[NW] Solomon, King of Magic IV

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"What we call 'life' is something with an end. Life is a pilgrimage that accrues suffering.
But, it is absolutely not a tale of death and separation."

Name: Solomon
Nickname: King of Magic, Grand Caster, Romani
Gender: Male
Age: 817
Clan: Ōtsutsuki
Alignment: Lawful Neutral


Appearance


Being from the Eastern Continent of Tobusekai, Solomon has a foreign, exotic, or otherwise unworldly charm to his appearance that bewilders, enthralls, or otherwise captures the attention of all who meet him. Standing at almost 6ft, he is a tall, handome man with firm features that indicate his self-assured and steadfast nature, and yet they still exude a soft, gentle warmth that convert an otherwise aloof man into one who steals the hearts of all who behold his grace and majesty. Truly, his appearance is the perfect mirror of his reputation as a "gentle, loving King.”

His skin is blessed with the gentle kiss of Tobusekai's sun, giving it a golden hue that puts the finest jewellery to shame, while his hair perfectly contrasts this complexion with a pale, spiritually infused white tone that shimmers a truer gold than even his complexion as the sun drenches it in its warmth. His hair flows freely, cascading down his back to effortlessly reach the back of his calves as it naturally forms into voluminous curved, carved and spiked sections that randomly take shape and form on their own free will, framing his face, and giving him an unmistakable sillhouette. Overall, his hair has an unkempt, yet charming appearance, save for a lone braid that is draped over the left portion of his torso in a regal, sofisticated woven pattern that ends with a loop that doubles back, and vanishes within his sea of golden-white locks. And while, at first glance, Solomon's eyes are sharp and aggresive in shape and tone, the emotion conveyed from them is nothing short of compassionate, empathetic and understanding, helped all the more by his eyes vibrant golden colouration, that rivals, and at times surpasses, his complexion with a gaze that burns like the sun itself.

In regards to attire, nothing but the finest robes would be right for a King to wear, and the finest robes in all of Tobusekai can be found nowhere else but Israel, within the heart of Jerusalem itself. Woven together by the finest crafters of silk and cloth, Solomon wears a pristine white robe with a black waistband, and golden section that curls around his colarbone and shoulderblades, with decorative golden trim throughout. Atop this simple robe he dons a red braid that has a small "tassle-like" attachment at the back, and is woven into a larger braid at the front, which keeps a black, decorative belt fixed to his form. The belt itself has two layered segments that hang down on either side of the front of his legs in a curved, sloped lightning bolt formation, that form an x-shape between his knees, as the front braid from the red cloth hangs in front, kept from unravelling with golden rings. Next, over his robe, and belt, he wears a loose-fitting white cape-like coat, with red detailing, that is draped over his shoulders, giving them a very unique shape, and kept in place by a pair of highly decorative, yet surprisingly effective and functional epaulettes, which are attached to the golden portion of his robes, near the collarbone, and extend down to passed his elbows, giving the illusion of sleeves, and the reality of regality. Finally, Solomon is adorned with various forms of accessories and accoutrement, from rings and bracelets, to necklaces and traditional braids sparingly located on his robes, however, the most prevalent of these are the countless tattoo's which embellish and decorate his already attractive skin. Some are of a decorative nature, with a pattern that weaves in and out of itself to create an intrictate web of tribal-esque patterns, while others conceal a more conventional, applicable nature, namely Fūinjutsu seals.


Personality


Introverted, enigmatic, and passive; all traits of the third king of Israel. Solomon is a self-assured and laid-back king, one who was loved and respected by the masses as wise and gentle. He has a deep love for humanity, yet sees himself as an outsider to their lives. From birth he was ordained to be king, something that was not in accordance with his own will. Because of this, his early psyche was dispassionate. He was only able to understand humans from an outsider looking in perspective, leading him to be unable to truly sympathize with their joys and sorrows. His half human and half Ōtsutsuki heritage also further compounds his outsider nature toward humanity.

It isn’t until he abdicates from the throne of Israel and travels the world does he finally allow himself to understand human nature to its fullest extent. Having forsaken his ordained position as king he can finally live by his own design, free to pursue the wisdom that he desires. Solomon frequently speaks of wishful thinking, looking toward the future with eyes full of hope for humanity. Likewise, he has a deep reverence for the past. With strangers he is very friendly, but his acceptance of human suffering leads him to a natural aversion to close relationships; he fears losing those he builds close ties with and would much rather limit himself to these superficial relationships. He prefers to be an observer in difficult situations, rather than directly confront the problem.

Solomon’s most important trait is that he refuses to interfere with the natural order, and does not seek to prolong finality. He believes that it is not his place to end human suffering as it is condescending, believing himself not to be superior to any other human and having no special right to take control of human destiny. In essence, he is convinced that the ideal philosophy is to trust humanity with its future and growth; he would rather the suffering humans face have meaning, rather than erase the suffering altogether. This philosophy frequently brings him into conflict with Goetia, who believes that Solomon should use his magnificent powers to correct the flaws in humanity.

Solomon has come to learn of an important distinction in his guiding philosophy. As the Age of Humans comes under attack from a long-forgotten conflict from the Age of Gods, he has learned that his intervention has become necessary. He can no longer remain inactive as the world humans have come to inhabit and create in comes under strain, as reality itself dissolves. And so while Solomon will always respect the natural order of creation and destruction, that which is caused from external forces and threats will be met and subverted by the King of Magic.​




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Village Information



Land of Birth: Israel
Warring States Clan: None


Rank & Chakra Information



Rank: Sage of Revelation
Health & Chakra: 200 & 3750


Skills & Elements


Fire Release................................................................................Taijutsu
Earth Release...........................................................................Ninjutsu
Wind Release...........................................................................Kenjutsu
Water Release..........................................................................Genjutsu
Lightning Release..................................................................Fūinjutsu
Force Release............................................................................Kinjutsu
Eridian Release.........................................................Medical Ninjutsu
Radiation Release..................................................................Byakugan
Grace.......................................................................................Tenseigan
Mystic Fire Release................................................................Satorigan
Yin-Yang Release.........................................................................Anutu


