Conri did not understand it at first.
He had faced gods without trembling.
But when Cassandra met his gaze, something shifted within him.
Not weakness.
Recognition.
She carried unbearable knowledge — and still stood.
She had been dismissed by kings — and still spoke.
Strength without army.
Courage without sword.
Perhaps… more than he expected.
"What do you see when you look at me?" he asked.
Cassandra held his gaze.
"I see a god who will outlive pantheons."
She paused.
"And I see blood."
Conri did not flinch.
"From enemies?"
"From sacrifice."
Silence settled.
"My realm is being forged," Conri said. "A world free from Olympus' chains. A place where truth is not silenced."
Cassandra's expression hardened slightly.
"You offer sanctuary?"
"I offer partnership."
That surprised her.
"You would bind yourself to a cursed prophet?"
"I would walk beside one."
The honesty in his voice unsettled her more than arrogance would have.
"And if I warn you of your fall?" she asked.
"Then I will prepare for it."
She searched his face for doubt.
Found none.
For the first time in centuries, someone had not dismissed her.
Not mocked her.
Not tried to possess her.
He had asked her to follow — not commanded it.
"I see your realm," she said slowly.
"Do you?"
"It grows strong. Disciplined. Feared by gods. Respected by warriors."
She swallowed quietly.
"And I see myself there."
Conri extended his hand.
Not as a god demanding devotion.
As a sovereign offering trust.
Cassandra hesitated only a moment —
Then placed her hand in his.
The golden threads of Apollo's curse flickered faintly.
Unbroken.
But strained.
As they walked beneath the darkening Greek sky, Olympus felt the shift.
Not from war.
But from alignment.
A sword-god building a pantheon.
A prophet who sees the future yet is never believed.
Together, they would shape something dangerous:
A realm guided not only by strength —
But by foresight.
And five thousand years later…
When gods fall and heroes rise—
The name Cassandra will not be ignored.
Because Conri believes her.
The northern winds were gentler in Conri's new realm.
The realm Bor had promised was no longer young.
It had grown.
Mountains crowned with silver citadels.
Forests threaded with living runes. A sky where fragments of Yggdrasil shimmered like constellations.
At its center stood Conri — no longer merely a normal divinity of swords and heroes.
Forests shimmered with faint aurora light. Rivers carried traces of Yggdrasil's living energy. The land was young — untouched by the ego of ancient pantheons.
And in its quiet heart stood two figures.
A sword-god shaping a pantheon.
And a prophet who had never been believed.
Cassandra did not immediately accept peace.
For centuries, every promise made to her had turned hollow.
Even Apollo's "gift" had become a prison.
But Conri did not rush her.
He built halls for warriors.
Sanctuaries for spirits.
Training grounds carved into mountainsides.
And at night, he sat with her beneath silver trees and simply listened.
Not to test her prophecies.
Not to challenge them.
But to understand them.
"You do not look at me like I am mad," she said once quietly.
"I look at you as one burdened with clarity," Conri replied.
It was the first time her eyes softened.
True to his word, Conri brought her to Asgard.
Not as a prisoner of politics.
But as a scholar.
Frigga herself — master of subtle magic — permitted Cassandra access to ancient rune libraries under Odin's approval.
Bor's old vaults held inscriptions older than Olympus.
Cassandra studied relentlessly.
Runes of protection.
Runes of sight beyond sight.
Runes that shaped probability rather than dictated it.
Conri stood beside her often, translating where needed, explaining Asgardian magical structure.
But he also brought something different.
Memories.
Fragments of fairy tales from his past life — stories of witches who defied fate, swords that rewrote destiny, heroes who overcame curses through understanding rather than force.
"Fate is not a straight line," he told her one evening while tracing glowing runes in the air. "It is a field of possibilities."
Cassandra frowned thoughtfully.
"I see outcomes," she said. "But I have never been taught to bend them."
"Then we begin there."
Apollo's curse was cruel in its simplicity:
She would always speak truth.
And she would never be believed.
Conri did not attempt to shatter it directly.
Instead, he studied its structure.
The curse did not silence her voice.
It influenced perception.
It twisted probability around belief.
So they trained differently.
Cassandra learned:
• Illusion magic — not to deceive, but to control framing.
• Rune-binding — to anchor her words with stabilizing sigils.
• Emotional resonance casting — ensuring her speech carried weight beyond sound.
She learned to weave runes subtly into her prophecies.
Centuries passed.
Not changing the truth.
But reinforcing its inevitability.
Slowly…
The curse began to crack.
After teaching her rune's he tried teaching her his new magic system he invented, but she couldn't learn it.
