Home / Fantasy / AWAKENING BEYOND THE VEILS / Prologue: The Night Of Ashes
AWAKENING BEYOND THE VEILS
AWAKENING BEYOND THE VEILS
Author: Diamond
Prologue: The Night Of Ashes
Author: Diamond
last update2025-09-01 01:42:25

The night bled with fire.

Smoke clawed at the heavens as the ancient temple cracked and groaned under the weight of its own flames. Roof tiles rained down in shards, scattering sparks across the city below. People screamed in the distance, their cries echoing through narrow alleys as the sky itself seemed to tremble.

But atop the highest roof of the burning temple, two figures did not run.

“Ardyn… it’s already too late.”

The woman’s voice broke as she pressed a trembling hand to her chest. In her grasp, a pendant glimmered faintly through the smoke—its chain broken, its surface cracked, but within it pulsed a strange light, alive and restless, as though it had a will of its own.

Her husband stood beside her, staggering on unsteady legs. His body was broken, his robes soaked crimson with blood that no longer seemed able to clot. Any mortal man would have fallen hours ago, but his eyes… his eyes still burned. Not with hope, but with defiance.

“They’ll never have him,” he rasped, forcing breath through ragged lungs. “Not our son. Not while I draw breath.”

The woman’s lips quivered. “Ardyn, please… You can’t—”

A sound tore through the night.

It was not thunder. It was not wind. The very air screamed as a rift split open across the sky, reality peeling like fragile parchment. From that wound descended shadows, cloaked in robes of ancient design, their mere presence warping the flames around them. The fire bent away, shrinking in submission, as if refusing to touch the beings that walked out of the veil.

“Hand it over,” one of them spoke, his voice like steel scraping against stone. His hood concealed his face, but power radiated from him in crushing waves. “The child carries a lineage this world cannot be allowed to remember. Give us the heirloom, and your deaths will be swift.”

The woman clutched the pendant to her chest. It pulsed again, faster, hotter, resonating with her heartbeat. She could feel it trying to respond, to awaken, but she dared not let it. Her son was already marked; if they discovered him—

Her thoughts were cut short as another cloaked figure stepped forward, his aura suffocating. “Do not test our patience. You have lingered in defiance long enough. Tonight, your bloodline ends.”

Ardyn chuckled hoarsely, coughing blood that stained his lips. His hand tightened around the hilt of his broken sword—a blade that was only half intact, jagged at the edge as though some greater power had shattered it long ago. Yet even in its ruin, the weapon breathed malice.

Dark flames licked along the steel, but these were no ordinary flames. They did not glow. They did not light the night. Instead, they devoured it. The fire around them dimmed, shrinking into darkness, as if afraid of being swallowed.

The cloaked figures paused. Fear—real, instinctive fear—flickered in their postures.

“Shadowfire…” one of them whispered.

The name itself carried weight, a word not meant for mortal tongues.

Ardyn bared his teeth in a bloodied grin. “If the gods themselves abandoned this power,” he growled, his voice shaking with fury, “then let me be the heretic who wields it.”

The woman gasped. “Ardyn, don’t—!”

But her husband had already moved.

He surged forward, broken blade carving arcs of shadow across the rooftop. The Shadowfire roared, hungry, devouring stone, wood, and air itself. The enemies met him with blinding speed, their weapons gleaming like falling stars, and the world erupted into chaos.

Light clashed with darkness. Flame screamed against void. Each strike shook the earth beneath the city, sending shockwaves that shattered glass and toppled walls.

The woman fell to her knees, shielding the pendant in her arms as debris rained around her. Tears streaked her soot-stained face, but her hands never faltered. She pressed the heirloom to her lips and whispered a desperate prayer.

“Kael… forgive us. One day, you’ll understand.”

Her husband’s cry echoed across the night, a roar that was more beast than man. The Shadowfire flared wildly, consuming the rooftop in a storm of black flame that devoured even sound.

And then—silence.

The woman lifted her head, heart pounding. Through the smoke, she saw him still standing, still fighting, though his body was little more than ruin. The cloaked figures pressed him harder, weaving seals and incantations, their combined power threatening to crush the very temple beneath them.

She knew then that there was no hope of victory.

Clutching the pendant, she rose. The air trembled around her as she poured her last strength into a forbidden seal. The pendant answered, its light flaring with desperate urgency.

“Go,” she whispered, tears streaming freely now. “Go to him. Protect him.”

The pendant trembled violently, as though resisting. She closed her eyes and forced the seal to completion.

With a sound like a thunderclap, the pendant shattered space itself and vanished into the void.

Far away, in the quietest corner of the city, a child stirred in his sleep. His tiny hands curled, reaching for something unseen, his lips murmuring a soundless cry.

The temple burned. The screams of battle turned into silence.

