight that seeps through Khel's veins... it is an Omen of... its presence."

He couldn't bring himself to say the name, the ancient evil his bloodline was sworn to contain. The very thought of it seemed to empower the relic in the chest, and Zarek could feel a faint, discordant pulse against his senses.

Imani saw the terror that lay beneath his kingly facade. "For three millennia, we have protected these lands from all threats. We will survive another night, my king, my husband," she said, her voice a clarion call of defiance. "Please do not lose faith in the light; that is how it wins. It fed off your father's lack of faith, Zarek. Do not give it what it needs." She began to place a small distance between them, her posture becoming regal, a queen addressing her king.

Her words struck home. He straightened, his shoulders squaring as he drew in a deep breath, pushing back the tide of fear. "You are right. I have faith in you and Towa. Let us join the others. The festivities are soon to begin."

Zarek turned, casting one last, long look at the chest containing the Nighthour. The runes seemed to glow a little less malevolently now, or perhaps it was just a trick of the light. He held Imani’s paw, and together, they left the cold, secret chamber, ascending the stairs toward the sounds of a kingdom awakening. Zarek put on the mask of the Sol Khan, a serene and powerful ruler. But beneath the facade, the cold weight of the Nighthour remained, a promise of the darkness that always followed the dawn. He had faith in his family, but the night, he knew, was coming.

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The heavy stone door hissed shut behind them, the ancient runes on its surface dimming as the locking mechanism engaged. The air outside the chamber, though still cool with the pre-dawn chill, was alive with the low thrum of anticipation. Torches cast a warm, dancing light across the grand courtyard of the Solstone Palace, illuminating crowds of Aseerians preparing for the great journey. The scent of roasted kava beans and sweet festival bread mixed with the earthy smell of the enormous beasts being saddled for the Migration.

Imani placed a steadying paw on Zarek's arm, her touch a silent anchor. "They are celebrating him, Zarek. Look."

He followed her gaze. Across the courtyard, standing near the head of the colossal caravan, was their son, Towa. He wasn't giving orders or posturing like a future Khan. He was listening intently to an old Beast Handler, his brow furrowed in concentration as the man pointed to the intricate harnessing of a great Sky-Skiff, a creature whose back was wide enough to hold a small dwelling.

"He looks like a stable hand, not a leader." The words were sharp, a bitter shard from the argument in the chamber.

"He looks like a man who understands that to lead, you must first know the work of those you are leading. Is that not a lesson you once taught me?" Her voice was gentle, robbing his words of their sting. She squeezed his arm. "Come. Let us wish him well."

They moved through the crowd, the people parting before them with respectful bows and murmured blessings. "Sol Khan." "Guildmaster." As they approached, Towa turned, his face lighting up for a moment before a shadow of weariness crossed it again.

"Father. Mother. The preparations are complete. We are merely waiting for the sun's first peak over the mountains. The Eastern and southern patrols have gone ahead of us. But have signaled things out to be in the clear thus far."

"The weight of this Migration rests upon you, Towa. Tens of thousands of souls, our entire future, follow your command. Do not take that lightly."

Towa’s gaze drifted past his father to a covered palanquin secured near the lead Sky-Skiff. A faint, rattling cough could be heard from within.

"I know my duty, Father. But there is a weight far heavier than a kingdom on my heart." He looked at Imani, a desperate plea in his eyes.

Imani stepped forward, her voice dropping to a comforting whisper that was for Towa alone. "I know it is challenging, but place your eyes and ears to the earth, meld into the plains, and keep to the echoes of the plains. We are looking for a sign of the Saiko activity."

Zarek's face hardened as he overheard."Let the Eternal's Aria guide you."

"I will not fail you... Or Khel"

Before Zarek could retort, the deep, resonant blast of a horn echoed from the palace spire, signaling the dawn. The sun's first ray crested the distant peaks, bathing the plains in a brilliant, hopeful gold.

Zarek’s posture changed in an instant. The troubled father vanished, replaced by the Sol Khan. He climbed a small dais, his voice booming across the now-silent courtyard.

"Sons and Daughters of Aseer! Today we journey forth not in fear, but in faith! Faith in the light that guides us, faith in the strength of our beasts, and faith in the new generation who leads us! Though I shalln't be far behind, this effort is under the command of my son, Towa of the Light Fang. You will reach the Summer Pastures! Go with the twin suns' blessing!"

A roar of approval erupted from the crowd. Amidst the cheers, Towa met his father's eyes. He gave a short, respectful nod, then turned and swung himself onto his mount. With a clear, unwavering cry, he gave the command to move forward.

As the massive caravan began its slow, thundering march out of the city gates, Imani stood beside her husband, watching their son disappear into the golden light.

"He has your strength, Zarek. And my heart. Take Solace in that."

His eyes remained fixed on the horizon, his expression unreadable. "May the light guide his path," he said, his voice a low prayer. But his paw clenched into a fist at his side, the phantom weight of the Nighthour and the encroaching darkness a cold, secret certainty in his heart.

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The sun of Vescrutia was a benevolent god, and the Aseerian people were its favoured children. Upon the endless, golden expanse of the Sunlit Plains, a river of life flowed. The Great Migration was a symphony of thundering hooves, rustling wings, and the deep, resonant calls of a thousand different species. It was a sacred dance, and Towa, Prince of the Aseerian, stood watch from a sun-baked mesa, his duty a heavy cloak upon his shoulders.

His father, the Sol Khan Zarek Light Fang, stood beside him, a figure of immense power and quiet strength. His golden mane, streaked with the wisdom of age, caught the light, and his presence was as commanding as the sun itself. On Towa’s other side was his mother, Imani, her sharp eyes scanning the herds. As Guildmaster of the Orion Consortium, she saw not just a sacred event, but a complex ecosystem in motion, one she was sworn to protect.

The animal life on the plains has also adapted in remarkable ways. Many species have developed vibrant, iridescent exoskeletons or scales that reflect the intense light, not only serving as camouflage among the shimmering grasses but also as a way to regulate body temperature. Some creatures have evolved specialized eyes that can filter the intense light, allowing them to see clearly even in the brightest parts of the day. These adaptations give them an advantage in hunting or foraging under the near-constant daylight.

Yet, for all the grandeur before him, Towa’s heart was miles away, locked in the sterile quiet of an infirmary in Sol Gomora. Khel. His name was a constant, aching pulse in Towa’s mind. The memory of the Sun Stalker, a blur of black fur and sickening blue veins, its claws sinking into Khel’s flesh, was a wound that would not scar over. Now, the Saiko parasite was at work, its microscopic mindflayers rewriting the man he loved from the inside out.

