Chapter 10

The battlefield was silent.

Not the silence of peace.

Not the silence of retreat.

But the silence that comes when hope dies screaming and nothing dares rise to take its place.

The war had already ended.

It ended the moment she arrived.

Medusa.

She stood at the edge of the massacre beside her son, Raezel. Unmoving. Unbothered. Unmerciful.

Her feet didn't touch the bloodied soil. They hovered just above it, as if even the earth itself was unworthy to be stained by her.

She did not speak.

She did not command.

She did not need to.

Her will had already decided the outcome.

Then—she tilted her head slightly. The wind dared not follow. Her golden eyes gleamed like twin furnaces.

"My son wishes to protect these mortals."

Her voice was soft. Almost mournful. Almost.

Then, a smile.

Not of joy. Not of kindness.

A slow, patient, apocalyptic smile—the kind that precedes divine extinction.

"Then let them be protected."

And the world reacted.

The snake sigils carved into the flesh of Velmor's soldiers erupted in golden fire, branding their souls with something far beyond mortal comprehension. Their backs straightened. Their wounds sealed shut. Their eyes—

No longer human.

Their pain disappeared.

So did their mercy.

Then—they moved.

Faster. Sharper. Crueler.

What happened next wasn't a battle.

It was a harvest.

The Xandrians, once proud, once fearless, now choked on their own screams.

One soldier turned to flee—only to slip on a coil of intestine, screaming as a blade cleaved through his spine and carved open his belly like a feast pig. He tried to crawl away, dragging himself with one arm, the other still twitching fifty feet behind him.

Another dropped his weapon, falling to his knees, eyes wide as a Velmorian ripped open a fellow soldier's ribcage bare-handed, laughing as he shoved a golden serpent into the exposed lungs.

"Please!" someone screamed.

"Mercy!"

But Velmor's army had learned something that day.

Death was a gift.

And gifts are not handed out so easily.

***

THE ACE WARRIORS

The last line.

The legends.

Xandria's nightmare fuel.

The Ace Warriors.

Handpicked at birth. Trained in slaughter. Each one a walking genocide. They didn't just end wars—they buried civilizations.

Until today.

Today, they watched their empire devoured.

They watched men skinned alive, their flesh curling like burnt parchment, screams bubbling from throats coated in molten blood. One Ace Warrior—his face drenched in gore—stood frozen as a Velmorian impaled a soldier, twisted his spine out through his throat, and wore it like a necklace.

"Monsters," he whispered.

Then came the charge.

One of them moved—a giant of a man, steel-plated, eyes blazing. He roared, swung his greatsword—

He never even saw the blow.

One heartbeat, he was alive.

The next, he was on the ground, eyes wide, watching his own jawbone roll away, teeth still clattering. His limbs spasmed, and a Velmorian drove a dagger through his skull, pinning him like an insect.

Another Ace Warrior screamed and launched fire—only to have it shoved back down his throat, his body glowing, bulging, and then—

Boom.

Ash. Bone. Nothing else.

They fell.

One by one.

Their screams a symphony of agony, their bodies ripped apart with joyless precision.

And the last?

The final commander of Xandria. The man who'd led fifty wars. The man who had never known defeat.

He did not fight.

He ran.

He slipped in the blood of his men, fell, crawled, pushed himself to his feet, and ran again. Eyes wide. Mouth agape.

Because he understood something too late—

The gods had abandoned him.

Or worse...

They had never been on his side to begin with.

***

THE THRONE ROOM

Silence.

Not dead silence.

Judgment silence.

Medusa stood, back straight, golden eyes dim with disinterest. The blood of an empire still fresh on her name.

Raezel turned to her, gaze unreadable.

"I have never seen you fight, Mother."

The air itself froze.

Somewhere in the corner, Nyx smiled.

Nythren's chuckle rolled like thunder dipped in ink.

"Oh, brother," he said, stepping forward. "Do you truly wish to witness such a thing?"

Then—

"STOP IT!"

A shout cracked the stillness.

Ares.

The War God lunged forward. His arms shook. His breath hitched.

Not a god's voice.

Not a warrior's.

But the voice of a man on the brink of collapse.

The room stared.

Ares collapsed to his knees, trembling. His fingers scraped against stone, blood seeping from his nails. His golden eyes lifted—

And locked onto her.

And in that moment—

His soul shattered.

He saw her—not as Medusa the mother, not as a legend, not even as a god.

But as inevitability.

A force that does not rage.

A force that does not threaten.

A force that simply ends.

Ares—the breaker of realms, the conqueror of gods—

Now knelt, weeping, whispering to himself.

"We're doomed…"

Medusa's smile returned.

Amused.