LOGINDawn arrived gently, devoid of the storms, thunder, or omens that had long characterized the turning points of her life. Instead, there was only light. Soft morning sunlight poured over the pack lands, touching the rooftops, ancient trees, stone walls, and open fields with quiet gold. It was a moment of real, unadulterated peace—an unfamiliar sensation that felt beautiful and, above all, earned. For the first time in her entire life, Aria woke without fear. No nightmares dragged her from sleep, no ancient power screamed inside her mind, and no prophecy waited like a shadow at the edge of her thoughts. There was only warmth, stillness, and the simple comfort of her own breath.She opened her eyes slowly to find Ryan still asleep beside her, one arm resting loosely around her waist. His face looked younger in sleep, stripped of the burdens and guards that leadership and war usually demanded of him. He looked almost like the boy he might have been before the world forced him to become ha
The morning came with a profound, unaccustomed quiet. There were no frantic alarms blaring through the corridors, no urgent summons from the war room, and no distant blare of battle horns echoing across the valley. No breathless messengers arrived on lathered horses bearing tidings of impending disaster. Instead, there was only the sunlight …soft, golden, and entirely peaceful—spilling across the floorboards of Ryan’s chambers.Aria woke slowly, drifting upward from a deep, dreamless sleep. For a few disorienting seconds, a familiar confusion gripped her. The deeply ingrained instincts of a survivor flared to life, her mind automatically cycling through the questions that had governed her existence for years: *What happened? What danger is coming? What did I miss?* Her muscles tensed, preparing her body to fight or flee, before the stillness of the room filtered through her senses and she forced herself to stop.There was no threat lurking in the shadows, and no impending chaos waitin
Three days after the cataclysm at the execution grounds, the dust had finally begun to settle, yet the world bore little resemblance to the one they had known. The old reality had shattered, leaving behind an era defined by profound uncertainty. It was a fragile, unfinished frontier, a blank canvas where history was waiting to be rewritten.News of what had transpired at the gallows spread faster than wildfire across every neighboring kingdom. Messengers rode through bustling cities and treacherous mountain passes without rest, their horses lathered in sweat. Witches dispatched enchanted ravens that streaked across the sky bearing urgent, magically sealed reports, while merchants willingly abandoned their lucrative trade routes just to be the first to carry the tale to the next tavern. Everywhere people gathered, they spoke of the same impossible, world-altering event: the Prophecy Child had died, and then she had risen.As the days passed, the narrative fractured and mutated dependin
In the quiet hours following the upheaval, a profound calm settled over what remained of the execution square. For the first time in what felt like an eternity, there were no clashes of steel, no desperate cries, and no trails of blood staining the stones. The frantic rush to survive had finally ebbed away. In its place came a silence unlike any they had known before. It was not the heavy finality of death or the choking grip of terror. This was something gentler and more fragile. It was peace, tentative and new, spreading through the air like the first rays of true morning light.The crowd began to disperse in slow, exhausted waves. Many slipped away without a word, their minds still reeling from the impossible events they had witnessed. Others lingered at the edges of the square, casting hesitant glances back toward Aria as though she might vanish if they looked away too long. Kings regrouped with their remaining guards, speaking in low tones. Priests bowed their heads in quiet refl
As the long night finally yielded, the first hints of dawn crept across the ruined execution square. Gentle shafts of soft golden light pierced the lingering storm clouds, slowly illuminating the shattered stone and scattered remnants of the previous chaos. For the first time in what felt like an eternity, the sky began to clear, revealing patches of pale blue that promised a new day. The symbolism resonated deeply with everyone present. The darkness had lifted. Something ancient and oppressive had perished in this place, though it was not Aria. What had truly died was fear itself, or at least the iron grip it had held over their world for generations.Ryan and Aria stood together at the heart of the broken platform, their fingers intertwined in quiet solidarity. There were no chains binding them now, no executioner’s blade hovering nearby, and no thrones looming in judgment. They were simply two people who had endured every trial designed to break them, standing resilient amid the wr
The southern king remained on his knees in the center of the shattered execution platform, utterly broken. This was not a defeat born of violence or lost battle, but one delivered by the merciless weight of truth. His crown had slipped sideways, hanging at an awkward angle against his sweat-soaked hair. His chest rose and fell in ragged, uneven breaths, each inhale sounding as though something vital had been torn apart inside him. The once-proud ruler now appeared small and diminished, stripped of every illusion that had sustained him.The entire execution square remained wrapped in profound silence. No one rushed forward to help the fallen king. No guards stepped in to defend him, and no other ruler dared speak a word in his support. Everyone present understood that something fundamental had shifted in that moment. The old order had cracked wide open, and it would never fully mend again. The foundations of power built on fear and control had begun to crumble, leaving only uncertainty
The first strike came fast, but Ryan was already moving.He stepped straight into it instead of pulling away, closing the distance before the attacker could finish the swing. His forearm came up, blocking the blow and redirecting its power. In the same smooth motion, he slammed his elbow hard into
Something felt off before the session even started. Aria stood in the center of the room again. It was the same space with the same controlled pressure and the same silence as before. But this time her body did not settle into the environment. It resisted the feeling instead. The resistance was not
The second attack did not come with any warning. It came with silence instead. Ryan felt it before he saw anything happen. It was that same shift again. The air was tightening around them and there was movement where there should not have been any movement at all.“Get ready,” he said quietly to Ca
Aria didn’t argue this time.That was the first thing Darius noticed, and it immediately put him on guard.She stood in the center of the room, exactly where she had been before. Nothing about her position had changed, but her presence had. The tension that usually followed her was gone. No sharp r