“Your thoughts are loud, my son.” Zarek’s voice was a low rumble, not of accusation, but of concern.

Towa tightened his grip on the hilt of his sun-forged blade. “He should be here. He loved the Migration.”

Imani placed a hand on his shoulder, her touch firm and grounding. “He is where he needs to be. The Xilphans are the finest healers in the Republic. They will find a way.”

Her words were meant to soothe, but they felt hollow. A sudden, piercing screech tore through the air, shattering the peace of the plains. All heads snapped towards the sky. Plunging from the heavens was a flock of avian monstrosities. Their forms were twisted perversions of the native Reavers, their feathers an unnatural black, shot through with pulsing, bio-luminescent blue lines—the tell-tale sign of a Saiko variant.

“Consortium, to your positions!” Imani’s voice cracked like a whip, her Guildmaster authority instantly taking precedence. “Protect the herds! Aseerians, with me! We cut them out of the sky!”

The variants dove, their cries a cacophony of pain and rage. They ignored the larger, more formidable beasts, instead targeting the young and the vulnerable, their attacks designed not for sustenance, but for maximum chaos. It was then they noticed other variants, Raggers, prehistoric-looking creatures, swift on their feet, attacking from the south.

Zarek roared, a sound that shook the very ground, and his mane erupted into a corona of solar fire. He launched himself into the air, a living sunbeam, incinerating the closest variant in a flash of golden light. Imani moved with a hunter’s grace, her twin blades a silver blur as she coordinated the Consortium members, their nets and arrows flying true.

Towa fought with a desperate fury. Each black and blue creature was a stand-in for the one that had stolen Khel from him. He leaped from the mesa, his own mane igniting, and met a variant mid-air. His claws sliced through corrupted flesh, the creature dissolving into black ash and a shower of foul-smelling blue motes. He crashed into the earth, unleashing a blazing shockwave of light force, decimating legions in an instant. The battle was short, brutal, and decisive. The combined might of the Aseerian clans and the Orion Consortium was overwhelming.

As the last variant fell, a wave of relief washed over the plains. But for Towa, it was replaced by a spike of ice-cold agony that lanced through his skull. The world dissolved into a vision of shadow and dread. He saw a figure, featureless and clad in impenetrable darkness, moving through the hallowed halls of his family's palace. The figure reached a secret chamber, and with a touch that seemed to drain the very light from the air, it opened a heavy, ornate chest. Inside lay the Nighthour, a relic of cosmic dread, a prison for a being of unimaginable darkness. In his vision, the figure took the Nighthour, its intent clear: to unleash the prisoner within.

Towa cried out, stumbling to his knees and clutching his head. “Father… Mother… the palace…”

Before he could explain, the sound of frantic hoof-beats drew their attention. An Aseerian healer, a Xilphan, was galloping towards them on a beast-back, her white robes stained crimson. She swayed in the saddle, her face a mask of terror and pain. She slid from her mount, collapsing at Zarek’s feet.

“My… My Khan,” she choked, blood bubbling on her lips. “It’s Khel… he’s… He slaughtered the other Xilphans and made for the palace…” Her eyes, full of a fading light, fixed on Towa. And then, the light went out for good.

The world seemed to stop. The cheers of victory died in the throats of the warriors. Towa was frozen, the weight of what was revealed nearly crushing him. Imani’s face hardened, her grief and shock forged instantly into resolve. “I will stay,” she declared, turning to the panicked Consortium members. “The plains must be secured. Zarek, go. Take Towa.”

Zarek needed no further prompting. He placed a hand on Towa’s shoulder, and the shared grief and fury between father and son was a palpable force. Their manes, which had dimmed after the battle, exploded into twin comets of golden fury. With a roar that ripped through the plains, on all fours they ran homeward, a pair of avenging stars streaking towards Sol Gomora.

They arrived at chaos. The city’s golden streets were filled with screaming citizens. Smoke billowed from the direction of the palace, the infirmary in ruins. They bypassed the panic, flying directly to the sacred wing that housed the Aseerian’s most guarded secret. The path to the chamber was a gallery of horrors. Royal guards, the most elite warriors of the clans, lay dead, their bodies twisted, the light utterly drained from their eyes, leaving only vacant, grey husks.

The great stone door to the secret chamber hung ajar. Zarek pushed it open. Inside, the golden light of the antechamber felt cold, muted. The bodies of the chamber’s keepers were scattered like fallen leaves.

And there, in the center of the room, stood Khel.

He was unnaturally still, a puppet pulled by unseen strings. His dark hair seemed to drink the light, and his eyes, once warm and full of life, were now vacant, yet filled with a chilling, internal blue glow. The Saiko parasite had not only infected him, but it had also possessed him. In his hands, he held a chest of obsidian and starmetal, pulsing with a faint, malevolent energy.

The Nighthour.

Khel turned his head, his movements stiff and inhuman. He looked at Towa, and for a fleeting, horrifying moment, it seemed as if a flicker of recognition, of profound agony, crossed his face before being snuffed out by the cold blue light of the parasite. He was the dark figure from Towa's vision, the instrument of an ancient evil, and he was holding the doom of their world in his hands.

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

“Khel,” Towa breathed, the name a shard of glass in his throat. It was not a shout of fury, but a whisper of profound, soul-deep agony. The chaos in the city, the shrieks of the dying, the bodies of his kin lying in streets slick with blood, the looming threat of the Nighthour—all of it faded to a dull roar behind the singular, searing pain of seeing the man he loved standing as the architect of their doom.

Zarek’s grief was a furnace banked behind the iron will of a king. He stepped forward, placing himself slightly ahead of his son, a shield of flesh and fire. “That is not him, Towa.” his voice was a low growl, each word forged in grim certainty. “It is a shell. A weapon pointed at our hearts.”

The thing wearing Khel’s face tilted its head. The movement was bird-like, unnatural, lacking the fluid grace Towa knew so well, the grace he had memorized under starlight. The cold blue light in its eyes pulsed, a malevolent little star, and it began to work the lock on the obsidian chest, its fingers moving with a chilling, surgical precision.

"Stop!” Zarek roared, his authority echoing off the stone walls of the sanctuary. His mane did not just ignite; it exploded into a miniature sun, bathing the chamber in blinding, sacred light that made the shadows writhe like things alive.

A sound scraped from Khel’s throat, a distorted mockery of his rich baritone, layered with a sibilant, chittering undertone—the voice of the Saiko. “The Khan of a dying star,” it hissed, the words slithering through the air. “Your light is a candle in a hurricane. Your favoured child will be the one to snuff it out.”

