Cherreads

Chapter 23 - 23

The outer districts stank of rust and ash. Cracked walls wept grease. Towering furnaces never ceased churning. Smoke coated the sky like a second skin.

This was where the Empire forgot its dead.

And Kiro walked among them.

He moved without a cloak, without armor—his body marked by glowing sigils, the Voidbrand pulsing faintly on his shoulder. Survivors—those too broken to resist, too afraid to speak—watched him pass with sunken eyes.

He stopped before a group of workers as they loaded grav-carts with scraps pulled from a collapsed fuel tunnel. One boy barely older than fifteen dropped his bundle when he saw the weapon on Kiro's back. Blood Venom, quiet now, hissed faintly in the boy's mind.

Kiro crouched before him.

"What's your name?" he asked.

The boy didn't answer.

Kiro didn't press. Instead, he looked to the others. "Do you feel it?" he asked. "The way the air tastes different. The tremble in the stone. That's not war. That's change."

An older woman, half her scalp burned from years in the refinery fires, stepped forward slowly. "You're the one from the core," she rasped. "The rupture… we saw the sky bleed."

"I made it bleed," Kiro said.

Silence followed.

Then he said the words none of them had ever dared to believe:

"I'm going to burn the Kargal Empire from the inside. But I won't do it alone."

They stared.

One man spat. "You don't know what you're saying. We've tried to rise. Every time—we're torn apart. They seed us with spies, mark us, twist us. They make rebels into monsters just to justify the slaughter."

"I'm already the monster," Kiro said. "But I chose it. I became it. And I'll use it."

He raised his hand.

The System shimmered in the air—just faintly—long enough for them to see the crimson web of energy crackling across his bones. The air around him warped with residual Blood Core essence.

"Fight for me, and I'll give you a new god. Not one who demands sacrifice. One who returns what's taken. One who remembers."

The boy who had dropped the scrap stepped forward, trembling. "Even… even if we die?"

Kiro nodded. "Especially if you die. This time, your death will echo."

Across the district, old comms began to crackle. Forgotten channels pulsed back to life. Encrypted symbols marked in old miner code reappeared on walls—messages of hope disguised as work orders.

Small at first. Then growing.

Hammers disappeared from tool racks. Blades were shaped from fallen steel. Explosives were stolen from deep within reactor maintenance vaults.

Kiro stood atop the skeletal remains of a crushed transport crawler, watching as the first wave of sleeper sympathizers fell to newly-armed rebels.

He didn't shout orders. He didn't pose.

He simply stood.

And they followed.

Far above, within the Kruger command cruiser Vindicator Prime, a new transmission arrived.

Executor Rhel reviewed the footage in silence: rebels forming, weapons being forged, sleeper cells going dark. His hounds lay coiled beside him, silent but alert.

Behind him, three more Executors waited in their shimmering red combat skins—armor laced with Viora conductors, their faces masked in helms that mirrored Kargal's wrath.

Rhel leaned forward, voice calm.

"He's not hiding anymore."

"No," one of the others replied. "He's declaring."

Another leaned forward, their voice layered with synthetic growl. "We were told he'd fracture. That the Voidbrand would eat him."

"It is," Rhel said.

He closed the file.

"But he's learning to feed it."

More Chapters