The bleeding had stopped, but Kael's head still rang with echoes.
He sat on the tailgate of Tessa's supply wagon, a cloth pressed to his nose, watching the southern horizon where the distortion had been. It was gone now—faded like morning mist—but the resonance hadn't returned to normal. The bones still hummed wrong, a frequency that set his teeth on edge and made his skull ache. Around him, the caravan was a controlled chaos of frightened people trying to pretend they weren't. "Drink this." Joren pressed a tin cup into his hand. Water, blessedly cold. Kael drank, tasting salt and metal. "How many others?" "Bled? Seven. Old Meris passed out but he's awake now. The Sohm sisters are fine—they never worked the deep mines, so less dust in their blood." Joren sat beside him, moving carefully. "Petran's having a panic attack. Cors is talking him down." "He shouldn't be out here. Too young." "We were all too young once." Joren's voice was flat, distant. He was staring at his hands, at the tremor that had started in his fingers. The corruption made him shake sometimes, usually when he was stressed or tired. Right now he looked both. "You need to rest," Kael said. "I need answers more." Joren finally looked at him. "What was that? Really?" Kael didn't answer immediately. How could he explain something he barely understood himself? The distortion had felt purposeful not random, like something reaching across distance, searching for a specific target. The vessel approaches. The singer draws near. "I don't know," he lied. "Maybe a storm we didn't detect." "That wasn't a storm and you know it." Joren's jaw tightened. "I've seen godstorms, Kael. Been caught in two of them. They don't bend air like that. They don't make shapes." "Then what do you think it was?" "I think something's waking up. And I think whatever it is, it's connected to you." Kael's hand clenched around the cup. "Why would you think that?" "Because you heard voices. I saw your face—you weren't just sensing resonance, you were listening to something. Understanding it." Joren leaned closer, voice dropping. "I'm not judging. I'm just asking: what did it say?" Kael met his eyes. Saw genuine concern there, beneath the cynicism and the fear. Joren had secrets too—the corruption wasn't something you got by accident. Whatever had happened in his imperial service, it had marked him as surely as the dust had marked Kael. Maybe that was why Kael trusted him. Both of them were carrying wounds that wouldn't heal. "It said someone's coming," Kael finally admitted. "Someone important. A singer." "Singer? Like a bard?" "No. Something else. Something that can..." He struggled for words. "Command the resonance, control it with their voice." Joren's expression darkened. "Voice resonance. Gods, those are rare. Empire keeps a registry of anyone with even a hint of the ability." He was quiet for a moment. "If something out there is calling to a voice resonant, and the empire finds out..." "They'll come," Kael finished. "In force." "Which means we need to move. Now. Before—" "Tessa! Riders incoming!" The shout came from the western perimeter. Kael was on his feet before his conscious mind processed the words, cup forgotten, hand already reaching for the knife at his belt. Joren moved with him, military reflexes kicking in despite his condition. They ran toward the wagon circle's edge where a young scout named Relle stood pointing west, arm steady despite the fear in her voice. "Eight riders. Maybe nine. Moving fast." Kael followed her gesture. There—dust plumes rising against the bone-white ribs, still distant but closing. The morning sun glinted off something metallic. Armor, maybe, or weapons. "Imperial?" Tessa appeared beside them, crossbow already loaded. Kael squinted, trying to make out details. The riders were in formation—too disciplined to be bandits, too purposeful to be traders. "Probably." Tessa turned, voice rising to carry. "Everyone stay calm! Keep the circle! Do not—I repeat—do not point weapons at them unless I give the word!" "Why would imperial riders be out here?" Cors asked, joining them. Her single eye was narrowed with suspicion. "Could be routine patrol," Davos offered weakly. "Nothing's routine in the Expanse," Joren muttered. He'd drawn his knife—a long fighting blade with a god-bone handle that probably cost more than everything Kael owned. "They're coming from the wrong direction anyway. Patrols run north-south, not east-west." Which meant they weren't patrol. They were escorting something, or someone. Kael's stomach tightened. The timing was too perfect. The distortion, the voices, and now imperial riders appearing within hours? That wasn't coincidence. The vessel approaches.Latest Chapter
Transformation
Kael woke to screaming. His own, he realized dimly. His throat was raw, his voice hoarse. He was still strapped to the chair in the interface chamber, but now the restraints were the only thing keeping him from thrashing violently. “—neural activity spiking—” “—administering resonance suppressant—” “—both subjects showing extreme distress—” Voices overlapped, men and women in the gray coats and emblem of the imperial physicians crowded around. Sereen’s face appeared in his field of vision, her expression betrayed concern . “Kael. Can you hear me?” He tried to respond but he couldn't form words. His body felt wrong, too heavy and too light simultaneously, as if his consciousness had expanded beyond his skin and was still trying to contract back into proper boundaries. “Give him another dose,” Sereen ordered. “And the female—is she stabilizing?” “Her heart rate is dropping. Neural patterns returning to baseline. But the readings are… strange.” Kael turned his head— a m
