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The Death Lord Is Back Chapter 157
The corridors twisted beneath the station like veins. Cold. Breathing. Whispering things Elias pretended not to hear.He walked alone.Not because he wanted to.Because something inside him said he had to.Pamela and Marcus didn’t notice when he slipped away. Good. They were too distracted by the mural of Kael—a king painted in gold and shadow, crowned not in glory, but in fear.But Elias knew.He had always known.This wasn’t just about Kael anymore.It never was.The hallway narrowed. The walls began to hum, and the air turned strange, thick like it was made of old memories. The light overhead flickered, casting long shadows that didn’t match his steps.Then he heard it.A voice.It wasn’t speaking words.It was whispering… guilt.And it was his.He came to a door made of black glass and silver bones. It pulsed once. And then—without a sound—it opened for him.Only him.The room inside was small. Circular. Like a forgotten chamber in a forgotten temple.At the center was a crystal—h
The Death Lord Is Back The Mirror of the Forgotten
The station was no longer still. It pulsed like a living thing, walls breathing, lights flickering like a dying heartbeat. Pamela pressed her palm to the console. It didn’t respond. “Marcus,” she whispered. “Something’s wrong. The layout’s changed.” He looked around. “This corridor wasn’t here before.” The walls had shifted again, swallowing the exit behind them. They were trapped. No alarms. No sirens. Just silence. A silence so heavy it made the air hard to breathe. Then the lights cut out completely. For a moment, they were blind. Then came the voices. Familiar. Terrifying. Echoes. “Pamela…” a voice murmured. Her blood froze. It was Kael. But not the Kael she knew. This voice was broken. Empty. She turned. And there it was. A door. Just standing in the hallway. A frame of rusted metal and shimmering glass. No hinges. No logic. Just… waiting. Marcus stepped forward. “Don’t.” Pamela didn’t listen. She opened the door. And walked into her past. The world aro
The Death Lord Is Back Waking the Warbringer
The sirens started first. Low, deep, unnatural. Like the heartbeat of something ancient waking from centuries of silence. Pamela was already at the console, her hands flying across glowing controls she barely understood. “Marcus!” she shouted over the blaring sound. “It’s a timed lock—ten minutes until total purge!” “Total purge?” he echoed, pushing aside a half-melted panel. “What does that mean?” “It means if we don’t get him out of there…” Pamela’s voice caught. “He’s gone. For good. Nothing left.” The containment chamber hummed louder. Kael hung motionless inside—suspended by threads of energy that pulsed with symbols no human language could read. He wasn’t breathing. He wasn’t moving. But something inside the glass was growing brighter. Then came a sound behind them. Boots. A slow, steady walk. They turned as Elias entered the room, calm as ever, his hands behind his back. “You came,” Pamela said, surprise flashing in her eyes. Elias gave a slow nod. “I said I wou
The Death Lord Is Back Chapter 160
“Kael?” Pamela’s voice was shaky. Soft. Too soft for this place.Kael stood there in the dim red light of the stasis chamber, shirtless, barefoot, eyes wide open. But they weren’t the same eyes. Not anymore.They were glowing.Not with light. With memory.With power.His chest rose and fell slowly, like he was learning to breathe again. His fingers twitched. Then his neck turned. Mechanical. Sharp. He looked at Pamela, then Marcus, then Elias… and said nothing.“Kael,” she tried again, stepping closer. “It’s me. It’s Pamela.”He blinked once. “Pamela,” he repeated, flatly. The name came out like data being processed. Not remembered.Her heart broke on the spot.Marcus reached for his weapon on instinct, but Pamela raised a hand. “Don’t,” she whispered. “He’s… he’s confused.”Kael tilted his head, like he was hearing a sound no one else could hear.Then he said, “Define ‘confused.’”Pamela flinched.Marcus stepped forward anyway. “Alright. What do you remember?”Kael’s eyes didn’t blin
The Death Lord Is Back Chapter 161