With a cry of pure rage, Zarek launched himself forward, not with a blade, but with a torrent of raw, golden energy that blasted from his outstretched hand. The beam of light should have incinerated anything it touched, should have turned stone to slag and flesh to ash.

But the possessed Khel moved with impossible speed. He sidestepped the blast, the light searing a molten scar into the wall behind him, and the blue glow in his eyes intensified. He didn’t counter with a physical blow. He stared at Zarek, and a wave of psychic pressure, cold and sharp as frozen glass, slammed into the Sol Khan.

Zarek staggered back, a hand flying to his temple, his fiery mane flickering as if starved of air. The Saiko was attacking his mind, showing him visions of a lightless future, a dead sun, a universe of silent, floating ash where his people were nothing but a forgotten memory.

Towa saw his father falter, and something inside him snapped. The paralysis of grief was shattered, replaced by a fearsome, sharp fury. “You will release him!!!” he screamed, his leonine mane flaring to life as his palm grew bright with scathing ire coating his claws, singing in the sudden glare.

"I would sooner have his blood stain my claws than for you to have him!"

He charged, a golden comet aimed at the heart of the darkness. The possessed Khel met his charge, not with a weapon, but with Khel’s own fighting style—the deft, evasive movements of a trained warrior, twisted into something predatory and lethal. It used Towa’s love as a weapon, moving in a way that forced Towa to pull his strikes, to hesitate for a microsecond at the sight of that beloved face, now a mask of cold malice, challenging whether he meant his words.

“He is still in here, little prince,” the Saiko voice whispered in his mind, a direct, violating intrusion that felt like icy fingers probing his soul. “Can you rend the life from the one you love? So fleeting, this desire of yours....”

Towa cried out, his claws scraping uselessly against the stone as his killing blow halted an inch from Khel’s throat. The opening was all the creature needed. It lunged, not to kill, but to bypass him. Zarek, shaking off the mental assault, roared and unleashed another wave of blazing light, this time shaping it into a net of light to ensnare the puppeted body. But it was too late.

With a final, sickening click, the lock on the Nighthour gave way.

The lid of the obsidian chest swung open. The blacked hourglass rose.

There was no explosion. No grand burst of energy. There was only… an ending. The brilliant golden light from Zarek and Towa’s manes was not extinguished; it was consumed. The light was pulled, ripped from its source, and drawn into the chest as if into a singularity. The air grew impossibly cold. A profound silence fell, a pressure that was the absolute absence of sound, life, and hope.

From the chest, a darkness that was not merely the absence of light but a living essence of smog, began to unspool. It was a living shadow, a formless consciousness of misery and dominion.

“The Eldritch Swarm that rules the Saiko,” Zarek breathed, the name a long-forgotten curse from the dawn of their history. “Suns help us....”

The shadows flowed from the chest, not into the room, but into Khel. They poured into his mouth, his nose, his eyes, his very pores, his body becoming the vessel for the ancient dread. He was lifted from the ground, his back arching in a silent, horrific scream that echoed in the mind rather than the ears. The blue light of the Saiko parasite in his eyes was snuffed out, consumed by a far greater, far older evil. Black, fluid tendrils of shadow erupted from his back, and his skin paled to a deathly grey.

Then, suddenly, he was flushed with colour. He shifted, his bold, dark lion form melting away into a humanoid shape—the form the legends called Primal. His eyes were no longer blue, but twin pools of burning starlight, a blazing amber that looked like compacted planet cores. The darkness became an ominous void, an aura of blackened madness that wafted in ebbs, crashing against the seam of their minds like a tsunami against a brittle barricade.

When his feet touched the floor again, he stood transformed. He was still Khel, but he was also a gateway to the abyss. The voice that spoke now was not his, nor the parasite's. It was a chorus of every scream lost to the void, a sound of dying stars and collapsing galaxies.

“The One Mind is free~ Bow before; Supremacy!”

Zarek stood tall, the solar fire of his mane reigniting with defiant, desperate brilliance. “By the First Light,” he gasped, his voice the peal of thunder before a final storm.

“AND THIS ONE IS MY WILL INCARNATE!!” the voice of Supremacy boomed, using Khel’s lungs, Khel’s throat.

Towa stared at the horrifying visage of the man he loved, now a host for a cosmic nightmare. The fury was gone, burned away by a grief so vast it threatened to unmake him. Yet, through the swirling darkness that now cloaked Khel, through the cacophony of the void-voice, he saw it. A single tear, black as oil, traced a path down Khel’s almond cheek. A flicker in the abyss. A final, trapped remnant of the man within.

Khel was still in there. Drowning.

The thing wearing his face smiled, a cruel, knowing expression. "This one fights. It resists. Love truly is such a powerful burden."

The voice softened, adopting a chilling mimicry of Khel's own cadence, twisting the memory into a weapon. "He spoke of how you once charted the constellations across the plains, keeping hope alive that you would have a happy ever after...."

The amber eyes blazed, and the void-chorus returned, absolute and final.

"But the Umbra sings of no such promises..."

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The battered walls of the grand Aseerian palace groaned around them, a testament to a battle that had already begun to tear reality asunder. Under the gaze of the Vescrutia's twin suns, casting long, funereal shadows, three figures stood in a triangle of fate. Towa was on his knees, his breath coming in ragged sobs, his gaze fixed on the man he loved—or the thing that wore his face.

Khel, his Khel, was fading. In his place stood the Lightless Lord, an avatar of the ancient eldritch terror, Supremacy. His familiar form was a cruel mockery, draped in shadows that seemed to drink the very sunlight. A void-like chill emanated from him, a nexus of cosmic psychic power and absolute command over Night. His eyes, once a warm hazel, were now burning pits of azure and amber fire.

Opposite him, his leathers sweltered, stood Towa’s father, the Sol Khan Zarek. His face, usually a mask of regal calm, was a storm of grief and fury.

"Enough!"

The word was not a shout, but a decree that caused the floating debris to still. Zarek’s form began to blaze, the light within him pushing back against the encroaching darkness. With a fluid, resolute motion, he tore his magnificent cloak from his shoulders, revealing a frame built for war and a waist bare save for a single, unadorned hilt.

"My son," Zarek’s voice was heavy, a mountain of sorrow. "I can only pray to the shining father Xilphis that you forgive me…" He looked from Towa’s broken form to the entity possessing Khel. "But this darkness cannot be allowed to escape. It is my duty...for this very reason do I wear the mantle of Khan!"

He gripped the hilt, his knuckles white. The air crackled with anticipation.

"Scathe through all Black; Akino!"

The fabled blade, the divine instrument, answered his call. It was a weapon not forged, but grown—created from the very bone of previous Khans, a legacy reserved only for the one to hold the title. Fueled by the exact source of the sun that burned within the Aseerian bloodline, the bone hilt was seared away in a flash of impossible heat, giving form to a blazing scythe of pure, incandescent light.

