Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 358: Gray Devil: Awakening
At the same time, in a place forgotten by light and life, a different kind of change was stirring.
This place existed in a crack between dimensions, a realm shrouded entirely in a silent, unmoving gray. It was vast, a hollow world as large as a planet. The air did not move. It hung heavy, reeking of ancient death and profound decay. The ground was not soil, but an endless, rolling desert of bones. Countless skeletons, from creatures small and frail to nightmarish beasts whose rib cages were as large as castles, lay bleached and broken. Some were so immense their single vertebrae were like hills, and their lengths stretched for thousands of meters, silent leviathans of a forgotten age.
At the absolute, silent center of this bone-yard stood a single structure: a gigantic throne. It was carved from a substance darker than the gray around it, a material that seemed to drink the faint, sourceless light. And sealed upon this throne was a figure.
Its features were obscured by a clinging, smoky shadow, except for one detail: a single, viciously curved horn that swept up from its brow, pale as polished bone against the gloom.
This being was the heart of the silence. The source of the decay.
At the exact moment Nero’s soul fully accepted the Essence of Earth, awakening his third star and snapping the sixth black chain within him, a corresponding shockwave of pure, foundational power rippled through unseen connections across realities.
In the gray realm, the silence was broken by a sound not heard in eons. 𝗳𝚛𝚎𝚎𝘄𝕖𝕓𝕟𝕠𝚟𝚎𝕝.𝗰𝕠𝐦
SNAP.
A thick, black chain of sealing energy—one of many wrapped around the throne and the figure upon it—shattered. The broken links dissolved into black smoke.
SNAP. SNAP. SNAP.
One after another, the ancient chains, weakened by the distant triumph of the Earth Law, burst apart. Each snap was like a mountain breaking, echoing through the dead realm. Bones dusted on the ground trembled.
Finally, only one chain remained. It was the thickest, the darkest, coiled around the figure’s torso like a primordial serpent. It pulsed with a sickly, resisting light.
Upon the throne, the mysterious entity stirred. From within the shadow that hid its face, two eyes opened.
They were gray. Not the gray of the realm, but a flat, lifeless, absorbing gray. There were no irises, no pupils, just endless, hungry pits of null-colored light.
The moment those eyes opened, the final, heavy black chain... tensed. It glowed, trying to reinforce itself with the last dregs of its sealing power.
The gray eyes merely stared at it.
SNAP!
The sound was final. Absolute. The last chain did not just break; it exploded into a cloud of dissolving darkness that was instantly sucked into the entity’s gray gaze.
The entire gray realm shuddered. It wasn’t an earthquake. It was the dimension itself flinching, groaning under the sudden, reawakened presence at its core. The mountains of bones shifted, avalanches of ancient remains whispering in the dead air.
The ambient prana—the very energy of the universe—which had been still as stagnant water, suddenly wavered. It didn’t flow; it recoiled, pulling away from the throne as if sentient and terrified, repulsed even. The air grew colder, the reek of decay sharpening into something more acute: the scent of impending oblivion.
The entity on the throne slowly flexed a hand, fingers pale and long. A sigh, like the wind through a long-sealed tomb, escaped it. She—for the presence felt feminine in its ancient, terrible grace—knew her limits. Eons of imprisonment had drained her. She was free of her bonds, but the cage of her own depleted strength remained. To exert her true power now would be to shatter this fragile, newborn freedom.
Patience, the thought echoed in the silent chamber of her mind.
She decided to wait. To gather her strength in the shadows. Perhaps, in the meantime, the other two—the more volatile, brilliant ones—would also be stirred from their slumber by the heir’s progress, those annoying fools.
But waiting did not mean inaction. She had to act, lay the groundwork, as the most powerful one (Self proclaimed) she ought to act.
She raised her newly freed hand, the motion causing the gray air to ripple. She snapped her fingers.
The sound was dry and sharp, like a bone breaking. In another, separate dimension—a prison forged from crystallized lightning and frozen screams—three of the seven other entities sealed there, her most loyal subordinates, felt their own bonds tremble. The shockwave of her freedom and the awakening of Earth on top of the other two already freed stars acted as a catalyst. Their seals, already stressed, began to crack. A slow, deliberate process of liberation was triggered. They would not be free today, or tomorrow, but the countdown had begun.
The Gray Devil on the throne lowered her hand. She turned her head, those iris-less gray eyes looking not at the bones or the gloom, but through the fabric of reality itself. Her gaze traveled across unseen pathways, through the chaos of dimensions, and settled on a specific point—a world of green and blue and conflict, where a young man with dark blue hair was just beginning to understand the weight of the power in his soul, unaware of the very destiny he carried, what it really meant to be the Primordial Heir, they could only be a single ruler, just like back then.
A slow, terrifying smile touched lips hidden in shadow. Her lips curved upward, not in joy, but in a shape of pure, chilling anticipation.
And in her eyes, where there should have been nothing, a flash of absolute madness flickered, there and gone, like distant lightning in a dead sky.
A storm was not coming. A storm was brewing. Quietly, in the deepest silence, gathering its terrible, patient strength. The first stone of the avalanche had been dislodged. The heir had taken a step onto his path. And she, freed from her first chains, was now watching. Waiting. A silent, gray shadow at the edge of a destiny she intended to twist to her own glorious, ruinous ends.







