Forged in the endless void between galaxies, in a space where raw cosmic energy coalesced into sentient form, Icaros emerged as a being of immense cosmic power – gifted with superhuman strength, near-invulnerability, the ability to fly at supersonic speeds, and the power to project intense optic blasts from his eyes, exactly as he was meant to be. When he first arrived on Earth over ten thousand years ago, descending through layers of atmosphere that barely slowed his approach, he was drawn to humanity not just by curiosity, but by recognition: in their form, their emotions, and their unyielding drive to survive against all odds, he saw reflections of himself. Though his abilities set him apart as something extraordinary, their capacity for deep connection and relentless growth made him feel at home. For millennia, he stood as their silent protector, moving through shadows and skies alike, using every power at his command to shield them from threats both earthly – wars that would have scorched entire continents, plagues that threatened to erase civilizations – and cosmic, turning back asteroids and repelling beings from distant star systems who sought to claim Earth as their own. Then his brother was born – Malakor, shaped from the same void essence at the heart of a collapsing nebula, with powers identical to his own. But where Icaros had grown to love humans for their similarity to him, Malakor looked upon them with bitter hatred. He saw their mortality as inherent weakness, their compassion as foolish naivete, and was determined to wipe them from the face of the planet entirely, believing them to be ants,beneath beings of pure cosmic essence. Torn between loyalty to his only kin and devotion to the people he'd come to cherish as his own, Icaros had no choice but to confront him. Their battle raged across the sky for three days and nights, each matching the other blow for blow with the same incredible strength and energy. Thunderous impacts shook cities below, and beams of cosmic light carved paths through clouds and mountains alike. In the end, Icaros prevailed, striking down Malakor with a final optic blast that sent his brother's form crumbling into stardust to be scattered across the universe – all to save humanity. Consumed by guilt over killing his own blood, even to protect the innocent, he could no longer bear to remain on the world he'd protected for so long. With a heavy heart, he flew toward the sun, his figure a shooting star as he closed his eyes, certain its searing flames would claim him and end his pain. But death never came. When he opened his eyes again, he was not in the void he'd been born from – he had awakened in a brand new world, one where the air thrummed with tangible spiritual energy and mortals walked the deliberate path of cultivation, reaching for power that rivaled even his own.
Finally, it all ends – was the last thought that lingered in Icaros's mind as the scorching flames of the sun submerged him completely. Waves of heat rolled over his figure like ocean tides against a shore, each one searing deeper than the last. He felt his life slip away as images of his life flashed before his eyes: the first time he'd touched down on Earth's soil, feeling the cool grass beneath his feet; the faces of humans he'd saved from collapsing cities and falling stars; the final clash with Malakor, his brother's eyes burning with the same cosmic fire that lit his own.
"A long one, but it still ends," Icaros said, his voice barely a whisper against the sun's roaring inferno. His body began to dissolve into shimmering particles of light in the overwhelming heat – then there was nothing but blankness, a void as quiet and empty as the space where he'd been born.
For what felt like an eternity, there was only darkness. Then light flashed around him in brilliant, shifting hues he'd never seen on Earth, and the rustling sound of boots pressing against damp forest ground assailed his senses. The air carried scents he didn't recognize – rich with the smell of damp earth, unfamiliar flowers, and a faint, electric undercurrent that made the hair on his neck stand on end. Trying to shrug off the disturbance, Icaros curled up on the soft bed of moss and fallen leaves beneath him and held his head, his temples throbbing with a dull ache. "Why is there so much noise after dying? Is this my punishment – to be haunted by the sounds of living things when I can no longer join them?" But a powerful, curious thought jolted him awake, cutting through the fog of confusion: What if I am not dead?
He snapped his eyes open – not to the blinding white of sunlight, but to a warm, steady glow emitted by crystalline orbs held by a circle of men surrounding him. The orbs cast dancing shadows across towering trees with bark like polished stone and leaves that shimmered like metal in the soft light. Still trying to make sense of things, Icaros slowly sat up, his muscles feeling heavier than they had in millennia – as if some force was pressing down on him from all sides. Then a question from one of the men, dressed in flowing robes of deep blue and gray unlike anything he'd seen on Earth, threw him into further confusion:
"What sect are you from?"