"Father…what…we...we can still" Towa cried out weakly. Zarek had become a blazing monument, engulfed in a pillar of celestial fire that roared towards the shattered heavens.

The Lightless Lord tilted his head, Khel's lips twisting into a smirk that did not belong there. His eyes narrowed. Supremacy remembered this weapon. The blade’s scent, a searing purity, carried the ghost of its ancient foe upon it.

"You would kill this one?" the entity purred, its voice a whisper that was not a sound but a pressure in the mind. "Knowing your child will hate you for eternity."

"You obviously know nothing about what it means to love something, you unconscious demon," Zarek retorted, his voice booming with the power of a star. "If it means keeping breath in his lungs, and the sun shining brightly upon my home, I would slay him a thousand times over. Without hesitation. That is what it means to protect what is precious to you!"

The force of his aura grew so intense, scathing with such glorious vigor, reality itself seemed to be scorched at the seams. Even Towa, a child of the sun himself, found it a struggle to handle the waves of celestial pressure his father was emitting. This technique, he knew, came from the forbidden scrolls.

"Scathing Universe…" he whispered in horror.

One of four forbidden techniques passed down through the Aseerian bloodline, named for the extreme risk to the user's life. Aseerians could increase their physical parameters by embodying their forms with stored sunlight. But the Scathing Universe was something more: the internal immolation of that energy in conjunction with one's own life force. This deadly conflagration essentially transformed the user into a living star, drastically increasing their abilities beyond their casual threshold at the cost of literally burning their soul away, pushing their body to the point of utter exhaustion and, quite possibly, death.

This was the first time Towa had witnessed such a thing. His father was like a vision of the twin suns given flesh, a burning martyr of vengeance, a breathing deity of righteous fire.

The Lightless Lord seemed to revel in the challenge. Khel manifested his own instrument, his legendary spear Ghermelion. But its familiar emerald glare was swallowed by the encroaching darkness. It re-emerged as an obsidian weapon of dread, with burning, azure veins of psychic energy coursing through its length.

"Let us see what burns out first," the entity hissed. "You… or this host!"

In a dash that left smoking craters in the marble floor, the forces of light and darkness collided. The impact created a force that blew the last vestiges of the palace roof into the sky, revealing the blazing heavens above. As if by ordinance of the Lightless Lord's very essence, the sky grew darker, the twin suns dimming as if in fear, emboldening Khel even further. They were moving faster than the eye could see, each clash sending streaks of searing gold and menacing blue darkness streaking through the gloom like bolts of divine lightning.

"You might wear his flesh, but you possess none of his pride, his mastery."

Zarek unleashed barrage after barrage of strikes, each faster and stronger than the last.

"He is an exceptional warrior, with the heart of one worthy of my son!!"
And open palm to the gut, temporarily stunning his prey.

"So do not smirk so casually with a face that torments my child!!!!"

A flaring kick to the side shattering Khel's rib instantly, the force of which sent him flying. Yet even this took but mere moments to weave back anew.

Zarek twirled his scathing scythe, Akino, in a rapid, dazzling arc, producing a whirlwind of searing gales before he threw the weapon. It cut through the air, creating a terrible turbulence that warped space around it. Khel nimbly dodged, a flicker of shadow. But it was a feint. In a daredevil display of speed, Zarek was suddenly before him, his hands mere inches from Khel's face—the signature Light Fangs technique of the Khans.

"Such speed…" Khel’s voice was laced with a flicker of genuine surprise. "So this is the power of the Light Fangs… I had nearly forgotten…"

He spoke too soon. Zarek grabbed his face with devastating strength, flinging him down toward the planet with godly power. The Sol Khan descended like a meteor, smashing the Lightless Lord into the ground with enough force to create a massive, deep crater. The seismic waves of the impact were so catastrophic that they shattered the very continent, great fissures spiderwebbing across the world’s surface.

"End of the line, Demon…you going back into your hell" Zarek panted, the light around him flickering slightly, the cost of his power beginning to show.

Khel’s face, half-buried in rock, fell into a grimace. The Lightless Lord was realizing its vessel, this mortal body, was still too incomplete to face a Sol Khan's full, sacrificial strength. Just as Zarek raised Akino, now a blade of pure, final judgment, to deliver the finishing blow, a desperate burst of speed cut through the dust.

Towa appeared, his arms spread wide before Khel’s prone body, his face a mask of tears and terrified resolve.

"Father DON'T!!"

Zarek’s arm, ablaze with stellar fire, froze inches from piercing his own son's heart. That single moment of hesitation—a father’s love overpowering a Khan’s duty—would cost them everything.

"Towa, what are you—"

Before either of them could move, with a lazy flick of his wrist, the Lightless Lord psionically commanded his spear. Ghermelion shot from the rubble, aimed directly at Zarek's exposed back, a streak of obsidian and fell blue light. Yet, before it could strike its target, Towa felt a colossal arm crash into his side. The force of his father’s blow knocked him completely out of the way, saving his life one last time.

The spear struck home.

"And here I was hoping to skewer you both," Supremacy’s voice echoed, cold and victorious. "No matter. Mortals will always be mortals. Foolish… brash."

Slowly, the Lightless Lord rose. He lifted the spear, Ghermelion, with Zarek's body still impaled upon it, holding him high like a dying trophy from an infamous hunt. The brilliant light of the Scathing Universe sputtered and died, leaving only the fading embers of a great man’s life.

"FAAAATTTHHHERR!!"

Towa’s cry, a sound of pure, soul-shattering anguish, filled the scattered ruin of his home, his world, his heart.
Last edited by Towa Aseer on Fri Jul 11, 2025 3:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The air itself was a wound, torn and bleeding shadow. On the fractured plains of Glomora, beneath a sky choked with unnatural twilight, Towa and his father stood against a nightmare wearing the face of a beloved. Khel—or the thing that was Khel—was no longer the gentle soul Towa had loved. He was the Lightless Lord, an avatar for an ancient evil named Supremacy. His body, once a source of warmth, now radiated a cosmic chill, and his eyes, which once held galaxies of affection for Towa, were stars of absolute power.

“Get… up… Towa…” Zarek’s voice was a low growl, a rumble that defied the mortal wound piercing his vitals. He didn't fall. He stood, his broad back to his son, a mountain against the encroaching dark.

The being wearing Khel’s face tilted its head, a flicker of genuine shock crossing the stolen features. “What is this?” the voice echoed, a chorus of psychic whispers layered over Khel’s familiar tenor. “You should be dead.”

