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REDEMPTION....

Soul_Shifted7
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
The wall between our world and the supernatural did not just fall. It shattered. In one single night, humans learned a terrifying truth that had been hidden forever. The gods were never listening to our prayers. The demons were not just old stories. They were all real. And humans were never the rulers of the Earth. We were just prey. We were money. We were farm animals raised for predators wearing crowns. Billions of people died when the monsters showed themselves. Kingdoms fell, religions broke apart, and the world burned. Nineteen-year-old Kael Redgrave should have died like everyone else. Instead, something impossible woke up inside him. His soul became three things at once: a prison, a throne, and a weapon. His soul became the home for five ancient, terrifying beings. They are so old and scary that even the gods erased their names from history. Inside Kael live: The Dark Smiler: A cruel nightmare who laughs at pain and speaks in riddles. The Demon Lord: Pure violence who only wants to hunt and kill. The Devil King: A smart mastermind who treats wars like a game of chess. The Divine: A strict judge covered in holy light who punishes people before understanding them. The Void:A deep hunger that wants to erase everything from existence. Together, these five forces should have destroyed Kael's mind. Instead, they are trapped inside him. Now, the whole universe knows his name: The Vessel of Five. The gods want to lock him away before he gets too powerful. The demons want to kill him before he changes. And regular humans fear him more than the monsters hunting them. Every day, the prison inside Kael gets weaker. The voices in his head are getting louder. The powers are getting stronger. The memories are getting clearer—and none of those memories belong to him. Kael was not chosen by these monsters by accident. He was made for them. He was built and designed to be the perfect cage for five forces that should never live together. Somewhere outside of our world, the forgotten creator who made Kael is waiting in the dark. It is watching and getting ready. It is waiting for its greatest weapon to remember its true purpose. And when that day comes, the gods will not be the ones judging the world. Kael will be the judge. Arc 1 [Completed]
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 : Born In The Storm

The rain didn't just fall; it punished the city, a relentless deluge that turned the streets into shimmering veins of black ink. Overhead, the sky was a bruised purple, occasionally torn open by jagged veins of lightning that bleached the world white for a heartbeat before plunging it back into shadow.

The ambulance shrieked into the emergency bay, its tires protesting against the slick asphalt. Before it had fully settled on its shocks, the rear doors swung wide.

"Critical! We're losing her!"

The stretcher hit the pavement with a metallic clatter. On it lay a woman who looked less like a person and more like a marble statue—pale, cold, and dangerously still. Her breath was a ragged, uneven ghost of a thing.

The hospital corridors, usually a hive of controlled chaos, felt unnervingly hollow. The only sound was the rhythmic *clack-clack-clack* of the stretcher wheels and the distant, muffled roar of the storm outside.

Inside the operating theater, the air was sterile and heavy with the scent of ozone and antiseptic. The lead surgeon, his eyes hard above his mask, looked at the monitors.

"The vitals are crashing," he said, his voice a low rasp. "It's a miracle she's even made it this far. But we're looking at a zero-sum game here. We likely can't save them both."

"Do it," a nurse whispered, though it wasn't clear who she was giving permission to.

The next hour was a blur of steel, sweat, and the frantic beeping of machines fighting against the inevitable. Then, amidst the tension, a sound emerged—a thin, wavering cry that lasted only a second before being swallowed by the silence of the room.

The surgeon's shoulders slumped. He checked the mother's pulse. "The mother is stable. She's coming back."

The nurse looked toward the small, motionless form at the end of the table. "And the child?"

The surgeon didn't look up. He simply shook his head, a slow, heavy movement of defeat. "No. The heart never took. He's gone."

Gently, almost reverently, the nurse wrapped the infant in a pristine white shroud. She placed the small bundle on a side table, tucked away from the frantic light of the surgical lamps, and returned to the mother. The room settled into the grim, mechanical rhythm of post-operative care. *Beep. Beep. Beep.*

Outside, the storm reached its crescendo. A bolt of lightning struck so close that the hospital windows rattled in their frames, the thunder arriving at the exact same moment—a deafening, celestial roar.

In the corner of the room, beneath the white cloth, a tiny hand twitched.

It wasn't the frantic, reflexive jerk of a newborn. It was a slow, deliberate curling of fingers.

Then, the chest rose. A single, deep inhalation of the sterilized air.

No one noticed. The doctors were focused on the monitors; the nurses were clearing the trays. But in the shadows of the tray table, the shroud slipped. Two eyes opened.

They were not the cloudy, unfocused eyes of a babe. They were dark, piercing, and possessed a terrifying clarity. As the next flash of lightning illuminated the room, those eyes didn't blink. They reflected the silver light like polished obsidian, ancient and knowing.

The child didn't cry. He simply watched the world he had just claimed, as if remembering a long-forgotten dream.

The king had returned, and the storm was his herald.