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Chapter 90 - 90

Hive World Nos – Central Conclave Chamber

The chamber deep beneath Nos' polar citadel was built for secrecy, not splendor. A relic of war-time shadow councils, its walls were reinforced with grav-iron and layered with nullfields. No transmissions escaped. No listening devices survived.

And now, in the ruins of the Kargal Empire, it had become the throne room for four would-be rulers.

Niro stood at the apex of the room, near the ancient dais where the High Minister's sword once lay. He hadn't told them the truth—that Kiro still lived, that the Blood System was pulsing from the Graveband like a dormant god beginning to breathe.

It wasn't time.

Not yet.

"We need a ruler," Zion said flatly, folding his arms. "Without one, the outer systems will fracture. The Kruger fleets are splitting. Mercenaries are pledging to pirates and warlords. The Archive's awakening won't wait for our debates."

"I agree," said Arton, stepping forward. "Which is why it should be someone with power. Someone who didn't kneel when the Voidstorms came. Someone who held the breach while the rest of you ran."

Niro scoffed. "You want the crown, Arton? Fine. Try to take it."

A sharp silence followed.

Neix leaned against a column of polished obsidian, watching with unreadable eyes behind her silver veil. "You both sound like children playing war."

Arton's eyes flared. "And yet your voice didn't speak when your homeworld died."

She stepped forward, cold as the vacuum. "Because unlike you, I don't mistake noise for power."

Tension thickened.

Then Niro's voice cracked like thunder. "We'll settle it the old way. Like the first Lords of Flame did."

Zion's head tilted. "Blood Trial?"

"No," Niro said. "Worse."

"High Guard Trial. One Champion. One Legion. Last force standing rules the Empire."

The words echoed like the toll of a burial bell.

Arton smiled grimly. "Then let the galaxies burn."

The High Guard Trial – One Week Later

It began as a formal challenge. Four heirs. Four elite legions. A contest to decide the fate of a galaxy.

But power has no patience for rules.

What should have been a trial on Nos Prime's moon became a galactic wildfire. Entire systems pledged their fleets. Kruger divisions fractured along bloodlines. Mining worlds turned into battlegrounds. Civilian planets raised banners overnight. War songs returned to the stars.

The Civil War of the Four Thrones had begun.

Arton claimed the militarized sector of the Broken Reach, gathering the remains of the Voidstorm Knights and heavy battalions still loyal to his code.

Neix's forces went dark, operating from cloaked citadels in the Fractal Belt. She spoke rarely, but her assassins struck swiftly, systems falling before their governors even knew war had come.

Zion fortified the worlds of the Ilexian Stretch, wielding arcana-tech and AI-prophets who could weaponize prophecy. His war was clean. Precise. Apocalyptic.

Niro, with the remnants of the Flameguard and most of the Kruger 9th Armada, burned through loyalist space, branding each conquest with fire and steel.

What they didn't know was that the Archive was watching. And waiting.

World of Nect – Two Sectors Beyond the War

Nect was a planet untouched by the empire's blood-stained history.

A world of slow winds and endless meadows, of living flowerfields that hummed with memory and moonlit lakes where stardust gathered on the surface. The people here had no gods. No armies. No crowns.

And in the highlands, between blooms that shimmered with alien light, lay Kiro.

Wrapped in silence.

A torn cloak covered his blood-fused skin, now marked with pale fractal veins that glowed softly at night. The shard embedded in his palm pulsed, but not with urgency. Not yet.

He'd buried his armor. Thrown the system into sleep mode. Tried to forget the Archive's voice.

But he couldn't escape the dreams.

Every night, he saw the stars burning. He heard Zion chanting. Arton roaring. Neix whispering. Niro's eyes, distant and grim.

And deep beneath them all—he felt something else.

Something old. Stirring.

The Void hadn't forgotten the Blood Apostle.

Oblivion Spire – Command Deck

Pablo El'Vertigo stared at the war map blooming across his display. His fleets had split—Kruger forces divided across four loyalties.

But he hadn't picked a side.

Not yet.

A secret channel blinked red.

From the Graveband.

His breath caught.

Kiro's pulse had returned.

Not a warning.

A summons.

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