
Pawn of the Starless God
Dee Fietz · Ongoing · 132.0k Words
Introduction
Instead, a god found me.
One moment, I was bleeding beneath the neon glow of the city, my life slipping through my fingers. The next, a glowing blue screen appeared before my eyes, offering me a choice that was never really a choice at all.
Accept the Summoner’s Mark. Or die.
Now I belong to the Death Game — a brutal cosmic system where ordinary people are turned into Players, thrown into impossible missions, and forced to survive horrors designed for the amusement of gods.
Every trial has rules.
Every monster has a weakness.
Every victory comes with a reward.
And every reward makes me less human.
My name is Nerissa Valehart, and I refuse to be anyone’s pawn.
But surviving the Game means trusting the one man everyone warns me to fear.
Veyren Ashford is ruthless, powerful, and dangerously beautiful — a veteran Player with blood on his hands and secrets in his soul. He says attachment will get me killed. He says love is a weakness the Game always punishes.
Yet when death comes for me, Veyren is the one standing between us.
In a world where gods gamble with mortal lives, monsters hunt from the shadows, and desire may be the deadliest weakness of all, I have only one goal:
Survive long enough to cross the board.
And make the Starless God regret choosing me..............
Chapter 1
I died with rain in my mouth and blood on my hands.
That was the first thing I remembered clearly.
Not the knife.
Not the man who had pressed me against the alley wall behind the nightclub and hissed something ugly into my face because I had refused to smile at him, refused to pour him another drink, refused to be small enough for his ego to swallow.
No. The knife came later in my memory, a silver flash beneath a broken security light. A hot tear beneath my ribs. His startled breath when he realised what he had done.
Then footsteps.
Running.
Away from me.
Coward.
I slid down the brick wall, one hand clamped against my side, the other scraping uselessly over wet concrete. Rain fell hard enough to blur the world, turning the alley into a tunnel of neon and shadow. Music thudded through the club wall behind me, bass vibrating through my spine as if the whole building still had a pulse even while mine began to falter.
I stared at my palm.
Blood filled the creases.
For one absurd second, I thought about how difficult it would be to get the stain out of my shirt.
Then I laughed.
It came out broken and wet.
“Idiot,” I whispered to myself.
My name was Nerissa Valehart. Twenty-four years old. Bartender at a nightclub called Eden, which was either irony or proof that the universe had a disgusting sense of humour. I paid too much rent for a tiny apartment with a window that looked directly into another brick wall. I owned three pairs of decent shoes, one cracked phone, and exactly no emergency contacts who would come running fast enough to save me.
I was not special.
I had not been born under a prophecy. I had no secret inheritance. No magic bloodline. No mysterious protector watching over me from the shadows.
I was just a woman bleeding out behind a nightclub while people danced thirty metres away.
“Help,” I tried to call.
The word barely escaped me.
My phone lay near the bins, screen glowing faintly in a puddle. Too far. I stretched anyway, fingers trembling toward it, and pain ripped through my body so sharply that the alley tilted sideways.
I bit down on a scream.
The man had stabbed me deep.
Deep enough that each breath came wrong. Deep enough that warmth kept spilling beneath my palm no matter how hard I pressed. Deep enough that the cold had started crawling in from my fingertips.
I had always thought dying would feel dramatic.
It did not.
It felt embarrassing. Messy. Unfinished.
I thought of my apartment, of the laundry I had left piled on the chair, of the unpaid electricity bill on the kitchen bench, of the half-empty bottle of cheap wine I had promised myself I would not finish after work. I thought of all the things I had told myself I would do when life became easier.
Study.
Leave the city.
Fall in love with someone who looked at me like I was more than a body behind a bar.
I had been waiting for life to start.
And now it was ending in an alley that smelled like garbage, rain, and stale beer.
My head tipped back against the bricks. The security light above me flickered once, twice, then steadied.
A strange calm settled over me.
Maybe that was blood loss.
Maybe it was my body surrendering before my mind could catch up.
The rain slowed.
I blinked.
No.
Not slowed.
Stopped.
A drop hung in front of my face, suspended in the air like a bead of glass. Beyond it, the alley froze completely. Rain hovered in silver threads. Steam paused above the vents. The music from the club cut off mid-beat, leaving a silence so complete it pressed against my eardrums.
