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Cosmic Corruption: The Starbound Cycle

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Synopsis
On the day Flare Nacht was born, the world broke. A green burst of cosmic energy swept across the planet, and ever since… the dead don’t stay dead. They become Ashen — monstrous, fear-twisted reflections of the people they once were. Now, every death is a potential disaster. Every funeral, a battlefield. Flare, an enhanced Slayer, is humanity’s last line of defense. Armed with weapons made from the very monsters he hunts, he’s spent years putting the dead to rest — again and again. He doesn’t hate them anymore. He just pities them. But something is changing. The Ashen are getting smarter. Meaner. Strategic. As if they’re following orders… as if something is calling to them. And when Flare faces a creature that should not exist — a myth brought to monstrous life — the truth begins to unravel. He wasn’t just born the day the world ended. He may be the reason it did. As whispers rise from the stars and impossible enemies awaken, Flare must face his past, his power, and a future drenched in blood and fire. The dead are rising. The stars are watching. And Flare Nacht is running out of time.
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Chapter 1 - In Orbit Of Silence

IN ORBIT OF SILENCE

 

Somewhere far beyond the reach of

stars, where even light forgets the way home, a structure drifts in silence.

Not drifting through space, but with it — not orbiting the gravity well of the

neutron star below, but holding place as though existence itself dared not tug

too hard at what was inside.

 

This was not a palace made by hands,

but by will. The kind of will that grows bitter in solitude.

 

Black stone. Curved towers, gold accenting

every edge. Windows that opened only to vacuum. And at the center of it all, a

hollow quiet that had no business being called peace.

 

In that place, Cassius stirred.

 

He did not sleep in the human sense.

He rested the way old, wounded gods might — by becoming still. Motionless not

out of laziness, but because to move was to remember. And remembering hurt.

 

The whisper came without warning. Not

sound. Not even thought. A vibration in the infinite, thin as a sigh in a

cathedral.

 

The cry of a child.

 

And with it, a pulse of energy —

faint, but ancient. The kind of power that doesn't echo through time so much as

warp it. The kind of power that wakes sleeping things, or worse, grieving ones.

 

Cassius rose slowly, robes rustling

like paper dragged across stone. He was tall — too tall — but his silhouette

folded inward, hunched beneath an unseen weight. His hood cast a deep shadow

over his face, obscuring all but the suggestion of bone beneath.

 

He did not speak at first. But his

fingers twitched. His neck turned. And something old began to twist inside him

like a cracked bell trying to ring.

 

Then the muttering began.

 

"Again.

It happens again.

Always the crying, always the light.

Always that… sound—"

 

His voice was cracked glass, dry and

hating. Not loud. Not even angry. Just… persistent. Like it had been rehearsed

across centuries.

 

"Star-born parasite.

Screaming into life like it's new.

Like it hasn't done this ten thousand

times before.

Like we haven't bled for it."

 

He walked the corridor in steps that

had never been measured. Not because no one had tried, but because the palace

shifted with him — the walls lengthened or shortened depending on what he

needed. Or maybe what he deserved.

 

Outside, the neutron star boiled in

silence. A sphere of collapsed light. It had no name, no orbiting planets, no

purpose but to burn. It spun rapidly — flickering violet and white — but the

palace defied its gravity, anchored instead by something older than force.

Something like bitterness.

 

Cassius's path brought him to a hall

etched in spiraling runes, glowing faint green. Not emerald, not neon — but the

sick kind of green. Like rot under skin. Like the moment before bile rises.

 

The muttering continued.

 

"They'll call him a savior.

A redeemer.

A prince of peace.

They'll fall on their knees and paint

him in light and dust and cradle songs.

 

But I see him.

I remember the fire.

The seal.

Her scream—"

 

He stopped.

 

For the first time in centuries, he smirked…

 

The chamber ahead pulsed with ancient

power. Pillars rose from void, not stone. They weren't carved — they had always

been there. They had waited. In the center: a raised dais, holding a focus

crystal the size of a man's heart. It pulsed green.

 

Cassius approached it like a mourner

approaching a grave he'd visited too many times.

 

"You shouldn't be here," he said to no

one.

"You shouldn't be anywhere. The cycle

should have broken. You should have stayed gone. He should have stayed gone."

 

The crystal shimmered as though in

response. Through its surface, images flickered — not fully formed, just

fragments: A newborn scream. A nurse running. A woman's eyes gone wide with

fear and fading. Hospitals cracking under the weight of bodies.

 

Cassius placed a single hand on the

crystal. Long fingers. Pale skin. The faint shimmer of bone beneath.

 

"He cries and the cosmos weeps," he

said softly.

"So I will make it weep for real."

 

For a moment, his voice caught. His

mouth moved, barely forming the word.

 

"Bela."

 

It wasn't a name he spoke often. But

it was hers.

 

He had loved her before the war,

before the seals, before the Star King stole her from everything — from him —

under the guise of protection. He loved her still, even now. Even knowing she

had never loved him back.

 

Cassius had lived with that truth for

cycles. Doomed to watch her remain asleep while her jailer was reborn again and

again. And again.

 

He couldn't kill the Star King — that

much was law. The rules of the cosmos forbid one Cosmic from destroying

another. But mortals? Mortals were fair game. Tools. Pieces. Pawns.

 

So he would make the world burn

itself.

 

He removed his hand from the focus

crystal and stretched his arms wide.

 

The room answered.

 

Energy gathered at his fingertips —

thin, whispering threads of green, spinning out from the focus like strands of

fate unwinding. They pulsed across the palace, arcing through circuits etched

in air, old as starlight.

 

"They'll die afraid," Cassius

muttered, almost gently.

"And that fear will shape them. Twist

them. The way fear always does.

They'll hate. They'll devour.

They'll hunt."

 

The green light thickened, trembled.

 

He raised both hands now, and the

palace shivered — walls pulsing, air cracking. The green energy poured outward

in an expanding ring — a pulse, not unlike a heartbeat.

 

It raced into the void. Faster than

light. Faster than thought.

 

Toward Earth, and everything else,

And on Earth…

A scream.

 

Not from Cassius. Not from the palace.

But from a newborn child.

From lungs fresh with air. From a life

that had never known silence.

 

Flare Nacht.

 

Born screaming into a world that would

end just for letting him exist.