Fighting Styles


Goetic Theurgy
Shūkyō Yonkō
Namikazeron
Spirits of Balance
Dance of the Bearded Sage


Summoning Contracts


Wyverns
Scarabs​





Increased Speed Specialist (Primary)


Despite his appearance, Solomon’s body is remarkably well trained. From a young age the King of Magic was not only trained in the arcane, but also in the body arts. The training typically took place with his brothers Amnon and Absalom; after long and intense studying periods with King David, the two would often take Solomon to play various sports. The result of this activity over a long period of Solomon’s life increased his base speed by one level.​


Majestic Presence (Secondary & Apex)


Through a unique mastery over Force Release, as well as his own powerful presence, Solomon is able to exert a force that passively slows his opponents' base speed down. Enemies within mid-range of the Mage King are slowed by two levels of their base, while those within short-range of Solomon are slowed by a staggering four levels. This makes him deceptively adept in close quarters combat.​


Yin-Yang Release Mastery (Extra)


When Solomon received revelation and awakened his Tenseigan, he also came to master Yin-Yang Release to its highest level. Having studied a considerable amount on primordial energies, Solomon was well accustomed to their nature when he came to possess the power to harness and manipulate them at will. This mastery allows Solomon's Homonculi to last indefinitely and be created with the ability to utilize Grace. Solomon's Yin-Yang Mastery also affords him the ability to sense charka and its nature.​


Spirits of Balance (CFS)


As a response to Merlin’s meddling, Solomon came to master the style known as Onryodo, or the Spirits of Balance. The style unifies Yin-Yang Release with Fūinjutsu, allowing him to invoke spirits and use them in the Sealing Arts. It is a potent style that resonates well with Solomon’s own preference toward spirituality and the nature of beings outside of the human experience spectrum. The core of the style allows him to seal objects or people into a separate dimension of his conscience without the need for traditional scrolls. Onryodo causes Solomon’s Fūinjutsu to be augmented by an additional rank in strength, excluding Forbidden ranked techniques. He also becomes keenly aware of illusory and Yamanaka techniques that influence his person, with an array of mental defenses erected, like the one that had captured Merlin, in order to protect his mind.​


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Background Information


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“The cycle of life and death, one gives meaning to the other. For without death, there can be no meaning in one’s life. It is ironic, the life of an ordinary human has more meaning than my own. I, who am destined to linger in the world for eternity.”

An enigmatic and reticent man, Solomon was the third king of the ancient civilization Israel, located in the lost lands of Tobusekai; it was a kingdom that preceded even the ancient Freehold. Solomon’s early years predates the advent of chakra in the world. He was a legendary king, elevated to even mythical status in some historical accounts. Respected for his benevolent and prosperous rule, while revered for his mastery over magecraft, he left behind numerous anecdotes. According to legend, during his reign Solomon dreamt of a revelation; God told him, “You are qualified. Speak your wishes. I shall grant them.” Instead of asking for wealth or power, Solomon sought wisdom. When he woke from his dream, he found ten golden rings on his hands. After the revelation he abdicated from the Throne of Israel, passing the crown to his successor and leaving to travel the world to achieve higher wisdom.

Just before leaving Israel he became best known for employing seventy-two Demon Gods as his familiars to build Solomon’s Temple. The seventy-two familiars amalgamate into the Demon God King Goetia. He would later record the ability to summon, create, and control demons in his Key of Solomon, or the Lemegeton. Created with a love of humanity Goetia was tasked with the Human Order Correction Ritual, a directive that would have Goetia look after humanity and protect them in times of crisis as Solomon’s agent. Much to Goetia’s disdain, Solomon refuses to use his powers to perform miracles for the benefit of humanity, believing that these miracles will lead humanity to corruption, or to fear him, and that it is not his place to end human struggle and strife.

The tale of Solomon, the king, is one of higher destiny; that from his very birth he was ordained to be king. His freedom stripped from him before he could even say the word ‘freedom’ itself, he was made to work as the vessel of the will of his people, his family, and the divine. Only after shedding his role as king could Solomon live among men, and attain what all humans desire: their freedom to choose. It is for that reason Solomon forsook his Throne of Israel in Jerusalem and took the name Roman, or Romani, in his travels for centuries thereafter. Rather than live as king, he would learn to live as a human from scratch, although he would always still somewhat feel outside of the human experience – his eternal lifespan having allowed him to transcend death itself. It is said he now wanders the world, collecting wisdom and sharing in human experience with his fellow man.​

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“...it is brilliant, a journey of a single instant like the blinking of a star. This is a story of love and hope.”

Solomon is descended from a line of Ōtsutsuki that have ruled over the Kingdom of Israel in Tobusekai; he is the son of King David, the second king, and his wife Queen Bathsheba. Solomon was born nine years prior to the Sage of the Six Paths, Hagoromo Ōtsutsuki, spread his chakra throughout the world at large. He was born with unnaturally powerful chakra, even by Ōtsutsuki bloodline standards. His birth marked an auspicious day for Jerusalem; the kingdom celebrated his birth for weeks after. Travelers and sages from around the world visited to bring gifts to the new born heir to the throne.

Solomon, however, was not the firstborn son of King David. David had fathered a number of children prior to Solomon’s birth. The firstborn, Amnon, was the original heir to the Throne of Israel when Solomon was born. He was followed by Absalom and Adonijah, twins that were born to David and Haggith, David’s second wife. But on the auspicious day of Solomon’s birth, as a promise to his mother, David decided that Solomon would be king. Many had predicted that such an action would lead to dramatic political upheaval among David’s other sons; yet Amnon remained loyal to his father, respecting his wishes. He stepped aside to pave the way for the young Prince Solomon to one day claim the Throne of Israel.

