The Fall of Camelot

Morgan le Fay stares at the corpse of her adopted daughter, her eyes hollow as if all hope has been lost.

It happened so suddenly—no chance to heal, no chance to say goodbye, not even a scream. Mordred simply slipped away in silence, her eyes still wide open in disbelief.

Morgan bites her lower lip until blood drips out, the reality of her loss slowly sinking in.

Arthur, too, watches this scene. His face shows disbelief, hesitation, and perhaps even a flicker of guilt in the corners of his eyes. The old habits from his childhood, when he was just a servant, resurface—the feeling that he has made a terrible mistake.

But his pride and arrogance quickly take over, fueled by the deep-seated hunger for absolute power that has grown within him during his years of ruling—years that now far outnumber those he spent under Morgan le Fay's protection.

This… drives him to make an even more disastrous mistake.