Path of the Forsaken Sigil
Path of the Forsaken Sigil
Author: Yeshua Yin
Chapter 1
Author: Yeshua Yin
last update2026-06-22 10:13:38

On the Great Plaza of the Iron-Heart Clan, the ground had turned into a thick, brown soup of mud and gravel. 

For most of the young men and women standing in the plaza, this was the greatest day of their lives. 

It was the day of the Rite of the Hollow Throne. It was the day they would finally bind a supernatural spirit to their souls and become true sorcerers.

But for Bruce Thompson, it was just another day of being a footstool.

"Don't you dare twitch, you piece of trash," a voice hissed from above him.

Bruce was on his hands and knees in the freezing mud. His thin shirt was soaked through, sticking to his ribs. He could feel the sharp stones cutting into his kneecaps. He didn't move. He couldn't. 

Above him, his cousin Nicholas stood with one heavy, leather boot planted firmly in the middle of Bruce’s back.

Nicholas was everything Bruce was not. He was tall, well-fed, and dressed in silk robes of iron-gray and crimson. He was the golden boy of the Iron-Heart Clan, the favorite nephew of the Matriarch. 

To Nicholas, Bruce was not a person. He was not even a cousin. He was a Chain-Bearer, a servant born from a mother who had brought shame to their bloodline.

"Are you listening to me, bastard?" Nicholas asked, shifting his weight. He pressed his heel down harder, grinding Bruce’s chest toward the wet earth. "If you get even a speck of mud on my ritual boots, I will have the guards flay the skin off your back. Do you understand?"

Bruce’s face was inches from a puddle. He could see his own reflection in the dirty water. His eyes were dark, tired, and hollow. He looked like a ghost that hadn't realized it was dead yet.

"I understand, Nicholas," Bruce whispered. His voice was raspy from a week of sleeping in the cold stables.

"It’s 'Lord Nicholas' to you," the cousin sneered.

Around them, hundreds of citizens of Oakhaven watched from the stands. They didn't look away in shame. They didn't feel pity. Instead, they laughed.

"Look at the priestess’s son," a woman in the crowd joked, pointing a finger. "Nineteen years old and still acting like a dog. His mother ran off to join a dark cult and left us with this garbage."

"He shouldn't even be allowed near the Hollow Throne," an old man added, spitting into the mud. "His blood is tainted. He will probably awaken a maggot or a sewer rat if he touches the crystal."

Bruce closed his eyes. The insults were old. They were scars he had worn since he was a child. 

They called his mother, Victoria, a traitor. They said she was a high priestess who had stolen a sacred relic and fled into the night, leaving her infant son behind as a reminder of her sin. 

For nineteen years, the Iron-Heart Clan had kept him alive only to punish him for her disappearance.

"Move," Nicholas commanded.

He used Bruce’s back as a step, launching himself up onto the high stone stage where the ritual altar sat. He didn't care that his boot left a deep, muddy bruise on Bruce’s spine. He didn't look back as Bruce collapsed into the mud, gasping for air.

Bruce slowly pushed himself up. His hands were shaking from the cold and the hunger. He wiped the mud from his face, but it only smeared further. He looked up at the stage.

In the center of the platform stood the Hollow Throne. It wasn't a chair, but a massive, jagged crystal that floated three feet above a stone pedestal. It glowed with a faint, eerie blue light. 

This was the source of the clan’s power. By touching it, a person could reach into the spirit realm and pull out a protector—a wolf, a hawk, a warrior spirit, or even a minor elemental.

Beside the crystal stood Lady Hestia, the Matriarch of the Iron-Heart Clan. She was a tall woman with hair as white as salt and eyes like chips of flint. She held a long, silver staff that hummed with magical energy.

"Silence!" Hestia’s voice boomed. It wasn't just a loud voice; it was infused with sorcery. The sound hit the crowd like a physical wave, forcing everyone to stop talking.

Hestia looked down at the mud-stained boy standing at the foot of the stage. Her lip curled in disgust.

"Today," Hestia began, her voice cold and formal, "we celebrate the strength of the Iron-Heart bloodline. We bind our youth to the spirits of the world. But before we begin the blessings, we must finish the cleaning."

She pointed her staff at Bruce. "Bruce Thompson. Step forward."

