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The World Beyond the Seal

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Synopsis
For centuries, humanity has withered beneath the Seal — a safeguard that became a cage. Locked inside Aurora, with motionless seas and monsters reduced to controlled simulations, the real world, Gemina, has been worn down to a half-remembered name. Gin, a fifteen-year-old trapped in a failing body, has never believed the Seal was meant to save anyone — only to postpone the inevitable. What he never imagined was the true cost of freedom — or who would be forced to pay it first.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Rupture

Solis dust pressed down like a hand on my lungs, brined with stagnant sea air, oxidized metal, and the sour sweat of ten thousand laborers. Every breath swallowed decay. I lay on a straw mattress, sheets steeped in cheap medicinal herbs and old illness, and the world came to me secondhand—dulled, distant, never whole.

In the distance, the rhythmic crack of hydraulic hammers dictated the pulse of the shipyards. Pulleys groaned under the weight of oak beams, reinforcing the hulls of the Council's defensive fleet—ships that had rotted and been rebuilt for generations, silent watchmen of an ocean that had forgotten how to move. Closer, the scratching hiss of Celeste's breath filled the room; my mother wheezed like a punctured forge bellows, every exhalation a protest from lungs ground down by shifts that never found an end.

"Sixteen copper coins... and three bronze coins."

The clink of metal against peeling wood was the only melody that mattered. It was the price of breath for the next day. Seaweed paste and a scrap of dried fish.

I tried to sit up. Every vertebra protested—a domino effect of hot needles ending in a dull throb at the base of my skull. I wasn't the master of this body; I was a prisoner in a cage made of useless flesh and stiffening tendons.

"You should eat the fish, Mom. Look at your hands."

Celeste's hands were a patchwork of burn scars and raw calluses, the harvest of years spent assembling the keels of boats she would never see sail beyond the Seal. She smiled, a tired, flickering gesture that died long before it reached her sunken eyes.

"Today you turn fifteen, Gin. Master Kahn promised to stop by. He's bringing something special from the Guild. A record... from Before."

Before. The word echoed like a myth. Before the isolation. Before the Iron Council turned Aurora into a sprawling barracks. Before humanity was locked in a glass box.

The mention of it sent a thin, weary fluid—my blood—racing a little faster. Knowledge wasn't just information; it was the only territory where I wasn't fragile. On the maps of Gemina, I was free.

Celeste didn't stop once the coins were counted. Exhaustion was a shadow she tried to outrun with sharp, frantic movements. She began wiping down the small table, using a grimy rag to polish the wood as if she could scrub away the misery of the present.

"You didn't need to clean the shelves, Mom. The dust will be back in an hour. The shipyards never stop."

"Today is not just any day." She paused, bracing a hand against the wall to steady herself. "If the Guild Master is bringing the past into this house, the least I can offer is a place where the present doesn't feel so wretched."

My throat tightened, a dry constriction that had nothing to do with my sickness. I looked away toward the shelf by the bed, where three volumes bound in moonfish leather rested. Every mold stain on those pages was a landmark. I knew the migration cycle of the Glass-Razors of Velkhar and the chemical composition of Vulkris ash by heart.

Beneath the industrial drone of the city, a different sound climbed the hills of Solis. It wasn't the rhythmic, heavy stomp of Council infantry patrols. It was an irregular, jaunty gait: broad shoulders swinging under joints that betrayed decades of work, carrying a bag heavy enough to hold centuries.

Kahn.

Celeste smoothed her hair, trying to hide the premature gray streaks, and placed a mug of tea on the table. For a brief instant, the gleam of curiosity replaced the shadows in her eyes.

The rotten wooden door creaked open. Kahn didn't knock; he simply occupied the space. The Master of the Adventurers' Guild smelled of old parchment and cheap tobacco. His clothes were a tapestry of worn leathers and moss-green patches, his pockets bulging with the weight of the past.

"The boy looks paler than an abyssal fish," Kahn thundered, though his eyes held a strange softness as he rested a heavy volume on my withered legs. "Happy birthday, little thinker."

The book was ancient. The cover had the texture of cured monster skin, cold and forbidding.

"Encyclopedia of the Tides of Nhalyss." My voice was a whisper, my translucent fingers trembling as they traced the faded gold lettering. "I thought the Council confiscated all Nhalyss records."