Zarek’s hands, impossibly, clenched into fists. A corona of defiant light flared around him, pushing back against the shadows clinging to the spear. “The Dawn has yet… to set!” With a roar that shook the very stones, he grabbed the Lightless Lord’s face with both hands and drove his forehead into Khel’s skull. The bull’s headbutt landed with the crack of shattering bone, sending the avatar stumbling back, momentarily dazed. Seizing the moment, Zarek gripped the spear’s shaft and, with a guttural scream, pulled the weapon from his own body.

He stared at the wound. It did not heal. The uncanny regenerative power of the Aseerian royal line was useless. Instead of closing, the gash in his chest wept shadow, a festering maw that seemed to drink the light from him. “Dammit,” he coughed, a spray of dark blood spattering the ground. “So it seems that even I am not immune… to the Night’s influence.”

“Father… please…” Towa scrambled to his feet, tears carving clean tracks through the grime on his face. “I’m sorry… my body… it just moved…”

“Hush now, boy… There is no time…” Zarek said, his breath catching. He placed a heavy, steadying hand on his son’s shoulder. “Towa, I… I know I have been hard on you… and have not always accepted the way you navigate the world… merely wishing for my own selfish desires to become your own…” He took a ragged breath, his form flickering like a candle in a gale. “But my boy, my only heir, out of all the grand things I have been able to achieve in my two thousand years… nothing has made me more proud than being your father.”

Zarek’s eyes, still burning with the light of a thousand suns, met his son’s. “I have watched your eyes burn with an appreciation for life. I have seen the spectral weave of the unseen dance around you like the currents of wind. I have felt the scathe of your light in protection for the ones you love, of your family…” He squeezed Towa’s shoulder, a final transfer of strength, of legacy. “Whatever you do… keep these words… close to your heart…”

His voice fell to a sacred whisper, the final creed of a dying king. “Burn brightly, my cub, shine ever more!”

And then, the light began to fade. Zarek remained standing, a statue of indomitable will, but the Sol Spark within him was extinguished. An unspeakable, hollow dread consumed Towa.

Before he could even grieve, Khel recovered. A monstrous claw of pure darkness engorged his arm, and with a movement that tore the air, he appeared behind Zarek. He stabbed the claw through the Sol Khan’s gut, lifted his body effortlessly, and tossed him aside like a sack of grain.

“How pathetic,” Supremacy’s voice sneered through Khel’s lips. “For all his posturing, he was already on death’s door. Light is weakness. Love is vulnerability. It was these things that prevented him from becoming so much more.” The void-like eyes fixed on Towa. “You too will waste away, become other… become, greater…”

Towa’s body was lifted from the earth, held suspended by an invisible force. Waves of psychic pressure crashed against his mind, a cosmic force that could crush a mountain into a diamond. Despair, cold and absolute, began to swallow him whole. To lose his father and now to die by the hand of the one he loved… a pitiful end.

But then, a whisper in the core of his being, his father’s words when the Migration first began. “Keep the Eternal’s Aria, close to you…”

Within the crushing psychic darkness, a spark ignited. Those words were a key, a tether to something ancient buried deep within him.

“Hear us now, child of the sun, destined to bask in the warmth of Eternity.”

"Who… who is there?" Towa thought into the void.

The blackness that swarmed his mind suddenly cracked like glass, shattered by an incandescent light. From the white void beyond, figures emerged—humanoids with leonine features and long, sweeping tails, their forms woven from starlight and memory.

“We who have stood vigil,” a voice spoke, seeming to come from all of them at once. “The voice that shepherds the earth, the breeze that guides the herd. We who came before, we who shall come after…” Their presence was immense, a collective consciousness that dwarfed any single soul.

“We. Are. Eternal.

These were the ancestors, the ethereal guides of the Aseerians. This was the Spirit Realm.

“The Sol Khan… my father Zarek has died,” Towa said, his voice trembling even in this non-physical space.

“We felt his Sol spark return,” spoke a woman whose eyes were swirling galaxies. “His ember rejoins the Well of Sol once more, as do all Aseer. As will you, one day.”

“My people are still endangered,” Towa pleaded. “The world is in danger! This is a darkness without end!”

“It is trying to twist you, unmake you,” spoke another, a male draped in golden-indigo robes. “We would see this not be so. We can grant you the power that defies it, as we once gave to the First Khan. A living incarnation of the White Sun, sculpted flesh of a star reborn. Light so pure, the darkness can find no flaw to corrupt.”

“You can help me? Stop it?” Hope, desperate and sharp, pierced through Towa’s grief.

“But it comes at a price,” the first figure said, perched now on an ethereal moon. “You must surrender all that you are. Your dreams, your love. Become a sentinel against the shadows.”

Another, standing on a miniature sun, finished the thought. “To stand vigil, to become one.”

“What… what do you mean?” Towa asked, confused by their riddles.

“The Night forms from individuality; it weaponizes that which differs. But when you are no longer an amalgam, but a singularity, it cannot permeate,” they explained. “You wondered why you can resist. The Blood of the First runs deeper in you. Surrender that which makes you YOU… and instead become US. Evolve into WE.” The figures multiplied, becoming an endless sea of ancient Aseerians, all speaking with one voice.

“I… I need this power,” Towa admitted, his heart aching. “I need to protect what my father gave his life for.”

“So you choose?” the chorus of ancestors asked.

Towa’s head snapped up, his father’s last words echoing not as a memory, but as a living fire in his soul. Burn brightly, my cub… “But… I cannot let myself resist one master only to become a slave to another.” His will, forged in love and loss, flared with a light of its own. “If you will not give it to me willingly…”

“Burn Brightly… my cub.”

The ancestors recoiled. “What… what is this heresy?” They felt their hold on him, on this entire domain, slipping, overwhelmed by a monstrous, individual will they could not comprehend.

“THEN I WILL TAKE IT BY FORCE!”

In the material world, Towa’s body became incandescent. A blinding array of lights strobed erratically before coalescing into a fearsome, silver blaze. His eyes shot open, searing with solar fire. With a surge of impossible strength, he grabbed the Lightless Lord’s hand, the sound of snapping wrist bones echoing in the sudden silence.

His body began to change. Bones broke and reformed with sickening cracks. Muscles, torn by psychic strain, regrew tenfold. His humanoid frame erupted outwards, swelling into a colossal, bestial form. When the transformation was complete, he was no longer Towa, the prince of the sun. He was a deified titan, his mane a conflagration of starlight haze, naten shimmering from a form that defied the basic elements; it was celestial, cosmic, definitive. The form his kind took before the Astral Year leashed them.