And when the flames consumed the last trace of that rooftop, the boy named Kael Ardyn would never see his parents again.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app
Next Chapter

Latest Chapter

  • final scene - "After the Fracture"

    The sky did not heal all at once. There was no single moment where the world snapped back into place no thunderclap, no blinding light, no divine declaration that the end had passed and something new had begun. Instead It quieted. Darius noticed it first in the wind. For days maybe longer, time had lost its edges the air had carried a constant tension, like a held breath that refused to release. Every gust had felt wrong. Too sharp. Too aware. As if the world itself had been bracing for something it could not survive. Now The wind moved cleanly. No resistance. No hesitation. Just motion. He stood at the ridge where the fracture had once split the sky. Where the Veil had thinned. Where everything had ended. And where nothing remained. No tear. No scar. No shimmer of unstable light. The sky stretched overhead in an unbroken expanse of deep, steady blue. Whole. Darius exhaled slowly. He hadn’t realized until that moment that some part of him had still been waiting

  • Crossing The Veil

    The world did not end. It shifted. Darius felt it in the ground before he saw it in the sky. The path beneath their feet once a narrow stone trail winding toward the ridge no longer held its shape. Rock bent where it shouldn’t. Grass grew in spirals instead of lines. The air pressed differently against his lungs, thinner in one breath, too heavy in the next. Reality was no longer consistent. It was… adjusting. “Keep moving,” Kael said. His voice sounded steady. Too steady. Darius glanced at him. Kael walked ahead without hesitation, eyes fixed on the horizon where the fracture hovered no longer faint, no longer subtle. It cut across the sky like a seam poorly stitched, a line that didn’t belong to anything natural. And it was growing. Not in size. In presence. Lyra stumbled. Darius caught her before she hit the ground. The moment his hand closed around her arm, he felt it Heat. No light. It pulsed beneath her skin, too bright, too unstable. For a split second, her

  • When The World Pushed Back

    The moment the tendril crossed Everything changed. Not slowly. Not subtly. Immediately. The chamber reacted like a wound forced open. The light in the carvings surged past stability and into something chaotic—patterns breaking, reforming, collapsing again in rapid succession. The structure beneath Kael and Lyra shuddered violently. Not rejecting them. Not accepting them. Failing to decide what they were. The tendril was not large. Not in the way a creature would be. But it did not need size. It carried presence. Weight. A density of something that did not belong to this world and knew it. It hovered just beyond the threshold where the chamber met the fracture above. Not fully through. Not anchored. But testing. Darius moved first. Blade up. Positioned between it and them. “…tell me you see that,” he said. Kael didn’t look away from it. “I do.” Lyra’s voice was quieter. “I feel it.” The tendril shifted. Not toward Darius. Not toward the chamber. Toward

  • The Cost Of Balance

    The chamber was no longer stable. It hadn’t been the moment Kael stepped into the hollow but now the instability had teeth. The structure beneath him pulsed in uneven intervals, each surge rippling outward through the carved channels like a heartbeat that no longer trusted its own rhythm. Lyra stood at the edge of it. Barely. The light beneath her skin had gone from fractured lines to something far worse It was leaking. Not like blood. Not like fire. Like something inside her was no longer fully contained by her own body. Kael felt every flicker of it. Every shift. Every strain. The bond between them wasn’t just active anymore. It was wide open. And something else was beginning to notice. “Step out,” Darius said again. His voice was sharper now. Less controlled. More urgent. Kael didn’t move. “I can’t,” he said. That answer was becoming a problem. The chamber trembled harder. Dust shook loose from the upper columns. The carvings flared then dimmed then flared

  • The Shape Of The Missing

    The chamber did not shake the way buildings did when they failed. It did not crack. It did not crumble. It tightened. As if the space itself were drawing in, bracing against something that pressed from beyond its understanding. Kael felt it through his bones. Through the Shadowfire. Through the bond Which had gone from a connection to something dangerously close to a conduit. Lyra’s hand was still locked around his arm. Her grip trembled not from fear alone, but from strain. The light beneath her skin had changed again. No longer erratic. No longer flickering. It now moved in patterns. Deliberate. Structured. Responding not to her but to the chamber. To him. To something older than both. “Kael,” she said, her voice tight, “step out of it.” He didn’t. Couldn’t. Because the moment he tried— The structure responded. A pulse. Low. Resistant. Like something refusing to let go. “I can’t,” he said. Darius swore under his breath. “That’s exactly what I didn’t w

  • What was buried

    The archives were not meant to be found. That was the first thing Kael understood as they descended an old path beneath the city. Not hidden. Not lost. Buried. Deliberately. Layer by layer beneath the city, past the places where history was kept and into the places where history had been sealed. The stone changed as they went down. The upper corridors were smooth—worked, maintained, touched by generations of hands and light. The lower passages were different. Rough. Older. The walls bore tool marks that no one in Veilstone used anymore—deep, angled cuts, like the stone had been carved in haste or under pressure. Or both. Darius ran his hand lightly along one of them. “This isn’t Council work,” he muttered. “No,” Lyra said. “It predates them.” Kael felt it too. Not through sight. Through the bond. Through the Shadowfire. Through something in him that recognized the place the way a scar recognizes cold. “We’re getting close,” he said. The door wasn’t guarded. Th

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App