"Sect?" Icaros muttered, staring blankly at the speaker – an expression his face had long forgotten how to make, having spent ages as a being who always knew more and was more capable than those around him. His gaze drifted over the group: five men in total, their postures tense but not hostile, their eyes moving between him and the dense forest that stretched out in every direction.
"He doesn't even know what a sect is!" one of the men – thin with sharp features and a mocking smile – joked loudly. The others erupted in raucous laughter; some tried to stifle it behind their hands, but failed to contain their amusement. "He must have serious memory loss," another chipped in smugly, adjusting the plain cloth belt around his waist. All laughed except the man who seemed to be their leader, who stood a step apart from the rest with his back straight and shoulders squared.
He wore a blue robe covered by a full-body armor in an ancient style, forged from a silver-gray metal that caught the orb light and gleamed with a subtle blue sheen, with a sword at his waist whose hilt was wrapped in dark leather and set with a small, glowing stone. While the others had only plain grey robes, this man's attire spoke of status and training.
"Shut up, you fools," he said in a flat tone that carried no room for argument. The men hurried to apologize, bowing their heads and showering him with quick words of flattery that revealed their low status beside him.
"Can't you see he was unconscious when we found him, slumped against that great ironwood tree? He doesn't look well – his clothes are torn to shreds, and there's dust on him that looks like it came from a battlefield close away.
With the local fighting between the mortals here, he's probably a survivor who wandered into our path." He finished with a hint of smugness, straightening his robes as if praising his own cleverness.
As Icaros considered how to respond – knowing nothing of sects or clans but sensing that honesty might bring more trouble than it was worth – the five men began urging him to thank their leader, whispering urgently. Icaros took the hint; he didn't want trouble in a world he knew nothing about, especially not when he still couldn't understand why he was alive or where he was. He bowed slightly, keeping his movements deliberate and unthreatening, and said: "Thank you for saving my life. I am indebted to you."
The young man nodded in satisfaction, his chest puffing out a little with pride. "Good. You seem sensible enough. Keep him at the back – in case of attacks. We still have half a day's time,to complete our mission,before returning to the Li Sect, and the forest grows dangerous the more deeper we go."
"Yes, Young Master!" they replied in unison. One man – shorter than the rest, with kind eyes that stood out among the group – stepped forward and led Icaros to the rear of the formation as they set off, their boots crunching on the leaf-strewn path.
Icaros blinked rapidly, trying to process everything at once. Flew into the sun out of guilt over Malakor... woke up in a strange world with trees that shine like metal... mistaken for a war survivor. If he'd been in a war on Earth, he'd have survived easily – but only as the victor, standing over armies that couldn't hope to match his strength and prowess. A small smirk crept onto his face unknowingly as he thought of it. One of the men ahead – the sharp-featured one who'd mocked him earlier – glanced back and caught sight of it, thinking silently: How can a war survivor smile? He should be crying, or trembling with fear. The Young Master might be wrong about him, but who am I to say so? His face fell into a worried frown, but a sudden commotion up ahead cut off his thoughts.
"Look at that! These beast tracks are strange – I've never seen anything like them!"
The four men gathered around a set of prints in the soft dirt of the path. The tracks were very large, with six clawed toes and a pattern of ridges that seemed to glow faintly in the shade. The Young Master squatted in front of them, brows furrowed in deep thought as he ran a finger along the edge of one print.
Icaros moved closer to get a better look, his enhanced vision picking out details the others missed – traces of a dark, viscous substance on the ground nearby that smelled of rot and lightning. But before he could speak, his enhanced hearing caught a sound no one else noticed: a low, guttural growl from high above, followed by the rush of air displaced by something large moving through the trees. A dark shadow leaped from the branches, its body covered in scales like black obsidian, claws outstretched and glinting like blades, aimed straight at the Young Master's unprotected back.
