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ENDLESS MAW

loyde_de_tur
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Endless Maw In the forsaken kingdom of Dreadmourne, where cruelty is law and poverty chains the masses, a nameless slave bears only a brand on his back — two words etched in fire: Alpha Omega. With no parents, no past, and no identity beyond that mark, he seizes the name as his own and resolves to carve a fate greater than the dungeon chains that bind his world. This is an age before steel towers and circuits, when mankind seeks power in labyrinths and dungeons. Each descent births more than treasure — it awakens something deeper: classes. Unlike simple skills, these classes are living destinies, shaping every individual into something unique. No two are alike. Some are blessed. Most are cursed. When Alpha steps into his first dungeon, the world answers. Not with mercy — but with Veyra, an ancient, sentient system older than empires. Neither blessing nor curse, Veyra crowns him with a fate both terrible and magnificent: a class bound to shadows themselves. Whispering, evolving, watching. A power that makes him neither master nor slave, but something more dangerous — a being touched by inevitability. But in Dreadmourne, genius is not salvation. The kingdom thrives on despair, grinding brilliance into dust. To rise, Alpha must outwit kings, conquer labyrinths, and bend even shadows to his will. What begins as a struggle for survival may end as something far greater: a war against the very design of fate itself. In a world where every soul is chained to their destiny, Alpha Omega will fight to prove that some chains were made to be broken.
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Chapter 1 - Chains

The morning began with iron.

Chains scraped against stone as the slaves were driven into the yard, their movements clumsy under the weight of rusted shackles. The sound was so constant, so unchanging, that it had ceased to be noticed. To them it was not noise , it was life.

Among them walked a boy. Thin, silent, and bare-footed, his steps were neither hurried nor hesitant. Dust clung to his skin, scars latticed his back, but his face was still. His eyes, dark and unblinking, held no spark of rebellion — yet neither did they carry surrender.

His name was not truly his own. None of them had names. But branded into the flesh of his back, etched by fire and ink, were two words

Alpha Omega

The overseers laughed at it sometimes, mocking the grandness of the title on a nameless slave. But the boy had taken those words for himself. He carried them not as shame, but as the only thing he owned in a world that denied him everything else.

He had no family, no memories of parents or kin. His first memory was of chains. His first lesson was silence. Words, he had learned, were dangerous. Too many questions brought lashes. Too much hope brought punishment. So he watched, and endured.

The sun climbed, hot and merciless. The overseer's whip cracked, splitting the air, driving the slaves to their labor. They hauled stones, carried water, scrubbed walls that would never be clean. They broke their bodies for nobles who never looked at them.

The boy did not complain. His hands bled, his shoulders burned, but he moved as though the pain belonged to someone else. Others cursed under their breath, some wept, but Alpha's lips never parted.

He was not stronger than them. He was not faster. Yet, in some way, he lasted where others broke.

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At night, when the slaves were herded into the pit to sleep, Alpha would sit against the wall, knees drawn to his chest, eyes tracing the cracks in the ceiling. The others would whisper about escape, about revolt, about gods that might pity them. He listened, but never joined.

Dreams were dangerous. They gave men something to lose.

Still, in the hollow of his chest, something stirred. Not hope, but a question he could never silence: ' Why am I here? Why me?'

He did not know the answer. The overseers didn't care. To them, he was just another body to be used until it broke.

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The mark on his back, though, remained. Alpha Omega. Sometimes he thought of it in the quiet hours. Alpha — the beginning. Omega — the end. A circle, perhaps. A chain. Or maybe a lie.

But if it was a lie, it was his.

When others mocked him, he never responded. When they sneered, he remained silent. And slowly, that silence began to unsettle even the other slaves.

"Strange boy," they muttered. 

"Doesn't cry. Doesn't laugh."

He heard them. He simply did not care. Words were useless. Chains did not break with words.

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Once, a fellow slave tried to befriend him. A boy younger than him, no more than twelve, whispered in the night, asking his name, asking if they could look out for each other. Alpha turned to him, met his eyes for a moment, then looked away without answering.

By the next week, the boy was gone. Too weak, too slow, too noisy.

Alpha never asked what happened. He already knew.

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Fifteen years. That was his life. A chain that had never broken.

But inside that silence, something hardened. Not kindness, not faith, not hope. Something colder. A refusal.

He would not bow in his heart, even if his body was shackled.

And though no one knew it, not even himself, the boy with no family, no voice, no freedom, carried within him the faintest ember of defiance.

The overseers saw only a quiet slave. The other slaves saw only a strange boy.

But one day, the world would learn his name.

Alpha Omega.

The beginning, and the end.

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