The sun hung high like a merciless overseer, its scorching light beating down on the ancient stone walls of the fortress known as the Black Reach.
Aric Blackthorn stirred awake in one of the upper chambers, a place reserved for those few of the Blackthorn bloodline bold enough to climb this far. There were no elevators here, no humming engines to ease the climb. Most of the old world’s technology had long vanished, buried under the ruins of what people now called the Fall. Time had swept away those wonders like sand through fingers, leaving behind only fragments of knowledge locked away in dusty vaults or dismissed as forbidden relics of a dead age. Aric climbed the winding stairs anyway, his boots echoing against the stone. The soldiers he passed, scarred and battle-hardened, watched him with barely hidden scorn. Whispers followed him like shadows, but he ignored them. When he reached the top, the balcony opened to a sight both brutal and majestic. A line of armored warriors stood before towering creatures, beasts twisted by Vita’s corrupting touch. They were massive, muscles coiled like steel cables, horns jagged as blades, claws gouging deep scars into the rock below. Between them stood a carriage, ornate yet fortified, a relic of a time when elegance and warfare still went hand in hand. “How is that cockroach still alive?” one warrior muttered under his breath. “I heard he took a hit from a Grade Two Enhancer and lived.” Another scoffed. “If he hasn’t evolved by now, he never will. Still useless. A failed experiment.” “I wonder what hopeless task the Sovereign will throw him at next.” Their words spread like venom through the ranks until they saw who was listening. Darius Blackthorn. He wasn’t dressed in the standard gray of the Blood Knight lieutenants. His armor was a deep crimson that radiated power and danger. His sharp, cold features were carved in a permanent scowl, and his very presence seemed to lower the temperature around him. The more the men whispered, the darker his expression grew. He had prayed that Aric was gone for good, dead and forgotten under the weight of his own failures. When word came that Aric had survived, disbelief had cracked through his anger like lightning through a storm. And now, watching the younger man stride across the courtyard without so much as a glance, Darius’s fists clenched until his knuckles ached. The boy had lived. Darius could already feel the frustration burning in his gut, the endless waste of time, energy, and honor that came with being tethered to a ninth vein who refused to evolve. Aric’s failures were a blemish the Blood Sovereign refused to overlook, and Darius had been forced to babysit him on suicide missions that never led anywhere. Every second spent guarding that weakling was a second stolen from Darius’s own rise to power. “Enough,” Darius growled. The single word cut through the air like a blade, silencing the murmurs. As Aric approached, Darius and his soldiers bowed in rigid unison. “Ninth Vein,” they greeted, voices taut with mock respect. Aric didn’t respond. Not a word. Not a glance. He walked straight past them, his crimson eyes unreadable, and stepped into the waiting carriage where Seris stood holding the door. Without hesitation, he entered, and Seris closed it behind him. A heavy quiet fell. Darius’s jaw tightened, his hands gripping the reins until the leather creaked. He kept his glare locked on the sealed carriage long after it began to move. That worthless failure. Escorting Aric was an insult, a theft of everything Darius had worked for. But Blackthorn law was absolute. No one outside the bloodline or sworn oath could lay a hand on a direct descendant. Anyone who tried would pay with their life. “We move,” Darius barked. The carriage itself was an odd mix of old and new, its medieval frame reinforced with etched sigils glowing faintly in the sunlight. At its front stood four Equitaras, massive beasts born from Vita’s corruption. Their wings stretched wide, their claws dug into the stone, and their heavy breaths steamed in the hot air. There were no machines left in this world, no cars, no aircraft. The Equitaras were the only way to travel, a terrifying fusion of power and arcane energy. With a flick of the reins, Darius commanded them forward. The beasts launched into the sky, wings thundering as they climbed higher and higher. Inside the carriage, Aric watched the fortress shrink below, its shadow stretching over the fractured land. His hands clenched around the armrests until his knuckles turned white. He had failed again. The Blood Sovereign had trusted him with another dangerous mission, a chance to prove himself, to finally evolve beyond his cursed stagnation. He had gone into it with a flicker of hope buried under the weight of fear. And yet, like every other time, he had come back unchanged. His eyes followed the distant horizon, the wasteland stretching endlessly beneath the blazing sun. Beyond the fortress lay the Dome, a colossal barrier swallowing nearly one-third of the planet. It covered over 170 million square kilometers, twice the size of ancient Asia, encompassing what remained of North America, Europe, and Asia. The Blackthorns ruled the western regions, the remnants of the Midwestern United States and parts of Eastern Europe. Once thriving cities now lay in ruins, replaced by fortresses built for survival, not beauty. Most of the world within the Dome was barren and silent, a ghost of civilization. But here, where the soil still held life, the land had become the Dome’s breadbasket. The Blackthorns, however, were no farmers. They were conquerors, cold, disciplined, and merciless. The flight back to Ironhold was uneventful. The only sounds were the rhythmic beating of wings and the dull hum of the carriage’s enchanted frame. Aric sat in silence, lost in thought. He had stared death in the face. He had touched the essence of Vita itself. He had fought until his body was nothing but pain and blood. And still, nothing. No evolution. No change. His jaw tightened, anger boiling beneath the surface. Was it ever going to happen? For years, he’d believed that evolution was simply a matter of time and willpower. But that faith was starting to crumble. As the sun dipped low, staining the sky with deep oranges and reds, the Equitaras began their descent. The fortress of Ironhold rose ahead, a city ruled under Blackthorn command. By nightfall, they landed at its gates, the air thick with the scent of steel and smoke. And as Aric stepped out into the darkening light, one thought burned brighter than the rest. He would not fail again.Latest Chapter
Chapter 10: Fracture.