"The Council confiscates steel, but they are terrible at finding books hidden under false floorboards." Kahn sat on a crate, his gaze fixed on the window overlooking the harbor. "They call it protection."

"It's still a cage." I murmured, opening the book.

My eyes devoured illustrations of creatures that defied anatomy and predators whose forms blurred with living hurricanes. While the Iron Council trained soldiers in simulations of "Echoes," I lived reality through ink. I knew the behavior of Burrowkin and the biological signals of a Coilbeast's aggression without ever feeling the void that precedes a strike.

Suddenly, my fingers stopped on the page.

"Kahn..." My voice faltered. "The Seal is vibrating."

The constant breeze of Solis, which usually dragged the smell of oil into the room, died instantly. The air became dense, stagnant, and heavy.

"This peace is thinning, Gin." Kahn's voice was a low, grave rumble. "The Primordial Clan gave us time to sharpen blades, not to hide forever. But the Council preferred to spend centuries perfecting machines of fear."

Kahn stood and walked to the window. The sunset was usually a transition from industrial gray to coal black, but tonight, the sky had other plans.

Celeste was immersed in a ritualistic calm, pouring the tea, when the first tremor hit. It didn't come from the ground. It hammered down from above.

The sound of crystal being crushed by a divine sledgehammer echoed throughout Aurora. The impact vibrated in the roots of my teeth. Through the window, the vault of the sky—the perfect dome that kept chaos at bay—began to fracture.

Veins of white light, cold and terrifying, crisscrossed the firmament like cracks in a mirror.

"Mom!" I screamed, using my arms to drag my useless weight to the edge of the bed.

Celeste didn't answer. She stood in the center of the kitchen, hands clutching her chest. The effort of fifteen years, the wear of double shifts, the malnutrition accepted in my name... everything collapsed the moment the world broke open.

The sound of her body hitting the packed earth was muffled by a second boom in the sky.

The Primordial Seal didn't break. It was torn to pieces.

The air pressure plummeted. Oxygen became heavy, charged with the static of raw energies humanity hadn't breathed in centuries. The shockwave tore the door from its hinges and made the shelves vomit my precious books.

"Celeste!" Kahn's shout was a roar that cut through the static.

He reached her before the ceiling dust could settle. His immense hands cradled her fragile body with desperate delicacy. Kahn knelt, ignoring the sharp shards of the tea mug digging into his knees, staining his trousers red.

"Mom, please..." I crawled out of bed. The pain in my joints was a wildfire, but I ignored it.

My despair wasn't a cry; it was a silent vacuum that suddenly filled with a brutal influx. New air invaded my sick lungs and found something withered and dormant in my chest. Something that, starving, reacted.

I didn't plan it. I just needed.

A pale light, the color of milk and moon, emanated from my palms. The air condensed, spinning in a silent vortex until a form solidified over Celeste's chest. A small snake, white scales glowing with internal luminescence, appeared from nothing. Its eyes were orbs of pure light reflecting my panic.

Kahn froze. His hands hung suspended in the air. He ignored the groaning ceiling and the screams from the street; his eyes were fixed on the silhouette of light slithering over Celeste's skin.

The creature hissed, a sound that vibrated directly in my mind. The luminous silhouette trembled, its pure light stained by gray veins—the reflection of my own fragility.

Understanding came in an instant: the power sustaining it came from a source that was withering away. In a fluid motion, the white snake slid from Celeste to my chest.

"No! Her! Help her!" I tried to grab the snake, but my hands passed through the glowing mist.

The light didn't just touch me; it burned through the flesh, ignoring ribs and muscles to nest in the cold void of my marrow. It was as if molten metal had been stitched directly into my nervous system. The creature coiled around my spine, every vertebra vibrating as the intruder forced my atrophied body to accept its presence.

Kahn, seeing me arch my back in a violent spasm, lunged to stop me from smashing my head against the floor.

"Hold on, Gin!" His voice sounded like it was coming from underwater.

Outside, the sky was a kaleidoscope of forbidden lights. And then, overlapping the collapse, came the sound all of Aurora feared: the iron-throated bellow of the Trumpets of Rupture.

The millennial war protocol had begun.

An explosion of pure agony—and then, silence.