Bruce felt every eye in the city lock onto him. His heart hammered against his ribs like a trapped bird. He walked up the stone steps, his bare feet leaving wet prints on the clean marble. He felt small. He felt like a lamb walking into a butcher shop.

When he reached the top, he didn't look at Nicholas, who was grinning like a shark. He looked at Hestia.

"For nineteen years," Hestia said, speaking to the crowd, "we have shown mercy. We have fed the son of a traitor. We have given him a roof. We have allowed him to breathe our air. But the heavens do not reward mercy to the tainted. Our clan’s power has weakened. Our harvests are smaller. The spirits are angry because we harbor a Void-Born among us."

A murmur of agreement ran through the crowd. They wanted someone to blame for their problems, and Bruce was an easy target.

"Bruce Thompson," Hestia said, her voice dropping to a low, dangerous growl. "Today, you are no longer a servant. You are no longer a resident of Oakhaven. You are being stripped of your name, your history, and your soul’s right to magic."

She reached into a small iron brazier sitting on a tripod. From the coals, she pulled out a branding iron. The tip was shaped like a broken circle with a jagged line through the middle. It glowed with a sickly, purple fire.

"The Brand of the Void," Nicholas whispered, his voice full of excitement. "You're going to be a nameless ghost, Bruce. No spirit will ever touch you. No house will ever take you in. You’ll be dead before the sun sets."

The Brand of the Void was a death sentence. It was a magical seal that didn't just burn the skin; it cauterized the "Gate" in a person’s soul. It made it impossible for them to ever practice sorcery or bind a spirit. In a world full of monsters and magic, a person without a spirit was as good as meat.

"Kneel," Hestia commanded.

Bruce didn't kneel. He stood his ground. He was tired of kneeling.

"I said, kneel!" Hestia barked. She released a burst of pressure from her staff. The magical weight slammed into Bruce’s shoulders, forcing his joints to crack as he was shoved down to his knees.

Two guards stepped forward, grabbing Bruce’s arms and pinning him. They pulled his shirt down, exposing his right shoulder.

Hestia stepped closer. The heat from the branding iron was so intense it made the air shimmer. "Do you have any final words, bastard? Any last lies to tell about your mother?"

Bruce looked up. He didn't look at the iron. He didn't look at the crowd. He looked directly into Hestia’s cold, gray eyes. 

For the first time in his life, the fear in his heart was replaced by something else. A spark of cold, sharp fury.

"My mother didn't run away," Bruce said. His voice was quiet, but in the silence of the plaza, it carried to every ear.

Hestia paused, the iron inches from his skin. "What did you say?"

"She didn't run," Bruce whispered, his eyes narrowing. "I remember the night she left. I was small, but I remember the blood on the floor. I remember the men in iron masks. She didn't run away from this family, Hestia. She was hunted by it."

The Matriarch’s face went pale for a split second, a flash of guilt or fear, before it turned into a mask of pure rage.

"Lies!" she screamed. "You are just like her! A mouth full of poison!"

She slammed the glowing iron onto Bruce’s shoulder.

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  • Chapter 8

    Bruce Thompson felt his heart stutter in his chest. It felt like a small, tired bird hitting its wings against a cage. The silver needle Mike had jabbed into his neck was small, but the poison inside was powerful. It didn't just hurt; it made him forget how to breathe.He slumped onto the dusty bed. The smell of his mother’s old lavender perfume was the last thing he expected to sense before he died."I’m sorry, Bruce," Mike’s voice drifted from the shadows. It sounded far away, like someone speaking from the bottom of a deep well. "In this world, being a bastard is a crime. Being a powerful bastard is a death sentence. I'm just the one who carries out the punishment."Bruce’s eyes began to roll back. He saw the Ashen Seraph, his magnificent, terrifying protector, begin to flicker. The angel’s six wings, usually so strong and radiant, were becoming translucent. Its skeletal mask was turning into smoke. The bond was breaking because the master was dying.“Is this it?” Bruce thought.