Supremacy, the ancient evil, stared from Khel's eyes. For the first time, its psychic voice held no confidence, only a sliver of primordial terror. Numinous Azeerian...

"Impossible!”

It's blazing, maber eyes narrowed into thin slits of recognition.

“The Peerless One.”

Towa let out a guttural roar, the likes of which sent tremors through the earth for miles on end, the scathing rays of wilted gold burning through the conjured darkness the Lightless Lord created.

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The roar was not merely sound. It was a physical law rewritten, a seismic shockwave of pure will that blasted across Glomora’s fractured plains. The unnatural twilight sky shivered, its grey-purple veil torn by the silvery luminescence of the titanic lion. Mountains in the distance shed rock in avalanches, and the very ground beneath the Lightless Lord cracked, fissures glowing with the reflected starlight of Towa’s mane.

Supremacy, for all its eons of existence, took an involuntary step back. The body of Khel, a vessel of cosmic power, now felt fragile, a cage of flesh and bone against a walking supernova. The entity’s fear was a cold, sharp thing, a memory dredged up from an age when the universe was young and light had teeth.

“A Primal's true flesh…” Supremacy hissed, Khel’s voice strained, losing its layered chorus and becoming a singular, panicked snarl. “Inconceivable. That power was shattered, diluted across a thousand generations!”

The Peerless One did not answer in words. It moved. It wasn’t the loping gait of a beast, but a fluid dissolution of reality. One moment it stood across the plain, the next it was upon the Lightless Lord, a blur of white and cosmic fire. A clawed paw, each digit the size of a mortal man, swept down not with malice, but with the inexorable gravity of a collapsing star.

Darkness boiled from the Lightless Lord to meet the blow like bubbling tar. Tendrils of pure void, aberrations that drank light and reason, lashed out. They were met not with resistance, but with annihilation. Where ashen light touched shadow, the shadow ceased to be, erased from existence—the claw connected. Khel’s body was flung across the wasteland, skipping off the shattered stone like a pebble on water before crashing into the base of a jagged mesa.

Towa felt the impact in his soul. A phantom pain echoed through his colossal form, a memory of the man he was striking. Inside the raging star of the Peerless One, the boy still wept. Khel… I’m sorry…

“Is that all your love is worth?” Supremacy’s voice echoed in his mind, no longer needing Khel’s mouth to speak. It was a poison dart aimed at the heart of the lion.

The body of Khel staggered to its feet, bones snapping back into place with audible cracks. A grotesque smile stretched the beloved features. “Every hit you land on me, little prince, you land on him. Feel his bones break? I can. He’s in here, Towa. Screaming.” But the creature's mental tricks found for quarry, for the cumulative essence of the Eternals, were a bulwark against its slithering saying.

Rage, pure and absolute, threatened to overwhelm him. The memory of his father’s body, tossed aside like refuse, ignited a fresh inferno within him. The ashen light of his form intensified, flaring with the heat of a blue giant. He opened his maw, and a torrent of stellar fire, a miniature solar flare, erupted towards the taunting figure.

Supremacy threw up a shield of compressed umbra. The stellar fire washed over it, bending space, causing the very air to scream as it was torn apart. The ground around Khel melted into a sea of glass.

“Weak!” Supremacy roared, the psychic blast hammering against Towa’s mind. “Your father’s love made him weak! Your love for this shell makes you hesitant! Light is a fool’s hope. Let it go! Become what you were meant to be! A god! We can be gods together!”

Burn brightly, my cub…

His father’s voice. Not a memory. A command. A truth. He was not burning to destroy. He was burning to protect. His father did not die for vengeance. He died for his son, for his people, for the world. He died for the chance that love was not a vulnerability.

The rage inside Towa did not vanish, but it was… refined. He looked at Khel’s spasming form, a puppet dancing on the strings of an ancient horror, and he understood. He could not win by shattering the puppet. He had to cut the strings.

The ancestors had told him.

Light so pure, the darkness can find no flaw to corrupt.

They meant for him to become that light by erasing himself. But his father had shown him another way. His flaw—his love, his individuality, his grief—was not a flaw at all. It was the lens that could focus the light. A thread that could tether him to the one he loved.

“You are misguided, ignorant and alone,” a voice rumbled, shaking the heavens. It was Towa’s voice, yet deeper, resonant with the power of a thousand suns, speaking from the lion’s throat. “It was love that broke the boundary, allowed me to ascend....and that love will help me to free Khel of you....

The Peerless One’s form began to change. The terrifying, bestial aspects softened. The light became less a weapon of annihilation and more a beacon of pure, unassailable truth. He rose onto his hind legs, a towering silver centurion, his gaze fixed on the monster wearing Khel’s face. He spread his arms, which were now closer to a man’s than a lion’s, and the stellar mane cascaded around him like a liquid cloak of burning galaxies.

“What are you doing?” Supremacy shrieked, sensing the shift. This was not an attack it understood.

“My father gave his life for me,” Towa’s voice resonated. "His spark returned to the well from which all Aseer hail from...a thread that connects us all, "

The light from the twin sun coalesced around him, creating a flaring matrix of white hot embers.

He brought his hands together. He was focusing every ounce of his grief, his love for Khel, his devotion to his father’s memory, into a single, perfect concept: a scalpel of pure dawn.

“As you keep reminding me, Khel is there...his thread remains!”

A wave of incandescent, white light surged forward. It wasn't hot, it wasn't destructive. It was… absolute. It was the concept of morning made manifest, the antithesis of the creeping dread Supremacy embodied.

"Is this the power of a true god?"

The Lightless Lord screamed, a sound that was not Khel’s voice, but a chorus of dying stars and psionic agony. The pure light washed over the body, not burning it, but passing through it, finding no purchase on the flesh and bone. It found only the shadow, the alien presence latched onto Khel’s soul. And it pulled.

"I...am no god..."

A geyser of black, viscous energy erupted from Khel’s chest, a shrieking, formless entity of terror and malice. It clawed at the air, trying to find something it could latch onto, to sustain, but the ashen light held it fast, dragging it out into the open. Khel’s body, a limp marionette with its strings finally cut, collapsed to the ground.

"I AM THE SUN!!"

The shadow of Supremacy, wounded and exposed, let out a final, desperate psychic wail that promised unending vengeance, and then imploded, vanishing from the material plane. With the Nighthour destroyed, there was nothing to contain it.

Silence descended upon the fractured plains of Glomora. The unnatural twilight was gone, replaced by the soft, clean light of a new dawn.

The colossal ashen form of the Peerless One flickered. The immense power, having served its purpose, receded. With a groan that was both cosmic and deeply human, the light collapsed inward. Where the titanic lion had stood, Towa fell to his knees, his own body restored but trembling, utterly spent.

