Masuk(Apollo) Then the world altered. Not in sight, not in sound, but in pressure, a deep and unnatural tightening that moved through the battlefield and into him, something older than motion, heavier than force, something that did not belong to the clash of armies but to the structure beneath them, to the mountain, to the Dominion itself. A wrongness. A held breath in the bones of Hell. The Nether Spire. Apollo turned, his attention cutting cleanly away from the immediate fight as the distant structure rose into focus across the Iron Marches, its immense form beginning to thread with a gathering light that was not flame but something colder, something that condensed rather than flared, pulling power inward in a way that made the air itself feel thinner, sharper, strained by what it was about to carry. Even at this distance, the shift reached them. The Legion felt it, not in discipline but in instinct, a subtle falter in rhythm as bodies adjusted without being told, as something
(Apollo) Below him, the Hell-beast tore through another cluster of Legion soldiers, its jaws snapping shut around a shield that crumpled under the force before being wrenched aside, its rider driving it forward with another surge of Emberthread that flared gold along its plated spine. The rider did not see him. Not until it was already too late. Apollo struck from above. Not with flame. With force. His hand closed around the rider’s throat as he passed over the beast’s spine, the speed of his descent translating fully into the grip, the impact of it snapping the man’s body backward with brutal finality. There was no struggle, no moment of resistance. The head tore free. Not cleanly. Violently. The force of Apollo’s motion carried through the connection between body and spine, the separation happening in the same instant his momentum carried him past, the rider’s body still bound to the beast by chains that now went slack and then taut all at once. Blood sprayed hot across t
(Apollo) Apollo inhaled. The scent of blood hit first. Iron. Heat. Life ending. Then he roared. The sound tore from him unrestrained, a deep, thunderous bellow that rolled across the battlefield and shook the very air, layered with something older than language, something that did not request attention but seized it, as if the voice of Hell itself had chosen to speak through him. The Legion felt it. The Emberborn felt it. The ground seemed to answer it. Ash jumped from the broken earth. Wings faltered overhead. Even the nearest fires seemed to bow and flare at once, as if the field itself had recognised its reigning monster. Apollo wrenched his head back. The motion tore the body free. Flesh split further along the line of the horns as he cast the corpse aside, the remains flung outward in a heavy arc that struck the ground hard enough to bounce once before sliding into the churn of battle. He did not watch it land. He did not need to. He stepped forward. Blood still ran d
(Apollo) Apollo did not settle into the rhythm of the line. He broke it. Where the Legion marched as a disciplined engine, Apollo moved as the blade that shattered its own housing, turning the Dominion’s order into a weapon so immediate that fear itself had no chance to gather its wits. He was the fracture in the machine, the heretic spark that made obedience burn. Where the Legion advanced in measured cohesion, Apollo moved ahead of their very breath, stepping into resistance before it dared to take shape, forcing the battlefield to bend to his will rather than the reverse. There was no pause between the deaths he dealt, no clean transition from one soul to the next. The space around him collapsed into immediacy, into impact, into bodies that either yielded or perished. The air itself narrowed beneath his dominion, pressed thin by heat and violence, until every heartbeat on the field seemed to crowd the next, as if time itself feared to linger in his shadow. A soldier came at hi
(Apollo) Movement layered over movement around him, the press of bodies, the clash of steel, the roar of flame and wingbeat and impact folding back in as the brief disruption of his arrival gave way to renewed violence. Heat slammed against his skin from multiple directions, the air thick with the scent of burning iron, scorched leather, and blood turned to steam on fractured stone. He stepped through it. Not avoiding, not pushing, but rewriting. Each motion erased one future and inscribed another, his will the quill and the battlefield his parchment. His awareness expanded outward again, not in abstraction, but through impact, through motion, through the violent language of bodies colliding and breaking around him. He caught the shape of the line not as something clean, but as something fighting to become clean again, Iron Legion cohorts driving toward him through resistance rather than forming in his wake. They were not waiting for him. They were coming to him. He saw them i
(Apollo) Apollo dropped. Not as a fall. As a strike. The sky tore itself around him as he drove through, air shrieking past his form in a violent rush that clawed at his armour and dragged heat in his wake. His wings folded tight against his back, shedding resistance, transforming him from creature to weapon as he cut through the layered currents and plunged earthward. There was no hesitation in the descent, only inevitability. A sentence that had already been passed. The battlefield rose to meet him. Fast. Too fast for anything below to fully react. A few Emberborn lifted their heads. Some turned. None moved in time. Apollo hit. The impact was no landing. It was a collision of force and world. Stone did not merely crack—it exploded. The black-glass ground shattered outward in a violent, concussive burst, fragments erupting in all directions as his body drove into it with force enough to crater the surface beneath him. The shockwave followed, a brutal ring of displaced a
(Adelaide & Caelum) The chamber felt different after Apollo left—emptier, yet somehow still too full. The air seemed uncertain, moving between holding his shape and forgetting it. Adelaide exhaled slowly, smoothing her palms over the leather on her thighs. The material creaked softly, warmed by h
(Adelaide)The Dreamscape greeted her with cold. Not the cold of winter, but the clean chill of starlight on water. She stood barefoot at the edge of a black lake, its surface so still it looked like obsidian glass. The sky above was an endless dark dome, pricked with unfamiliar constellations. F
(Adelaide & Caelum)Power burst through him like a sun exploding underwater—white-gold fire racing over his skin, searing through the leash spell at his wrist, burning Apollo’s mark into ash. The corridor brightened so sharply the shadows fled to the corners, recoiling like sinners from a shrine.
(Adelaide & Caelum)They reached a wide archway carved down into the mountain’s belly, and Cael lifted his hand. Shadows peeled from his palm, swirling around his fingers like smoke underwater. The shadows moved like they were reading the air, tasting it, looking for Apollo’s scent the way wolves l







