Back in the hallowed halls of the church, in western Orario, the air crackled with a malevolent stillness.
Where fragmented stained glass had once depicted saints and miracles, now only shattered remnants offered distorted views of the sprawling night sky, each shard reflecting a cold, indifferent star.
There, amidst the debris and the lingering scent of mold mixed with dust, stood Erebus, the dark god, his presence a stark, unsettling contrast to the sacred space.
He surveyed the scene with an almost clinical detachment, his gaze resting momentarily on the fractured heavens before returning on Ryuu, who lay sprawled and broken on the cold stone floor.
"I believe Astraea has been too soft on you," Erebus's voice, a silken whisper that seemed to slither through the silence, finally broke the quiet.
He spoke not with anger, but with an unnerving, almost philosophical calm, his eyes – pools of deepest shadow – now fixed on Ryuu.
"Or perhaps," he mused, leaning slightly closer, a predatory tilt to his head, "she is even crueler than I am. Tell me, if she truly is a goddess of justice, why doesn't she simply give you the answers you seek? She must know the truth. Instead, she hides it from you, concealing clarity behind fanciful words and cute metaphors, adorning it with pretty lies."
A low, chuckle escaped Erebus's lips, a sound devoid of mirth, yet brimming with a chilling satisfaction.
It was a sound that betrayed the deep pleasure he took in his condemnation, in tearing down the foundations of Ryuu's faith.
Ryuu, despite the dizzying agony that coursed through her body, could barely steel herself against her own condemnation.
But to hear her beloved goddess, Lady Astraea, so vilely slandered?
That, she would not permit.
A spark of stubborn defiance, fuelled by an enduring loyalty, flickered within her.
With a monumental effort, a shuddering breath rattling in her chest, Ryuu weakly managed to raise her head, her sky-blue eyes, though dulled by mental pain, still held a faint glimmer of their former fire.
"Y...you are wrong!" she stammered, her voice a fragile whisper, thick with unspent tears and desperate indignation.
"Lady Astraea is not like that, she—" Her words, however, caught in her throat, a choked gasp escaping as her strength gave way to a searing headache, and her head slumped forward once more.
Erebus, seized on her vulnerability.
He strode forward with unhurried grace, his dark form casting a long, ominous shadow over her prone figure.
He knelt, his face drawing unnervingly close, until his gaze plunged deep into her wide, shimmering eyes, which mirrored the vast, blue sky.
Taking advantage of her now raw and fragile heart, laid bare by pain and doubt, he leaned in further, his voice dropping to a near-inaudible whisper, chillingly intimate against her long, pointed elven ears.
"Are you truly sure about that, little elf?" he purred, his words like venomous tendrils unfurling within her mind.
"Is it not precisely because of her negligence, her refusal to be direct, that you find yourself suffering such inner turmoil? Could it not be that this entire ordeal, this quest for an elusive 'justice,' is nothing more than a sick, twisted game designed by her? A cruel charade in which you are merely a pawn?"
Ryuu's mind screamed for immediate refutation.
Her very being yearned to scream against the blasphemy, to defend the goddess who had given her purpose.
But Erebus's insidious rhetoric had already planted its seeds.
Those tiny, insidious grains of doubt, carefully sown, now began to sprout, sending tendrils through her fragile mind.
Her thoughts spiralled, tangled and confused, in the aftermath of her physical and emotional collapse.
"Is it justice to feel such exquisite pain?" Erebus continued, his voice a relentless, persuasive hum.
"Is it justice that brought you here, broken and despairing, only to be laughed at by the very deity who you claims to be the enemy of justice?"
His words, his perverse theories, were nothing less than the devil's whispers, meticulously planting dark seeds in the fertile, ravaged ground of her heart.
Before Ryuu fully comprehended the treachery, a horrifying realization dawned upon her: the face of the goddess she had devoted her life to, the radiant smile, the comforting gaze, began to blur, then fade completely from her memory.
Everything Astraea had taught her—the tenets of justice, the pursuit of truth, the warmth of compassion—seemed to dissipate like smoke, tainted and distorted by the insidious acid of doubt.
Erebus watched her disintegration with a sadistic grin, a slow, widening curve on his lips.
He marvelled, in that moment, at the efficiency of his work, at the sheer destructive power of words.
"You really are my favourite elf, you know," he murmured, his voice laced with a dark, appreciative humour.
"So easy, and so much fun to tease."
A light, dismissive chuckle escaped his lips as he extended a long, pale finger, brushing back a stray strand of her golden-blonde hair from her face.
Ryuu trembled violently at his touch, a wave of disgust washing over her.
She felt exposed, violated, utterly powerless, despite the instinct to recoil, to fight.
