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Shattered Chains of the fallen Emperor

Tormentor_of_peace
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Synopsis
Valen Veridian, son of the Duke of the Kiel Empire, was never allowed to be a child. His father—hailed as a legendary noble who resurrected the fallen House Veridian—harbored a dream he himself could never reach: placing his family at the very top of the imperial hierarchy. And when his own ambition failed, he carved that dream into his son instead. From the moment Valen was born, his life was shaped by manipulation, sacrifice, and ruthless expectations. Love was expendable. Loyalty was a tool. Everything existed for one purpose—the throne. But dreams forced upon a child rot over time. As Valen grows, the empire he was meant to rule becomes a cage. His hatred shifts—from his father, to the world, and finally to the gods who created a system so cruel. No longer satisfied with becoming Emperor, Valen dares to dream beyond humanity itself: to destroy the god who forged this world and replace him. Is this the rise of a savior… or the birth of something far worse? Will Valen succeed, fail—or uncover a fate more terrifying than either? Shattered Chains of the Fallen Emperor is a dark fantasy about power, deception, and the terrifying cost of freedom—where the greatest chains are the ones we place upon ourselves.--
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Chapter 1 - Chapter One The Fullness in emptiness

Clang*, clang*—metals were crashing against one another, screams were heard, and the raging cries of battle were going on.

People were driving swords into each other's chests, murdering in the name of the war their own country.

"Were their heads filled with pride as they killed in the name of justice?"

Their own people saw them as heroes, someone who saved their nation or sacrificed themselves for the sake of their nation, but what did those people who were killed by those heroes see them as—heroes or villains?

"Justice, you say? The ones who were killed by others were sheep killed in the name of natural order."

"Morality and rules are nothing more than weak, fragile constructs made by humans to keep the other humans from slaughtering them."

In their eyes they were nothing more than a cold-blooded murderer who needed to be taken down, but were the victims any different?

You see, the hero or the villain depends on whose book we are reading.

"Throughout my life I have seen many angels and devils, yet one thing remains the same: they all were humans. Humans can eat each other if there are no rules or punishments, yet some become heroes, angels, without any want for reward humanity.…it's like a double-edged sword."

"Race and ethnicity are fragile words like this that can contain the nature of animals trying to make sense of something meaningless."

And then another voice spoke: "Did you know a devil can become an angel to some if he is trying to find meaning in something meaningless?"

The man in chains trembled. "Who was that...?"

Silence was eating him.

He murmured, "Just my hallucinations."

"Now where were we?"

You may think of yourself as a hero, but would that be the same in someone else's story? Are you really sure it would be the same?.

No, it won't. You see, in the story of plants, the deer is the villain, while the lion is their guardian who killed the deer for the better.

There are no villains, no heroes, just a different cover and pages.

But why am I saying this to you?.

Said* the human sitting in the void, his clothes were tattered and torn as if he had been through a battle, but his face was still shining as if his face had caught a glimpse of the beauty of God, his eyes shining brightly like the water of the ocean, their color like the skies above the mortals, his hair shining like dawn of light yellow, but he was sitting in chains, one that covered his hands, legs, and neck, as he prepared to bestow another set of words, his pink-looking lips moved in motion, and he let out the words.

"Well, because I don't know which one I was, and because when you have spent I don't know how much time in an endless void, talking to yourself is the only choice." He did not finish speaking with that sentence; he continued to speak, becoming more violent and desperate with each word leaving his mouth.

"But why do I think I am not alone in this void? Why do I think there is someone watching my misery, watching me go insane? Is there someone there? Hello, is there someone?"

Silence*. Again, it's just silence, emptiness.

I forgot again. Why am I here? Am I dead??.

And if I am dead, then how does a dead man think???

Why is a dead man chained in an empty void? Why do I feel there are multiple people watching me? It's driving me insane.

Silence*

Then suddenly the void shined up under the cosmos, displaying an incredible view.

"What is this? Have the gods taken pity on me?"

Or

"Am I a god taking pity on some mortals?"

Finally, am I about to be freed from those damn chains? Then the void trembled as something, a being, appeared in the void.

End of Chapter 1