My heart gave one weak, frightened thud.
“What…?”
Blue light opened above me.
At first, I thought it was some kind of hallucination. A dying brain throwing up nonsense before the end. But the light sharpened into a rectangular screen, hovering in the air, translucent and edged with electric blue.
Words burned across it.
CANDIDATE LOCATED.
I stared.
The screen flickered.
VITAL STATUS: CRITICAL.
SOUL INTEGRITY: ACCEPTABLE.
RESISTANCE INDEX: HIGH.
DESPAIR SATURATION: OPTIMAL.
My mouth went dry.
“What is this?”
Something laughed.
The sound did not come from the alley.
It came from everywhere.
From the walls. From the rain. From inside my bones. It rolled through the frozen world, deep and endless, layered with a thousand voices speaking beneath the one I could hear.
“Little mortal,” it murmured. “Even at the edge of death, you burn.”
A tremor moved through me that had nothing to do with the cold.
There was something watching me.
I could not see it. There was no figure standing at the end of the alley, no monster crouched on the rooftop, no face reflected in the puddles.
But I felt it.
A presence vast enough to make the city feel like a toy. Ancient enough that my mind recoiled from the edges of it. It pressed against reality like a hand against glass.
“Who are you?” I whispered.
The blue screen brightened.
PATRON ENTITY IDENTIFIED: THE SUMMONER.
The voice caressed the title with amusement.
“I am the hand that reaches into dying worlds. The architect of trials. The collector of desperate things.”
“That doesn’t answer my question.”
Another laugh.
Despite the blood loss, despite the impossible floating screen, despite the fact that time itself had apparently stopped, anger sparked inside me.
It was small.
It was mine.
“You find me dying in an alley and start speaking in riddles?” I rasped. “Either help me or leave me alone.”
The silence after that was enormous.
Then the rain droplets around me began to tremble.
“Oh,” the Summoner said softly. “You are perfect.”
A new line appeared on the screen.
NERISSA VALEHART, YOU HAVE BEEN SELECTED.
My stomach twisted.
Selected.
I hated that word immediately.
Selected sounded clean. Polite. Like being chosen for an award or a scholarship or a table near the window.
Not like being watched by something that had waited until I was too weak to run.
“For what?”
The screen pulsed.
WELCOME TO THE DEATH GAME.
The words seemed to carve themselves into the air.
My breath caught.
More text appeared beneath them.
ROLE: PLAYER-SERVANT.
PATRON: THE SUMMONER.
CLASS: LOCKED.
LEVEL: 0.
OBJECTIVE: SURVIVE. ENTERTAIN. ASCEND.
I stared at the glowing letters until they blurred.
“No.” My voice shook. “No, I don’t agree to this.”
CONSENT IS NOT REQUIRED.
Fear slid beneath my skin.
The Summoner’s voice softened, and somehow that was worse.
“You are dying, Nerissa Valehart. In thirty-nine seconds, your heart will stop. In forty-two, your mind will go dark. In fifty, there will be nothing left of you but meat cooling in the rain.”
My chest tightened.
The screen changed again.
OFFER: LIFE EXTENSION.
COST: SERVICE.
REFUSAL RESULT: DEATH.
Two options appeared beneath it.
ACCEPT THE MARK.
DIE UNCLAIMED.
I laughed once, but it came out as a sob.
“That’s not a choice.”
“No,” the Summoner agreed. “It is an opportunity.”
Rage flared hotter.
“Opportunity? You’re using me.”
“Of course.”
The honesty stunned me more than any lie could have.
The Summoner continued, voice smooth as oil over deep water.
“But the world has used you too, has it not? Men who thought your body was owed. Employers who mistook exhaustion for loyalty. A city that watched you bleed and did not turn its head. I offer you what none of them ever did.”
The blue screen hovered closer.
POWER.
The word glowed brighter than the rest.
My fingers curled against the concrete.
I wanted to refuse.
I wanted to spit blood at the invisible thing and tell it I would rather die than belong to anyone.
But death was not noble from where I lay beneath it.
Death was cold.
Death was lonely.
Death was the phone I could not reach. The help that would not come. The life I had not yet lived.
I had never been good at surrendering.
