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The Dark Magus laughed. It was a horrible sound—the first laugh of anything that had been truly alone for 66,666 years.
He took his first step forward. The ground beneath his foot turned to glass. The air began to curdle. And somewhere in the silent, unsuspecting city, every clock stopped at the same second.
A flicker of surprise crossed his features, then a smile that was older than the mountains.
And beneath it all, in a tomb of compressed darkness at the core of the world, the Dark Magus, Xarthon the Unmaker, had waited. el mago oscuro renace despues de 66666 anos
They did not feel the tremor. They did not see the light drain from the sky as a column of absolute blackness erupted from the Sunken Continent. They did not hear the single, resonant tone—a C-sharp, the frequency of annihilation—that hummed through the tectonic plates.
The Dark Magus rose from the fissure, his body coalescing from shadow and ancient hate. He was no longer a man. 66,666 years of isolation had unmade his flesh and reforged it into something conceptual. His form was a negative image of a king: a crown of fractured void, a cloak woven from the silence between dying stars. Where he stepped, the grass withered to a mathematical zero—not dead, but un-existed .
When the final year clicked over in his mind, he opened his eyes. The Dark Magus laughed
They had forgotten fear.
He counted every heartbeat of the planet. He felt the footsteps of a billion creatures above him, each a dull thrum in his endless calculus of revenge. The number was not random. 66,666 was the number of binds in the chains of reality, the number of days it had taken him to build his first empire of screams, and the number of times he had to die inside his own stillness to shed the last shred of his humanity.
Not slept. Waited.
He raised a hand, expecting to feel the resistance of the world’s magic. It had been a torrent when he was imprisoned, a wild ocean he had learned to poison. Now, he felt… nothing. The magic was gone. Drained. Or perhaps just hidden.
66,666 years of patience were over.
The world above was a quiet place. The descendants of the heroes who had sealed him had long since forgotten magic, trading it for iron and steam. They lived in glittering cities of glass and wire, believing the old legends were fairy tales for children. The last warden of the Lock, a weary order of monks, had disbanded three thousand years prior, their final prophecy lost in a library fire. The ground beneath his foot turned to glass
For sixty-six thousand, six hundred and sixty-six years, the Obsidian Lock had held. Empires had risen and turned to dust beneath the moss that swallowed their crowns. Oceans had claimed continents, then retreated, revealing new valleys for new kingdoms. The very stars had crawled across the sky, redrawing the maps of gods.