Got it — from here forward, we'll stay fully immersed in Kiro's point of view, with a deliberate, grounded pace that explores his thoughts, emotions, and transformation in depth. Let's continue.
CHAPTER 97 — The House Without a Throne
Kiro didn't feel the wind when he stepped out of the dream-pod.
The air on Umbra Prime was thin — filtered, recycled, unnaturally still. But the silence wasn't from atmosphere. It was from him.
Something about his presence now canceled noise. Not by force. Not by command.
But by… recognition.
The earth beneath his bare feet pulsed faintly — like it remembered him, even though he'd never stepped here before.
The pod behind him hissed one final time, then went dormant.
He took a slow breath.
It didn't hurt anymore.
Not the ribs that had been fractured by void-touched nightmares. Not the lungs once blackened by radiation rot. Not the threads of fear that had tugged at the edge of his mind since Vevadexus fell.
He wasn't healed.
But he had passed through something worse than death.
He had faced himself.
And lived.
The landscape stretched out like a rusted bruise. Umbra Prime wasn't a battlefield or a capital—it was a graveyard of abandoned purpose. Great hangars filled with old Kruger walkers rusted under broken domes. Craters-turned-lakes boiled with electrical runoff.
This was where the empire sent things it wanted to forget.
And that was why Kiro had come.
Because he was not ready to be remembered yet.
Pablo waited at the perimeter. No guards. No escort. Just him.
Smart.
Kiro approached slowly, watching Pablo's stance—rigid, alert, but not hostile. Good. A soldier who respected stillness.
Pablo gave a slight nod. "You're alive."
"Something like it," Kiro murmured.
Pablo eyed the faint light spiraling off Kiro's skin, the way each step left a temporary glyph burning into the sand.
"That dream," Pablo said. "What did you find?"
Kiro's gaze drifted to the dead sky. "The parts of me I couldn't carry anymore."
He didn't elaborate.
Pablo didn't press.
They walked together for a while, boots and bare feet crunching on oxidized gravel. No destination. Just motion.
The horizon rolled with silent turbines and long-dead data towers.
"Do you know how many are dead now?" Pablo asked after a time. "Since the civil war started?"
"I have guesses."
"Guess lower."
Kiro stopped. "It won't stop if I kill one heir. Or even all four."
"No," Pablo said. "It'll stop when something bigger than war speaks louder than blood."
Kiro exhaled. "That's the problem. They don't believe in anything louder than blood."
He looked down at his own hand — fingers curled loosely, blood system glyphs still faintly humming beneath the skin.
He clenched them slowly.
"I need to be something they can't justify resisting."
Pablo studied him. "And what's that?"
Kiro looked ahead.
"The last thing they ever wanted to see again.""A God who remembers being human."
They found an abandoned Kruger comm-station near the ridge — scorched, mostly collapsed, but enough still standing. Kiro knelt near its remains and sifted through the shattered data crystal embedded in the console core.
It flickered briefly.
A flicker became a whisper.
Then the Archive chimed faintly in his ears:
"[Blood System Anchor: Reestablished]""[Signal Drift: Contained — Umbra Prime now a valid Archive Channel Node]""[Would you like to reconnect to the Heirlink?]"
Kiro hesitated.
His fingers hovered above the console.
"No," he said quietly. "Not yet."
That night, if it could be called night, Kiro sat beside the old station. He had no tent. No food. No fire.
He simply sat, watching the stillness of Umbra Prime.
He didn't meditate.
He didn't sleep.
He just listened.
To the weight in the silence.
To the wounds in the stars.
And to the voice buried somewhere deep in his own soul, still echoing from the dream:
"You are not done."
He whispered to himself, eyes half-lidded.
"I know."