THE GODDESS WHO DEVOURED HERSELF
In a world shaped by forgotten gods and bound by ancestral magic, Nakala, a dying village girl, bleeds upon an ancient shard of obsidian — and awakens the last being the heavens swore would never rise again.
Esh’ra, the Black Sun, was once the supreme goddess of death, rebirth, and cosmic balance — a deity so powerful she ended the first world to cleanse it of corruption. For that crime, her divine kin betrayed her, tearing her soul apart and sealing it within stone at the edge of the mortal realm.
A thousand years later, her prison becomes Nakala’s salvation — and curse.
Now the goddess and the mortal share one body, one heart, and one destiny.
But their awakening stirs something older and hungrier than either of them.
Across the fractured continent of A’banu, humans and demons — ancient enemies divided by war and fear — begin to lose their history, their faith, even their faces. Entire cities vanish from memory overnight. The world itself is being rewritten.
The cause: The N’gai, an unknown species from beyond the Spirit Veil.
They do not seek conquest — they seek erasure. To them, existence is a sickness, and memory is the infection.
To stop them, mortals and demons must form an impossible alliance, led by a woman who is no longer entirely human — and a goddess who cannot decide if she wishes to save the world or end it properly this time.
Haunted by divine betrayal, human frailty, and the weight of creation itself, Nakala and Esh’ra must learn to coexist — or consume each other completely.
Their bond will forge miracles… or unleash the true end of all things.