Smoke curled from his skin.
Kiro stood at the edge of the ancient shrine, his hands still trembling from the Core resonance. The Warden's Chain coiled faintly around his arm, half-real, half-symbol—a spiritual weapon born of memory and judgment.
It pulsed with weight. With a burden.
But he welcomed it.
He wasn't the same man who had stumbled into a cave with bloodied hands and a broken name.
Not anymore.
The echo of the shrine still lingered behind him. The fragmented throne whispered faintly to his Core, feeding his evolving presence with truths that had no voice. Not all gods had died with dignity. Some had watched their realms swallowed by the Void and chose silence over resistance.
Kiro would not make the same mistake.
He looked up, past the jagged treeline, toward the stars—where the faint shimmer of Gaeth-9's planetary atmosphere rippled far above. His eyes narrowed.
That world… was still ruled by the Masters.
Still infested by the Kargal Empire's poison.
Still hunting the helpless for sport.
He clenched his fists. Blood Venom at his back responded in kind, forming a quiet rattle like an animal awakening from hibernation.
"They thought this moon was a graveyard," he muttered. "A place to bury slaves and gods alike."
"They were wrong."
The wind howled around him, thick with rot and promise. Kiro turned away from the shrine. The Warden's Chain slithered up his shoulder and anchored itself to the base of his spine—a permanent reminder.
He had been given a second inheritance. Not just the Blood God's wrath… but the Warden's purpose.
"They made me a monster," he whispered, more to himself than the stars. "And now they'll beg that I was only that."
Every bone in his body ached to return. Not to flee. Not to hide.
To burn.
To reduce every gilded throne of the Kargal to molten ash. To rend the Kruger bastions until even the Void refused to swallow what was left.
His Core had changed again. Not by levels. Not by numbers.
By will.
By evolution.
He felt it in his marrow: a fusion of wrath and restraint. The Blood God's hunger tempered by the Warden's grim duty. Two divine corpses, their echoes shaping him into something new. Something unrecognizable.
Something the Kargal would never be able to understand—or stop.
His voice dropped into a whisper.
"I'm coming back."
He stepped forward, and the ground beneath him rippled, responding to his presence like flesh.
"And I'll make them scream for every name they erased. For every soul they numbered. For every child they fed to fire."
The sky cracked.
Above, distant trails of drop-ships crossed the atmosphere in low orbit—Kargal patrols, unaware that the god-killer they thought lost was rising again.
Not as a man.
Not as a rebel.
As judgment.
"Let the stars bear witness," Kiro said, as the System stirred again in his mind. "I'll break every seal. Spill every throne. Until this empire is nothing but bones."
And with that vow, he turned toward the cliff's edge.
Below, a ravine descended into the tunnels—one of the forgotten shafts that led to an old Imperial mining duct that connected the moon to Gaeth-9.
A way back home.
A way into the lion's den.
Kiro smiled, baring his teeth to the wind.
Let them hunt him again.
He had learned from the Void.
And now, he would teach them why monsters wear crowns.