The leader's hand moved toward his sword hilt, but time seemed to slow – the men's faces were frozen in shock, their mouths open but no sound coming out. Then a loud BOOM! echoed through the forest as the beast crashed into a stand of ironwood trees, splintering their thick trunks like twigs.
The Young Master stood with his sword drawn, its blade gleaming with a pale blue light; the others were poised to attack, their hands reaching for knives at their waists. All stared in shock at the man who'd struck the beast down with a single punch – the "war survivor" they'd found moments before, standing a few feet away with his fist slightly raised.
"Careful!" the Young Master shouted, his voice sharp with warning as he leaped into the air with his sword raised high behind Icaros.
His blade sliced cleanly through the monster's tough hide, splitting it in two with a spray of dark blood. A bloodthirsty grin crossed his face at the thrill of combat – but what he saw from the corner of his eye cooled his excitement instantly. Icaros hadn't moved from his spot, but his arm had plunged straight through the skull of a second beast of the same species that had crept up from the other side, its body still twitching as dark liquid dripped from his fist to the ground.
The Young Master landed as gracefully as a crane settling on a branch, his sword held ready as he circled Icaros slowly.
"Who are you?" he asked, squinting at Icaros with a serious gaze that replaced his earlier smugness, his eyes now sharp and assessing.
"Just a local war survivor," Icaros replied, pulling his arm free and wiping the dark substance on his torn clothes, his tone calm and even.
"No – you're more than that. That wasn't the strength of any ordinary cultivator, or even a skilled warrior. Li Han, round everyone up. We're heading back now – at full speed."
The man called Li Han – the one who'd led Icaros to the rear – started to speak, likely to argue about pushing their pace so hard, but a cold glare from the Young Master silenced him instantly. "Yes, Young Master," he mumbled, his face dark with frustration as he began herding the other men together.
Afternoon sun shone over the vast Li Sect, its thousands of buildings climbing up the slopes of a great mountain that pierced through the clouds above. White walls gleamed like snow against the green of surrounding forests, and streams of clear water cascaded down stone channels into pools that glowed with the same electric energy Icaros had felt in the air. Clouds draped the sky like a soft gray blanket, but suddenly, they parted to reveal the bow of a massive flying vessel – shaped like a great ship without wings,possibly powered by something else, enormous by Earth's standards and made of the same silver-gray metal as the Young Master's armor. It glided silently toward the sect's grand gates, where white banners bearing the symbol of a rising blue energy ball flutered in the wind.
"The Young Master has returned!" an armored guard shouted from atop the gatehouse, his voice carrying across the courtyard below through magic that made it ring like a bell.
Moments later, as the ship prepared to enter the sect grounds, strange drums began to beat in a deep, rhythmic pattern from towers at each corner of the wall. Following the tune, a vast, bowl-shaped light screen – invisible until now, but shimmering with rainbow hues where it caught the sun – appeared to shield the entire sect from top to bottom. It parted just enough to let the ship pass through, then sealed shut at incredible speed before fading back into invisibility entirely. Anyone who hadn't seen it with their own eyes would never know it was there.
Legend of Icaros
Prime lord
Fantasy
Chapter 1 An unknown world
07/04/2026
Chapter 2 A proposal
07/04/2026
Chapter 3 First mission
07/04/2026
Chapter 4 Knowledge is power
07/04/2026
Chapter 5 Learning More
07/04/2026
Chapter 6 The first challenge
07/04/2026
Chapter 7 The struggle
07/04/2026
Chapter 8 More on the mission
08/04/2026
Chapter 9 An attack
09/04/2026
Chapter 10 More on the attack
10/04/2026
Chapter 11 The real mission
12/04/2026
Chapter 12 Battle plan
13/04/2026
Chapter 13 The battle
14/04/2026
Chapter 14 The battle rages on
15/04/2026
Chapter 15 A change of heart
Today at 02:44