Transformation
Kael woke to screaming. His own, he realized dimly. His throat was raw, his voice hoarse. He was still strapped to the chair in the interface chamber, but now the restraints were the only thing keeping him from thrashing violently. “—neural activity spiking—” “—administering resonance suppressant—” “—both subjects showing extreme distress—” Voices overlapped, men and women in the gray coats and emblem of the imperial physicians crowded around. Sereen’s face appeared in his field of vision, her expression betrayed concern . “Kael. Can you hear me?” He tried to respond but he couldn't form words. His body felt wrong, too heavy and too light simultaneously, as if his consciousness had expanded beyond his skin and was still trying to contract back into proper boundaries. “Give him another dose,” Sereen ordered. “And the female—is she stabilizing?” “Her heart rate is dropping. Neural patterns returning to baseline. But the readings are… strange.” Kael turned his head— a m
Crossroads
“This is what the empire hides,” the god said. “The truth about the war, that we weren’t unprovoked tyrants. We were frightened parents trying to stop children from destroying themselves. And you weren’t noble revolutionaries. You were survivors willing to commit genocide rather than accept limits.”Kael felt sick. "How can we know this is true."Thaltos was a god after all, what was to say the visions were true.You’re trying to make us feel guilty. Make us think humanity deserved what you did.”“I’m trying to make you understand context. Because what happens next, what I want from you requires understanding that both sides were right. And both sides were wrong.”“What do you want?” Ilara asked.“Reconciliation,” Tharos said simply. “Synthesis between the divine and the mortal. A partnership. I want to create something new—beings that carry both mortal innovation and divine wisdom.”“You want to possess us,” Kael said.
The Before Times
The bone cathedral expanded infinitely in all directions. Kael stood at its center, pillars rising and falling. Archways opened onto voids that gave way to depths his mind couldn’t process. The walls themselves seemed to pulse with meaning, every surface inscribed with patterns that hurt to look at directly. Ilara’s hand in his was the only constant, thee only anchor to what they’d been before crossing this threshold. “I don’t understand what I’m seeing,” she whispered. “You’re seeing memory given form,” Tharos replied. The god’s voice came from everywhere, pressing against his thoughts. “Our consciousness doesn’t experience reality the way mortal minds do. What you perceive as space and structure is a metaphor. Translation. My attempt to speak in terms you can comprehend.” The presence coalesced. “You asked what I want,” Tharos said. “What I’m planning. What happens if you help me wake. These are good quest
Awakening
Guards appeared to escort them. They were led through more corridors, past more laboratories, deeper into the facility. Kael's mind churned through options. They could run, try to escape before the trials began. But where would they go? They were deep underground, surrounded by armed guards, in the heart of imperial territory. They could fight—use their resonance to create chaos, maybe damage the facility enough to prevent the experiments. But that would kill innocents, and probably trigger the very uncontrolled awakening they were trying to prevent. Or they could cooperate. Play along with Sereen's plans while looking for opportunities. Learn what they needed to know. And then... what? Betray the empire? Help Tharos? Find some third option that neither god nor human had considered? They reached Joren's medical bay. Through the observation window, Kael could see him ly
The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
Sereen's expression didn't change. "You're frightened. That's understandable. You've been told various things about this facility, about my intentions, about what will happen here. Most of them are probably partially true." She gestured again to the chairs. "But we'll accomplish nothing standing in doorways. Sit. We have much to discuss and limited time." "Where's Joren?" Kael demanded. "In medical, receiving continued treatment. As promised." Sereen moved to her desk and opened a leather-bound ledger, consulting handwritten notes. "His vital signs are stable. The corruption has been halted completely. Reversal will take time, but he will survive." She gestured to a nearby observation window. "You can see him yourself if you wish." Through the reinforced glass, they could see into an adjacent medical bay where Joren lay on a bed, mechanical monitoring equipment surrounding him—brass gauges with oscillating needles tracking his pulse, respiration, and resonance levels. His eyes we
You may also like

Beyond The Immortal
Shin Novel 32.6K views
The God of War Calen Storm
Cindy Chen31.7K views
BEAST EMPEROR
Xamo32.7K views
Dao Masters Of Demonic Cultivation
Sweet savage18.7K views
Dao God of the Demonic Path
IOnlyWriteEvilMc862 views
The Underdogs Throne
Kaaylon510 views
ELLIOTT'S QUEST: A Relicbound Adventure
Oluwabiyi Raymond981 views
WORLDBREAKER: Rise of the Reborn Flame
Prisca Ernest335 views