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Chapter 1 - Ashir, Child of the Glow (Enhanced: Roman Cult Hidden)

The city always glowed, even at midnight.

Ashir had never seen true darkness. Not once in his seventeen cycles. The Dome above shimmered with soft white light, pulsing gently like a heartbeat. It was called the Light of Peace — a gift from the Flame Throne, they said.

The priests told them,

> "The Light never sleeps, because truth must always be seen."

But Ashir had begun to wonder…

If the Light never sleeps, maybe it's because it's hiding something.

---

He looked at the statues lining the Grand Plaza.

Tall marble gods with wings, laurel crowns, swords in hand — the Radiant Ones.

Their names were never spoken, only bowed to.

But Ashir had read old fragments in school, and one statue always haunted him:

> A towering figure with rays of sun behind his head, arms outstretched.

They called him Solian the Peacebringer.

But in a forgotten tongue, he was once called Sol Invictus.

There were others too:

Aurion, the god of order (Mars in ancient Rome)

Numa, the Dove-Bearer (recast version of Mithras)

Mother Luxia, goddess of healing (really Venus, queen of seduction)

Divinius, the "First Emperor of Light" — draped like Caesar, worshiped like a prophet

Ashir asked a tutor once:

> "Why do they look like the old Roman idols?"

The tutor had gone pale.

The next day, Ashir was assigned to "obedience conditioning."

---

He learned not to ask again.

But he never forgot.

---

At the center of the city stood the Temple of Flame — built atop a buried stone foundation.

A foundation no one talked about.

It was said to be "holy," yet made of black rock — ancient, scorched, and older than the Light Empire itself.

Some said it was built by the first bringer of truth.

Others whispered it had been stolen — renamed — repurposed.

Ashir believed the second.

---

So when the Offering was announced, and the three condemned were paraded before the Flame…

And when the Voice declared:

> "In the names of Solian, Luxia, and Divinius…

we purify this city in light."

Ashir finally saw through it:

> These weren't gods.

They were false lights — old Roman idols reborn in a new skin.

A religion of unity, yes — but one based on ancient betrayal.

---

He turned to flee.

And in the shadows, the ragged man whispered:

> "Now you see, child of the glow.

You walk in Rome…

but call it Heaven

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