abraxaner
Book I: The Champion of Setermet
Meru should have died in the desert.
He walked for days beneath a sun that flayed the flesh and nights cold enough to break bone, sustained only by faith and a god who does not answer prayers gently. When the sand finally takes him, it does not kill him. It carries him home.
Setermet is a fortress-city raised in blood and devotion, ruled by the Aspects of Kor: living demigods worshipped as fragments of a cruel god of war. The weak are broken, the strong are tested, and faith is proven only through suffering. Meru awakens there nameless, starved, and unrecognized, stripped of the legend he once was. So he takes a new name. A lesser one.
But devotion does not forget its own.
As Meru rebuilds his body among soldiers and slaves, mercenaries and zealots, he watches the Sekhem - the most perfect of Kor's Aspects - move through the halls like a promise and a threat. Every shared glance is a benediction. Every word from the Sekhem feels like scripture. Meru tells himself it is faith. Others call it madness.
When the Champion's Trials are announced, ritual combats where men die to entertain gods, Meru sees not a sentence, but an offering. To be seen. To be chosen. To be worthy again.
Even if it costs him everything.
The Champion of Setermet is a dark fantasy novel about religious obsession, power, and the terrible intimacy between god and devotee.