Yet, her body, her essence, had been so utterly consumed by the psychological assault that she couldn't even summon the will to flinch.
Erebus felt her involuntary shudder beneath his fingertips, and a deep, visceral sense of satisfaction swelled within him, a triumphant thrum in his very being.
His moment of dark revelry, however, was abruptly shattered.
A sudden, deafening explosion ripped through the air, shaking the foundations of the church itself.
The very stones groaned, and dust rained down from the ceiling.
Startled, his composure momentarily fractured, Erebus rose swiftly to his feet.
He turned, his gaze snapping towards the fractured window, his earlier complacency replaced by a flicker of annoyance, then curiosity.
The explosion had unmistakably come from outside.
Across the vast, echoing space, near the remnants of an altar, a figure remained entirely unperturbed.
Alfia stood motionless, a silent sentinel, her back to the disruption.
She didn't even bother to glance over.
Ryuu, despite her weakness, stirred.
A flicker of curious determination, a desperate need for distraction from the tormenting whispers, compelled her to strain her neck.
She managed to peek out through the broken glass, her gaze drawn to a towering plume of smoke rising ominously in the distance.
Something was definitely happening in the city, something significant enough to interrupt even a god's cruel sport.
.............
Miles away, around the western periphery of Orario, the city streets hummed with a different kind of tension.
Not far from where the malevolent god resided, a certain blue-haired adventurer ran through the labyrinthine alleys, her movements smooth and efficient.
This was Asfi, the new captain of the Hermes familia, her customary cool demeanour now laced with a subtle edge of frustration.
She was fulfilling her duties, a tireless pursuit of the evilus champions, those who had plunged the city into chaos.
Where better to search, she reasoned, than the very places they were last seen?
Draco and Alfia, had clashed violently in this district, leaving behind a trail of devastation.
The Hermes familia had hoped to uncover clues, perhaps even a hidden lair, within the vicinity. But after hours of relentless searching, working tirelessly late into the night, their efforts had yielded nothing.
It was as if Alfia, the tempestuous force of nature, had vanished into thin air, leaving no trace of herself save for the widespread destruction she and Draco had wrought.
'Sigh, Should we leave this area? Perhaps...' Asfi thought, her stride faltering for a moment as she glanced around at the desolate, ruined houses.
Her thought, however, was violently interrupted.
All of a sudden, the entire city lurched, a colossal tremor that sent cracks spider-webbing across stone walls and rattling windows in their frames.
"What..?" Asfi exclaimed, her face paling in fright, her eyes wide with uncharacteristic alarm.
The sound that followed was deafening, a concussive boom that vibrated in her bones, blotting out all other noise.
But when the reverberations finally died down, an eerie silence settled, quickly punctuated by the sudden, piercing screams of terrified citizens.
Sparks, like chaotic fireflies, began to dance upwards from various streets, painting the dark sky with fleeting, orange streaks.
From the heart of this unfolding chaos, a figure emerged.
A man with a cascade of flowing white hair stepped out of the swirling dust and debris, his silhouette imposing against the flickering streetlights.
"Why are we pussyfooting around wounded foes?" he questioned, his voice booming with a savage impatience, not directed at anyone in particular, but broadcast to the startled night.
This was Olivas, one of the evilus top leaders, flanked by a large contingent of Evilus soldiers. He was defying his master's calculated orders, abandoning a carefully laid plan in favour of immediate, unbridled carnage.
"I, for one, will not miss my chance!" Olivas roared, his voice thick with a delusional grandeur. "I will break you, Orario, in body and spirit! Prepare to be crushed!"
For reasons known only to his own warped sense of strategy, Olivas had come to believe his mechanizations, his rash, bloodthirsty impulses, were superior to those of his god.
It was a fatal train of thought, a moment of hubris that would, though he could not know it then, cost the Evilus greatly in the grim future that awaited them.
..........
A weary, exasperated voice echoed down the long, empty hallways of the Guild Headquarters, its usual bustling energy replaced by a strained quietude.
"Ugh, give me a break!" Loki complained loudly, her distinct, fiery vermilion hair bobbing and bouncing with each tired, wobbling step.
"Why is a god like me, doing all this menial labor, this physical grunt work? I'm not even an adventurer, damn it!" She cradled a precariously tall stack of parchment, her arms aching.
"This is exhausting..." she mumbled, her fantasy taking hold.
"I just want to go back home and take a bath... in a bathtub full of booze." Lost in her boozy daydream, she neglected to watch where she was going and, with a soft thud, bumped squarely into a wall.
A muffled "Ghhh!" escaped her internally as the towering stack of papers, her carefully organized, yet incredibly heavy, burden, cascaded to the polished stone floor with a disheartening rustle.
