CHAPTER ONE: THE NIGHT THE AETHER AWAKENED
The sky above Eldoria had never known fear.
For centuries, it had watched empires rise and crumble, kings crowned and executed, wars fought and forgotten. Storms came and went as they always had—predictable, obedient to the quiet laws of nature. But on this night, the sky trembled as though something ancient had stirred beneath its endless blue.
It began with the clouds.
They did not drift or gather as storms usually did. Instead, they twisted inward, spiraling upon themselves in slow, deliberate motion, forming a vast circle directly above the western quarter of the capital. Their color shifted unnaturally—from pale grey to deep violet, then to streaks of molten silver that pulsed like veins.
The air grew heavy.
Merchants paused mid-step. Guards on the city walls leaned forward, gripping their spears as a pressure settled over their chests, unseen yet unmistakable. Animals screamed and fled. Birds dropped from the sky as if struck dead.
In the Grand Temple, the High Seer fell to his knees.
“The Aether…” he whispered, eyes wide with terror. “It’s awakening.”
Lightning tore through the clouds—not downward, but sideways, branching endlessly across the sky in silent arcs. There was no thunder. There was only a low, resonant hum, vibrating through stone, bone, and blood alike.
At the edge of the city, far from marble halls and noble estates, a woman cried out in pain.
Seraphine Vale had known this night would come.
She lay on a narrow bed in a crumbling stone house, sweat-soaked hair clinging to her face as another wave of agony tore through her body. Candles flickered violently around the room, flames bending away from her as if repelled by an invisible force.
“Breathe, Seraphine,” the midwife urged, her voice shaking despite her experience. “You must breathe.”
Seraphine gasped, gripping the sheets as magic surged uncontrollably through her veins. The runes carved into the floor—old, f*******n symbols meant to suppress magical overflow—burned white-hot, cracking the stone beneath them.
“I tried to stop it,” Seraphine whispered through clenched teeth. “I sealed every pathway… every conduit…”
The midwife swallowed hard. She could feel it now too—the power building, pressing against reality itself.
Another contraction hit.
Seraphine screamed.
The scream did not remain inside the room. It tore outward, riding a wave of raw aether that burst through the house, shattering windows across the district. Roof tiles flew. Metal rang. People cried out in confusion and fear.
Deep beneath Eldoria, in chambers sealed since the First Age, ancient mechanisms stirred. Locks engraved with god-f*******n sigils cracked. A relic thought inert for a thousand years pulsed once… and then split down the middle.
Back in the house, the air ignited with golden light.
The child was born at the exact moment the moon dimmed.
Midnight struck—and the storm vanished.
The clouds froze, then dissolved into nothingness, as though erased from existence. Lightning collapsed into silence. The oppressive pressure lifted instantly, leaving behind a stillness so absolute it felt wrong.
The newborn did not cry.
The midwife stared in horror.
The infant lay quiet in Seraphine’s arms, unnaturally calm. His chest rose and fell steadily, eyes open far too soon for a newborn. They glowed—not brightly but unmistakably—soft gold, like sunlight seen through deep water.
The candles around the room extinguished all at once.
The midwife stumbled backward, nearly falling. “No,” she breathed. “That’s not possible.”
Seraphine looked down at her son, tears streaming freely now—not from pain - but from dread and overwhelming love.
“Please,” she whispered. “Please don’t let him be—”
The midwife fell to her knees.
“He’s Aetherbound.”
The word hung in the air like a death sentence.
Seraphine pulled the child close, shielding him instinctively, as though the world itself might strike him down if it knew what had been born.
“Say nothing,” she said fiercely. “You hear me? Nothing.”
But the midwife could barely breathe.
Aetherbound.
A being tied directly to the Aether—the raw, primordial force from which all magic was drawn. Not a mage who used magic, but one through whom magic flowed. Such beings were not meant to exist. Every recorded instance had ended in catastrophe.
Cities erased.
Continents scarred.
Gods slain.
The child shifted slightly, tiny fingers curling around Seraphine’s thumb. The golden glow faded from his eyes, replaced by a deep, natural brown. To anyone else, he might have looked ordinary now.
But the damage was done.
The world had felt him.
Far away, in the Arcane Council’s crystal hall, every scrying mirror shattered simultaneously.
Seven archmages gasped as one, clutching their chests as a shockwave of recognition slammed into them.
“An Aether surge,” one whispered.
“No,” said Archmage Valtheris slowly, dread creeping into his voice. “Not a surge.”
“A birth.”
Back in the stone house, dawn crept cautiously over Eldoria’s rooftops.
Seraphine rocked her son gently, exhaustion weighing heavily upon her. She pressed her forehead to his, whispering the name she had chosen long ago.
“Aelion,” she said softly. “Your name is Aelion.”
The child sighed contentedly.
Seraphine looked toward the window, where the first rays of sunlight touched the broken glass.
“They will come for you,” she murmured. “Because they always fear what they cannot control.”
Her arms tightened protectively around him.
“But I swear this,” she whispered, voice trembling with resolve. “You will not be their weapon. You will not be their god.”
Outside, the city slowly returned to life, unaware that its fate—and the fate of the world—had shifted forever in the arms of a single woman holding a silent, glowing-eyed child.
And somewhere deep within Aelion, something ancient stirred… and smiled.