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Star Chronicles:Embers of the Calamity

Greyfin
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Synopsis
Let Power Be Your Truth. Your Light. And Your Chains. That was the first law granted to the Nyxvalis clan. For thirty-eight generations it held. Through fire and blood, through empire and ruin, through centuries of war waged in the name of a bloodline that had long since ceased to be merely human. It held — and in holding, built a monolith so absolute that the world stopped asking whether it could fall. Then came the 39th Flame. Seven hundred and thirty-one entered the Chambers of Night. Forty-seven crawled back out. Not an army. Not a dynasty. An ember — dim, diminished, and already encircled by enemies who had spent years sharpening their finest wolves in anticipation of its arrival. A heresy in numbers alone. A silent warning to those still bold enough to hear it: If a monolith can tremble — so too can it fall. As the world prepares to record the embers in its annals, so must its instruments play their parts. Those duty-bound to hold the monolith in place. Those eager to test the might of a millennium of power. And the forty-seven — carrying a smiling ember within. A dark gothic world of political deceit and ancient bloodlines. Empires built on inherited violence. Power forged in law and broken in shadow. And beneath it all — the slow, certain rot of institutions that have never once been held accountable. This is the world of The Star Chronicles. A story about survival without innocence. Legacy worn like chains. And the particular kind of power that doesn't free you — it simply decides how you burn. Embers of the Calamity Volume III
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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER 1 : ACT I — Devil Of The 39th

(Rhea — Western Continent, Drake's Teeth, The Vale of Eternal Night, Sphere of Noir. September 23 — 3rd Cycle of I.C. 1730)

Three days remained until the Exodus Trial.

The air above the inner sanctum of the Vale pressed down like something coiled and waiting. No wind. No sound. Only the suffocating weight of a storm that had already bled across the Vale leaving behind a silence more unsettling than the carnage itself.

Two Mantle-bearers moved along the Obsidian Walk.

A path meant for hundreds now lay stripped bare, its breadth hollowed by absence. Only a scattering of shadows lingered behind them, a few more drifting ahead, each keeping their distance, each pretending the others weren't there.

Their steps cut against polished volcanic glass as the corridor stretched toward the Hall of the First Nyx, where the Patriarch would deliver his final address before casting them into the world as weapons of legacy.

The first was Violet, ranked Fourth in the Spiral of Blood.

Dusk-threaded armor cloaked her frame, veins of violet light pulsing along its seams, converging at her chest where her Mantle had been etched.

She walked with the steady confidence of someone who had endured agony and come out sharpened by it.

Beside her walked Chion Nyxvalis. Ranked Eighteenth.

Twelve years old.

He bore no scars from the trials. No marks of struggle. Nothing to suggest he had endured what the others had.

They walked side by side, yet a chasm stretched between them.

Not until they were swallowed deeper into the corridor's gloom did Violet break the silence.

"They know what you've done."

Her voice wasn't sharp. It was steady—too steady.

Chion didn't look at her. His gaze remained fixed on the darkness ahead.

"It doesn't matter," he said.

A beat passed.

"Not if they can't prove it."

Violet let out a quiet scoff, the sound folding into the obsidian walls.

"For now, perhaps. But fear fades. Sooner or later, they'll start talking. And even if they don't…"

Her eyes slid toward him, measuring rather than warning.

"The truth doesn't change."

He didn't slow. Didn't blink.

"They'll come for your life the moment you step beyond the Vale."

"They can try," he said.

Quiet. Certain.

Violet turned sharply, searching his face for something—fear, doubt, anything.

There was nothing.

Her expression closed.

"You're arrogant," she muttered.

That earned a smile. Small. Crooked. Certain.

"And you," he said, "are overly concerned with blood that isn't yours."

He slowed, letting the distance between them stretch.

"You owe me nothing. Try to keep it that way."

Runelight moved across his pale features as he finished speaking.

"Or the whispers may soon decide you're a co-conspirator." Then almost interested. "Wouldn't be fitting for a High Lore, now would it?"

They reached the archway of the Hall of the First Nyx.

The carved doors loomed overhead, etched with runes of the Origin Blood—symbols cut before the first wars were ever named. They burned with a faint, sickly light beneath the weight of the ongoing storm.

Violet sneered. Without another word, she stepped past him and into the gathering Mantle-bearers, disappearing into the crowd without a backward glance.

Chion remained beneath the archway, half-lost in shadow watching the space she'd left behind.

The only one willing to talk to someone they already labeled Devil.