He stared across the glassy plain at the still form of his beloved. He had won. He had saved him. Saved them all...

But as he watched, his heart frozen in his chest, Khel did not move.

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The shadow of Supremacy had been a malevolent force, oozing with darkness and intent to dominate all of Glomora and then the world. It had lurked in the folds of the Nighthour, feeding on the fears and doubts of the world, whispering into the minds of its inhabitants, amping up the Saiko, infesting the wildlife all to get here to an Aseerian who could free it. But Towa, with the fierce resolve of a warrior and the heart of a lover, had confronted that darkness in a titanic clash of wills. Now, in the wake of its final desperate psychic wail, silence encapsulated the landscape like a fragile cloak, muffling the screams of the dying echoes of war.

The light of the new dawn pierced through remnants of dread and despair, driving away the shadows that had crept too long in the alleys of existence. The fractured plains—once home to the cacophony of battle—were now a serene vista, marred only by signs of struggle and sacrifice.

Towa's form, colossal and radiant just moments ago, now dwindled as though the very essence of the universe had receded into him. He found himself kneeling in the soft earth, a shaking husk, yearning to reclaim strength that had drained away in a breathtaking moment of potential and purpose. The grand silhouette of the Peerless One—the embodiment of his courage—flickered and faded, leaving him exhausted.

But then his gaze fell upon the stillness that stilled the air—Khel, his beloved. A luminous spirit entwined with the essence of life now lay among the remnants of the battle, uncharacteristically silent. Towa's heart clenched, sending icy tendrils of dread unfurling through his core. The world around him brightened with the sun's welcoming glow, yet all Towa could feel was a creeping shadow enveloping him from within, mixing with the remnants of the wail that still hung, ethereal, in the twilight air.

He surged to his feet, collapsing beside Khel’s body. "Khel…,” he breathed, his voice trembling like a fragile leaf caught in a storm. There was no answer; only the whisper of a breeze played through the wreckage. Towa felt a wave of desperation crash over him as he dug his fingers into the cold earth, wishing to absorb warmth and find some life within Khel.

It was a stark reminder of how fragile existence could be, and as he sat there, the memories of their laughter and plans rushed like branches from an ancient tree caught in a tempest—each one a reminder of what they had fought for. The warmth of hope encased them both; he had fought so earnestly for this moment, and yet with Khel lifeless at his side, victory tasted hollow.

Moments later, a vision flickered before him, and a tumult of footsteps announced the arrival of his kin. His mother, Imani, emerged from the veil of the horizon, flanked by the other seerian warriors. Their faces, once animated with the thrill of battle, transformed into masks of horror as they surveyed the aftermath of what Towa had accomplished.

"Towa," she breathed, her voice a shivering echo across the desolation, "by the suns..." Her eyes widened, taking in the devastation surrounding her—the scorched earth, the remains of the supernatural conflict, and the bodies draped beneath the shimmering remnants of twilight.

“Where…where is your father?” Imani’s voice dipped, her eyes shifting to the form that lay cold beneath Towa’s trembling hands. The question hung in the air, heavy like the echo of an unrelenting storm.

Towa could only nod, his body sagging under the weight of grief too immense to articulate. He pointed weakly, for he had little strength left, to the lifeless form of Zarek, fallen just meters away.

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The silence that followed was heavier than any mountain. Imani’s gaze followed her son's trembling finger. Her eyes, the same sharp, intelligent eyes that had guided councils and stared down warlords, widened. Across the glittering, glassed plain, she saw him. Zarek. Her husband. The Khan. A still figure against the jagged rock, his proud armor rent, his vibrant life extinguished.

Her composure, a fortress built over decades of ruling beside a man she adored, did not just crack; it crumbled to dust. A sound escaped her, not a cry, but the sharp, broken exhalation of a soul being pierced. Her hand flew to her mouth, her legs buckling. Two of the Seerian warriors, their own faces masks of grief, moved instinctively to support her before she fell. They were the Waarioers, the lion-guard, sworn to the royal family. They had just lost their king. Now they watched their queen break.

Towa couldn't bear to look at his mother’s face. The sight would shatter what little remained of him. He tore his gaze away, forcing his focus down to the man in his arms. The world had narrowed to two points of unbearable reality: the cold weight of his father’s absence and the fragile warmth of Khel’s presence.

“Khel?” he whispered, his voice a raw, broken thing. “Please.”

He pressed his ear to Khel’s chest, praying to suns he no longer knew if he believed in. He listened past the phantom roar of the Primal still echoing in his bones. For an agonizing moment, there was nothing. Then, a flutter. A heartbeat so faint it was like a moth’s wing brushing against the inside of a ribcage. Once. Twice.

Towa’s head snapped up. He watched Khel’s face, searching for any sign. There. The barest flutter of eyelashes against a deathly pale cheek. A shallow, hitching breath that was more a ghost of respiration than life itself.

It wasn’t life, not truly. But it was not death.

Hope, fierce and desperate, was a blade in his throat. It was a new kind of fire, not the all-consuming inferno of the Peerless One, but a tiny, flickering candle in an endless night. He couldn’t let it go out.

“He’s alive,” Towa choked out, looking back at his mother. She had straightened, supported by her guards, her face a ruin of majestic sorrow. The queen was reasserting herself over the widow, piece by agonizing piece. “Mother, he’s alive. But he’s… fading. The entity. Taking it out…”

He didn’t need to finish. They all understood. An anchor that deep, ripped from the soul, would leave a wound that could not be seen but would surely kill.

Imani looked from the lifeless form of her husband to the barely living man in her son's arms. She saw the devastation of her world and the singular, desperate focus in Towa’s eyes. In that moment, she made a choice. Grief could wait. Her son could not.

Her voice, when it came, was raw, stripped of its usual warmth, but forged in the steel of command. "Heizen! Joric! Prepare a litter. Gently." Her command was for Khel, but her eyes were on Zarek. The warriors, their discipline a shield against their own sorrow, moved without question.

She walked towards Towa, her steps steady on the unsteady ground. She placed a hand on his shoulder, her touch firm, anchoring. “The Nylod healers. They are the only ones who might know what to do.” She looked at Khel’s face, her expression unreadable. “We will take him there. Make preparations for the journey after...After we laid my husband to rest.”

The Aseerians were noticeably concerned. One of them was bold enough to voice it.

"My lady, but he is-"
Joric responded, his broad shoulder stiffened in makeshift defiance.
"A victim in all this....WE.."

She snapped back sharply, catching her rising temper, regaining her composure.

"All of us Elders had a part to play in this... but enough. Do as you are told...now."

