Chapter 1 Chapter 1
The cheers should have been shaking the fortress walls, yet an unnatural silence hung over the Crimson Citadel as Kael Draven stared across the battlefield where the Demon Sovereignty had finally fallen and countless Imperial banners stretched beneath the dying light of the evening sun.
For the first time in decades, there was no enemy left to fight, yet all Kael felt was exhaustion as memories of freezing trenches, blood-soaked battlefields, and fallen soldiers surfaced unbidden.
One more battle, one more victory, then we can go home.
The heavy gates behind him opened with a deep groan, pulling him from his thoughts.
“His Majesty approaches,” a royal herald announced, his voice echoing across the fortress.
Kael turned and watched Emperor Cassian Voss emerge from the citadel surrounded by nobles, generals, priests, and royal guards. The emperor wore a bright smile, and for a brief moment Kael felt something loosen inside his chest because perhaps this was finally the end of it all.
Perhaps the sacrifices had meant something.
He dropped to one knee. “Your Majesty.”
Cassian quickly stepped forward and placed a hand upon his shoulder before he could remain kneeling for long. “Rise, Kael. If anyone has earned the right to stand proudly today, it is you.”
Kael rose and met the emperor’s eyes. “The campaign is complete,” he said, unable to hide the weariness in his voice. “The last demon fortress fell before sunrise, their emperor is dead, and their remaining forces surrendered before noon. There will be no more war.”
The emperor’s smile widened. “No more war,” he repeated softly, as though savoring the words.
For the first time in years, Kael allowed himself to imagine a future beyond war. He could visit his wife’s grave, sit beside his parents’ resting place, and perhaps spend the years he had left living as a man instead of a weapon.
His chest tightened.
She should have been here.
Sixteen years ago, while he fought in the eastern territories, a plague had taken her life, and by the time he returned home, all that remained was a gravestone and regrets he would carry forever.
He never got to say goodbye, and the victory suddenly felt far less complete.
“Tell me,” Cassian said with a warm laugh, “what does the great Black Shogun intend to do now that he has saved the Empire?”
Kael exhaled slowly. “I intend to rest,” he admitted, and a faint smile appeared despite himself. “I think I’ve earned at least a few years of peace.”
Several nobles laughed, and even Roland Blackthorne smiled. Kael found himself smiling back because after more than twenty years of surviving assassinations, sieges, and impossible battles together, Roland was the one man he trusted without question.
Then a metallic click echoed from below.
Another followed, then dozens more, and every instinct forged through decades of war immediately sensed danger.
Kael’s gaze snapped toward the army beneath the citadel, and the breath caught in his throat as he saw thousands of soldiers raising their crossbows in unison, every weapon aimed directly at him.
Slowly, Kael turned back toward the emperor as a cold unease spread through his chest.
“What is this?” he asked quietly.
His eyes moved from face to face.
Victor Hale.
Malach Orien.
Roland Blackthorne.
None of them looked surprised and none of them looked confused. They looked prepared.
A sick feeling twisted inside him.
His gaze settled on Roland. “Roland…..” he said, forcing a laugh that sounded wrong even to his own ears, “tell me you’ve got an explanation for this.”
For one desperate moment, Kael wanted Roland to laugh and call it a misunderstanding, but when his oldest friend lowered his eyes, the truth hit harder than any blade. It wasn’t the threat of death that hollowed out his chest but the realization that Roland had known all along, that the man he had trusted like a brother for over twenty years had stood among the conspirators and watched him walk straight into betrayal.
“You too?” Kael asked, and the words felt like glass tearing through his throat.
Roland’s jaw tightened, but he still couldn’t meet his eyes.
The emperor stepped forward. “You became too powerful.”
Kael stared at him in disbelief before a laugh escaped his lips. It wasn’t amusement. It was the sound of a man realizing that everything he believed in had been a lie.
“Too powerful?” he repeated. His fingers tightened around his sword. “I buried my youth for this Empire. I buried my family for this Empire. I spent twenty-seven years fighting wars that weren’t mine because I believed I was protecting our people.”
His voice grew harsher with every word. “I watched friends die. I watched entire generations disappear into battlefields. I gave everything I had, and you’re standing here telling me my crime was being too successful?”
Fear flickered across the emperor’s face before it disappeared. “The people worship you more than they worship the throne.”
Kael finally understood.
The demons had never defeated him, the enemy kingdoms had never defeated him.
His own Empire had.
The emperor raised his hand. “Kael Draven, by the authority of the Imperial Throne, you are hereby condemned as a traitor.”
The accusation echoed across the battlefield. Kael looked at the thousands of soldiers below and felt something colder than anger settle within him.
Not one person spoke, not one person objected.
The emperor lowered his hand. “Execute him.”
The sky darkened beneath a storm of bolts.
Kael moved.
Power erupted from his body as his sword flashed through the air, and soldiers began falling by the hundreds while blood painted the fortress stones red. He fought like the monster they believed him to be, carving a path toward the men responsible while wounds accumulated across his body and pain burned through every muscle.
Yet no matter how many he killed, more came. Then Malach Orien stepped forward and raised a silver relic covered in ancient runes.
Kael’s eyes widened.
The Seal of Aether.
A pillar of silver light descended from the heavens, and agony exploded through his body as his power vanished.
His knees struck the ground.
The emperor exhaled in relief. “It is over.”
Steel pierced his chest then another blade followed, then another. Warm blood spilled across the stone as darkness slowly consumed his vision.
Above him stood the people he had sacrificed everything for. Hatred burned hotter than the pain.
If I had one more chance, I would destroy every one of you.
Darkness swallowed the world, then a cold mechanical voice echoed through the void and announced, “Historical Divergence Detected; Conquest System Initializing; New Timeline Created.”
Kael’s eyes flew open.
He sat upright on a straw bed while moonlight spilled through the cracks of a small wooden hut, and the sight stole the breath from his lungs because he recognized this place immediately.
His childhood home.
His trembling hands looked young and unscarred.
Seventeen years old.
The mechanical voice returned and said, “Welcome, Conqueror; The Conquest System has successfully bound to Host.”