"Aaaaaaah, this is too much!" she shrieked at the unyielding ceiling, pulling at her hair in pure, unadulterated frustration.
Just then, one of the heavy, wooden doors in the hallway creaked open, and Finn stepped out.
"Finn..." Loki whimpered, turning to him with a perfected "puppy-faced" expression, her eyes wide and pleading.
She truly, desperately, needed a helping hand.
Finn, sighed.
A small, almost imperceptible shake of his head.
"Alright, let's gather everything," he said, his voice calm, already bending to retrieve the scattered documents.
He always gave in to her, eventually.
Quickly, and with considerably more efficiency on Finn's part, they gathered the scattered papers before entering the room he had just exited.
The chamber was a strategic nerve center.
Maps of the city, meticulously detailed and annotated, covered every available surface—tables, desks, even spare bits of wall were adorned with charts and diagrams.
"Finn, the fortifications you ordered are ready," Loki announced, her earlier dramatics dissipating slightly as she adopted a more serious tone.
She unceremoniously plonked the re-stacked papers down on a nearby desk, then rotated her aching shoulders, a satisfying pop reverberating through her joints.
"Once we get the civilians inside them, the rest will be..." Loki trailed off abruptly, her casual air vanishing as she noticed an ominous, utterly solemn look on Finn's face.
"What's wrong, Finn?" she asked, her voice tinged with genuine concern.
"Is something amiss?"
"Take a look at this," Finn replied, his voice low, a tense undercurrent to his usual calm.
He tossed a fresh parchment onto the desk directly in front of him, sliding it towards her with a significant gesture.
"Hermes just brought this over to the Guild. It's the official report on the ten gods who were sent back to heaven during the war."
"Ack, that messy affair," Loki muttered, scratching exasperatedly at her head.
The memory of the chaotic conflict, the sheer confusion surrounding the gods' forced return, was still a sore point.
"I still don't have a clue how they managed to pull that off," she said, her fingers already reaching for the report.
Slowly, her sharp eyes scanned the meticulously penned lines.
She saw the familiar names of some allied familia gods, causing her face to scrunch up in mild distaste, recalling past grievances.
However, her eyes quivered moments later, catching something undeniably odd, something that sent a jolt of alarm through her.
"Hold on, this can't be right!" Loki yelled, her slouched, fatigued posture snapping ramrod straight, all traces of weariness instantly banished.
"It seems to be correct," Finn replied, his expression unchanging.
"We all know that ten gods returned to heaven that day," he began to carefully explain, his words precise and deliberate, "however, this report names only seven of our allied familia's gods. Which means," he paused, allowing the implication to sink in, "three gods are unaccounted for."
"What...?" Loki shrieked, startled by the very suggestion, her mind racing to grasp the impossibility.
"What's going on? How is this possible? You don't suppose the Guild or even Hermes miscounted?"
"It seems unlikely given the gravity of the event," Finn replied, his thumb subconsciously rising to his mouth, a rare, nervous habit.
"I think the extra three gods might have come from the evilus side."
"What?!" Loki gasped, the word escaping her lips in a stunned whisper.
"You mean, some of our people might have taken their attackers out with them? Or are the Evilus not as united as we thought?"
"I couldn't say, I'm afraid," Finn admitted, his brow furrowed in deep contemplation.
"But if we assume this isn't a simple slip-up in accounting, or merely an internal conflict among the Evilus, then that leads us to only one grave conclusion. Their primary aim wasn't solely to break our morale, as we initially believed, but to hide something far more significant." He leaned back, his eyes distant, piecing together the invisible threads of a larger tapestry.
A heavy hush fell over the room as Loki contemplated this chilling line of thought.
The gears of her intellect, usually consumed by frivolous antics, now whirred furiously.
The wings of imagination, unrestrained by conventional thinking, transformed into the key, illuminating what had been hidden in plain sight.
Systematically eliminating all other possibilities in her mind, Loki arrived at a stark, terrifying conclusion.
"Finn, they cant be planning to do something down th…." Loki didn't get to complete her sentence.
The sheer, overwhelming solemnity on Finn's face, told her he had already arrived at the same horrifying truth.
"Raaagh, those shit heads!" Loki raged, her fists clenching, her earlier weariness replaced by an incandescent fury.
"Those bastards! Their aim wasn't just up here, on the surface, but down in the dung….." Her furious outburst was suddenly interrupted by a violent, concussive bang against the heavy door.
In that instant, the door slammed open with an echoing thud, revealing Raul, one of Loki familia's young members, panting and disheveled, running inside in a desperate hurry.
"An urgent message, Loki-sama!" Raul gasped, struggling to catch his breath, his eyes wide with alarm.
"A great number of evilus have been spotted close to the northwest! They're moving fast!" Raul hastily reported….