The walls began to breathe.Not metaphorically—literally. The inner structure of the alien station pulsed like the inside of a lung, as if it were inhaling their presence. Bioluminescent veins of silver and violet light flowed through the walls like liquid circuitry. Every time Kael took a step, the floor rippled gently beneath him, as if the station recognized his weight, his identity… his blood.“Do you feel that?” Pamela whispered.“I feel like we’re inside a heart that’s still beating,” Marcus said, raising his weapon, unsure what to aim at.Kael didn’t speak. He couldn’t. His mind was no longer anchored to the present. Flashes. Echoes. Fragments. Not of this room—but of countless others. Countless lifetimes.The station wasn’t dead. It was dreaming. And those dreams were made of him.Suddenly, columns of light erupted from the walls, forming shapes—human at first, then mutating, then solidifying. Pamela gasped and reached for her gun, but Kael held out his hand.“No,” he said. “T
The Death Lord Is Back Chapter 162
Kael stared at himself.Not a mirror. Not a reflection. Not some symbolic ghost of who he might have become. No—this was real.He was staring into the eyes of himself—a version untouched by Selene’s compassion, unbroken by Elias’s betrayals, unbent by loss. A version born not from survival, but domination. A creature sharpened by war and polished in darkness.The Warborn Kael smiled. It wasn’t a smirk or a grin—it was something hollow, something stretched across a face that had forgotten how to feel.“I used to think you were the worst of us,” he said quietly, walking in slow, measured steps. “The soft one. The one who got too close to the fire and came back afraid of the heat.”Kael clenched his fists. “I’m not afraid.”“No,” the Warborn said. “But you’ve become… inconvenient.”Pamela stepped in front of Kael before he could respond, her weapon raised.“Back away from him,” she warned. “I don’t care what version of Kael you are. You’re not touching him.”The Warborn tilted his head.
The Death Lord Is Back Chapter 163
Kael’s knees hit the floor first.Then his hands.Then his breath—ragged, slipping, strangled in his throat.The Archive trembled around him, colors bending where they shouldn’t exist, time distorting into knots of light. The energy in the room was crushing. It wasn’t pain—it was something worse.Unmaking.Pamela screamed. “Kael!”He could barely lift his head.The Warborn stood over him, not gloating. Not laughing. Just calm. Focused. His hand hovered inches above Kael’s chest. Tendrils of dark light stretched out from his palm—threading into Kael’s ribs like wires.“You feel that?” the Warborn murmured. “The unraveling? That’s your soul, Kael. Peeling apart. Making room for me.”Kael gritted his teeth, hands clawing at the floor, dragging himself back inch by inch.“I… won’t let you.”The Warborn leaned closer. “You already are.”Across the room, Marcus was on the ground, convulsing. His fingers clawed at his head, eyes wide open but seeing too many things at once.“No… I’m not supp
The Death Lord Is Back Chapter 164
The Archive was burning from the inside out.Not with fire—but with collapsing timelines, pulsing memories, fractured light. Every wall breathed with images too fast to process—Kael’s pasts, his futures, twisted and overlapping in a storm of identity.And at the center of it all stood Kael—or what was left of him.One half darkened by the Warborn’s presence. Cold, hollow-eyed. Fingers curled like blades of glass. The other side—his side—trembled, flickering, as though it was being overwritten pixel by pixel.Pamela didn’t wait for permission.She sprinted toward the central console.“Pamela!” Elias barked. “Don’t you dare—”“I’m not losing him again!”The Archive tried to reject her. The control panel was alive, wired to Kael’s neural stream. It surged with volatile energy. She bit back a scream as pain lanced through her arm—veins lit up with neon fire.Still, she didn’t let go.“I can stabilize him,” she gasped. “I have to anchor his memory. Give him a reason to stay who he is.”“Yo
Latest Chapter
Chapter 166
The walls of the Archive began to twist.Not crumble—twist.Time peeled away in sheets, collapsing inward as the group ran, each step falling on ground that might not exist in the next breath. Fragments of timelines flickered all around them—ghostly versions of themselves trapped in loops, echoes of choices they never made screaming like haunted shadows.Pamela grunted as another burst of gravity cracked the hallway open. “Move, move, move!”Marcus was limping behind her, his arm torn and shoulder blackened with some kind of residue from the Warborn’s psychic bleed. “I’m trying! I only have one functioning leg right now!”Kael stumbled, hand gripping the corridor’s wall as it rippled under his fingers like water. He could feel the Archive rejecting them—like it knew they didn’t belong anymore. His entire body hummed, sparking faint pulses of energy that didn’t feel like his own.Selene’s form hovered beside him—bright, fading, flickering.She wasn’t running.She wasn’t solid.“Kael!”