Many gifts brought to the newborn Prince Solomon were gold, symbolic for his soon-to-be kingship on earth. Others were varieties of incense, a symbol of divinity within the prince. But one such gift stood out among the others: a sword that would come to be known as the Sword of King Solomon. The blade presented was, at the time, not particularly unique. Its cross guard and pommel were forged from simple steel, and at the bottom the Star of David, an icon of King David’s reign, was engraved into it. An intricate pattern is woven into the cross guard with lions on either side of it. But aside from these artistic impressions, there was little about the sword that carried much significance. Yet it was the gift that Prince Solomon seemed to admire the most, and so it was mounted in his chambers in the Palace of Jerusalem that night.

The blade was presented to an infant Solomon and his parents by Adonijah. The thirdborn twin son, only fourteen at the time, had no prospects to gain political power himself. And so, he knelt before Solomon in his crib, promising that he would remain loyal to the prince through turbulence and strife, to shield him from those who would seek to cause harm, and to promote his interests once he sat upon the Throne of Israel.

From the moment of his birth Solomon was ordained to be king. As soon as his son could speak his first words, David would begin to spend countless hours of the day from an early age instilling what it meant to be king. By the age of two Solomon was learning the practices of good governance and stewardship. The lessons then were simple, a necessity because Solomon had been so young. But they were essential nonetheless. David taught his son compassion, a necessary quality to show his people in times of difficulty, like famine or disease. Solomon was taught to share with other boys his age, and to challenge himself to accept the hardships that were accompanied by loving others, but above all loving himself – a trait that Solomon would, later in life, frequently fail to comprehend. As he grew and matured Solomon’s lessons grew in complexity as well. He learned about the intricacies of managing the state, monitoring debt and avoiding driving the kingdom to become a debtor state, to seek alliances and cooperation instead of war, and to seek true friendships above all else. The third lesson would come to greatly impact Solomon’s later life; he became a man that differentiated greatly between acquaintances and companions. Around those he saw as the former, he was reserved and tempered. Such behavior earned Solomon the moniker “The Silent King” in the early years of his reign. To those he saw as his companion, of which there were few, he treated them as equals, offered them safety and shelter whenever needed, and support for their states. Solomon also learned that the people he ruled were an extension of himself, as if they were family, and that he must nurture them as much as he could but not to the point where they would become dependent on him.

As a child Solomon was not shielded from the commoners of Jerusalem, and Israel as a whole. When not studying with his father, he would go with his mother, Bathsheba, into the city to surround themselves with the common people. He would learn their names, their stories, see their suffering, and the two would do their best to alleviate. But never once did Solomon, or any of his family, use their powers to better the people of Israel. King David had insisted on a philosophy of benign neglect; he opted for wise and reserved choices, rather than using their powers to end human suffering. And so, he went on with his family to learn what it meant to be king and continue good works, providing bread to the commoners and helping with commonplace human skills. By the age of seven he was helping priests in Jerusalem’s temple to heal the wounded and sick with medicine, not chakra. In no time he had become beloved by the people; his mere presence spread smiles across their downtrodden faces in times of crisis, and invoked cheers in times of prosperity.

But this isn’t to say that Solomon never came to harness his own innate powers. He was a very gifted boy, with an innate sense of his own bloodline, and the curiosity to tap into it. David had frequently cautioned his son against growing too comfortable with his inherently powerful Ōtsutsuki bloodline. He believed that such power was too much for humanity to handle and that, should he ever use them too much, would lead to corruption. Despite this, King David was wise enough to recognize that his son would, inevitably, come to use his magnificent gifts. And so, on Solomon’s fifth birthday King David allowed his son to study the arcane arts. King David’s regime was not strenuous, however. It was intended to only give his son a very rudimentary understanding of the nature of his powers. Fortunately, Solomon had no need to train or study; the gifts he was born with brought themselves to maturity; not because he was a genius, or because he had the perseverance to awaken them, but simply because the powers had brought themselves to light. By the age of six Solomon came to master all five nature transformations, and awaken his clan’s bloodline – the Byakugan. It was a remarkable level of mastery that even King David was impressed by. Solomon’s wise father recognized that his son still adhered to his logic; that carelessly using these powers could only lead to negative consequences, driving humanity down a much darker path.

Solomon’s seventh year marked a difficult time for the Kingdom of Jerusalem. It was that year that Absalom, King David’s third son and twin to Adonijah, led a rebellion in the kingdom’s northern provinces. The rebellion was preceded by growing unrest among local nobles in the northern provinces; dissent had begun to spread because the nobility had grown disgruntled with the favorable treatment that David and the royal family had given to the peasants. Yet, at the time, no one had anticipated their dissent to grow into a full-blown civil war. David sent Absalom to visit the borders of the kingdom on a diplomatic peace mission. Yet when he arrived in Hebron the prince instead assembled an army nearly 7,500 men strong. It consisted of the same disgruntled nobles that had been angered by David’s policies; the diplomatic mission had been a failure. To this day scholars on Israeli history do not fully understand the motivations behind Absalom’s rebellion against David and his family, capitalized through the dissent that had quickly spread in the north. Prior to the mission Absalom seemed to have maintained good ties with the family, and his descent from grace had been very sudden. And so, with their vast wealth as well as the backing and command of Prince Absalom, these nobles assembled an army of mercenaries and peasants under their command. It was an army that could nearly match the military might of Israel itself.

The Kingdom of Israel’s military under David was not remarkable, and some would even say nonexistent. In fact, during times of peace David preferred to disarm outright. The aging king hadn’t anticipated Absalom’s sudden betrayal, as well as the swift coalescing of rebellious noblemen. David and his generals hastily assembled an army of peasants that numbered only around 9,000 men; and while they outnumbered Absalom’s mercenary army, they certainly lacked the training and discipline necessary to fight against a professionally trained military. Within weeks many of the northern cities had fallen, or defected in the face of imminent siege. It wasn’t long before Absalom established a fully functional proto-kingdom capable of rivaling the legitimacy of Israel itself. Crisis set in at Jerusalem, fearing that Absalom’s claim to the throne would lead neighboring rivals to align with the thirdborn prince and support him.

