Aether's last stand

Chapter 1: Aether's Last Stand

The air was thick with the smell of smoke and the distant echoes of explosions. Aether crouched low behind the crumbling remains of a stone wall, his hands gripping his rifle tightly. His eyes scanned the battlefield before him, but it wasn't a battlefield in the traditional sense. No, this was an emotional war. The soldiers weren't armed with guns—they carried bottles, glowing with emotions that were sold on the black market.

His heart pounded, but there was no fear left. No adrenaline. No rage. He should feel something, anything, but those emotions had long since been drained from him, sold off for scraps of survival. The only thing left was an empty determination, the kind that came when you knew you had nothing more to lose.

"This is it," he muttered under his breath. The final raid, the last strike. He knew they wouldn't survive, but that was fine. He didn't need to survive, just to make sure the others did. He glanced over his shoulder. Milo and the rest of the team were waiting for the signal, their faces tense but focused. Milo's hand trembled as he clutched his sidearm, but his gaze was unwavering, locked on Aether.

Aether gave him a nod. "We take out the supply route, we cut them off from controlling everything." His voice was steady, even as the sky above roared with artificial lightning, a storm created by the elites to keep the rebellion at bay.

He should be afraid, but he couldn't feel it. The war had taken everything from him, including his emotions. He remembered the day the last drop of anger had left him, sold to some elite's child in exchange for a few days of rations. Since then, he had become a hollow shell, a soldier without fear, without joy, without sorrow.

The sky darkened further, and he stood up, rifle slung across his back. His boots sank into the muddy ground as he moved forward, each step calculated, precise. He had trained for this moment, for the end.

Suddenly, a flash of light from the enemy's tower caught his attention. They were moving faster than expected. He raised his hand to signal Milo and the others to stay back, but it was too late. A deafening explosion erupted to his left. The ground shook, and the world around him blurred in an instant.

Aether was thrown to the ground, his head slamming into the earth. Pain shot through his body, but he didn't scream. He couldn't scream. The emotions that made pain unbearable were gone. He rolled over onto his back, blood trickling down his face, vision hazy. His hand reached for his gun, but before he could pull himself up, he saw the enemy troops marching through the smoke.

The elite enforcers, dressed in their clean, unblemished uniforms, moved with cold efficiency. Each one carried a vial of bottled emotions strapped to their chests like trophies. Aether watched them as they passed, unable to feel the hatred that should have burned in his chest. They were the reason his world had fallen apart, but in this moment, he was numb to it all.

One of them stepped forward, a commanding figure with silver hair slicked back and cold eyes scanning the battlefield. It was him—the Puppet Master. The man who had orchestrated the downfall of the Underbelly, who had turned Aether's family into commodities to be bought and sold like cattle.

"Aether Blackstone," the Puppet Master's voice was calm, almost amused. "I've been waiting for this moment."

Aether tried to stand, but his legs wouldn't cooperate. His vision darkened at the edges.

The Puppet Master crouched beside him, a smug grin on his face. "You thought you could win this war? That you could challenge me with your pitiful rebellion?" He reached into his coat and pulled out a small vial, glowing softly in the dim light. "This is all that's left of you. Your last real emotion." He twisted the vial in his hand, watching the light inside shift.

Aether's chest tightened, but still, no anger came. No rage. No fear. Only the heavy weight of finality settled in his bones. He had failed.

With a flick of his wrist, the Puppet Master shattered the vial against the ground, the last remnants of Aether's humanity spilling into the dirt.

"Goodbye, Aether," the Puppet Master said, rising to his feet.

Darkness rushed in, and in that moment, Aether knew it was over. He had nothing left. His body fell limp, his heart slowing until all that remained was the void.

He died there, in the mud, surrounded by the empty shells of what had once been his comrades. His fight, his rebellion, ended in silence. The Puppet Master walked away, victory etched into his every step.

But Aether wasn't gone.

He wasn't finished.

The darkness that had consumed him shifted, swirled, pulled him in. His mind twisted in the black, and for what felt like an eternity, he floated in the void, weightless and numb. Until the pull became a push, a violent shove that yanked him from the abyss.

Suddenly, his eyes snapped open, and Aether gasped for air. But the battlefield was gone. The mud, the smoke, the ruins—all replaced by a new sky, clear and bright. He was no longer in the Underbelly, no longer fighting a war he couldn't win.

He was somewhere else.

And for the first time in years, Aether felt something stir inside him. A warmth, faint but real.