Chapter 297: Ch 297: War is Declared - Part 2
Kyle stood amidst the broken remnants of Moras's once-holy sanctuary, his gaze fixed on the doorway ahead—ornate, ancient, and humming with divine energy.
Melissa, still recovering and cradling the remnants of her lifted curse, gave him a tired look. Bruce stood beside her, arms crossed tightly over his chest, tense.
"I'm heading inside. To the inner sanctuary. The Diamond of Break should still be there."
Kyle said.
Bruce stiffened.
"The World Tree…?"
Kyle nodded.
"I want to see it for myself."
He stepped forward, but Bruce moved instinctively, preparing to follow. Kyle raised a hand to stop him.
"No. Stay with Melissa. The curse might not be entirely gone yet. She needs someone beside her until she feels renewed."
he said gently but firmly.
Bruce opened his mouth to protest, but one look from Kyle silenced him.
"I'll be fine."
Reluctantly, Bruce nodded and turned back toward Melissa, who gave Kyle a worried glance.
Kyle offered her a rare, reassuring smile before turning and walking toward the sealed passage that led to the inner sanctum.
Queen, quiet all this while, descended from the rafters like a drifting mote of light and took its place beside Kyle. Together, they advanced toward the divine gates.
The closer they got, the heavier the air became. The barrier surrounding the inner sanctuary was not one meant for mortals. It was laced with divine purpose—a will that refused entry to those not chosen by the gods.
It pushed at Kyle like a living thing, clawing at his skin, whispering in his ears that he was unworthy.
But Kyle pushed forward.
He grit his teeth, his mana wrapping tightly around his form like a second skin. Each step was a battle, each breath a protest against the divine force that sought to repel him.
Queen hovered silently beside him, offering no aid. It knew this was something Kyle had to overcome on his own.
And he did.
With sheer will, Kyle stepped past the final threshold and into the heart of the sanctuary.
There it was.
The World Tree.
Or what remained of it.
It was a towering, ethereal entity that pulsed with trapped divinity.
The branches were brittle with golden light, and the roots coiled like imprisoned serpents beneath the white marble floor. Despite its grandeur, it looked… tired. Bound.
Kyle stepped forward slowly.
The tree shuddered at his presence, as if recognizing something ancient and dangerous in him. Divine energy sparked along its bark, but it didn't strike. It hesitated.
"I know."
Kyle said quietly, stopping at the base of the Diamond of Break—the crystalline core embedded within the tree.
"You're sensitive to all things. You were meant to be the symbol of unity between gods and mortals, weren't you? But now… you're nothing but a prison."
He murmured, raising a hand toward the shimmering structure.
His hand hovered just above the diamond.
"I won't leave you like this."
Kyle's mana surged, swirling around his arm like storm winds as he pressed his palm to the crystal. It resisted him at first, but then, like dry earth drinking in rain, it accepted.
Slowly, deliberately, Kyle began to infuse the region with his mana.
The divine coating on the tree flared in protest. It did not want to yield. But it was no longer stronger than him.
Bit by bit, the World Tree changed.
Colors faded from its branches only to return in Kyle's hues—deep, starlit blues and silver hues that shimmered with his essence. The oppressive light of the divine was replaced by something steadier. Quieter. Stronger.
Kyle didn't force submission. He offered freedom.
The tree responded.
A soft, almost imperceptible sound echoed within the chamber—like the sigh of a weary prisoner who had just felt the first touch of wind on their face.
The diamond at its core pulsed once, twice, and then glowed steadily.
It had accepted his mana.
His claim.
This was his territory now.
The inner sanctuary, the Diamond of Break, the World Tree—it was all his. Not by force, but by choice.
Kyle stepped back, his eyes fixed on the tree.
"You're no longer under their chains. You're under my care now."
Queen hovered beside him in silence, then gave a slow nod—its strange, ever-shifting form rippling in acknowledgment.
From this moment on, anyone who dared enter would feel Kyle's presence.
This was no longer a holy site ruled by a god.
It was the domain of a mortal who had defied the divine.
And he refused to give it up.
The air turned sharp.
A loud crack tore through the heavens, a jagged wound slicing across the blue expanse like a warning scrawl etched by furious gods.
The sky shimmered unnaturally, trembling beneath the weight of divine attention.
Kyle paused outside the inner chamber, hand still resting against the bark of the World Tree.
He looked up, watching the sky bleed threads of gold and white—divine energies lashing out in protest. He could feel it. The gods were watching. And they were not pleased.
A voiceless threat echoed from above, rumbling like thunder, demanding restraint. A message from the heavens itself:
[Do not overstep, mortal. Know your place.]
But Kyle only narrowed his eyes. Slowly, deliberately, he raised his hand skyward.
"I will not stay in a lane drawn by those who fear change."
His voice carried, steady and unshaken.
"Let it be known—this is no longer just rebellion. From this moment on, it is war."
Queen hovered beside him silently, its form flickering with a faint shimmer of mana as if bearing witness to a declaration that could not be undone.
"A war where either I, and humanity, overcome every trial and shatter the divine chains that bind us—or I fall."
His eyes gleamed with calm fury, reflecting the jagged light above.
"But even if I fall, I will return. One way or another, I'll make sure my name lingers through time, echoing loud enough that even the heavens tremble."
The sky responded with another crack, but no retaliation came.
For now.
Satisfied, Kyle lowered his hand and turned away.
With a quiet whisper of mana, he reached toward the sanctuary's ancient boundary.
The entrance to the inner sanctum began to seal—stone and divine wood fusing under his power. Layer upon layer of barriers formed, interwoven with protective arrays and Kyle's own essence.
"No one enters here again without my will."
He muttered, watching as the final layer shimmered into invisibility.
He gave the sealed chamber one last glance.
Then he walked.
Bruce and Melissa were waiting outside, Melissa still visibly tired but upright. Her eyes widened slightly when she saw him, but Kyle gave her a reassuring nod. He didn't need to say anything more.
Bruce raised a brow.
"Is it done?"
Kyle nodded.
"It's ours now."
No one asked about the sky or the growing sense of tension in the air. They didn't need to. Everyone could feel it—that something irreversible had just occurred.
The gods were no longer content watching.
But Kyle no longer cared.
He had made his move.
And now, it was time to return home.
Together, the trio walked away from the shattered temple—toward the unknown storms awaiting them. Above, the sky remained cracked and restless, as if waiting for a chance to strike.
But Kyle never looked back.
He had declared war.
And there would be no retreat.