1073: Story 1073: Black Halo Prophecy 1073: Story 1073: Black Halo Prophecy They came riding in at dusk—silhouettes against a storm-black sky, their eyes aglow with the eerie green fire of the cursed.
At their center, carried in a cradle of bone and rusted chains, was the Black Halo—a warped relic shaped like a crown, but pulsing like a living heart.
The people of Ashvale had long forgotten the prophecy.
Buried it like they buried their sins: deep, unspoken, and beneath the bones of the innocent.
But the prophecy had not forgotten them.
“When the Halo rises,” the crones once muttered, “so shall the veiled god awaken—and dream the world into unbeing.”
Zeke Crowhurst, a former preacher turned cynic, stumbled across the riders during a storm.
He’d taken refuge in the remains of the old cathedral, seeking warmth.
Instead, he found visions scorched into the stained glass—of saints burning from within, their faces melting into eyeless voids.
Thunder cracked, and the altar bled black.
That was when he saw them.
The Prophets of the Black Halo.
Twelve riders.
Faceless.
Ageless.
Their bodies draped in tattered vestments woven from human hair and shadow.
One held the relic aloft—its aura twisting reality like heat on a desert road.
The moment Zeke laid eyes on it, he heard a choir of children screaming backwards.
And then he saw himself, crucified in fire.
Back in Ashvale, the sky had turned violet.
Time buckled.
People moved in reverse or froze mid-scream.
The dead returned not as corpses, but as reflections, pulling their living twins into shattered mirrors.
Zeke ran, the vision still burning in his mind.
“The Halo isn’t a crown,” he whispered.
“It’s an eye… and it’s looking for a host.”
The town’s last defense was Mother Rhea, a blind witch who’d guarded the grave of the Halo’s last bearer.
She greeted Zeke without turning.
Her mouth stitched shut.
Her skin inked in eldritch script.
She cut the stitches open just to say:
“You brought it here.”
He hadn’t.
But it had followed him anyway.
As the Prophets descended, reality ruptured.
Buildings folded inward.
Wind howled with voices too old to name.
And at the center of it all, the Black Halo floated above the altar once more.
It chose Zeke.
His flesh peeled back in ribbons of fire.
His soul bled into the sky.
And as he screamed, he heard it:
“You are the mouth now.
You shall speak the next verse.”
Ashvale was erased—replaced by a spiral crater that hummed like a throat clearing.
The world above never noticed.
But those who wander near the edges of the scar claim to hear a man preaching in tongues that rot your ears.
And if you listen too long…
…you dream of the Halo, too.