That was probably why the Summoner had chosen me.
“What happens if I accept?” I asked.
“You play.”
“And if I win?”
The silence shifted.
For the first time, the entity did not answer immediately.
Then it said, “No pawn asks that during the first move.”
“I’m asking.”
The screen flickered, almost irritated.
The Summoner’s amusement returned, sharper now.
“If you survive long enough, little pawn, you may reach the far side of the board.”
“And then?”
“Then even gods must respect the rules.”
My heartbeat stumbled.
There it was.
Not hope exactly.
Something more dangerous.
A crack in the cage before the cage had even closed.
My hand lifted with agonising slowness. My fingers shook so badly they barely seemed like mine.
The screen waited.
ACCEPT THE MARK.
DIE UNCLAIMED.
I thought of the man who had stabbed me running away. I thought of everyone who had mistaken my silence for weakness. I thought of the life I had been too tired, too broke, too afraid to claim.
Then I touched the first option.
The world caught fire.
I screamed.
Blue light tore through my veins, burning along every nerve. My back arched off the ground. The wound in my side opened wider, then sealed from the inside with a heat so vicious I thought it would hollow me out. Something sharp carved itself into my left wrist.
Not a tattoo.
A brand.
I felt every line of it.
A circle of runes formed beneath my skin, rotating slowly around the image of an open eye. The pupil split into a star.
The Summoner’s voice thundered through me.
“Marked.”
The pain vanished.
Not faded.
Vanished.
I sucked in a breath so violent it hurt.
Time resumed.
Rain crashed down around me all at once. Sound slammed back into existence: music, traffic, distant laughter, the hum of neon. I was lying in the alley, drenched and shaking, one hand still pressed against my ribs.
But the wound was gone.
My shirt was torn and soaked in blood. My skin underneath was smooth.
I stared at it, breathing hard.
“No. No, no, no.”
A blue window appeared in front of my face.
PLAYER PROFILE UNLOCKED.
Name: Nerissa Valehart
Level: 0
Role: Player-Servant
Patron: The Summoner
Class: Unassigned
Strength: 4
Agility: 6
Endurance: 5
Will: 11
Charm: 8
Corruption: 0%
I blinked at the numbers.
“Charm? Seriously?”
NOTE: PLAYER STAT COMPLAINTS ARE NOT ACTIONABLE.
Despite everything, I almost laughed.
Then the alley lights went out.
One by one.
Pop.
Pop.
Pop.
Darkness swallowed the space ahead of me.
A smell rolled through the rain. Saltwater. Rot. Something old and wet, like a corpse dragged from the bottom of the sea.
The blue screen flashed red.
TUTORIAL MISSION INITIATED.
My blood turned cold.
MISSION: SURVIVE THE FIRST HUNT.
TIME LIMIT: 10 MINUTES.
ENEMY: THE LONG-MOUTHED MAN.
REWARD: CLASS UNLOCK + STARTER SKILL.
FAILURE: CONSUMPTION.
From the shadows at the far end of the alley, something unfolded.
At first, it looked like a man in a ruined grey suit.
Too tall.
Too thin.
His arms hung nearly to the ground, fingers scraping the wet concrete with a soft, rhythmic tick. His head lolled to one side as if his neck had been broken and badly reset. His skin was pale, swollen, and stretched too tight over bones that did not fit properly beneath it.
Then his mouth opened.
And opened.
And opened.
His jaw split downward to the centre of his chest, revealing rows upon rows of needle teeth slick with black saliva.
A sound left me that was not brave.
The creature clicked its teeth together.
The timer appeared in the corner of my vision.
09:59
I ran.
My body moved before thought could form. I slipped in the rain, slammed shoulder-first into a bin, caught myself, and kept going. Behind me came the slap of bare feet on concrete, too fast, too eager.
The alley exit glowed ahead.
I burst onto the street, nearly colliding with a group of women laughing under a shared umbrella.
“Help!” I screamed. “Please!”
They flinched away from me, startled, but their eyes slid past the alley.
They could not see him.
The Long-Mouthed Man crawled out behind me, limbs bending wrong, teeth glistening beneath the neon signs. People walked around him without noticing, their bodies instinctively shifting aside as if avoiding a puddle.
No one screamed.
