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Saturday, April 18, 2026

The Pharaoh of Hollow Light - Chapter V: The Procession of the Unmade

PharaohWhen the sky opened, the city did not fall into chaos.

It organized.

That was the most unnatural thing of all.

Where panic should have spread, there came instead a quiet, deliberate order. The screaming ceased—not because fear had passed, but because something had taken hold of it, reshaping it into purpose.

The people of Khaem-Set began to move.

Not randomly.

Not in flight.

In procession.

From every corner of the city, they emerged—labourers, guards, scribes, the devoted and the doubting alike. Their steps fell into rhythm, slow and synchronized, as though guided by a pulse that no longer needed to be heard to be obeyed.

They walked toward the central pit.

Their eyes were open.

But they were not seeing the world around them.

They were seeing something else.

Each face carried a different expression—rapture, sorrow, relief, terror—but beneath it all lay the same certainty. The same quiet understanding that whatever waited below was not to be resisted.

It was to be joined.

At the head of the procession walked those who had descended before.

Or what remained of them.

Their bodies were intact, but wrong.

Limbs bent at subtle, impossible angles. Skin stretched too tightly across their frames, faint light pulsing beneath it in irregular patterns. Their movements were fluid, but not human—too precise, too efficient, as though guided by geometry rather than muscle.

Their mouths moved constantly.

Whispering.

The sound was not meant for ears.

It slipped beneath thought, embedding itself directly into the mind.

Come.

Witness.

Become.

Those who heard it did not question.

They stepped forward.

One by one, the people reached the edge of the pit.

And they did not hesitate.

They stepped into it.

There was no falling.

No impact.

As each body crossed the threshold, it seemed to thin, to stretch, to lose cohesion—not violently, but inevitably. Like sand slipping through fingers, like light fading at dusk.

They were not being destroyed.

They were being… translated.

The air above the pit shimmered with each descent, ripples spreading outward in concentric waves that distorted everything they touched. Buildings bent. Shadows twisted. The very shape of the city began to warp, its rigid lines softening into curves that should not exist.

And still, the procession continued.

At the far edge of the square, a small group resisted.

A handful of guards, their discipline not yet fully eroded, had formed a barrier. Their weapons were drawn—not against the entity, not against the Pharaoh, but against the people they had once sworn to protect.

“Stop!” one of them shouted, his voice raw with desperation. “This is not the will of the gods!”

No one listened.

A woman approached—her face calm, her steps unbroken.

The guard raised his blade.

For a moment, his hand trembled.

Then he struck.

The blade passed through her neck.

But it did not cut.

It slowed.

As though the air itself had thickened, resisting the motion. The metal sank into her skin by mere fractions, each movement requiring more effort than the last, until it stopped entirely—embedded, but ineffective.

The woman did not react.

She did not bleed.

She simply stepped forward, the blade sliding free as though it had never been there.

The guard dropped his weapon.

Behind him, the others lowered theirs.

Resistance ended not with force, but with irrelevance.

Above, the sky continued to fracture.

The opening where the sun had been widened further, its edges peeling back to reveal a depth that defied all sense of scale. Within it, shapes moved—vast, indistinct, their forms suggested only by the absence of light around them.

They were not descending.

They did not need to.

Their presence alone was enough.

The entity beneath the city responded.

Its form rose higher now, pushing further into the visible world. The shifting mass began to stabilize, not into a fixed shape, but into something more coherent—an arrangement of impossible structures that hinted at intention.

And at its centre…

The Pharaoh.

Khaem-Set was no longer merely visible.

He was… integrated.

His body had elongated, his limbs stretched into proportions that no longer aligned with human anatomy. Light flowed through him freely now, his form acting as both conduit and anchor.

His face remained.

But it, too, had changed.

The pale, empty eyes had deepened, filled now with that same consuming brightness at the core of the entity. His expression was serene—not in peace, but in completion.

He raised one hand.

The procession slowed.

Not stopped.

Acknowledged.

“They come willingly,” he said.

His voice no longer echoed.

It resonated.

Not through the air, but through the structure of reality itself, vibrating in a way that could be felt more than heard.

“They understand.”

A pause.

Then, softer—

“They remember.”

At that word, something shifted.

Not in the city.

Not in the sky.

In the people.

For the briefest moment, clarity returned.

Eyes widened. Breaths caught. The weight of individuality pressed back against the imposed order, fragile but undeniable.

A child screamed.

A man turned, reaching for someone who was no longer there.

A woman fell to her knees, sobbing as the truth flooded back in.

And then—

It was gone.

The procession resumed.

Faster now.

Urgent.

Because whatever had been remembered…

Had also been taken.

And the entity below…

Was almost ready.

Source: Some or all of the content was generated using an AI language model

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