But the same thing didn't occur when he tried teaching Bilga the head of the mage clan. he could form the mana circles.but his progress was slow.
So from this aspect alone, Conri came to a conclusion that Cassandra wasn't able use his mana circle system, because of sorcery lineage
Although a mage and a sorcerer looks the same,they are fundamentally not. a mage bends nature to his will to cast magic, while a sorcerer coexisting with nature one wrong move and a sorcerer can lose their power they need a bond.
After figuring the problem he took study of rune's again into his daily grind.
From Asgard, he took structure — rune geometry, energy anchoring, cosmic harmonics.
From his past life's fairy tales and mana circle magic system he created,he drew imagination — stories where witches rewrote endings, swords sealed curses, and names held power.
From Cassandra, he learned foresight.
The result was something unprecedented:
Conri created another magic system in which only sorcerer's can use, this magic system which he called Mythweaving. Mythweaving was built on three pillars taking:
Runic Foundation – Stability and structure.
Mana Circle – Advancement and growth
Narrative Intent – The caster's chosen "story direction."
Probability Anchoring – Controlled manipulation of possible outcomes.
Unlike traditional sorcery, Mythweaving did not force reality.
It negotiated with it.
Spells were constructed like stories:
• Beginning – Establish the rune anchor.
• Conflict – Introduce desired change.
• Resolution – Lock probability into place.
Cassandra excelled.
Her foresight allowed her to see branching outcomes and choose which narrative thread to strengthen.
For the first time in her existence—
She wasn't reacting to fate.
She was shaping it.
Apollo's curse weakened further.
shattered violently.
But unraveled logically.
Her words, reinforced by Mythweaving sigils, gained weight.
People began believing her not through compulsion —
But through inevitability.
Conri never stopped training.
Love did not soften him.
It refined him.
At dawn, he trained with blade.
At dusk, he studied runes.
At night, he walked beside Cassandra under starlit skies, discussing futures yet to unfold.
She once watched him practice alone at the edge of a cliff overlooking the realm.
His movements were precise.
Controlled.
Deadly.
He did not swing wildly.
Each technique carried divine structure.
THE DEMONIC FANG GOD SWORD ART
sword style born from his reincarnated essence — inspired by the ruthless grace of Sesshomaru's template, but reshaped into something uniquely Conri's.
FIRST FORM: ABYSSAL SLASHES
A rapid sequence of crescent-shaped cuts infused with compressed void energy.
Each strike leaves behind lingering afterimages that detonate moments later.
Not chaotic.
Calculated.
It overwhelms perception before overwhelming the body.
SECOND FORM: HELLSPAWN THRUST
A single forward lunge.
Simple in appearance.
Catastrophic in impact.
The blade pierces space itself, briefly opening a micro-rift that drags the opponent's defenses inward before the strike lands.
A technique designed to end duels instantly.
THIRD FORM: ABYSSAL PHANTOM DEMONIC STEP
Not an attack.
A movement technique.
Conri dissolves into shadowed afterimages, stepping between probability gaps.
To observers, he appears in multiple places at once.
To Cassandra, it looked like he was walking through unseen futures.
She once whispered:
"You move the way I see."
FOURTH FORM: POISON FANG
The blade becomes coated in divine-corrosive energy.
Not mere toxin.
It erodes magical constructs, divine barriers, even godly regeneration.
Against immortals, it is fear itself.
Olympus would one day dread this form.
FIFTH FORM: DEMON DOG ROAR
The culmination.
Conri channels his full demonic-divine aura into a downward arc strike.
Upon impact, a colossal spectral hound formed of abyssal energy erupts forward with a thunderous roar.
The shockwave shatters terrain and ruptures spiritual defenses.
It is not merely destructive.
It declares dominance.
The first time he unleashed it in full —
Even Asgardian observers fell silent.
Cassandra watched with steady eyes.
"I saw this technique once," she murmured.
"And?" Conri asked.
"It changes the outcome of a war."
The final fracture of Apollo's curse came not through combat.
But confession.
Cassandra had foreseen a possible confrontation with Apollo.
In one future, she fell.
In another, she was dragged back to Olympus.
In a third —
She stood unafraid.
The difference?
She chose to speak without fear of disbelief.
One evening before Conri's captains, she declared:
"Olympus will attempt interference within three lunar cycles."
There was no rune reinforcement.
No magical anchor.
Only her voice.
The captains believed her.
Not because of enchantment.
But because she had proven herself.
The golden threads of Apollo's curse shattered completely.
Far away, Apollo staggered in his solar temple.
His punishment had ended.
Not through divine mercy.
But through growth.
