The world beyond the Veil had always whispered of boundaries, of the celestial and the mortal. They told stories of how the heavens were eternal, that no mortal could defy them without the promise of annihilation. The sky had always remained steadfast above Rin, a symbol of divinity's dominion over the mortal realms. But here, beneath the fractured dome of a dying world, the sky trembled with anticipation. And so did Rin.
At the heart of the fractured sky, a platform stood — a monument to the end of realms. It was not a temple of worship, nor a shrine of hope. No, it was an altar to something greater. A place for endings. The stone beneath Rin's feet was slick with the residue of a thousand souls — whispers of their passage still clinging to the cracks in the earth. The sky above him was torn, jagged, as if the heavens themselves had begun to break apart.
Rin did not kneel. He did not raise his hands in supplication. He simply stood, looking up at the celestial expanse that had imprisoned him and all others for so long. His Death Core burned with the echoes of his journey, the agony of a thousand regrets and a thousand deaths. His mind had long since shed the trappings of mortal fear. What did death mean to a man who had already passed through its gates countless times?
In the silence, the words came — a Divine Decree, punctuated by the heavens themselves.
"Rin Xie, Heretic of Death, be erased."
The words did not fall gently. They cracked the air like a whip, curling around his body, tightening around his chest, threatening to suffocate him beneath their weight. The sky itself seemed to pulse, the very air vibrating with divine wrath. And then, from the cracks in the heavens, a figure descended.
A celestial being, tall and imposing, made not of flesh, but of pure, blinding light. Its form was perfect — flawless in shape and cold in presence. Its face, though indistinct, radiated an energy so intense that it burned the edges of reality itself. The Executioner. An embodiment of celestial law, forged by the heavens to enforce their will.
Its blade — a great, glowing cleaver forged from the pure essence of divine law — gleamed with an otherworldly glow, as though it was not simply an instrument of death, but the very measure of existence. The heavens had sent this instrument to erase him, to quench the fire of his rebellion.
The Executioner raised its blade. It did not speak, for words were beneath it. It did not need to; its actions alone were the manifestation of divine wrath. In a flash, it was upon him, the blade coming down with a speed that would have cleaved mountains in half, its edge sharp enough to slice through time itself.
Rin did not move. He could hear the hum of the blade in the air, the weight of its judgment pressing down on him. He felt no fear — only the cold embrace of certainty. He had prepared for this.
Instead of drawing his own weapon, Rin closed his eyes. His body rippled with the accumulated grief, pain, betrayal, and silence he had cultivated within himself. The memories, the deaths, the unresolved sorrows of countless lives surged within him, twisting into a single, unified force — the raw essence of death itself.
The Executioner's blade descended. And Rin let it come.
The moment the blade neared his throat, the air around them froze. The world held its breath.
Rin's eyes snapped open, and in that instant, the power of his Void Eulogy came alive. A vast, overwhelming silence blanketed the world, erasing the very idea of fate.
The blade, in its infinite purity, shattered in midair, breaking not upon Rin's skin, but against the nothingness he had conjured. The heavens could not control him anymore.
The Executioner, its form flickering with the impossibility of disobedience, faltered. It did not retreat — it had no will to act beyond its purpose. But Rin's silence, the refusal of fate itself, locked it in a stasis that it could not escape. The celestial being froze, its very essence buckling beneath the weight of Rin's deathless will.
With a final, deafening ripple, the world split. The heavens above began to crack, long fissures stretching across the once-perfect sky. Light bled through the cracks, seeping into the void below. The sky wept.
The Executioner collapsed — or perhaps, it simply ceased to exist. Its blade dissolved into the air, turning to ash as the divine law it had represented crumbled into oblivion. Heaven had faltered, not because it was weak, but because it had never understood the true nature of death. Death was not to be feared, nor controlled. It was a force as fundamental as life, and it had no master.
Rin stepped forward, moving past the flickering form of the Executioner. His eyes were fixed on the sky — no longer shattered, but open. The cracks continued to spread, as if the very fabric of the divine realm was beginning to unravel.
He raised his head, his voice cutting through the remnants of divine law.
"Let the sky remember me," he declared.
And in that moment, the world shifted.
To be continued