Amnon, David’s eldest son and original heir to the throne before Solomon had been born, remained steadfastly loyal to his father alongside Adonijah. Rumors had spread for some time that Amnon had considered assembling his own army and staking a claim for himself, sending the entire House of David into a legitimacy crisis. The two Ōtsutsuki brothers agreed that, in order to protect their father’s throne and Solomon’s birthright, they would need to march forth. Amnon had trained diligently as a child to be a soldier, believing that in order to successfully manage a state one must wield the sword themselves. It was a skill that would prove very important in the coming battles. And so Amnon and Adonijah agreed that he would lead the army to battle against Absalom, while Adonijah would remain in Jerusalem to protect the Throne of Israel and its heir. With their plans set in motion Amnon led the inexperienced peasant army against Absalom’s proto-state. All the meanwhile Solomon, while not directly involved in the battle planning, was acutely aware of the crisis at hand. A boy of seven, he was noted by Queen Bathsheba’s handmaidens to have an incredibly prescient mind for politics; he understood that the northern provinces under Absalom’s control could no longer be relied upon. And as long as Absalom controlled those provinces Israel would remain cut off from the ocean, and subsequently from global trade. He recognized that this placed strain on his father and brothers, they only had so much time before their precious resources would run out. But Solomon was vexed by the strange reality of the rebellion in the first place; his brother Absalom, prior to rebellion, had shown no signs of anger or jealously. And so, it puzzled the young prince as to why he would rebel so suddenly.

One month after Amnon’s forces departed from Jerusalem, word returned that a decisive battle between the two armies had taken place outside of Hebron. It is said that the courier who delivered the letter to King David in his throne room did so with tears streaming down his eyes; the Old King could only sit at the edge of his throne, anxiety creeping down his spine, as he watched the courier slowly and dreadfully unseal the scroll. The report contained scarce details of the battle itself; but it is said that Amnon fought valiantly. Despite having 2,000 of his own men abandon him before battle, a symptom of an untrained and undisciplined military force, they managed to slay nearly one third of Absalom’s force. Most of the fighting had been done by Amnon himself, who is said to have killed hundreds of mercenaries singlehandedly. The courier’s voice stuttered before finishing the report, however, with tears streaming down both cheeks. He choked up and knelt before David, stating that Amnon was slain by Absalom personally, and that Absalom had done so with a type of ‘dark magic.’

Needless to say, David was disturbed and saddened by the news. But the Old King kept his composure against all odds. With Adonijah at his side he instructed his son to prepare the city’s defenses with what they could. He also told him to spread word that his other son, Absalom, had used forbidden magics to commit fratricide. Solomon immediately knew his father’s intent, despite his young age; the Old King sought to incite anger and hatred within the hearts of his loyal citizens in order to raise a second army that would fight to the end against the traitorous son. And so, within days the defenses of Jerusalem had been raised; over sixty percent of the population in the city had taken up arms and stationed themselves along the walls, fully prepared for the siege that would inevitably come. Adonijah was placed in charge with the protection of Prince Solomon, while David would command the city.

It is said that on the day Absalom arrived before the city walls with the remainder of his mercenary army, the Old King immediately recognized Absalom’s blood red eyes and grey skin – a change that horrified him. He was unsure what could have caused such a change in his son, but knew that some powers outside the norm was driving him to such horrid acts. The King made no attempt to parlay with his son, and instead instructed the defenders on the wall to lose their arrows upon the mercenary army. He knew that his son was lost to him, in mind and body. The siege itself lasted for nearly a week until Absalom himself stepped forth to destroy a considerable portion of Jerusalem’s outer wall. The defenders of that section were temporarily routed into the inner walls that surrounded the palace itself, allowing Absalom’s mercenaries to stream through it largely unabated. On the other sections of the wall the defenders continued to fight valiantly, preventing any of the hired blades to scale the walls and create additional weaknesses.

The second phase of the battle then took to the streets of Jerusalem. From house to house buildings burned; mothers took up arms against the invaders, using kitchen knives to defend their homes. The old, infirm, and children had all been taken to the safety of the inner walls before the battle had begun, leaving the families to protect their homes without fear of their loved ones being placed in immediate danger. But the true danger was not the soldiers fighting on the streets, it was the powers that drove Absalom. In the dead of night, while the battle still raged outside the walls of the palace, the forsaken son managed to breach the walls of Jerusalem in silence. It isn’t entirely clear how Absalom circumvented the defensive measures that King David had put in place around the palace to protect the young prince Solomon, but the few witnesses who watched him enter the palace speak of a black aura that enveloped the former son of David. It was as if he appeared in a cloud of black smoke, rather than traverse the dangerous defenses that protected the inner sanctuary.

When Absalom appeared in Solomon’s bedchambers the prince did not flee, or cry for his life. Instead the prince looked upon him with sorrow, pitying his lost elder brother as his mind was clearly forfeit to the powers that drove it. And while, at the time, Solomon could not hope to match Absalom’s superior fighting capability he knew that he was safe above all else. Prior to the battle beginning Solomon privately planned with Adonijah; the seven-year-old prince, for the first time, told his older brother that his twin would come in the night and bypass all of his father’s defenses. Adonijah was, reasonably so, skeptical of his brother’s claims. How could this young prince, so unfamiliar with the art of war and strategy, have such intimate knowledge of Absalom’s plans. But nonetheless Adonijah adhered to the young prince’s message, despite Solomon not having any authority to command him to do so. Unknown to the entire family at the time, it was the first instance of Solomon’s awakened Clairvoyance.

