
Blackthorn was burning. The once-proud city had been reduced to a collapsing sea of fire and smoke. Entire streets were swallowed by flames that climbed higher than rooftops, while the sky above darkened into a choking blanket of ash. Screams echoed everywhere. Not distant echoes of fear—but close, real, and breaking.
People ran through the streets without direction, abandoning homes, names, and futures in a desperate attempt to survive what was already unstoppable. Monsters moved through the chaos. They did not rush. They did not hesitate. They simply advanced, as though the city belonged to them from the very beginning.
A towering creature smashed through a stone watchtower with one strike. The structure collapsed instantly, burying soldiers beneath rubble and dust. From the ruins, a knight tried to crawl away. He never made it. The monster grabbed him mid-motion and crushed him without effort. Silence followed for half a second.
Then the screaming returned louder, more desperate. The captain of Blackthorn’s defence force stood in the middle of the ruined avenue. His armour was cracked. His sword trembled in his hand. Around him lay the remains of what used to be his unit.
The battlefield had already decided the outcome. They had lost. But he still stood. Not out of courage, but because there was nowhere left to retreat. Ahead of him, the creature approached. It was called a Flameborn Ravager. Fifteen feet of corrupted flesh and burning veins, each step leaving molten cracks in the stone below. Its breath released sparks like furnace embers, and its eyes burned with violent intelligence.
The captain swallowed hard. His throat was dry. His body refused to move properly anymore. This was not a fight he could win.
The Ravager lifted its arm. And brought it down. The captain raised his sword out of instinct more than hope. But before impact, the air changed. A sudden pressure spread across the battlefield, as reality itself had paused for a fraction of a second. The monster stopped moving. Even the flames seemed to hesitate. Something had entered the space between them.
A young man stood between the captain and the Ravager. He arrived without announcement. No sound of footsteps. No disturbance in the air.Only presence. He wore a long black cloak marked with faded silver symbols that looked like forgotten writing. Ash drifted around him but never touched his body directly, as though something unseen rejected the fire.
The captain blinked slowly. He was certain the man had not been there a moment ago. The stranger lifted his head. Dark silver hair moved slightly in the heatless wind. His eyes, crimson mixed with grey, reflected the burning city without emotion. No fear, no shock, only observation.
The Ravager roared. The sound shook the surrounding ruins. The creature charged forward instantly, its claws tearing through the ground. The young man did not retreat. He stepped forward instead. Just one step. That was all.
In that instant, the world shifted. A flash of motion passed through the air too fast to be properly seen, too precise to be questioned. Then stillness returned. The Ravager froze mid-motion. For a few seconds, nothing happened.
Then its body slowly separated. Not violently.Not dramatically.Just cleanly. The upper half slid away from the lower half and collapsed into the burning street.Dead.Absolute silence followed. The captain’s mouth opened slightly, but no words came out. His mind could not process what his eyes had witnessed. The stranger did not react. He simply turned away from the corpse. As if it had never mattered.
The young man stood among the ruins of Blackthorn. His name was Jasper Ravencrest. And this city was once his home. Years had passed since he last saw it. Thirteen years. Taken as a child because of a bloodline the world feared, Jasper had been dragged into the wilderness and trained by beings whose names he still did not fully understand.
Pain had been his childhood. Survival had been his education. And silence had been his world. Now he had returned. Not as a child.Not as someone weak.But as something the world was not prepared to understand. His gaze moved across the burning streets.
Familiar places lay broken. The shops he once passed as a boy were reduced to ash.The city he remembered no longer existed in the same way. Something inside him tightened. He had not returned for war. He had returned for his family.
Jasper’s body moved suddenly. Not running. Not walking. He simply disappeared from where he stood. The captain staggered backwards in shock.“Where did he—”
But there was no answer. Only wind and fire remained. High above, on a broken tower overlooking the battlefield, a masked figure stood silently. Silver markings covered his cloak. A faint symbol—black sun encircled by chains- glowed faintly on his wrist.
He watched Jasper’s movement with calm interest.“So he returned,” the figure murmured. His voice carried no surprise. Only confirmation. Then he turned away. “This changes the timing.”