Chapter 165
The chamber pulsed with dying light.Kael stood in the center, swaying like a man on the edge of drowning. His body crackled with unstable energy—residual sparks from the Warborn still peeling off him like pieces of an old skin. His breaths were sharp, ragged, like each inhale was trying to convince his lungs they still belonged to him.Across from him, she stood.Selene.But not the same.Her form shimmered—less a solid person, more a flame made of memory and presence. Her hair drifted like smoke, her eyes glowing with the same soft defiance he remembered. But her voice, when she spoke, wasn’t just sound—it was feeling.“You pulled me back,” she whispered. “Through pain. Through everything.”Kael stepped forward, his legs heavy. “You… I saw you die.”“I did,” she said. “But not all of me went with it.”Pamela watched from behind him, frozen in awe and disbelief. “How… is this even possible?”Selene turned her gaze to her, smiling faintly. “Because he never let go. Kael refused to for
Chapter 164
The Archive was burning from the inside out.Not with fire—but with collapsing timelines, pulsing memories, fractured light. Every wall breathed with images too fast to process—Kael’s pasts, his futures, twisted and overlapping in a storm of identity.And at the center of it all stood Kael—or what was left of him.One half darkened by the Warborn’s presence. Cold, hollow-eyed. Fingers curled like blades of glass. The other side—his side—trembled, flickering, as though it was being overwritten pixel by pixel.Pamela didn’t wait for permission.She sprinted toward the central console.“Pamela!” Elias barked. “Don’t you dare—”“I’m not losing him again!”The Archive tried to reject her. The control panel was alive, wired to Kael’s neural stream. It surged with volatile energy. She bit back a scream as pain lanced through her arm—veins lit up with neon fire.Still, she didn’t let go.“I can stabilize him,” she gasped. “I have to anchor his memory. Give him a reason to stay who he is.”“Yo
Chapter 163
Kael’s knees hit the floor first.Then his hands.Then his breath—ragged, slipping, strangled in his throat.The Archive trembled around him, colors bending where they shouldn’t exist, time distorting into knots of light. The energy in the room was crushing. It wasn’t pain—it was something worse.Unmaking.Pamela screamed. “Kael!”He could barely lift his head.The Warborn stood over him, not gloating. Not laughing. Just calm. Focused. His hand hovered inches above Kael’s chest. Tendrils of dark light stretched out from his palm—threading into Kael’s ribs like wires.“You feel that?” the Warborn murmured. “The unraveling? That’s your soul, Kael. Peeling apart. Making room for me.”Kael gritted his teeth, hands clawing at the floor, dragging himself back inch by inch.“I… won’t let you.”The Warborn leaned closer. “You already are.”Across the room, Marcus was on the ground, convulsing. His fingers clawed at his head, eyes wide open but seeing too many things at once.“No… I’m not supp
Chapter 162
Kael stared at himself.Not a mirror. Not a reflection. Not some symbolic ghost of who he might have become. No—this was real.He was staring into the eyes of himself—a version untouched by Selene’s compassion, unbroken by Elias’s betrayals, unbent by loss. A version born not from survival, but domination. A creature sharpened by war and polished in darkness.The Warborn Kael smiled. It wasn’t a smirk or a grin—it was something hollow, something stretched across a face that had forgotten how to feel.“I used to think you were the worst of us,” he said quietly, walking in slow, measured steps. “The soft one. The one who got too close to the fire and came back afraid of the heat.”Kael clenched his fists. “I’m not afraid.”“No,” the Warborn said. “But you’ve become… inconvenient.”Pamela stepped in front of Kael before he could respond, her weapon raised.“Back away from him,” she warned. “I don’t care what version of Kael you are. You’re not touching him.”The Warborn tilted his head.