And so, when Absalom stood before Solomon at bedside, Adonijah appeared from behind him and emerged from the shadows. The third son of David was empowered by his trademark Ōtsutsuki bloodline, the Byakugan, and armed with nothing more than a traditional steel longsword and shield. But Absalom, strangely enough, was armed with nothing but his bare hands. It seemed that he had intended to strangle Solomon to death, but as Adonijah interceded he turned toward his twin brother. What transpired between the three is largely left to speculation; the boy that would grow into the Mage King hardly speaks of the event, even to those that are his close confidants. But what is known is that Absalom, overtaken by dark magics that were unknown to the world at large, launched himself at Adonijah in a maddened frenzy fueled by nothing other than bloodlust, ambition, and hatred. The battle that ensued between the two was brief, but bloody. Adonijah, armed with sword and shield, warded off Absalom’s relentless offense. Despite only using his hands, the first twin’s attacks were remarkably powerful and displayed an inhuman resilience, no doubt derived from the powers that fueled his body. Each time Adonijah would block his attack and follow with a strike from his blade Absalom would make no effort to evade. Each time the blade sliced through his darkened skin red blood would spurt out, as any human would. All the meanwhile Solomon hid near his bed, waiting for an opportunity to assist. It wouldn’t be long before his chance presented itself; Absalom’s offense had forced Adonijah into a corner with nothing but his shield to protect himself with. Solomon, by instinct, activated his own bloodline and reached for the ornate sword that had been gifted to him on the day of his birth. At the time it was not known as the Sword of King Solomon, or the Judgement; but with sword in hand Solomon struck at Absalom’s ankles, slicing the tendons from under him.

For the first time blood dirtied Solomon’s hands as he wounded his elder brother. All Solomon could manage was a surprised expression across his face, not having anticipated the mess it would cause as Absalom fell to the ground. Reacting to the changing tides of battle, Adonijah lurched forward from his corner and struck at Absalom driving his own blade through his twin’s heart, tears streaming down his face. In that moment Absalom, gravely wounded, rest his hand on his twin brother’s blade. The words exchanged are not known to this day, kept a hidden secret between Solomon and Adonijah. What is known is that Absalom died that night, and within hours his mercenary army was routed to Ephraim’s Wood, a glade a short distance from the outskirts of Jerusalem. The battle was won, and Jerusalem did not fall. With the mercenary army forces routed David and Adonijah pursued close behind, seeking to end the remnants of Absalom’s insurgent forces. When they finally reached Ephraim’s Wood, what little remained of the mercenaries either abandoned their posts or fought to the death. The nobles that had rebelled in support of Absalom were, for the most part, nowhere to be found; they had all fled to the West.

Unfortunately, David had no time to pursue, or to initiate an extensive inquisition to find the nobles that had supported Absalom’s cause. Instead he sought to mend the realm, to bring the Northern provinces back into the fold, and reestablish legitimacy in the eyes of rivalling kingdoms throughout Tobusekai. Historians that had recorded the battles in Absalom’s brief civil war note that it is entirely unclear what drove Absalom, a typically loyal son, to such extremes so quickly. Governors that controlled the Northern Israeli provinces had a number of interactions with Absalom; many were not truly loyal to the fallen twin prince, but had acquiesced for the benefit of their people. Those that quickly returned to the fold and sought David’s protection after the war reported that Absalom had behaved much like a schizophrenic; at times those close to him spoke of Absalom talking of whispers “from the sea.” He would oftentimes stare off into the distance, looking toward the Hokubu Ocean as if it provided him some level of solace.

The next year of Solomon’s life was spent travelling the kingdom with his father, while Adonijah worked on rebuilding the capital. The civil war was brief, lasting just under six months, the loss it inflicted upon the family of King David was immense; in such a short timespan the Old King of Israel had lost his firstborn son Amnon and Absalom. It is said by many that the stress and tragedy of the war caused David to age considerably; the man that, despite his age, was always energetic and compassionate began to decline into lethargy and bitterness. The transformation in David’s personality, while warranted, did impact his relationship with his remaining sons. The Old King would begin slowly withdrawing from public life, something that would become far more noticeable once the Northern provinces were once again brought back into the realm.

Solomon celebrated his eighth birthday in Hebron, the final destination on their royal progress. Hebron was the heart of Absalom’s rebellion; it was there that Absalom is said to have had divine inspiration to overthrow David and kill his younger brother. But David believed this ‘divine inspiration’ to be nothing more than the dark whispers that had seduced his son to revolt. Nonetheless, David and the young prince Solomon arrived in Hebron and were welcomed to a warm procession. It was vital that David secure the port city for Israel; their resources had run dangerously low toward the end of the war. Without assistance from Last Bastion, one of the few cities that still maintained their support for King David, Jerusalem would have likely run out of food in the middle of Absalom’s siege. Thus, David’s task was, at its heart, a critical diplomatic endeavor. But his bitterness at the tragedy that had befallen his family left him somewhat blinded to the realities at hand; and so, the eight-year-old Solomon was partially responsible for keeping his father in check and focused on the task at hand. The young prince provided a softer aspect to David, the tragic father that had lost two sons; he was cute to many, adored by others, and his presence brought happiness to their faces. The Old King and his son spent, in all, one week in Hebron; by the end of their visit they had brought the last rebel city back into the Kingdom of Israel, securing the throne once again.

The next two years of Solomon’s life were spent with Adonijah. David, after returning from their royal progress, had begun to increasingly withdraw from public life. David’s reign, up until now, had been recognized by his willingness to sit before his people and address their complaints. But after the civil war the Old King often retreated to the inner palace to meditate or read ancient scriptures. In his stead Adonijah and Solomon, along with Queen Bathsheba, would sit upon the Throne of Israel and speak with the commoners. Alongside Solomon’s newly discovered administrative duties, he continued to advance his arcane studies. On his ninth birthday his mother gifted Solomon an ancient text titled The Energies Which Govern; it was a book that revealed, to a limited extent, the nature of Yin and Yang and their powers to govern reality. Solomon was captivated by these inherent forces that existed within all life. But perhaps what was more interesting was that the text seemed to allude to the existence of the primordial life that came before civilization. The book made the argument that life originated from the sea, shaped by progenitors that reigned supreme before humanity’s advent. It was equally fascinating as it was puzzling to the young prince who, at the time, was far from reaching his true potential.