Jasper moved across rooftops with unnatural speed. The city blurred beneath him. Flames rose in waves, but he passed through them without hesitation. His expression remained controlled, but something inside him was no longer calm. His heartbeat had changed.Faster.Heavier.Not from exhaustion.From anticipation. From fear, he refused to name.
Then he saw it. The Ravencrest Estate, or what remained of it. Jasper stopped. For a moment, the world went still again, but this time, not because of power. Because of the realisation. The estate was destroyed. Walls collapsed inward.
The main structure was partially burned and partially shattered. Bodies lay scattered across the courtyard. Some were soldiers. Some were servants. Some were people he recognised. Jasper did not move immediately. He simply stared. The wind passed through broken stone. Then he stepped forward. Each step was slower than the last.
Jasper walked through the ruins without speaking. His eyes scanned every fallen body. Old Bran.Lena.The gatekeeper, who used to complain about his childhood mischief. Each name returned without permission. Each memory struck deeper than the last.
But his face did not break. Not yet. Something about the destruction was wrong. This was not random. This was deliberate.Targeted.Controlled.Someone had come for his family specifically. A faint sound reached him. Coughing.
Jasper vanished instantly. He reappeared beside a collapsed wall. A wounded guard lay trapped beneath rubble. Recognition flickered in the man’s eyes.“…Young Master…”
Jasper knelt.“What happened here?” The guard coughed blood before speaking. “They came… asking for something…”“Who?”The guard struggled. “Silver cloaks… and monsters…”
Jasper’s eyes sharpened. Silver cloaks. A fragment of memory surfaced. A warning from one of his mentors. Never trust those who wear the silver order’s mark.“They took your sister…” the guard continued weakly. Jasper froze.“…and your parents…”
A silence followed. A heavy, unnatural silence. The air around Jasper shifted. Not violently.But dangerously. The guard reached into his broken armour and pulled out a small emblem.
A black sun surrounded by chains. The moment Jasper saw it, something inside his memory clicked violently. A warning voice echoed in his mind. If you ever see the Black Sun… run. The guard’s hand fell. He was gone. Jasper slowly stood. The air around him grew heavier. The fire nearby flickered strangely, as if afraid to approach.
Then Clap. A slow, deliberate sound echoed from the ruins ahead. A man stepped out of the smoke. Silver robes.A white mask.Crimson markings glowing faintly across his sleeves. He stood calmly, as though the destruction around him was meaningless.“Impressive,” the masked man said. “You survived longer than expected.” Jasper turned toward him.“Where is my sister?”
The man tilted his head.“Alive.”A pause.“For now.” Jasper’s eyes darkened slightly.“You destroyed my family.” The masked man sighed softly. “Only partially.”
That answer was enough. Jasper took one step forward. The ground cracked beneath his foot. The masked man did not move. Instead, he smiled behind his mask.“You don’t understand anything yet.”Jasper’s voice lowered.“Explain.”
The man chuckled softly.“Tell me, Jasper Ravencrest…” “How does it feel knowing the people who raised you… might be connected to this destruction?”
The world seemed to freeze again. Not from power this time. But the truth is beginning to surface. And somewhere deep within Jasper’s memory, something long buried began to awaken.