No one ran.
Only me.
09:21
I sprinted across the footpath. Pain stabbed through my hip when I clipped the edge of a metal chair outside a closed café, but I did not stop. A taxi blared its horn as I stumbled into the street.
Headlights flared.
I threw myself backward just before the car tore past.
The creature lunged.
Cold fingers brushed the back of my neck.
I screamed and spun, swinging my bag with both hands. It hit the side of his head with a wet crack. My cracked phone flew from the pocket and shattered across the road.
The Long-Mouthed Man paused.
Slowly, its head turned back toward me.
The broken half of its face twitched.
Then it smiled wider.
“Oh, I hate this,” I gasped.
A glowing notification appeared.
COMBAT TRIGGER DETECTED.
TEMPORARY SKILL GRANTED: DESPERATION STRIKE.
ACTIVATION CONDITION: GENUINE KILLING INTENT.
“Killing intent?” I shouted, dodging as the creature swiped at me. “I’m a bartender, not an assassin!”
A bus roared past, blocking my path to the other side of the road.
The Long-Mouthed Man came at me again.
I ducked into a narrow service lane between two buildings, because apparently panic had decided my survival strategy was to trap myself in even smaller spaces.
Brilliant.
The lane ended in a locked gate.
I grabbed the bars and shook them. “No. No, come on!”
Locked.
Of course it was locked.
Behind me, the creature’s fingers dragged along the brick walls with a sound like knives scraping bone.
08:34
I turned around.
There was nowhere to run.
The Long-Mouthed Man filled the lane, tall and dripping, mouth hanging open in hungry anticipation. Rain streamed down its swollen face. Its tongue moved behind its teeth, black and wormlike.
I backed against the gate.
My hand closed around something leaning beside a stack of crates.
An old metal pipe.
Heavy.
Rusty.
Better than nothing.
I lifted it with both hands.
The creature tilted its head.
I could feel my fear. It was everywhere. In my throat, my stomach, my shaking knees. But beneath it was something else. A hard, bright fury that had been living in me long before tonight.
I was tired of being cornered.
By men.
By money.
By fear.
By gods.
The creature sprang.
I screamed and swung.
Not to scare it.
Not to escape.
To kill.
The pipe connected with its jaw.
Blue light exploded down my arms.
DESPERATION STRIKE ACTIVATED.
The impact was impossible. The pipe smashed through teeth, bone, and shadow. The Long-Mouthed Man shrieked, a high, wet sound that shattered every window in the lane. Glass rained down around us.
I stumbled, shocked by my own strength.
The creature reeled back, half its jaw hanging loose.
A health bar appeared above its head.
LONG-MOUTHED MAN
HP: 61%
“Oh, you have got to be kidding me.”
It attacked again.
This time I was not fast enough.
Its claws caught my side and hurled me into the brick wall. Air punched from my lungs. Pain burst through my shoulder. The pipe clattered away.
The creature loomed over me.
Its mouth stretched wider, black saliva dripping onto my chest.
07:48
I scrabbled blindly across the wet ground. My fingers found broken glass.
I closed my hand around it.
The edge sliced my palm.
The Long-Mouthed Man lowered its face toward mine.
Its breath smelled like drowned things.
I drove the glass into its eye.
It screamed.
I screamed too, shoving deeper, my hand slick with blood and rain and whatever foul darkness spilled from its socket. The creature thrashed backward. I rolled, grabbed the pipe again, and forced myself to my feet.
My entire body shook.
But I was standing.
The screen flashed.
ENEMY WEAKNESS DISCOVERED: EYES.
BONUS EXPERIENCE PENDING.
The creature clutched its ruined eye, shrieking.
I did not wait.
I hit it again.
And again.
The second Desperation Strike did not trigger, but rage did most of the work. I swung until my arms burned, until its skull caved strangely beneath the blows, until its long fingers stopped twitching.
Finally, the thing collapsed into a puddle of black water and teeth.
The alley went silent.
I stood over it, chest heaving, pipe gripped in both hands.
The remains hissed, melting into the drain.
The timer vanished.
MISSION COMPLETE.
Blue light burst around me.