In the next year, four months after Solomon’s tenth birthday, King David and the young prince were present when their distant relative, Hagoromo Ōtsutsuki, introduced Ninshu to the world. The ceremony took place in the far East of Tobusekai, in a place that would become known as Hagoromo’s Last Hearth. There the Ōtsutsuki clan gathered as a group of humans, who became known as Hagoromo’s Chosen, had their spiritual energies connected with each other to; what followed was a magnificent ceremony of human bonding. Without even communicating those who became connected could sense the very lives and emotions of those around them. This moment in history was a critical moment that crystallized the growing schism between the Old King and Solomon’s philosophies, appearing as a reaction to the Sage’s decision. David appeared skeptical, likely a result of the cynicism he had developed after the civil war, believing that the introduction of such power would inevitably lead to greater wars and conflict. Solomon’s reaction was quite different, and one of the few moments that Solomon would express true free thought until long after his reign in Jerusalem had ended. To the young prince, whether humans destroyed their own civilizations or grew themselves into something better with chakra didn’t matter. He believed that humans should have the freedom to make that choice with their new-found gift, regardless of the consequences it might bring.

After the ceremony Solomon’s relationship with his father took a turn for the worse. The Old King’s bitterness had finally reached a critical point where it was unbearable to be around him. His father, who was originally very involved in Solomon’s education and upbringing, was now absent more often than not. He no longer accepted a ‘fatherly’ role in his son and heir’s life, delegating that role to be shared between Bathsheba and Adonijah. David no longer cared for his son’s feelings or thoughts, and only instructed him to ‘look forward’ toward the future and his kingship. Perhaps the assassination attempt on Solomon’s life had caused David to become more cautious toward his son, forcing him to focus only on the young prince’s future prospects as king.​

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“I've always been a man who will only sally forth in battles that he can win.”

The Old King David fell ill just after Solomon’s fifteenth birthday, in the fifth year after Hagoromo spread Ninshu through the world. David’s illness was not of the body, but of the mind; his father was plagued by bouts of hypoactive delirium as dementia began to set in. His father’s decline was further compounded by years of depression and withdrawal he had increasingly experienced after the civil war that claimed the lives of Amnon and Absalom. It was a difficult time in Solomon’s life; over the five years since Hagoromo’s Ceremony of Peace he and his father and only drifted apart further, with the latter resigning themselves almost exclusively to be in solitude and leave matters of the state to his wife and children. David’s declining health was attended to be an array of palace stewards and physicians. But Solomon and Adonijah insisted that they sit by their father’s side in his fits of delirium. In those moments David would show more affection for Solomon than he had in almost eight years since the rebellion.

The responsibilities of the infirm Old King were not forsaken. While Solomon and Adonijah spent their time with their father, Queen Bathsheba and David’s advisors attended to matters of state. The administrators believed it to be best that they keep the king’s health a state secret from the general population for the time being; it was not the commoners they were concerned over, but the nobility. Despite the Old King and Solomon’s best efforts reuniting the country there were still nobles that held aspirations for rebellion. But despite this many still noticed that King David was absent from his public administrative duties for months at a time. Inevitably word spread that the king, who had already been withdrawing from public life, was now perpetually absent along with his sons. Whispers began to spread through Jerusalem, claiming that the royal family had vanished from sight. But the wiser amongst the commoners knew that it was related to the king and his health; for nearly twenty years he had come to be known as the Old King, it was inevitable after all.

David remained in this state for nearly seven months, growing increasingly delirious with each passing day. Despite it all, Solomon remained by his side as much as he could. David’s attendants would later record during the reign of Solomon that he remained by his father’s side for hours on end, reading him stories and keeping him company; he would read from The Book of Proverbs, a famous text from the Kingdom’s state religion, to works from The Energies Which Govern. But finally, on the 23rd day of the sixth month of illness, David slid into a coma. At this point Bathsheba and her council of advisors declared a regency in place of the ailing king. The physicians that attended the Old King informed Solomon that his time was limited. The Regency Council established by Bathsheba, upon hearing this news, began to prepare for Solomon’s coronation. The Queen opted to leave these matters to the rest of the council and, after months of working hard to maintain the kingdom, could finally spend time with her husband. It was tragic; Bathsheba had increasingly become responsible for managing Israel and, as David’s mental state declined, continued to fill that role as she worked tirelessly for him. Finally, in David’s final days in a coma she could spend time with her king and husband. Five days later King David, the second King of Israel, passed away peacefully at the age of 70.

Solomon informed the regency that he did not wish to take his father’s crown until after the funeral procession. The ceremony was extensively planned by the regency. King David’s body would be taken in procession through the streets of Jerusalem for all to see. Thousands of viewers came forth to honor the late king, holding lit candles out into the night to illuminate David’s way to the temple named after his mother, the Temple of Nitzevet. There the priests of Jerusalem would anoint David’s body with incense and oils in preparation to pass to the afterlife. Meanwhile an array of priests and theologians lined the walls of the temple whispering prayers for the Old King. Solomon and Adonijah remained by David’s body for the entire funeral ceremony. The ceremony itself concluded with a funeral pyre, burning the Old King’s body and interring his ashes in the Temple of Nitzevet.

Solomon was ordained King of Israel within the week after the funeral ceremony by the regency council. But as he was still only fifteen, a few months from his birthday, and because the country still mourned for the loss of David, Solomon had yet to receive a coronation. After brief deliberations Solomon and his regency council agreed that a coronation should be delayed until his sixteenth birthday, the day he would come of age. Bathsheba remained on Solomon’s regency council, adopting the official title Queen-Mother. She was beloved by the people and proved instrumental in ensuring a peaceful transition between father and son. Likewise, Solomon offered Adonijah, his elder brother by a few years, a position on his council as well. It was an honor that he could hardly imagine refusing, and he accepted the position as Chief General and would take command of Israel’s armies under Solomon.

A few months later Solomon was officially coronated on his sixteenth birthday before the people of Jerusalem. The council summoned governors from each of the provinces to attend the ceremony, and each of them pledged their allegiance to David’s son. The coronation took place at the steps of the palace rather than any temple in particular; there Solomon was surrounded by priests and mages who each performed rituals in order to bless him and prepare him for his divinely ordained reign. By the end of the day David’s fourth son had become king; he was known as King Solomon, the third King of Israel.

