FAZER LOGINThe ocean trembled beneath them, not as a surface reacting to wind, but as something alive struggling to contain what lay beneath. Aurelian hovered in stillness, his gaze fixed downward into the endless dark. Kaelith floated beside him, arms loose at his sides, though his eyes were sharper now, more focused than before.Then it came.Not rising, not emerging, but unfolding.The water beneath them warped and bent, pulled inward as if space itself had been disturbed. A faint glow pulsed from below, slow and rhythmic, like a heartbeat that did not belong to the world.Kaelith exhaled under his breath. “That’s not a creature.”Aurelian did not answer, because there was nothing to name it with.Leviathan moved.The ocean above them erupted.The surface of the Pacific Ocean twisted violently, waves rising into unnatural heights, collapsing into each other in chaotic force. Thunder tore across the sky, lightning flashing in rapid bursts that illuminated the storm in fractured glimpses.Near t
The world returned all at once.Wind tore across the sky. Thunder rolled in violent waves. The ocean below them surged as if something beneath it was trying to rise.Aurelian stood still the moment they arrived.Kaelith did not.“…okay,” he said, looking around slowly, “this is already worse than I expected.”The sky was dark.Not night.Something heavier.Clouds churned in thick spirals, dragged inward toward a point far below the horizon. The sea stretched endlessly in every direction, but it was not calm. It moved in unstable patterns, rising and collapsing without rhythm, as if the entire body of water had lost control of itself.Aurelian’s gaze sharpened.“This is not natural.”“No,” Kaelith agreed. “That much is obvious.”A massive wave rose beneath them without warning, towering high before crashing down with explosive force. The sound echoed across the ocean, followed by another surge, and another.Like breathing.Slow.Violent.Alive.Kaelith folded his arms, staring downward
Silence followed the decision.Not the peaceful kind.Not the kind that settles after something ends.This was the kind that stayed because no one knew what to say next.Aurelian stood still.Perfect posture. Controlled breathing. Unmoved on the surface.Inside, everything was unsettled.Across from him, Kaelith was still on one knee, stretching his arm like he had just finished something mildly exhausting instead of nearly destroying an entire realm.“Okay,” Kaelith muttered, rolling his shoulder slightly. “That could’ve gone worse.”Aurelian said nothing.Kaelith glanced at him.Then tilted his head.“You’re staring.”“I am assessing,” Aurelian replied.“Right,” Kaelith said. “That sounds less creepy when you say it like that.”Silence again.Heavy.Uncomfortable.Kaelith stood up slowly, testing his balance. He wobbled once, caught himself, then looked around at what remained of the battlefield.“…we broke it,” he said.Aurelian did not respond.Kaelith looked back at him.“You’re
Kaelith was still laughing.It was not loud.Not wild like before.But it lingered, uneven, breaking through the heavy silence that had settled over what remained of the battlefield.He stayed on one knee, one hand pressed against the fractured surface beneath him, his breathing still unsteady. His body had not recovered. It would not recover anytime soon.But he was alive.Barely.And that, apparently, was enough.“Now… that’s what I called fun, haha-” he muttered, voice low, almost to himself.The battlefield no longer moved.What remained of it floated in quiet ruin, fragments suspended in a space that had lost all sense of direction. The clash had ended, but its presence still lingered in the air, thick and heavy.Aurelian lay not far from him.Still.Unconscious.Unmoving.Kaelith glanced at him briefly, then looked away again, a faint smile still present despite the exhaustion weighing down every part of him.“Didn’t think you’d drop first,” he said quietly.No response.Of cou
The battlefield no longer resembled a place.It had become the aftermath of something that should not exist.Fragments of shattered land drifted without direction, colliding, splitting, dissolving into the endless void below. Light bled into darkness, darkness consumed light, and the air itself trembled under the weight of power that refused to settle.Only four remained.Two from Heaven.Two from Hell.Aurelian stood across from Kaelith.Neither spoke.There was no need.Everything that needed to be said had already been expressed through impact, through force, through the violent language of power that neither of them held back anymore.They had crossed that point.Where restraint no longer existed.Where purpose became simple.Survive.Aurelian moved first.Not out of impulse.Out of certainty.Light gathered in his hand, not as a weapon, but as an extension of his will. It did not flare wildly. It did not explode. It focused. Condensed. Refined to a level that carried no excess, n
The battlefield did not stabilize.It worsened.Fragments of land continued to break apart, drifting and colliding in unstable motion as the clash of power refused to slow. Light and darkness tore through the space in violent bursts, each impact reshaping the ground beneath them.There was no order left.Only survival.Aurelian moved through it with precision.Every motion calculated. Every strike measured. He no longer reacted. He predicted. The chaos around him unfolded like a pattern, something he could read, something he could control.A blade of darkness cut toward him from above.He stepped forward instead of back.Light formed instantly in his hand, deflecting the strike while his other hand moved without hesitation, driving a focused surge of energy into his opponent’s core.The devil was thrown back, crashing through a floating fragment before catching himself, skidding across its surface.Not defeated.But shaken.Aurelian did not pursue.Another attack was already coming.T
Hell never stayed the same long enough to get bored.Which was good.Kaelith hated being bored.The ground beneath him cracked open again with a loud, satisfying snap, spilling molten fire upward like it had something to prove. A creature with too many limbs crawled out of it, shrieking like it had
Heaven did not change.It did not shift with time, nor did it bend to uncertainty. Every structure, every light, every movement existed in perfect alignment with purpose. There was no decay, no imperfection, no hesitation.Everything was as it should be.The beings within it reflected that same per
Before anything existed, there was not even emptiness. There was no space to be empty, no time to pass, no silence to be heard. There was simply nothing. No beginning, no end, no meaning. And then something became aware. It had no form, no voice, no name, yet it knew that it existed. That awarene
In the beginning, they named things before they understood them. They spoke as if naming was knowing, as if a word could hold the full weight of truth. They believed that once something was given a name, it became fixed, certain, unchanging. And so they built their world on definitions they had ne