REWARDS GRANTED:
+100 EXPERIENCE
LEVEL UP: 0 → 1
CLASS SELECTION UNLOCKED
STARTER SKILL AVAILABLE
TITLE ACQUIRED: SHE WHO REFUSED THE MAW
I stared at the screen, numb.
Then my knees gave out.
I sank onto the wet ground, trembling so hard my teeth chattered. My palm was bleeding. My shoulder throbbed. My ribs ached where claws had torn through my shirt.
But I was alive.
Horribly, impossibly alive.
A slow clap echoed from the mouth of the lane.
I froze.
A man stood beneath the flickering streetlight.
Not the man who had stabbed me.
This man was taller, broader, and far too composed for someone standing beside the remains of a nightmare. He wore a long black coat over a dark suit, rain sliding down the expensive fabric without seeming to touch him. His hair was black, tousled by the weather, and his face looked like it had been carved for danger rather than softness.
Sharp jaw.
Cruel mouth.
Eyes so pale they seemed almost silver in the neon glow.
He looked at the pipe in my hand, then at the black stain where the monster had dissolved.
One corner of his mouth lifted.
“Messy,” he said.
His voice was low and smooth, with enough arrogance in it to make my spine stiffen.
I forced myself upright, though every muscle protested.
“Who the hell are you?”
His gaze moved over me slowly.
Not in the sloppy way men at the club looked.
This was worse.
Sharper.
Assessing the blood on my shirt, the Summoner’s mark burning faintly on my wrist, the glass cuts in my palm, the fury I had not managed to hide. When his eyes returned to mine, something unreadable passed through them.
Interest.
Or warning.
“Veyren Ashford,” he said.
The name meant nothing to me, but the System reacted.
A red-edged notification appeared.
WARNING: HIGH-RANKING PLAYER DETECTED.
THREAT LEVEL: LETHAL.
My grip tightened around the pipe.
Veyren noticed.
His smile deepened, and for reasons I hated immediately, it made him more beautiful.
Dangerous beautiful.
The kind of beautiful that did not ask to be admired because it already knew admiration was inevitable. The kind of beautiful that belonged in old stories, where girls wandered into forests and never came back the same.
“Relax,” he said. “If I wanted you dead, little pawn, you would be.”
I lifted the pipe higher.
“Call me that again and I’ll test your theory.”
Something flashed in his eyes.
Amusement.
Approval.
He stepped closer, and the air seemed to change with him. The rain felt colder. The shadows leaned nearer. My brand pulsed on my wrist, responding to him like a warning bell.
Veyren stopped just out of striking range.
Close enough that I could see a thin scar cutting through his left eyebrow. Close enough to smell rain, smoke, and something darkly expensive clinging to his skin.
His gaze dropped to my mouth for half a second.
My breath betrayed me.
Then his eyes lifted back to mine.
“You survived your first hunt,” he said softly. “That means the Game owns you now.”
“No one owns me.”
His expression shifted.
For the first time, the arrogance dimmed into something harder.
Older.
“Hold on to that lie,” he said. “You’ll need it.”
The blue screen flickered between us.
CLASS SELECTION AVAILABLE.
CHOOSE BEFORE NEXT MISSION.
Veyren’s eyes narrowed at whatever he saw reflected in my face.
Then he reached into his coat and pulled out a black card edged in silver. He held it between two fingers.
“Come to this address before dawn.”
I stared at the card.
“Why would I go anywhere with you?”
“You wouldn’t be going with me.” His voice lowered. “You’d be going because every Player in the city just felt your tutorial clear. The weak ones will want to recruit you. The desperate ones will want to use you.”
He stepped closer.
This time, I did not move back.
“And the strong ones?” I asked.
Veyren leaned down, his mouth near my ear.
The heat of him cut through the rain.
“The strong ones will wonder why the Summoner marked you personally.”
My pulse stumbled.
He pulled back just enough to look at me.
For a moment, the nightmare, the blood, the impossible glowing screens all faded beneath the weight of his stare. I hated that he unsettled me. I hated even more that some reckless part of me wanted to step closer instead of away.
Then he slipped the card into the torn pocket of my jacket.
His fingers brushed my waist.
Barely.
Still, the contact shot through me like a spark.
“Survive the night, Nerissa Valehart,” he said. “Then decide whether you want answers badly enough to trust a monster.”