You never have.The words were like pieces of ice, hammered in a midnight storm, that came out of the lips of Aric Blackthorn, each syllable cleaving the tense silence like a blade thrust home.“You bastard!” The stillness was broken by the scream of Vira, and the face of that girl was contorted into a mask of naked, unrestrained rage. Everything around them was moving slowly, like syrup, as the world was approaching a boiling point.The crimson eyes of Aric flashed with deadly accuracy, and narrowed to slits, as though to cut through the very air. His senses were keener, all his muscles tensed as a bowstring.He beheld it all.The slight shake in the hand of Vira holding the dagger, the fingers tightening with the venomous determination.The angry throbbing of a vein at her temple, the fury and barely suppressed rage.The sternness of her set jaw, where reason sank beneath the incoming flood of anger.The straining energy in her legs, ready to deliver a brutal attack.He had practice
Chapter 9: Clash.
Aric Blackthorn stood drenched in sweat, his body trembling from the brutal rhythm of training. His crimson eyes narrowed as they fixed on the slip of white paper in his hand. The forest around him seemed to hold its breath, every rustle and whisper fading into silence.Was it time again? Suspicion and exhaustion twisted inside his mind.Another mission from the Blood Sovereign? Normally, such orders came sealed in crimson parchment—a color that demanded both obedience and fear. But this letter was different. White. Plain. Almost innocent.Seris’s voice broke the silence, steady but cautious. “It’s from Mistress Vira, Ninth Vein.”Aric frowned, stepping closer. Without hesitation, he tore open the envelope. His eyes scanned the brief message, his expression hardening. The paper crumpled in his hand before he tossed it aside with clear disdain.“Ignore it,” he said coldly, his tone slicing through the air like a blade.He turned back to his training, muscles screaming, fury burning thr
Chapter 8: Seris.
Aric Blackthorn shut the massive oak doors of the dining hall behind him and stepped into the night. The air was cool, the manor surrounded by a forest so thick that the moonlight barely touched the ground. Sleep had long abandoned him; rest was a luxury he neither needed nor wanted. His mind and body were restless, drawn once again to the training fields he had carved into existence through sheer willpower and discipline.High above, perched on a tall branch, a pair of crimson eyes followed him through the darkness. Seris watched silently, her face unreadable, her posture still as stone. The flicker of torchlight reflected off Aric’s skin as he moved, muscles straining with every motion, each swing of his blade echoing with raw exhaustion. Sweat and blood shimmered under the faint light, but Seris didn’t flinch. Her expression didn’t waver. She only watched, calm and cold, as if carved from marble.Time slipped by unnoticed until she finally moved. With the silent grace of a shadow,
Chapter 7: Sovereign.
“Still failing to evolve, Aric? Honestly, it would be a mercy if you disappeared altogether. Someone like you doesn’t deserve a seat at this table.”Vira’s voice dripped with venom, every word sharp enough to cut.Heads turned, but no one dared to interfere. It was easier to pretend Aric Blackthorn didn’t exist, easier to treat him as little more than a ghost haunting the family’s grand table.But Vira, ever relentless, couldn’t resist twisting the knife. She lived for these moments—crushing him under her heel, feeding on the silence that followed.Aric didn’t respond.He just sat there, his red eyes glowing faintly beneath lowered lashes, his expression calm and unreadable. His fingers rested loosely in his lap, poised, patient.That quiet defiance only stoked the flames in Vira’s chest. Her brows knitted together, her temper snapping like a drawn bowstring.She leaned forward, her voice rising, sharp with fury.“What else could anyone expect? You’re the son of that filthy—”“Kai.”T
Chapter 6: Dinner.
Time slipped quietly through the forest as Aric Blackthorn and Seris moved beneath the bare branches, their footsteps light and soundless. They traveled until the trees gave way to a clearing, revealing the broken silhouette of a manor swallowed by decay and silence.The building stood like a monument to forgotten glory, its cold stone walls weathered by time. This had been Aric’s inheritance—bestowed upon him at twelve, the age when every Blackthorn heir was meant to awaken and claim their destiny. It was meant to be his stronghold, a symbol of nobility and promise.But to Aric, it was no throne. It was a prison.The house that should have marked his rise had instead become a tomb of quiet isolation. His parents, once powerful and proud, were long gone—casualties of the brutal politics that consumed the clan.Without allies or favor, Aric had become a ghost among his own bloodline. No one wanted to tie their fate to a boy who had failed to evolve, who carried the Blackthorn name but
Chapter 5: The Curse.
Ironhold sat beneath the fading sun like a city forged for war, its metal veins of raised roads slicing through the landscape like old battle scars. It wasn’t built for beauty or dreams; it was built to endure. Every wall, every beam, every road carried the same message: survive, no matter the cost.At its heart loomed a towering fortress, grim and unyielding, surrounded by smaller settlements huddled beneath its shadow like desperate survivors seeking warmth.When twilight spilled across the horizon, Darius Blackthorn declared the day done. The group would rest here under Ironhold’s cold gaze until dawn offered safer skies. Flying at night was suicide, only fools tempted the dark, for it belonged to creatures faster, sharper, and deadlier after sunset.Their arrival swept through the city like a storm. The Blackthorn crest burned bright on their carriage, trailed by armored warriors whose presence silenced the streets. No one dared to challenge them. They stopped at the heart of Redm
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