LOGINThe house always knew before Lily did.
The air thickened first. Then the quiet came — the unnatural kind, where even the wind seemed afraid to exist. Lily sat on the floor beside her bed, eyes half-closed, breathing slow and measured. She had started doing that lately. Counting breaths. Counting heartbeats. Reminding herself she was still here. In. Out. In— The candle flame bent sideways. Her eyes snapped open. He was here. She didn’t need to turn around to know. Her body remembered before her mind did — the cold numbness crawling up her spine, the strange emptiness swallowing her senses. “Lily.” Her name sounded almost gentle in his voice. Almost. She turned slowly. Her father stood in the doorway like he belonged there. Blonde hair glowing pale in the dim light. Blue eyes endless and calm and wrong in a way she couldn’t explain. Like storms trapped under glass. “You’ve grown quieter,” he said. She swallowed. “You’re not supposed to be here.” “I am wherever my blood exists.” Her hands curled into fists. “I am not a place you can visit.” Something like amusement flickered across his face. “You were always my strongest creation.” “I’m not something you made,” she said. But the words felt fragile. Because part of her still wondered if he was right. He stepped into the room. The temperature dropped instantly. “Your sister is failing you,” he said softly. Lily’s jaw tightened. “Leave Luna out of this.” “She hurts you.” “She thinks she’s helping.” “She is afraid of what you are becoming.” The words sank deep. Because they were true. And Lily hated that he could see it. “I can take the pain away,” he said. Her stomach twisted. “I don’t want anything from you.” “You want control. You want the shaking to stop. You want the nightmares to quiet. You want to stop feeling like your own skin is a prison.” Her breath caught. Tears burned suddenly — unexpected, unwanted. “I can feel your thoughts,” he said gently. “I always could.” Power stirred inside her chest — that new, cold power. Darker than before. Quieter. Older. It reacted to him. Not reaching. Not welcoming. But… recognizing. Like two storms circling each other. “I don’t belong to you,” she said again, weaker this time. He stepped closer. Not touching. Never touching. But close enough she could feel the pressure of him, like gravity had shifted. “You are not bound by chains,” he said. “You are bound by purpose.” “I choose my purpose.” “Then choose it.” The words landed heavy between them. For the first time… he sounded almost curious. Like he wanted to see what she would become. Down the hall, a floorboard creaked. Luna. Watching. Listening. Waiting for the explosion. Lily straightened slowly. Her hands stopped shaking. “I choose,” she said, voice quiet but steady, “to survive you.” Silence filled the room. Long. Heavy. Then her father smiled. Not warm. Not proud. Something stranger. “Good,” he said. “Survive long enough… and you might become something even I cannot control.” He stepped backward. The air warmed slightly. The pressure lifted. And then he was gone. Lily collapsed back onto the bed, chest heaving. Not safe. Never safe. But still here. Still breathing. Still hers.The air was electric. Not metaphorically. Literally. Lightning arced across the fractured sky, shivering with raw energy. The world trembled beneath their feet.Lily stood frozen, clutching Luca tightly, her eyes darting between the two impossibilities before her: Luke, wings fully unfurled, radiating power that had grown sharper, fiercer with every moment he had been protecting her son; and God—her stepfather, twisted and unrelenting—hovering above, aura flaring golden and terrible, eyes locked onto Luca with obsession that sent a chill deeper than any wind.“You won’t leave him here,” God said, voice booming yet calm, every word vibrating like the strike of a hammer across reality.“I won’t let you touch him!” Luke shouted back, sword crackling with celestial energy, wings flaring wide, casting shadows across the shattered plains of Heaven. “If you try, I’ll destroy you first!”Lily’s heart pounded. Her chest ached, but she knew she had to hold Luca tightly. The baby was calm for no
The air tore.Not loudly.Not violently.But wrongly.Like reality itself was being peeled back in thin, invisible layers.Lily screamed as Luca’s body lifted from her arms, his small form suspended between her world… and something else.“No—NO—!”Her fingers dug into him, desperate, shaking, refusing to let go.But the space around him distorted, bending light, warping shape—like he no longer fully belonged to the same plane as her.Luke reacted instantly.His wings snapped open, power surging violently around him as he grabbed onto Lily and Luca both, anchoring them with everything he had.“Hold onto him!” Luke shouted.“I AM!” Lily cried, tears streaming down her face. “I’m not letting go—I’m not—!”But she could feel it.That pull.That invisible force trying to take her son somewhere she couldn’t follow.God moved.Fast.Decisive.Golden light exploded around him as he raised both hands.“I can stop this.”“No!” Lily screamed immediately. “Don’t touch him!”But God didn’t hesitat