  • Chapter 7

    Deep beneath the wooden floorboards, near the bed, a rhythmic golden light was beating. It was faint, like a dying candle, but it was there.Bruce ran to the spot. He knelt down, his fingers clawing at the gap between the boards. These boards weren't rotted; they were reinforced with lead to hide what was underneath."Help me," Bruce urged.The Seraph used a single claw to pry the heavy board upward. It snapped with a loud crack, revealing a hidden compartment lined with velvet.Inside, there was no gold. There were no jewels. There was a small, leather-bound book with a silver lock, and a small glass vial containing a single lock of raven-black hair.As Bruce picked up the vial, his entire arm began to tingle. The lock of hair wasn't just hair; it hummed with the exact same frequency as the Seraph behind him. It was a "Soul-Anchor," a piece of a living person used to tether a spirit to this world."It’s her hair," Bruce whispered, a tear finally escaping and rolling down his cheek.

  • Chapter 6

    The golden light of the Inquisitors was not warm. It did not feel like a summer sun or a cozy hearth. It felt like a desert at noon, harsh, blinding, and thirsty for blood.High Inquisitor Bontus sat atop a horse made of solidified sunlight. His armor was so polished it reflected the chaos of the plaza like a thousand tiny mirrors. He raised a flaming sword, and the tip pointed directly at Bruce’s heart."Heretic!" Bontus’s voice was like a clap of thunder. "By the decree of the Order of the Solar Flame, you are found guilty of summoning a Forbidden Entity. Surrender your soul to the fire, or be erased from existence!"Lady Hestia was laughing now, a shrill, hysterical sound. "Kill him! Burn the bastard! See how his 'angel' fares against the light of the true gods!"Bruce felt the heat of the Inquisitors' presence pressing in on him. His heart pounded in his ears. He was one boy against an army of holy hunters. He looked at the Ashen Seraph. The creature was calm, its six wings pulsi

  • Chapter 5

    Thirty guards, dressed in iron-plated armor and carrying enchanted spears, began to close in. They were the "Iron Guard," the elite soldiers of the clan. Each of them had a minor spirit bound to their weapons, making their spears glow with various elemental lights."Stay back," Bruce warned.The guards didn't stop. They saw a nineteen-year-old boy. They didn't understand the power they were facing.Bruce felt a pulse of heat from his branded shoulder. The "Brand of the Void" was still there, but it felt different now. It wasn't a seal anymore; it was a doorway. He realized that the Seraph wasn't just a pet he had summoned. It was an extension of his own will.Suddenly, Bruce felt a new sensation. It was like he could feel the weight of every shadow in the courtyard. The shadow of the stage, the shadow of the pillars, even the shadows cast by the guards themselves.“Dominion,” a voice whispered in his mind. It was the Seraph’s voice. “Everything the light touches belongs to the sun.

  • Chapter 4

    The silence in the Great Plaza was not a peaceful one. It was the kind of silence that happened right after a lightning strike, before the thunder broke the sky.Bruce Thompson stood in the center of the ruin. Rain still fell, but it didn't touch him. The heat radiating from the Ashen Seraph created a dry circle around him, turning the falling water into thin, ghostly steam. Behind him, the six-winged creature held the Silver-Gale Falcon by its neck. The majestic bird, which had been the symbol of Nicholas’s pride, looked like a broken toy in the angel’s silver grip.Nicholas was on his knees, clutching his chest. His face was a mask of pure agony. In the world of Oakhaven, a sorcerer and his spirit were connected by an invisible cord of light. Whatever the spirit felt, the master felt."Please..." Nicholas gasped, a string of bloody saliva dripping from his lip. "Bruce... it hurts... tell it to let go..."Bruce looked at his cousin. He remembered three winters ago, when Nicholas ha

  • Chapter 3

    The heavy, gray clouds that had been weeping rain over Oakhaven suddenly ripped apart. But there was no blue sky behind them. Instead, the firmament turned a deep, bruised violet, a color so unnatural it made the onlookers gasp in terror. The sun, which had been a pale coin behind the clouds, was suddenly smothered. A massive, shadowy silhouette drifted across the face of the sun, casting a jagged, six-winged shadow over the entire Iron-Heart estate."What is that?" someone screamed from the stands. "Is the sun dying?"Lady Hestia fell back, her silver staff clattering against the marble floor. She looked up at the sky, her eyes wide with a fear she had never shown in her sixty years of life. "The eclipse... the prophecy of the Bleeding Sky..."In the center of the shattered ritual stage, Bruce Thompson was no longer visible. He had been swallowed by a pillar of black flame. This was not the fire of a hearth or a forge. It was a cold fire, a flame made of pure darkness that didn't

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