prologue
Clara did not sneak. Sneaking implied shame. There would be no hint of shame. On this night she was doing the Lord’s work.
This moment was the culmination of centuries of patience. Empires had risen and fallen while she waited, yet she regretted not a single second. Her Lord had granted her extended life, not as a gift, but as a necessity for his favored consort. Now, that investment would finally pay dividends.
She moved through the vault of the Silent Order with the lethal grace of a woman who had memorized the blueprints a lifetime ago. Her crimson and ebony armor gleamed in the flickering magelight.
"Hurry," she hissed to her subordinates. "The Silent Ones are slow, not deaf."
Around her, cultists of the Lucasian Temple scrambled, smashing glass cases and stuffing artifacts into bags of holding. They weren't just stealing gold; they were stealing history. They were reclaiming what the Order had buried in the dark.
Clara stopped before a massive central pedestal. Resting atop it was a jagged, crystalline prison. Inside, a dark, swirling smoke pulsed with a heartbeat of pure chaos.
Nethyua. Her Lord. Bound, but alive.
"I have you," Clara whispered, her hand trembling as she reached out.
The moment her skin touched the crystal, the world screamed. Wards flared red, and the air pressure dropped so sharply her ears popped. The crystal broke; it disintegrated. A coalescing shape began to take form from the smoke. Horns, flames, ash and a malice old as time.
Her Lord had returned.
She dropped to a knee, head bowed. "My Lord," she choked out, holding back tears of religious ecstasy.
A hand, comprised of smoke and cooling magma, cupped her chin.
"You kept your vow," Nethyua’s voice rasped, sounding like grinding stones. "You have done well."
"Intruders!" a voice boomed from the entrance.
The heavy iron doors blew inward. Silent Order Paladins flooded the chamber, weapons glowing with holy light. The thunderous rhythm of armored reinforcements echoed down the corridor.
"We must go!" Clara shouted, hurling a sphere of necrotic fire to buy them seconds.
Nethyua paused. His form flickered, unstable. The centuries of sealing had left him drained; he was a god running on fumes. He looked at the charging Paladins. He could slay many, yes. But he would likely be overwhelmed and sealed again.
His gaze shifted to the hundreds of other pedestals in the vault—other demons, cursed weapons, and bound gods the Order had collected.
A devious thought curled through his mind. The Silent Order believed they were the jailers of the world. They had spent millennia being a thorn in his side.
Why not return the favor?
"If I cannot rule this world today," Nethyua sneered, "neither will you."
He didn't aim at the Paladins. He aimed at the vault itself.
Gathering the last of his strength, he let out a wave of chaotic, fiery energy. Portals ripped open all over the room—wild, unrefined tears in reality.
"Disperse," Nethyua commanded.
Artifacts were sucked into the voids, teleported to random corners of the globe. A cursed sword to a bandit camp. A demon to a noble's court. Chaos, sown across the world in a single heartbeat.
A spear of concentrated sunlight erupted from the Paladin line, aimed directly at Clara’s exposed back.
She braced for death, but it never came.
Nethyua moved with a speed that defied his weakened state. He stepped between her and the light, his shadow form absorbing the holy fire with a hiss of agony. He grunted, smoke pouring from his shoulder, but he did not step aside. He would not lose his investment so soon.
"Hold on," he growled.
Shadows wrapped around them, and they dissolved into darkness just as the Paladins’ next volley scorched the spot where they had stood.
Somewhere Else
Thousands of miles away, deep within the twisted canopy of the Weeping Pine Forest, the air rippled.
A tear in reality opened. Sickly green and sounding like a cathedral bell cracking. It spat out a single object.
It hit the mud with a dull thud. It wasn't a demon like Nethyua. It was something older. Something colder.
A simple band of black obsidian, pulsing with a faint violet glow.
The Ring lay in the dirt, its consciousness recalibrating from the forced teleportation. It reached out, its senses expanding. It felt the damp earth. It felt the primitive wildlife.
And then, it felt a signal.
A mind. Structured. Logical. Stubborn.
It was a stream of thought bleeding through the thin veil of reality.
It checked all the boxes on the list.
Resonance.
The Ring did not ask for permission. It locked onto the signal.
It pulled.