The universe was not silent; it was a screaming divide. For ten thousand cycles, the celestial fabric had been torn between two fundamental forces, two philosophies forged in fire and ice: the Solari Ascendancy and the Lunara Sovereignty. This was the eternal war, an inescapable cosmic truth where every star system became a trench and every nebula a grave.To the followers of the Sun, the Solari, the cause was clear and luminous. They were the champions of warmth, order, and the brilliant, blinding light of progress. Their fleets, gilt-edged and fierce, cut through the void like vengeful comets, burning away what they perceived as the stagnant, dangerous cold. Their dogma taught that the Lunara were nothing more than encroaching shadows—sullen, secretive, and utterly devoid of the righteous fire necessary for survival.Across the Great Schism, the Lunara gazed upon the Solari with a profound, weary contempt. Born of the deepest night and sustained by the cool, sapphire glow of a thousand moons, they revered strategy, patience, and the profound, humbling silence of the void. They knew the Solari for what they were: reckless tyrants consumed by their own blinding ambition, destined to burn out and take the whole galaxy with them. Every Lunara child was taught to fear the Solari's unchecked heat; every soldier understood their duty was to preserve the sacred shadow.There were rules to this war, strictures that had been codified in blood since before the first starships were forged. One: Solari and Lunara did not parley. Two: They did not retreat. Three: They did not, under any circumstance, coexist.Yet, beyond the known battle lines, in the quiet, treacherous currents of dust and dark matter, destiny was weaving a pattern more complex than any fleet formation. It sought not destruction, but balance. It sought the single, volatile point where the sun's brightest flame met the moon's deepest shadow, far from the roar of the fleets. It sought an impossible truce, hinging on the collision of two souls—one a brilliant, blazing warrior, the other a brooding, ice-cold strategist—who were about to discover that the only thing separating war from peace was a desolate, forgotten planet.The stage was set, the armies were deployed, and the galaxy awaited its final, inevitable outcome. But for Lyra of the Solari, and Orion of the Lunara, the war was about to become infinitely smaller, and infinitely more personal.