Chapter 161
The walls began to breathe.Not metaphorically—literally. The inner structure of the alien station pulsed like the inside of a lung, as if it were inhaling their presence. Bioluminescent veins of silver and violet light flowed through the walls like liquid circuitry. Every time Kael took a step, the floor rippled gently beneath him, as if the station recognized his weight, his identity… his blood.“Do you feel that?” Pamela whispered.“I feel like we’re inside a heart that’s still beating,” Marcus said, raising his weapon, unsure what to aim at.Kael didn’t speak. He couldn’t. His mind was no longer anchored to the present. Flashes. Echoes. Fragments. Not of this room—but of countless others. Countless lifetimes.The station wasn’t dead. It was dreaming. And those dreams were made of him.Suddenly, columns of light erupted from the walls, forming shapes—human at first, then mutating, then solidifying. Pamela gasped and reached for her gun, but Kael held out his hand.“No,” he said. “T
Chapter 160
“Kael?” Pamela’s voice was shaky. Soft. Too soft for this place.Kael stood there in the dim red light of the stasis chamber, shirtless, barefoot, eyes wide open. But they weren’t the same eyes. Not anymore.They were glowing.Not with light. With memory.With power.His chest rose and fell slowly, like he was learning to breathe again. His fingers twitched. Then his neck turned. Mechanical. Sharp. He looked at Pamela, then Marcus, then Elias… and said nothing.“Kael,” she tried again, stepping closer. “It’s me. It’s Pamela.”He blinked once. “Pamela,” he repeated, flatly. The name came out like data being processed. Not remembered.Her heart broke on the spot.Marcus reached for his weapon on instinct, but Pamela raised a hand. “Don’t,” she whispered. “He’s… he’s confused.”Kael tilted his head, like he was hearing a sound no one else could hear.Then he said, “Define ‘confused.’”Pamela flinched.Marcus stepped forward anyway. “Alright. What do you remember?”Kael’s eyes didn’t blin
Waking the Warbringer
The sirens started first. Low, deep, unnatural. Like the heartbeat of something ancient waking from centuries of silence. Pamela was already at the console, her hands flying across glowing controls she barely understood. “Marcus!” she shouted over the blaring sound. “It’s a timed lock—ten minutes until total purge!” “Total purge?” he echoed, pushing aside a half-melted panel. “What does that mean?” “It means if we don’t get him out of there…” Pamela’s voice caught. “He’s gone. For good. Nothing left.” The containment chamber hummed louder. Kael hung motionless inside—suspended by threads of energy that pulsed with symbols no human language could read. He wasn’t breathing. He wasn’t moving. But something inside the glass was growing brighter. Then came a sound behind them. Boots. A slow, steady walk. They turned as Elias entered the room, calm as ever, his hands behind his back. “You came,” Pamela said, surprise flashing in her eyes. Elias gave a slow nod. “I said I wou
The Mirror of the Forgotten
The station was no longer still. It pulsed like a living thing, walls breathing, lights flickering like a dying heartbeat. Pamela pressed her palm to the console. It didn’t respond. “Marcus,” she whispered. “Something’s wrong. The layout’s changed.” He looked around. “This corridor wasn’t here before.” The walls had shifted again, swallowing the exit behind them. They were trapped. No alarms. No sirens. Just silence. A silence so heavy it made the air hard to breathe. Then the lights cut out completely. For a moment, they were blind. Then came the voices. Familiar. Terrifying. Echoes. “Pamela…” a voice murmured. Her blood froze. It was Kael. But not the Kael she knew. This voice was broken. Empty. She turned. And there it was. A door. Just standing in the hallway. A frame of rusted metal and shimmering glass. No hinges. No logic. Just… waiting. Marcus stepped forward. “Don’t.” Pamela didn’t listen. She opened the door. And walked into her past. The world aro