I swallowed.
“Are you the monster?”
Veyren smiled.
“No.”
He turned, black coat shifting around him like shadow.
“I’m what monsters fear.”
Then he walked into the rain and disappeared beneath the neon glow, leaving me alone with blood on my hands, a god’s mark on my wrist, and a card burning like a secret against my hip.
Above me, unseen by the sleeping city, the blue screen pulsed once more.
WELCOME TO THE DEATH GAME, PLAYER.
And somewhere beyond the clouds, something ancient laughed.
Last Chapters
#40 Chapter 40 The First Door Opens
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#39 Chapter 39 The Future I Choose
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#38 Chapter 38 Beside, Not Behind
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#37 Chapter 37 The Patrons Who Watched
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#36 Chapter 36 The Court Comes Calling
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#35 Chapter 35 Unowned
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#34 Chapter 34 The Far Side
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#33 Chapter 33 The Board of Starless Things
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#32 Chapter 32 Three Hours Before the Blade
Last Updated: 5/31/2026#31 Chapter 31 The Blade That Remembered
Last Updated: 5/31/2026
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Instead, my fingers curled into his shirt, clutching the fabric as though it was my only anchor. Something in him snapped—something he had been holding back for too long. His mouth found mine in a kiss that wasn't tender, but hungry, desperate.
I gasped into him, his hand sliding up to cup my jaw, holding me as if afraid I might vanish.
"You drive me insane," he breathed against my mouth, his lips trailing to my throat. "I can't lose you, Ella. Not you."
My head fell back, a soft sound escaping me as his fingers memorized my waist. My anger melted beneath his desperation.
"James..." I whispered, more plea than protest.
His hand caught mine, fingers threading together tightly. "I'll bring him back. I swear it. Just... don't turn away from me. Please."
The word please—low, ragged, almost broken—undid me more than anything else could have.
Ella never imagined she would marry the man she had secretly loved for years in such a way.
When her brother Theo faced twenty-five years in prison for massive embezzlement, the ruthless business tycoon James Lancaster offered her a deal: marry him in exchange for her brother's freedom.
This wasn't a fairy tale proposal, but a carefully orchestrated revenge. Because in James's heart, Ella was the culprit who had killed his sister Cecilia. He wanted her to pay the price—to atone with a lifetime of suffering.
Game of Destiny
When Finlay finds her, she is living among humans. He is smitten by the stubborn wolf that refuse to acknowledge his existence. She may not be his mate, but he wants her to be a part of his pack, latent wolf or not.
Amie cant resist the Alpha that comes into her life and drags her back into pack life. Not only does she find herself happier than she has been in a long time, her wolf finally comes to her. Finlay isn't her mate, but he becomes her best friend. Together with the other top wolves in the pack, they work to create the best and strongest pack.
When it's time for the pack games, the event that decides the packs rank for the coming ten year, Amie needs to face her old pack. When she sees the man that rejected her for the first time in ten years, everything she thought she knew is turned around. Amie and Finlay need to adapt to the new reality and find a way forward for their pack. But will the curve ball split them apart?
The Spy Who Left
"I still can't believe she actually did it. Aria Hart, filing for divorce. Who saw that coming?"
"How long do we think it'll take before she comes crawling back?" Another voice joins the conversation.
"Three days," Victoria declares. "Five at most. She has no money, no skills, no family. Where's she going to go?"
When Aria Chen divorced billionaire Leon Hart, New York's elite sneered, betting she'd crawl back within days. She never did.
Three years later, the world is rocked when Dr. Aria Vale, CEO of a revolutionary cybersecurity empire, steps into the spotlight. The mysterious genius who built a billion-dollar company from nothing is none other than Leon's discarded wife, the woman everyone thought was just a pretty ornament.
Now, every powerful man wants the queen Leon threw away a renowned scientist seeking partnership, a financial titan proposing an empire, and an actor offering devotion. Each sees the brilliance Leon ignored.
Then Leon discovers the truth: Aria's sacrifices, her secret double life, and the daughter she's been raising without him. For the first time, the man who once took her for granted must fight for her love. But can he compete with men who valued her from the beginning?
A story of love, betrayal, and power where the king must kneel before the queen who never needed saving.












