This is an epic fantasy that blends mythological reinvention, political allegory, and family duty.
The story begins with the genesis of creation itself — the god Pangu forges a world not from nothing, but by borrowing divine power from another true god: the Creditor. With the old order on the verge of collapse, Pangu summons two mortal siblings, Shanjue and Qianhui, and bestows upon them the divine titles of God of Justice and God of Administration. Together with their eldest brother Wanquan — the Lord of Order, Freedom, and Fate — they form a divine family.
But this is a desperate, all-or-nothing battle against a conspiracy. The Creditor has spent a millennium laying a trap designed to devour their world entirely — and do so legally. To stop him, the siblings must strike a balance between their divinity and their lingering humanity, building a new judicial and administrative system to replace an old order that was both primitive and brutal.
As the story unfolds, readers will witness the loneliness behind divine power, the dark costs of maintaining order, and the fates of mortals caught and controlled in the machinery of gods — as well as the tender yet sinister truth behind a "second chance." This is not a fairy tale of simple good versus evil. It is a deep, somber allegory about debt, reform, and the true nature of the world.
When the true god Pangu was young, he aspired to create the world and borrowed divine power equivalent to currency from other true gods.
Pangu shaped the face of heaven and earth, established the primordial laws, and then used this borrowed divine power to infuse the world with vitality.
Thus, he succeeded in creating this world but also incurred a debt. Yet he never anticipated that all of this was part of a cunning design.