Latest Chapter
Chapter 7 — The System That Remembers His Name
The underground chamber of the Ravencrest Estate trembled as the Black Sun Core completed another unstable cycle of activation, and for the first time since its awakening, the system did not merely respond to Jasper Ravencrest; it acknowledged him as something it had once known.A violent pulse surged through the chains binding the chamber, and reality itself flickered as if struggling to maintain consistency. The silver-cloaked operatives immediately shifted into defensive formation, but their movements were no longer confident. Something in the system had changed, and even they could no longer predict its behaviour with certainty.Jasper stood at the centre of it all, his body rigid as waves of unfamiliar pressure rippled through his mind and soul simultaneously. The connection that had once felt invasive had now evolved into something far more dangerous.Recognition.Not his recognition of the system.But the system recognises him. The leader of the silver-cloaked unit stepped forwar
Chapter 6 — The Memory That Was Never His
The moment the core beneath the Ravencrest Estate fully stabilised, reality itself seemed to hesitate. Not collapse. Not explode. But hesitate, as though the world had suddenly realised it was standing on top of something it was never meant to acknowledge.Jasper Ravencrest stood at the centre of the awakening chamber, his breath steady but his body no longer fully under his own authority. The connection between him and the Black Sun Core had deepened beyond interference. It was no longer a force acting upon him.It was responding with him. The silver-cloaked operatives did not advance immediately. For the first time since the battle began, their formation shifted into something more cautious. Their discipline remained intact, but their movements reflected recalculation rather than certainty.The leader raised a single hand.“Stabilisation threshold exceeded,” he said calmly. “Proceed with observation phase.”Jasper slowly lifted his head. His eyes were no longer simply observing the b
Chapter 5 — The Voice Inside the Core
The moment the Black Sun Core fully awakened beneath the Ravencrest Estate, the entire structure of reality around it began to distort as if the world itself had forgotten its original shape. Jasper Ravencrest felt the connection before he understood it. Chains of light extended from the colossal entity below, not as physical restraints anymore, but as living conduits of information and intent. They wrapped around his presence with surgical precision, bypassing resistance entirely and interfacing directly with something deeper than his body.Something inside him reacted instantly. Not his muscles.Not his instincts.But something far more fundamental. Jasper staggered backwards across the fractured platform, his boots scraping against collapsing stone as the sensation spread through him like an invading current. For the first time since his return to Blackthorn, his control wavered not outwardly, but internally.The silver-cloaked operatives did not hesitate. They advanced in synchronis
Chapter 4 — The Awakening Beneath the Estate
The ground beneath the Ravencrest Estate shuddered violently as ancient sigils flared to life across its entire buried structure. Jasper Ravencrest felt it before he saw it. A deep vibration travelled through the soles of his feet, not caused by collapsing ruins or shifting debris, but by something far older awakening beneath layers of forgotten stone. The air itself thickened, becoming heavy enough to distort movement, as if the world was struggling to contain what had just been activated.Above ground, the silver-cloaked operatives adjusted their formation immediately. The leader’s voice cut through the chaos with controlled urgency.“Directive confirmed. Full activation engaged.”Jasper’s gaze narrowed as he slowly lifted his head. He was no longer focused on the enemies in front of him. His attention had shifted downward. Something massive was moving beneath the estate. Not metaphorically.Not symbolically.Literally.The sigils carved into the ruined foundation glowed brighter, spre
Chapter 3 — The Containment Begins
The sky above the Ravencrest Estate fractured with light as the first wave of silver-cloaked operatives descended through the burning smoke. They did not fall like ordinary soldiers. They descended with controlled precision, as though the air itself obeyed their movement. Each landing cracked stone beneath them, forming a wide circle around Jasper Ravencrest without a single wasted motion.The ruins that once belonged to his family had now become a battlefield. And Jasper stood at its centre. For a brief moment, no one moved. Only fire shifted through broken pillars, and ash drifted between opposing sides like the remains of something ancient finally collapsing.Then the silence broke. The leader of the silver-cloaked unit stepped forward. His voice carried calmly across the destroyed courtyard.“Subject Ravencrest has been confirmed.”A pause followed, deliberate and cold.“Begin containment protocol.”The word did not sound like a threat. It sounded like a procedure. Jasper’s eyes narr
Chapter 2 — The Name Beneath the Black Sun
The air inside the Ravencrest Estate felt heavier than smoke. It was not the weight of destruction that pressed down on the broken courtyard, but something far more unnatural, something that lingered like an invisible presence watching from within the ruins. Jasper Ravencrest stood motionless.His eyes remained fixed on the masked man ahead of him, yet his awareness stretched far beyond the immediate space. Every instinct he had developed during years in the wilderness screamed at him that this moment was wrong. Not dangerous in a normal sense.But wrong in a way that suggested design. The masked man tilted his head slightly, as if studying Jasper’s reaction with quiet amusement.“You are calmer than I expected,” he said at last, his voice smooth and almost conversational. Jasper did not respond immediately.His attention shifted briefly to the fallen emblem in the guard’s bloodied handthe black sun surrounded by chains. The symbol no longer felt like a mere mark. It felt like a key un
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