Then, her gaze shifted to her husband. "My Khan…" she breathed, the words laced with a pain so profound it seemed to leech the color from the air. She turned to the rest of her warriors. "We do not leave him here. Khan Zarek returns to the land...with honor."

The journey through the fractured lands of the Solar Republic was not a victory march. It was a funeral procession. The Aseerian warriors fashioned a bier for their fallen Khan, draping his body in the tattered remains of a royal cloak. They moved with grim purpose, their silence a testament to the loss they had suffered.

Towa walked ahead of them, refusing to let anyone else carry Khel. Every labored breath Khel took was a victory. Every faint pulse was a battle won. Towa walked through the dawn-lit wasteland, his own body screaming with exhaustion, his soul hollowed out by grief, but his arms were locked around the last, fragile piece of his heart.

He had called upon the power of a god incarnate, unleashed the fury of a sun, and saved his world from an eternity of darkness. But as the clean light of the new dawn illuminated the somber tableau—the grieving queen, the fallen king, the beloved on the brink of death—Towa understood. The sun he had become now illuminated the terrible price of its rising. And the light cast a very, very long shadow.

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Re: The Great Migration; Supremacy Dawns; The Lightless Lord Awakens

Post by Towa Aseer »

The shadow cast by the procession stretched long and skeletal across the glittering plains as the sun began its ascent. It was a sun that felt alien to Towa, a pale imitation of the stellar fury he had channeled. He tuned out the rhythmic, mournful tread of the warriors behind him, the creak of the makeshift bier carrying his father’s body. He tuned out everything but the feather-light weight in his arms and the fragile, stuttering rhythm against his own chest.

Each step was an act of will. The glassy ground, shattered by the Primal’s power, crunched under his boots like broken promises. He could feel the eyes of the warriors on him, a mixture of pity, awe, and a lingering suspicion he refused to acknowledge. Heizen and Joric, who had moved to support his mother, now flanked the bier, their faces carved from granite. He could hear their thoughts as clearly as if they’d shouted them: The Khan is dead, and the Prince carries the weapon that killed him.

Imani walked beside him, a silent pillar of strength. The Queen had returned, her sorrow locked away behind a mask of regal duty. She did not look at the body of her husband. She did not look at the half-dead man her son carried. She looked forward at the hazy line of the horizon where the capital of the Nylod, Nala, lay nestled in the mountain's embrace, which would emerge with time.

"Towa," she said, her voice low but clear, cutting through his haze of exhaustion. "You must rest. Let Heizen carry him."

"No," Towa said, the word a raw tear in his throat. His arms tightened around Khel. He could feel the tremor in his own muscles, the deep ache that had settled into his bones. "I've got him."

It was a lie. He was fading. The divine power had receded, leaving behind a hollow emptiness that was being filled, drop by drop, with an ocean of grief. But letting go of Khel felt like letting go of the last anchor in a world that had been torn from its moorings. To let go would be to drown.

Imani did not press. She simply nodded, her sharp eyes assessing his state. "The Nylod are a day's march. We will not stop."

The procession moved on, a river of silent sorrow flowing through a dead land. They passed the twisted husks of destroyed weapons and the still forms of Aseerian warriors who would not be returning home. For each one, Imani paused, murmuring their name and a short prayer for their passage into the light. It was a queen’s duty, performed with the personal pain of a woman who had known every single one of them.

As dusk began to bleed purple and orange across the sky, they saw the lights of Nala. The city was carved into the heart of a great mountain, a testament to their people’s strength and endurance. But tonight, the lights seemed dimmer, the city more vulnerable than it had ever been.

Word of their approach had preceded them. The great gates of Nala stood open, but the avenue beyond was not filled with cheers. It was lined with the silent, stunned faces of their people. They saw the bier carrying their Khan, and a collective gasp, a wave of pain, rippled through the crowd. They saw their Prince, bloodied and weary, carrying the broken form of a man many still considered a traitor, and confusion warred with their grief.

At the entrance to the Citadel, the Nylod healers were waiting. They were an ascetic order, clad in robes the color of unbleached linen, their faces serene and detached from the world’s turmoil. An elder, a woman with eyes that seemed to hold the memory of centuries, stepped forward.

"My Queen. My Prince," she said, her voice like the rustle of dry leaves. Her gaze fell upon Khel. "The tapestry is torn."

"Can you fix it?" Towa asked, his voice cracking. He felt his strength finally failing."Fix him?"

The elder did not answer directly. She gestured to two acolytes, who brought forward a soft, fleece-lined litter. "The soul is not a thing of stone, to be glued back together. It is a river. When its banks are broken, it seeks a new course. We can guide it, but we cannot force it to flow where it once did." She looked at Towa, her ancient eyes seeing not the god-like Primal, but the terrified boy beneath. "You must release him to us now, Prince Towa."

The moment he had dreaded was upon him. Gently, as if Khel were made of spun glass, he laid him on the litter. His arms, suddenly empty, felt impossibly heavy. The absence of Khel's fragile weight was a crushing pressure, and the dam inside him finally broke.

His knees buckled. He didn't fall to the ground. He fell against his mother, who had moved to his side, her arms wrapping around him with a strength that defied her slender frame. The bier carrying Zarek was being borne past them, towards the Hall of Kings, and the sight of his father's still hand, hanging over the side, shattered the last of Towa's control.

A sob tore from his chest, a raw, guttural sound of pure agony. He buried his face in his mother's shoulder, and the grief he had held at bay for his father, for Khel, for his people, for himself, came pouring out in a torrent. The Queen held her son, the Prince, the savior of their world, as he wept like a lost child. The crowd watched, silent and unmoving, sharing in the sorrow of a royal family that felt, for the first time, devastatingly human.

Later, in the cold silence of the royal chambers, Imani stood with Towa on a balcony overlooking the city. The funeral pyres for the fallen warriors burned in the valley below, sending sparks like fleeting souls into the night sky. Khel was in the care of the Nylod, his fate as uncertain as the dawn. The body of the Khan lay in state, awaiting the rites of passage.

"I unleashed a sun to save them," Towa whispered, his voice hoarse. "But it feels like I just burned everything I loved."

Imani placed a hand on his arm. Her own eyes were red-rimmed, but her voice was steady. "Suns give life, Towa. But they are born from collapse and fire. What you did was necessary. The cost... the cost is the burden we now carry."

She looked out at the city, at the flickering pyres, at the darkness that pressed in around the edges of their mountain home. The war was over. The entity was gone. But the silence that followed was heavier than any mountain. The light of their victory had saved the world, but as Towa looked at the space beside his mother where his father should have been, he knew the truth of it.

The light cast a very, very long shadow. And they would have to learn to live in it.

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