Chereads / a world of wizardry and blood: Némesis english / Chapter 5 - Chapter 5 and 6 I got too lazy to keep copying, translating, and pasting.

Chapter 5 - Chapter 5 and 6 I got too lazy to keep copying, translating, and pasting.

The universal consciousness made a mistake by moving into the new dimension. The gravitational force of the black hole pulled it toward itself, causing even more disruptions in the universe. Among these, a galaxy—Andromeda—began to slowly move toward the new dimension, the spiral, toward the Milky Way.

As it was being absorbed, the universal consciousness experienced inexplicable visions: a golden skeleton stabbing it, a dark nebula with crimson rays, and a single word that repeated itself constantly: "NEMESIS."

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THE SOLAR SYSTEM

In the beginning, the Sun, a star of eternal fire, forged the essence of the system. Its unyielding heat emerged from the primordial darkness, shaping the worlds in its orbit. A burning sphere that, in its brilliance, sustains all that is known. It is the center of a vast order, yet also the reflection of creation itself—a being that gives and consumes, that grants life while consuming itself in its own energy.

Around it, in their infinite dance, the planets revolve—bodies born and dying under its gaze.

Mercury, the first, untouched by the cold of the void, forever close to the Sun. A messenger of fire, its proximity grants it a destiny of torment, for its relentless heat drags everything that dares approach.

In the next orbit, Venus shines in the firmament with a dark beauty, its brilliance masking implacable storms. Its atmosphere conceals a dangerous truth, for beneath its veil lies the chaos of the primordial, the beginning of instability. A planet of contradictions, whose depths remain an unsolved mystery.

Mars, the red warrior, is the evidence of what remains after the wear of time. Its scorched and desolate surface reflects the memory of what was and the shadow of what could have been. A planet devoid of life yet full of history, its stillness bears witness to ancient days.

THE GAS GIANTS

The gas giants, distant from the Sun's scorching heat, were born of cosmic winds and the primordial matter that floated in the vast darkness of space. Far from the direct influence of stellar heat, light gases like hydrogen and helium, dispersed in the solar nebula, gathered through gravitational forces. These immense and powerful giants grew from the particles the Sun could not consume, absorbing what remained in the void.

Jupiter, the first to form, became a sphere of gas that trapped the lightest particles around it. Over time, its gravity turned it into a giant. By gathering these elements, Jupiter became the colossus we know today: a dense atmosphere with raging winds and eternal storms that hide its core. Within its vast being, Jupiter reflects the untamable force of the primitive—the same force that gave birth to the universe, as if creation itself sought to embody its power in a single being.

Saturn, beside it, followed a similar path. Its rings, formed by remnants of comets and asteroids trapped by its gravity, were created from the same light elements the Sun could not absorb. In its stillness and majesty, Saturn maintains the system's balance; its atmosphere, rich in hydrogen and helium, reflects the constant struggle between stability and transience.

Farther out, Uranus and Neptune, the blue giants, stand as the final remnants of that cosmic dance. Their formation, distant from the Sun's warm influence, occurred under the cold gaze of deep space. These worlds were not forged by heat but by the same gravitational forces that bind and separate, trapping the gases that existed in the nebula without the Sun's proximity interfering with their development.

In their atmospheres of methane and gas, Uranus and Neptune carry the secrets of remoteness—the stillness of the distant—as guardians of a forgotten realm.