Solomon’s first acts as king were made alongside the counsel of his advisors, most important of which was his mother Bathsheba. The first year of Solomon’s reign as king would establish him as a capable ruler and skilled administrator. The king was fortunate enough to have a group of advisors that had all assisted David in ruling before his death; it was a powerful experienced group that Solomon could call upon. For most of David’s reign Bathsheba was an active Queen; she frequently advocated for the advancement of basic domestic policies that would advance the wellbeing of the commoners. The Queen-Mother’s influence undoubtedly played a major role in Solomon’s administrative policies.

Solomon’s first act as king, with the support of his mother, was to declare a series of reforms. David’s reign had focused on flourishing trade and diplomatic expansion. And while the late Old King was honored in death as a wise and tempered man, his later years in solitude had led to neglected social issues. Solomon’s first actions took it upon himself to reform society; the first of these reforms saw to improving education. King Solomon wisely recognized that education was the cure to ignorance and poverty; with such reforms he hoped that he could elevate people out of poverty by creating new opportunities for children. Instead of becoming a simple farmer, now children could take apprenticeships to learn to blacksmith or metal work. They could become physicians and staff the hospitals, or they could study theology and become anointed priests of the Temple.

Solomon’s second reform was targeted toward poverty. The standard of living in Jerusalem was relatively high compared to the rest of the provinces, a product of King David’s trade policies. But this resulted in an uneven distribution in the state. The capital thrived off the neighboring provinces, using their resources for international trade that brought most of the wealth home to Jerusalem where it would stay. Solomon sought to change that; when he had gone on his royal progress with his father after the civil war one of the motivations for Hebron supporting Absalom was poor living conditions. They perceived the concentration of wealth in the capital to be of malicious design, and something they felt was unfair. To combat this, King Solomon and his council imposed a tax increase on wealthy merchants in the capital province; revenues from the taxes were redistributed to the governors of their respective provinces and invested toward infrastructure, public works, and residential construction projects. While this policy was not necessarily popular in the capital, it gained Solomon the critical support of the outlying provinces and secured the Throne of Israel from within. Within the first two years of Solomon’s reign poverty decreased by nearly 10.0%; the poor would more often find food on their table and a shelter to sleep in, and the middle class prospered. Solomon also allocated some of the new tax revenue toward constructing food repositories where the impoverished could seek small warm meals on harsh days; soup kitchens, bread distributaries, and other establishments began to emerge in major cities throughout the kingdom.

Solomon’s third reform was targeted toward the military. While his mother was instrumental in creating an effective social program that promoted education, fought poverty, and better distributed wealth, she was not versed in matters of war. For this, Solomon relied heavily on his older brother and advisor Adonijah. The Army of Israel under King David preferred isolationism; during times of peace they would disarm and return to their homes, leaving the state somewhat vulnerable in times of crisis. This proved all too true when Absalom raised a mercenary army, trained and disciplined. Solomon sought to create a new military for Israel, commanded by his brother Adonijah. For this Solomon levied an additional tax directed toward the noble class. While many nobles were still disgruntled with the House of David, few would likely rebel with a revitalized Israeli military and the support of the common people. With their power stripped from them the nobility made for a simple target for an additional tax. With the newfound revenue stream Solomon and his brother went to work establishing permanent military bases in the land between provinces; these bases served as established training facilities and created a strong projection of Solomon’s soon-to-be military might. He also armed the soldiers with the best weapons that could be forged at the time; steel swords and shields, cuir bouilli, and spears were all fresh forged for Solomon’s new military. He also outfitted the army with a number of chariots, and increased the size of the navy. His father had been particular fond of fostering strong trade practices, which did promote prosperity for most. Solomon saw to protect this prosperity by establishing Israel as a powerful naval force in the East. Within five years of Solomon’s military improvements, the Kingdom of Israel became a regional hegemon. To extend Israel’s influence outside of its borders, Solomon funded a number of trading outposts that would be protected by his military. These outposts would come to be used by a number of nations in Tobusekai, each paying tribute to the Israeli army for their protection. David had succeeded in connecting Israel’s economy to the rest of the world, but Solomon had established it as a hegemon. A dominant force that commanded global respect.

Solomon’s three reforms cemented his popularity at home; while not all of his policies were universally popular, even his political rivals, of which there were few, acknowledged his wisdom. It wasn’t long until the young King Solomon became known as the Wise King. His social programs, progressive taxation, infrastructure projects, and public works built a foundation for a prosperous Kingdom of Israel for decades to come. With his military expansion he established Israel as the preeminent force in Tobusekai, and projected naval might across the Hokubu Ocean. This first phase of Solomon’s reign, known as the Great Reforms, lasted for a period of five years. The period of Great Reforms is noted to have ended by historians when the Queen-Mother Bathsheba abdicated her position as advisor; the Queen-Mother decided that, in her old age, she no longer had the energy to govern. She believed that her son could now rule in his own right, without the need for a relic from the past administration. Adonijah would remain by Solomon’s side, commanding the military and assisting where he could on certain social issues.

After the Queen-Mother stepped down from her advisory position, Solomon decided to employ an official historian to collect a state account of Solomon’s reign. The reign of previous kings of Israel had only been kept in scattered documents by a number of different historians through the annals of time. These records often conflicted with one another, creating a number of contradictions in critical events that took place in Israel’s history. After weeks of deliberation amongst the council the name Abel came to mind for the position of Court Historian. Abel had composed his own history texts on past events in Ōtsutsuki history. Texts like Hagoromo’s Chosen: The First Bearers of Ninshu and The Tragedy of King David caught Solomon’s attention in particular, as they were both events that he had firsthand knowledge of. He found that the recollections were remarkably accurate, even though Abel was not present at Hagoromo’s ceremony or Absalom’s civil war. This surprised Solomon, provoking him to investigate the scholar’s work; he found that Abel relied on accounts from many different sources to compose a single coherent retelling of events. It is said that same day the king smiled, and welcomed Abel to the royal court. Abel would, during Solomon’s reign, compose his greatest work – The Wisdom of King Solomon.

