Silent Power: Rise Of the Hidden Heir
Silent Power: Rise Of the Hidden Heir
Author: Sueños
The Shard And The Howl
Author: Sueños
last update2026-01-12 18:06:21

 The delivery was supposed to be easy. In and out. No drama.

Ronan Burke slid down a rusted fire escape in Chinatown, boots scraping metal as he dropped the last few feet. A sealed packet of meds was tucked tight inside his vest. Lose that, and he didn’t get paid. Simple math.

The air smelled like wet concrete and burned ozone. Sirens wailed somewhere far off, then closer, then faded again. Seven years after the Aura Revival, New York never shut up. Crisis was background noise now.

Across the river, Manhattan’s regulated zones glowed behind bright energy shields. Military tech. Family arrays. Clean streets, real food, safety, for people who mattered. Out here on the edges, you survived or you didn’t.

“Should’ve charged extra,” Ronan muttered under his breath.

The client was a street alchemist with a bad temper and too much money. He’d paid triple to move the package fast and quiet from Queens. Ronan took the job because fast and quiet was what he did best.

He crossed rooftops instead of streets. Asphalt below had split open, trees punching through like they owned the place. Alleyways had turned into narrow forests. Ground level meant patrols, scanners, and small monsters looking for easy meals.

Ronan dropped onto a dumpster in a low crouch. No sound. Years of parkour and desperation had taught his body what to do before his brain caught up.

“Two weeks’ rent,” he whispered. “Don’t screw this up.”

Then he heard it.

A low, rough growl rolled out of the alley ahead. Not loud. Not rushed. Confident.

Ronan went still.

“Yeah,” he said quietly, hand tightening on the edge of the dumpster. “Of course it wouldn’t be easy.”

Two glowing amber eyes lit up the darkness.

They were huge. Way too big.

A Steel Furred Wolf stepped out of the shadows, its fur clumped together like dull metal. It was massive, its shoulders came up to Ronan’s chest. Thick jaws opened, strings of saliva dripping down. Those teeth looked like they could bite through a streetlight.

Ronan swallowed. “Okay,” he whispered, forcing a weak grin. “Nice dog. I’m just walking by.”

The wolf sniffed the air. Its nose twitched. It smelled the package. The herbs inside still carried a trace of spiritual energy.

The wolf lowered its body.

“Oh no,” Ronan said. “That’s a bad look.”

It charged.

Ronan didn’t stop to think. Thinking got people killed. He ran.

He sprinted toward a brick wall, leapt, and kicked off a rusted pipe sticking out of it. His body flew just as the wolf lunged underneath him, jaws snapping shut on empty air.

He hit the ground hard and kept moving.

“Too slow!” he shouted, already sprinting down the alley.

The wolf roared and came after him.

Left turn. Jump the gap. Don’t look back.

Ronan’s mind went blank except for movement. Hands grabbed ledges. Feet hit walls. He vaulted trash piles and broken fences as the street exploded behind him. The wolf tore through debris like it wasn’t even there.

“Why are you so fast?” Ronan gasped.

Ahead, the city opened up, and his stomach dropped.

“No. No, no, no,” he muttered.

He was heading straight toward Central Park. The expanded wilds. The place everyone avoided.

Then the ground shook.

Not from the wolf.

From far to the north, a deep, rolling roar echoed through the city. One voice became many. Dozens. Hundreds. A wall of sound bouncing off dead skyscrapers.

Ronan skidded to a stop.

“Beast Tide,” he whispered.

And he realized he’d just run into something much worse.

Sirens exploded across the city.

Not the distant kind. These were loud, sharp, panicked. The kind that meant things had already gone wrong.

The Steel Furred Wolf skidded to a halt behind Ronan. Its ears flattened. It looked past him, toward the north, where the roar of the Beast Tide was growing louder.

Ronan glanced back and laughed breathlessly. “Yeah,” he said. “Bigger dinner just showed up, didn’t it?”

The wolf hesitated. Food now… or the call of the horde.

Ronan didn’t wait for it to decide.

He cut hard to the right and dove through a broken storefront. Glass crunched under his boots as he burst out the back door and sprinted down the alley. The building groaned behind him as it blocked the wolf’s line of sight.

“Sorry,” Ronan muttered. “You’ll have to eat someone else.”

He ran straight toward Central Park.

Every sane part of his brain screamed at him to stop.

The park was a dead zone. People went in and didn’t come back. Maps didn’t work right. Signals died. Monsters lived there.

But it was also where you could disappear.

The trees at the edge of the park weren’t normal trees anymore. They formed a solid wall of wood and shadow. Oaks and maples had grown huge, trunks wider than subway cars, branches tangled so thick they erased the sky.

Ronan slowed for half a second, staring. “You’ve got to be kidding me.”

Then he ran in.

The moment he crossed the tree line, the city vanished. The air grew heavy, pressing down on him. It tasted like metal and dirt. Aura flooded the space, thick enough to feel on his skin.

The forest creaked and groaned as if it were alive. Something small skittered nearby. Something else moved higher up, unseen.

Behind him, the Beast Tide thundered closer.

Light fell in pale beams through the canopy, dust and glowing pollen drifting through the air like slow moving sparks.

Ronan swallowed and whispered, “Please let this be the right kind of weird.”

