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God Grave

Idowu_Peter
7
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In the Lorn Expanse, humanity has built an empire on the corpses of the gods they killed thirty centuries ago. They mine divine bones for fuel, burn crystallized god-blood to power their cities, and hunt anyone who can hear the dead whispering in the ruins. Kael Ardren survived a mine collapse that should have killed him. Now he hears echoes in god-bones—a ability that makes him valuable to the empire and hunted by those who fear what he represents. Ilara Vale's parents were executed for heresy when she discovered she could make the bones sing with her voice. The empire wants to turn her into a weapon. She'd rather die free than live as their tool. When imperial forces capture them both, they're dragged to the Spine—a city carved into a dead god's ribcage—where a desperate scientist offers them an impossible choice: merge with the divine consciousness trying to wake from death, or burn out resisting a transformation that's already begun. But the god they're meant to interrogate has been waiting three thousand years for this moment. And it doesn't want to be studied. It wants to be reborn. A dark fantasy of divine corpses and dangerous power, where resurrection might be the only thing worse than death.
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Chapter 1 - The Ribs of Lorn

The dust tasted like memory. He had learned that years ago,

down in the bone mines where his father died. God-dust didn't sit on your

tongue like salt or sand—it dissolved, left you with flashes of someone else's

life. A woman's laugh. The smell of burnt cedar. The shape of a word you'd

never spoken.

But that dust, and the one in the air now, was a different

dust—the processed kind, rendered down until most of the resonance had been

burned away. What he'd breathed during the collapse, trapped in Chamber 19 for

six hours while they dug toward him through rubble, had been raw, uncut. It was the kind of

concentrated divine essence that should have killed him like it had killed the

others, still humming with whatever made gods divine.

‎He spat into the grit and kept walking. The Ribs rose ahead

of him, bone-white against the salt flats, curved high enough to swallow the

morning sun, Tharos's ribcage. The god had been dead three thousand years, but

the corpse still hummed—a frequency most people couldn't hear. Kael could. He'd

been able to since the collapse, since the dust got into his blood and changed

something fundamental.

‎He hated it.

‎"Kael! Wait up!"

‎He didn't slow. Behind him, Joren stumbled through the

scrub, breathing hard. The older man had been drinking again—Kael could tell

from the way he moved, too careful, overcompensating.

‎"We're going to miss the caravan," Kael called.

‎"No we won't."

‎"We will if you keep dragging your feet. I told you

you'd had too much to drink yesterday."

"Slow down. Please"

‎Kael stopped and turned. Joren caught up, bent double,

hands on his knees. At twenty-seven he looked forty, too many years in imperial

service, too many things he wouldn't talk about. The left side of his neck was

bandaged, always bandaged, hiding the god-corruption that was eating him alive

one inch at a time.

‎"You alright?" Kael asked.

‎"Fantastic. Never better. Why?"

‎"You're sweating."

‎"It's a desert."

‎"It's dawn, and cold."

‎Joren straightened, wiped his face with his sleeve. For a

moment something flickered behind his eyes—pain, maybe, or fear—but he grinned

it away. "You worried about me, kid?"

‎"No."

‎"Liar."

‎Kael turned back toward the Ribs. The caravan camp was

visible now, a scatter of canvas and cook fire smoke against the bone. Twelve

wagons, forty people, all of them trying to cross the Lorn Expanse before the

memory-storms hit. They'd hired him as a guide because he could sense when a

storm was building, could feel the resonance shift in the god-bones before the

sky turned red.

‎They didn't know why he could do that. He'd made sure of

it.

‎"Think they'll actually pay us?" Joren asked.

‎"If we get them across alive."

‎"And if we don't?"

‎"Then payment won't matter much."

‎Joren laughed—rough, sharp, the kind of sound that wasn't

really amusement. "I like your optimism."

‎They walked in silence after that, boots crunching through

salt-crust and fossilized bone fragments. The deeper into the Expanse you went,

the more of Tharos and the other dead gods you found—vertebrae the size of

houses, finger bones like fallen towers, ribs that curved overhead and cast

shadows that never quite aligned with the sun.

‎The empire mined it all, shipped god-bone back to the Spine

cities, rendering it down in forges, to build engines and weapons and the

framework of their perfect ordered world. The process left dust, the dust left

marks.

‎The hum changed. He stopped walking.

‎"Kael?"

