Prologue: The Fading Light

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There was a time when the sun bathed the world in warmth, its light stretching from horizon to horizon, an unbroken cycle of day and night that had persisted since time immemorial. It seemed eternal, untouchable-so much so that for centuries, scientists predicted that the sun's inevitable end would come in the distant future, far beyond the reach of human civilization. The warnings were noted, but dismissed. The fall of the sun was not for this generation, nor the next. It was someone else's problem.

No one could have foreseen just how quickly things would unravel.

The Flicker. That's what they called it-the day the sun began to fail. It wasn't the fiery explosion of a dying star or a sudden cataclysm that darkened the sky. It was far worse. The sun simply flickered, as if some cosmic hand had turned down its brightness like the fading of a candle. Within weeks, its once-vibrant light grew thin and cold, casting pale shadows where there had once been warmth. There was no explanation. No one knew why it was happening, only that every model, every prediction, had been wrong. The sun wasn't supposed to die for millions of years. But here it was-fading much faster than anyone could have imagined.

At first, society refused to panic. After all, humans had survived worse. They had adapted through wars, natural disasters, even plagues that wiped out entire populations. Surely, this too could be managed. Governments and scientific elites scrambled to create solutions, and so the photon generators were born-massive machines designed to harness and amplify what little sunlight remained. For a while, they seemed to work. The cities continued to glow, artificial sunlight streaming into the streets, and people clung to the fragile hope that, once again, science would save them, as it always had.

But it was a lie. The photon generators, though a brilliant feat of engineering, were never meant to be a permanent fix. As the sun continued its slow death, the generators grew weaker, unable to keep up with the diminishing light. What had once been cities bathed in golden light became islands of flickering glow, surrounded by the ever-growing dark.

And then came the Shadows.

It began in the outer regions, in the places furthest from the artificial light, where the sun had already faded to a distant memory. At first, the shadows were barely noticeable, just a strange flicker at the corner of the eye, or a slight movement in the dark that people dismissed as paranoia. But soon, they became bolder-slipping into the cities, slithering through cracks in the streets, hunting in the places where the light was weakest. These were not natural shadows. They were something else, something born from the sun's death. They fed off the absence of light, growing stronger as the world grew darker.

But the true horror wasn't in the shadows themselves. It was the sickness they carried. A creeping disease, one that spread slowly at first, infecting those who lived too long in the dark. The early signs were subtle: a sensitivity to light, an unusual coldness in the limbs, shadows beneath the skin that moved unnaturally. As the disease progressed, the infected became more withdrawn, their eyes darkening, their bodies contorting as they lost their connection to the light.

Soon, they would turn.

The disease didn't just kill-it transformed. Those who succumbed became something else entirely, twisted creatures born of shadow, more darkness than human. They were drawn to the night, feeding off the last remnants of light within their victims. And once the transformation was complete, there was no cure. They became part of the growing army of shadow creatures that stalked the world, hunting in the dark.

People began to disappear. First, it was the isolated villages, entire towns swallowed by the encroaching darkness, leaving behind nothing but empty streets and crumbling homes. Then it spread to the cities, where even the strongest photon generators couldn't keep the shadows at bay forever. Whole neighborhoods vanished overnight, consumed by the growing dark.

The world-the Old World-began to crumble. Nations fractured, power grids collapsed, and the people who once relied on sunlight to grow food, power their cities, and warm their homes, began to starve. Famine swept across the land. Disease followed in its wake. Desperation gnawed at the edges of society, and chaos spread like wildfire. The world split into two: those who could afford to live under the glow of the last remaining photon generators, and those forced to wander the ever-darkening wastelands.

Out of the ashes of the Old World, two factions emerged, each with their own vision of survival. The Lightbearers, a group determined to preserve what little sunlight remained, believed that humanity's only chance lay in safeguarding the photon technology. They saw the generators as humanity's last hope, and clung to the belief that the sun could be reignited, or at the very least, replaced with something of equal power. Ancient technologies, long since forgotten, were dusted off and studied in a desperate attempt to hold onto the light.

But there was another path. The Shadowforgers-a coalition of rogue engineers, scientists, and survivalists-saw the world differently. They abandoned the idea of clinging to the light and turned to more desperate measures. To them, the future lay in embracing the shadows. They developed new technologies capable of harnessing the dark-quantum energy, dark matter, forces that had been long theorized but never understood. They didn't care what it was called. All that mattered was survival, and in the dark, they found power.

But both factions were wrong.

The sun was not simply dying. Something far worse was happening-something no one could have predicted. And now, the Flicker was becoming a full eclipse, one that could swallow the world whole.

In the present day, society stands on the brink of extinction. The light is failing faster than anyone could have predicted, and the photon generators are barely holding on. The Lightbearers, from their glowing cities, place their faith in technology, hoping scientists will find a solution before the last of the sun disappears. But the truth is darker, far more sinister. There are whispers among the Shadowforgers, rumors of a force hidden deep within the earth, a forgotten energy that could either save-or destroy-the world.

But they've been wrong before.

And this time, being wrong could mean the end of everything.





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