Then Ronan saw it.

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

Latest Chapter

  • The One Who Waits

    The garden screamed.Every flower, every root, every seed that Ronan had planted over the years all of them cried out as the figure wearing his face raised its hand. The sky darkened. The rivers ran backward. Reality itself seemed to bend around this being.Ronan stood frozen, staring at himself.Not his old self. Not Kai, the reflection who had chosen to become something new. This was something else. Something that had been waiting in the shadows of his own soul for fifty three years."You're not me," Ronan said quietly."I'm every part of you that you buried. Every doubt you suppressed. Every moment you wanted to give up but didn't." The figure smiled cold, perfect, terrible. "I'm the version of you that chose perfection over love. Certainty over hope. Power over connection."Lyra stepped forward, her blade drawn. "Step away from him.""Lyra." The figure's eyes softened with something that might have been recognition. "You chose him over your family. Over your future. Over everythi

  • The Void’s Embrace

    The garden died in silence.No screams. No battles. No heroic last stands. One moment, flowers sang. The next, they were simply... gone. Not erased. As if they had never existed at all.Ronan felt it happen. Felt the absence spreading like a disease through everything he had built."Ronan."Primal's voice was barely a whisper."The Void is here."He ran.Through fields where flowers had bloomed moments ago now empty soil. Past rivers that had flowed with liquid hope now dry beds. The garden was dying, and he couldn't stop it.He found Lyra at the garden's heart, standing before the intertwined flowers Origin's bloom and Grief Bloom. They were still alive. Barely."Ronan, what's happening?""The Void. It's here. It's consuming everything.""But the flowers""Are fighting. But they're losing."Kai appeared beside them, his young face pale. "I can feel it. The absence. It's not attacking it's unmaking. Making it so nothing ever existed.""How do we fight something like that?"Kai looke

  • The Erasure

    "Stay. Learn. Grow. Help us tend the gardens." Ronan smiled. "You've spent eternity trying to destroy hope. Maybe it's time to try something different."The being looked at the new garden growing where the weapon had been. At the Seekers who were watching, uncertain, hopeful."I would like... to try."The celebration that night was unlike any before.Not because they had won they had won many battles. But because an enemy had chosen. A being who had spent eternity trying to erase hope had decided to become part of it.The new being it chose the name "Quest" sat beneath the great flower, asking questions, learning to wonder."How do you know which hope to plant?" it asked Elara."You don't. You plant them all. Some grow. Some don't. That's okay.""And the ones that don't grow?""They become soil for the ones that will."Quest considered this. "That is... inefficient.""Life is inefficient. That's what makes it beautiful."Ronan sat apart from the celebration, watching.Lyra found him

  • Silence

    The weapon pulsed.It wasn't light or darkness it was absence. The place where the weapon pointed simply stopped existing. Not destroyed. Not transformed. Just... never there.Ronan watched as a section of the garden vanished. Flowers that had sung for centuries. Soil that had held the dreams of a thousand worlds. Gone."This is your end, Hope Bringer," the Seeker leader hissed. "Not with fire or force. With truth. You never existed."Ronan's mind raced. The weapon didn't attack the body. It attacked memory. If it touched him, he wouldn't die. He would simply... never have been. Lyra wouldn't remember him. Elara wouldn't be his daughter. The gardens would never have grown."You're making a mistake," he said quietly."Truth does not make mistakes.""Truth doesn't. But you're not truth. You're fear. Fear of what you might become if you let yourself hope."The leader's form flickered."You know nothing of what we are.""I know you're alone. I know you've always been alone. I know that's

  • Silence Gift

    Ronan shook his head. "I'm just a man. A street rat who got lucky.""You are the man who refused to give up. Who chose hope when hope was foolish. Who told truth when truth was painful. Who loved when love was dangerous." The Dreamers stepped closer. "You are exactly who we have been waiting for."They showed him everything.The beginning when hope and truth were one, when the universe sang with possibilities, when every choice led to growth. The separation when some beings chose certainty over wonder, when hope and truth became enemies, when the long war began. The present gardens spreading, seeds blooming, hope returning to worlds that had forgotten it."The war is not over," the Dreamers said. "The Seekers who fled are gathering. They have found something in the deep dark a weapon that can destroy hope forever. They will come. And when they do, the gardens will need a defender.""What kind of defender?""One who can be everywhere at once. Who can carry every hope, speak every tru

  • The Bridge Between

    One month after the Origin's flower bloomedRonan stood at the edge of the garden, looking out at the stars.His hands no longer pulsed with the strange light that had followed the Origin's transformation. He was himself again not young, not old, just Ronan. The garden had accepted him as its Gardener, and the flower had accepted him as its keeper. But something else was growing inside him. Something he didn't fully understand."You're doing it again."Lyra appeared beside him, her footsteps silent on the soft grass."Doing what?""Staring at nothing. Thinking too loud." She took his hand. "What's wrong?""I don't know. That's what's wrong." He turned to face her. "Since the Origin's flower bloomed, I've felt... different. Like there's something inside me that wasn't there before.""The seed?""Not the seed. Something else. Something that's been waiting."The message came at dawn.Primal materialized in a flash of urgent light, its form flickering between colors Ronan had never seen.

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