The flames consumed the village faster than Kael could comprehend. Ash spiraled upward like restless spirits, smothering the sky. The acrid stench of burning wood and flesh filled his lungs as he stumbled forward, barely able to see through the smoke. Screams tore through the chaos, piercing his ears as panic swept through the once-quiet settlement of Durnwick.
It wasn't supposed to end like this.
Kael collapsed to his knees in the center of the square, coughing violently as the heat from the flames prickled against his skin. Around him, villagers fled in every direction, their faces twisted with terror. Abyssals—twisted, monstrous creatures born of failed Veil contracts—rampaged through the streets, tearing apart anything in their path. Their blackened forms were amorphous, shifting like shadows given shape, their eyes glowing with malevolent hunger.
"Kael!" A familiar voice cut through the chaos.
Kael turned just in time to see Lira, his childhood friend, sprinting toward him. Her face was pale, her hands bloodied as she gripped a crude spear. "Get up! We have to go!"
"I didn't do this," Kael rasped, his voice cracking as he struggled to rise. His heart pounded, not from fear of the Abyssals, but from the truth that had led to this moment. The villagers had blamed him. They believed he had sabotaged the Core Nexus, the ancient structure that protected their settlement from Abyssals. And now they wanted him dead.
"I know!" Lira grabbed his arm, pulling him to his feet. "But they don't care! If you stay here, they'll kill you before the Abyssals do!"
Kael glanced around the square. The mob of villagers was closing in, their faces twisted with fury. He recognized some of them—people he'd grown up with, people who'd once smiled at him. Now, they shouted his name like a curse.
"There he is! He brought this upon us!"
"Burn him with the rest of them!"
"Kill the Voidless scum!"
"Lira, I can't—" Kael began, but she cut him off with a slap across his face.
"Stop whining and run!" she snapped, her brown eyes fierce despite the tears streaming down her cheeks. "You didn't do this, but they've already decided you're guilty. If you die here, it won't change anything!"
Kael gritted his teeth, anger bubbling beneath his fear. She was right. He couldn't stay here. Not now. Not after everything had gone so wrong.
Lira pushed him toward the edge of the square, away from the mob and the Abyssals. "Head for the Rift! You'll be safe there."
The Rift. The Forbidden Zone. It was a place no one dared to tread—a wasteland of broken mana currents and Veil storms. But it was also the only place where the villagers wouldn't follow him. Kael hesitated for a moment, glancing back at Lira. "What about you?"
"I'll hold them off as long as I can." She raised her spear, her hands trembling as she faced the advancing mob. "Now go!"
Kael wanted to argue, to fight alongside her, but the desperation in her voice left no room for debate. He turned and ran, his legs burning as he pushed himself toward the outskirts of the village. Behind him, he could hear the shouts of the mob and the guttural roars of the Abyssals. The sound of battle filled the air as Lira's spear clashed with the villagers' crude weapons.
He didn't look back.
The edge of the village gave way to the barren expanse of the Riftlands, a desolate wasteland shrouded in a perpetual haze. Kael stumbled forward, his breath ragged as he crossed the invisible boundary that marked the edge of civilization. The air here was colder, sharper, carrying an unnatural stillness that made his skin crawl.
Above him, the sky shifted unnaturally, streaks of violet and silver cutting through the dark clouds. This was the Rift—the place where the Veil was weakest, where the barriers between worlds bled together. It was said that anyone who entered the Rift would be consumed by its chaos, their soul torn apart by the unstable mana currents.
But Kael didn't have a choice.
As he ventured deeper into the Riftlands, the sounds of the village faded behind him, replaced by an eerie silence. The ground beneath his feet was cracked and uneven, glowing faintly with residual mana. Strange, flickering shadows danced at the edges of his vision, but when he turned to look, they were gone.
His legs gave out, and he collapsed onto the ground, gasping for air. The adrenaline that had driven him this far was gone, leaving only exhaustion and a gnawing sense of despair.
They think I destroyed the Nexus. They think I'm a murderer.
The thought burned in his mind, sharper than any wound. He clenched his fists, his nails digging into his palms. It wasn't fair. He'd done nothing wrong. But the villagers had needed someone to blame, and Kael—poor, powerless, Voidless Kael—had been the easiest target.
"You're pathetic," a voice whispered, low and guttural, echoing in the stillness.
Kael froze. The voice wasn't his own, and it wasn't human. It seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere at once, resonating deep within his chest.
"Who's there?" Kael demanded, his voice shaking.
The shadows around him began to coalesce, forming into a vaguely humanoid shape. Its eyes glowed a deep crimson, and its body shimmered like liquid darkness. "You are weak," the figure said, its voice dripping with disdain. "Powerless. Abandoned. And yet, you cling to life like a drowning rat."
Kael scrambled backward, his heart pounding. "Stay away!"
The figure chuckled, a sound that sent chills down Kael's spine. "Do not fear me, boy. I am not your enemy. In fact, I can offer you the one thing you crave most."
Kael hesitated, his back pressed against a jagged rock. "What are you?"
The figure leaned closer, its crimson eyes piercing into Kael's soul. "I am Erythos. A fragment of the Veil itself. And I can give you power."
Power. The word echoed in Kael's mind, filling the hollow space left by his fear and despair. He thought of the villagers, of their hatred and their blame. He thought of Lira, left behind to fight alone. He thought of the Abyssals, the Veilborn, and the endless hierarchy that had kept him powerless his entire life.
"What's the catch?" Kael asked, his voice barely above a whisper.
Erythos's smile was sharp and cruel. "Your soul, of course."
Kael swallowed hard. He knew he should run, should reject the offer. But deep down, a part of him—the part that had always yearned for something more—refused to turn away.
"I accept," he said.
And with that, the world around him exploded into darkness.