‎The resonance in the bones had shifted—still faint and distant,

but wrong, like a string pulled slightly out of tune. He closed his eyes, and

concentrated to isolate the feeling. It was coming from the south. Deep south,

past the caravan route, past the mining camps, out where the Ribs tapered into

the sternum and the real corpses began.

‎"Kael, what is it?"

‎He opened his eyes. "Something's wrong."

‎"Wrong how?"

‎"I don't know yet."

‎Joren's hand dropped to the knife at his belt—old reflex,

military training. "Storm?"

‎"No. Different."

‎"Different bad or different interesting?"

‎Kael looked at him. "In my experience, there's often

no distinction."

‎The caravan master was a woman named Tessa Vrome—short,

scarred, with the kind of voice that carried across fifty yards of wind. She

was arguing with her second-in-command when Kael and Joren arrived, something

about water rations and whether they could risk a faster pace.

‎She saw Kael and stopped mid-sentence. "Tell me

something good."

‎"Route's clear," Kael said. "No storms for

at least two days."

‎"At least?"

‎"I'm not a priest. I can't predict the future."

‎Tessa grunted. "Can you predict whether we'll hit a

sinkhole?"

‎"No."

‎"Then what exactly am I paying you for?"

‎"To not die horribly in a memory-storm."

‎She stared at him for a long moment, then barked a laugh.

"Fair enough. We move in an hour. Stay close to the lead wagon."

‎Kael nodded and turned to go, but Tessa caught his arm. Her

grip was strong, calloused. "That thing you do," she said quietly.

"The listening. You learned that in the mines?"

‎He didn't answer.

‎"My cousin worked Lorn Deep-18," Tessa continued.

"Said there were kids down there who could hear the bones sing. Said the

empire took them away."

‎"Your cousin talk a lot?"

‎"He's dead."

‎Kael pulled his arm free. "Then he's got nothing to

worry about."

‎He walked away before she could respond. Joren followed,

silent for once.

‎They were two hours into the march when Kael felt it

again—that wrongness in the resonance, clearer now, closer. He slowed, scanning

the horizon. Nothing. Just salt and bone, the cold, and the shimmer of God bone

dust in the air. But the hum was louder.

‎"Joren."

‎"I know. I feel it too."

‎Kael glanced at him sharply. "You can—?"

‎"Not like you. But something's off. The air's too

still."

‎He was right. The wind had died completely, and n the

Expanse, that was never a good sign.

‎Kael moved up to the lead wagon, where Tessa rode shotgun

beside the driver. "We need to stop."

‎"We just started."

‎"I know. Stop anyway."

‎Tessa looked at him, then at the sky, then back at him.

Whatever she saw in his face made her decision. "Hold!" she shouted.

"Full stop! Circle formation!"

‎The caravan shuddered to a halt. Drivers called out, wagons

creaked, but within minutes they'd formed a defensive ring—standard procedure

for the Expanse, where threats could come from any direction.

‎Kael stood in the center of the circle, eyes closed,

listening.

‎The resonance was changing. Not a storm—storms built

slowly, like pressure behind your eyes. This was sharp, sudden. It felt as if

something had woken up.

‎"Kael," Joren said quietly. "South. Look

south."

‎He opened his eyes.

‎On the horizon, maybe two miles out, the air was bending.

Not heat shimmer—this was wrong, geometric, like reality was folding in on

itself. And in the center of the distortion, something was moving.

‎"Gods'," someone whispered.

‎"The gods are dead," Tessa snapped. "Stay

calm. Weapons ready."

‎But Kael couldn't look away from the distortion. Because

now he could hear it—not just the resonance, but voices. They were layered,

overlapping, and spoke in a language he shouldn't understand but somehow did.

‎The vessel approaches. The singer draws near. The cycle

begins again.

‎His blood went cold.

‎"It's not coming for us," he said.

‎Tessa turned to him. "What?"

‎"Whatever that is—it's not coming for the caravan.

It's going somewhere else."

‎"Where?"

‎Kael's throat was dry. "The Spine. It's heading for

the Spine."

‎And then, cutting through the morning heat like a blade, he

heard it—her. A voice, clear and impossible, singing a melody that shouldn't

exist. The resonance in every bone fragment around them shivered.

‎Joren grabbed his shoulder. "Kael, your nose."

‎He touched his face. His fingers came away red, and the

singing was getting louder.