The sky didn’t tear this time.It whispered.A low, almost inaudible vibration spread across Heaven, like something breathing just beyond reality. The cracks from before remained, faint scars across the sky—but now they pulsed.Alive.Watching.Waiting.Lily stood frozen, her arms wrapped around Luca, her entire body tense.She had felt it.Not outside.Inside.A presence brushing against her mind—soft, careful, deliberate.Like it didn’t want to be noticed.But she noticed.And worse—So did Luca.His small body shifted in her arms.Not restlessly.Intentionally.His glowing eyes opened again.This time—There was no mistaking it.He was looking at something no one else could see.“Luca…” Lily whispered.He didn’t look at her.Didn’t react to her voice.Instead, his gaze lifted slowly toward the sky.Toward the place where the ripple pulsed faintly.Luke stepped closer instantly.His wings flexed slightly, tension running through him.“What is it?” he asked quietly.Lily shook her he
Silence did not bring peace.It brought something worse.After the rift sealed, after the creatures vanished, after the sky stopped screaming—Heaven felt… wrong.Broken.Not just physically.But fundamentally.The air itself felt thinner, unstable, like reality had been stretched too far and hadn’t snapped back into place properly.Lily stood in the middle of it all, unmoving.Her arms were wrapped tightly around Luca.Too tightly.For example, if she loosened her grip, even for a second, he might slip away from her.Or worse—Become something she couldn’t reach anymore.Luke landed beside her slowly.For once, he didn’t speak right away.He just watched her.Watched the way her shoulders trembled.Watched the way her eyes stayed locked on Luca like she was searching for something.Or checking for something.“Lily…” he said gently.She flinched.Just slightly.But enough.Luke’s chest tightened.“That thing,” he continued carefully, “it’s gone. For now.”“For now,” she repeated.Her v
Everything stopped.Not slowed.Not paused.Stopped.The wind froze mid-howl. Fragments of broken Heaven hung suspended in the air like shattered glass caught in time. Even the massive creatures clawing their way through the rift halted, their shifting forms locked in place.And at the center of it all—Lily stood.Breathing.Alive.Awake.Her hand was still raised, fingers trembling slightly, but the power radiating from her was no longer unstable.It was controlled.Focused.Terrifying.Luke stared at her, his chest rising and falling as he tried to understand what he was seeing.“Lily…” he said quietly.She didn’t answer.Not because she didn’t hear him.But because something deeper had her attention.Something inside her.Her mind wasn’t just hers anymore—it was… bigger. Expanded. She could feel everything.The broken edges of Heaven.The crack in the sky.The creatures beyond it.Even God.Especially God.She turned her head slowly.Her eyes met his.And for the first time—He lo
The sky didn’t just crack.It screamed.The rift above Heaven split open wider than ever before, tearing through clouds, light, and reality itself. What spilled through wasn’t light or darkness—it was something deeper. Something that made both look like weak imitations.Lily felt it before she saw it.A pressure.Not on her body.On her soul.Like something ancient had just noticed her… and decided she mattered.Her breath hitched as she clutched Luca tighter. His small body glowed brighter in her arms, pulsing like a second heartbeat against her chest.“Luke…” she whispered.“I see it,” he said, voice low and tight.His wings spread wider, instinctively shielding her. His blade burned brighter, shadows and silver lightning coiling around it like something alive.God hovered above them, golden light flaring violently—but this time, not in dominance.In resistance.For the first time—He wasn’t the most powerful thing in the sky.The rift tore wider.And something began to crawl out.N
The third fracture did not glow.It breathed.Lily felt it at midnight.Not as vibration.Not as pressure.As heat.But not the golden fire she carried.This heat was deeper.Older.Not structured like heaven’s lattice.Not precise like Aeron’s force.It moved like a pulse beneath stone.Alive.She
The first mortal response was not worship.It was fear.Three days after the sigil awakened beneath the castle, the miracles stopped being contained to stone chambers and divine confrontations.They began leaking outward.Spontaneously.Unpredictably.And not always safely.A child in the eastern q
The snow did not fall.It hovered.Tiny white fragments suspended in the air as if the world itself was holding its breath.Lily stepped fully into the ruined valley, gold and crimson light trailing faintly behind her like a dying aurora. Luke remained half a step behind, hand near his weapon—but n
The second fracture did not form in the earth.It formed beneath the throne.It began as a vibration too subtle for anyone but Lily to feel.She was seated in the council chamber when it happened — nobles arguing over trade routes, priests disputing doctrine, and generals demanding border reinforce







