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Hybrid King

Ceno_Blak
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Chapter 1 - PROLOGUE: The Child The Stars Remembered

The night was too quiet.

Not the peaceful kind of quiet that came with sleep, but the heavy kind - the kind that pressed down on the world and made even the bravest hearts feel small. The stars above seemed dimmer than usual, as though they were holding their breath. Somewhere far beyond sight, something ancient had shifted, and the universe had noticed.

The world had not yet learned how to fear the stars.

But it was about to.

High on a cliff that overlooked a forest older than memory stood an ancient manor of black stone. It had been there long before kingdoms rose and fell, long before humans learned the names of the constellations. Tonight, the manor trembled.

A storm raged above it—not a storm of rain or wind, but of magic.

The sky churned and twisted in shades of deep violet and burning silver. Lightning cracked without thunder, splitting the clouds like scars torn across the heavens. The air tasted sharp, like iron on the tongue. Every breath burned.

Around the manor grounds, tall trees glowed faintly with protective wards etched into their bark. The symbols pulsed and flickered, struggling to hold. Sparks jumped from rune to rune, hissing as though the magic itself was afraid.

Inside the manor, candlelight shook against stone walls covered in old carvings. Symbols of protection, binding, and secrecy were carved so deeply into the stone that they seemed grown there rather than made.

At the heart of the great chamber stood two figures.

They hovered over a newborn child.

The mother sat on a carved stone bed, her face pale with exhaustion, her dark hair clinging to her skin. She was a witch of the old blood. Runes were embroidered into her flesh—not carved, not burned, but woven into her skin like living ink. They glowed softly, rising and falling with her breath like distant stars.

She held the baby close, as if the world itself might try to steal him away.

The father stood beside her, tall and unmoving, gripping a staff made of ash and silver. Power clung to him like a storm waiting to break. When he spoke, thunder lived beneath his words. When he breathed, the air listened.

They looked down at their son with a mixture of wonder and terror.

The baby slept peacefully, unaware of the weight placed upon him before his first breath. His tiny chest rose and fell in a slow, steady rhythm. His fingers curled around nothing, trusting the world completely.

He looked normal.

Soft.

Fragile.

Human.

Except for the mark.

Around the child's neck, just beneath his jaw, lay a birthmark unlike any other. It curved in the shape of a crescent moon, sharp at its ends, with three thorn-like lines piercing through the arc. The symbol shimmered faintly, glowing like molten stone beneath skin.

It was not merely a mark.

It was a sigil.

A forbidden one.

The air around it trembled, as though reality itself did not quite agree with its presence.

The parents knew the symbol well.

Every witch. Every wizard. Every being who studied the deep laws of magic knew it.

The Sigil of the Forsworn.

A prophecy long buried. Long denied. Long feared.

The sound of footsteps echoed through the chamber.

Six hooded figures emerged from the shadows, stepping into the circle of candles that surrounded the family. Their robes were dark, heavy with age and magic. Their faces were hidden, but their presence carried power older than kingdoms.

They were the High Seers of the Arcane Order.

Guardians of balance.

Keepers of forbidden knowledge.

The first seer raised their head slightly. Their voice shook despite centuries of discipline.

"The Sigil has appeared," they said. "The prophecy is no longer dormant."

A murmur rippled through the circle.

Another seer spoke, their voice firmer, edged with grim certainty.

"This child will be the weapon against the Devouring Darkness."

At those words, the mother's arms tightened around her son. Her breath caught. Her runes flared brighter, reacting to her fear.

"No," she whispered. "He is a child."

The oldest seer stepped forward. Their hood was frayed with time. When they spoke, their voice carried the weight of centuries lost.

"Or," they said quietly, "he will be the weapon that destroys us all—if the darkness claims him first."

The father lifted his staff, the air around it crackling with restrained fury.

"No," he said, his voice shaking the candles. "No darkness will claim my son. We will teach him. We will protect him. We will guide him."

His grip tightened.

"We will—"

The explosion cut him off.

Stone shattered as the manor walls burst inward. The protective wards screamed as they broke, splintering like glass under unbearable force. Candles hissed and died. Smoke rolled through the chamber.

A howl echoed through the night.

Low.

Monstrous.

Hungry.

"They found us," the mother gasped, clutching the child closer.

Outside, shapes moved among the glowing trees.

Wolves.

But not beasts of nature.

These were werewolves—warriors bound to something older and crueler than the moon. Their eyes burned with unnatural light. Their armor gleamed with dark enchantments. They moved with purpose.

They were not hunting prey.

They were reclaiming something promised.

The leader of the High Seers stepped forward, their staff striking the stone floor.

"There is no time," they said sharply. "If the child stays, he will be found. If he is found, the world will burn."

The father turned to them, horror clear on his face.

"No," he said. "Please. Do not take him from us."

The seer's voice softened—but did not bend.

"To save the world," they said, "the world must forget him."

The spell began.

Magic rippled outward in waves, cold and final. This was not ordinary enchantment. This was a forbidden working—one that erased names, severed memories, and tore history from reality as easily as wind erased footprints from sand.

The mother sobbed.

She pressed her lips to her son's brow, her tears falling freely now.

"Live," she whispered. "Live long enough to save us all."

The sigil on the child's neck flared brightly, pulsing like a heart refusing to surrender.

A portal opened behind them—a swirling mouth of stars and darkness.

The baby was lifted gently from her arms.

The mother screamed his name.

A name only she would ever remember.

Her voice vanished as the portal collapsed.

Silence returned.

The darkness outside stepped in.

The parents stood together, raising their magic one final time.

They did not expect to survive.

But they expected their son to.

Far away, in a quiet human neighborhood, a baby appeared on a cold doorstep.

No magic.

No monsters.

No memory.

Warm hands lifted him from the frost.

A new life began.

The sigil pulsed once more.

Slow.

Steady.

A heartbeat counting down.

To war.