One of the first chapters of Abel’s great work is titled The Judgement of King Solomon the Wise. The story recorded within recounts the events of a dispute between two women, Adinah and Kuna. The veracity of the account is debated among Tobusekai scholars today, given the nature of the story compared to the rest of Abel’s works. It is perhaps best thought of as an anecdote to give weight to Solomon’s true wisdom. The account centers around the two women Adinah and Kuna; they had come before the Wise King Solomon disputing over who was the mother of a particular infant boy. Solomon sat silently atop his throne while the two women argued endlessly about who was the true mother. Within hours the throne room had divided into two factions: those who believed that Adinah was the mother, and those who placed their faith in Kuna. Abel reports that nearly four hours passed before Solomon spoke a single word, allowing for chaos to nearly envelop the entire throne room. Finally, the Wise King stood up from his throne and approached the women. With a warm smile across his face Solomon spoke to his Guard Captain, commanding him to bring his blade. It was the same blade that had been used to assist in slaying Absalom, cutting his tendons from his ankles. Solomon then spoke to the women, stating that to easily resolve such an endless dispute he would simply cut the child in half, to be shared by both women. The entire throne room gasped at the Wise King’s command as he drew his blade from its scabbard. And just as he gripped its pommel, one of the women immediately renounced her claim to the child. She cried out that she would rather give the child up than see it killed. With her words Solomon tipped the blade downward and rest it against his throne. He placed both hands on the crying woman’s shoulders and declared her the mother, as she was the one who had shown true compassion for the child. It was that day that Solomon’s sword became known as the Sword of King Solomon, or at other times referred to as Judgement. Abel’s account propagated throughout the kingdom and beyond, as historical recollections from throughout Tobusekai, from different historians, around this time period can be seen to talk about, in some form or another, the events of this trial. Rumors of Solomon’s great wisdom and benevolence were abuzz throughout the Eastern Continent.

In the following year, near the king’s twenty-second birthday, the common people began to wonder when the Wise King might marry. During his time as king he had a number of suitors, both from within the kingdom and in neighboring countries. The peasants would joke amongst themselves that the Wise King Solomon had worked so hard he had forgotten the most important duty of any monarch, to continue the royal bloodline. There was some truth to that; but the reality of it was that no suitor had ever piqued Solomon’s interest. Many had come because of his wealth, and others for the fame of marrying into his bloodline. But these women did not interest the Wise King. But as fate would have it, Solomon would soon marry.

It didn’t take long for Solomon’s reforms to spark whispers of his wisdom and benevolence throughout the world. A neighboring kingdom, called Sheba, soon heard of the Wise King’s nature; word had already reached of Solomon’s great wealth and bloodline, but few had spoken of his great wisdom. Hearing of Solomon’s wisdom, the Queen of Sheba planned for a diplomatic visit to the Kingdom of Israel just weeks before Solomon’s twenty-second birthday. As was customary the Queen of Sheba brought with her numerous wares and valuables from her kingdom to pay tribute and show respect to the Wise King Solomon. But the gifts she brought were nothing more than that, simple trinkets that would ultimately mean nothing to him. Her true gift was a trial of wisdom for Solomon. Should the king succeed and prove his with, the Queen of Sheba would give Solomon her heart. A brief record of the Queen’s visit is noted in the text Tributes to the King:

The aroma of sandalwood, an assortment of mother-of-pearl inlays
And a valuable agate with a star-patterned impurity.
The Cloisonné Wares and Treasures that were ready to be presented to the king, just only fractured the spine of the camels.
What awaits at the end is either the Wisdom or Virtue of the Judge King.
But the true gift is the Queen’s Heart, overflowing with affection that no one can surpass.

The Queen of Sheba, who would come to be known simply as Sheba, reached Jerusalem later that month from her southern kingdom. She arrived in magnificent fashion; a military procession accompanied by a caravan of camels transporting the vast array of gifts and riches to present to King Solomon. But the Wise King was not impressed by Sheba’s grandiose presentation, as he already lived a life of grand wealth; but that was the Queen’s plan all along. As recorded by Abel in his sixth chapter, The Queen of Majesty, the future Queen and King first met at the gates of Jerusalem. It was there that Sheba humbly asked King Solomon for a demonstration of his wisdom, presenting him with three riddles, these riddles would eventually become known as the Three Enigmas: Achat, Shtayim, and Shalosh. Abel, at the request of the Wise King, did not record the riddles or their solutions; the only record of the Three Enigmas was an ancient scroll said to have originated from an island off the southern coast of Tobusekai that has long since been lost to humanity, submerged deep in the Kaijuu Ocean after five hundred years. As Abel writes, Solomon pondered the riddles for a short time before finally seeing through them, providing precise answers to each of the Enigmas. Sheba was impressed by Solomon’s wisdom, and the way that Jerusalem and Israel as a whole had prospered under his rule. Before she even passed through the Gates of Jerusalem Sheba gave Solomon her heart. The Wise King opened the gates, and welcomed his soon-to-be wife into his home.

Abel’s seventh chapter, The Great Royal Progress, centers around the weeks before King Solomon’s wedding to Sheba where they go on their first royal progress together. Solomon wanted to show Sheba more than just the great capital city of Jerusalem; and while his decision broke with tradition, that a royal progress should only be done with king and queen, he felt it was important. They traveled from Jerusalem to Sidon and Tyre along the coast, to Hebron and Gaza; they crossed over the rivers of Tobusekai to reach Bethlehem, and then returned to Jerusalem just days before their grand wedding. As they traveled the governors and nobility would join their progress and return to Jerusalem with them to witness the great wedding. It was on the eve of Solomon’s birthday that he and Sheba were married. Up until their marriage Solomon’s life with his family was largely cold and indifferent, especially in the later years when his father’s health began to decline. For the most part his mother, the Queen Bathsheba, was entirely focused on ruling in her father’s place and his father spent a majority of their time together teaching his son how to rule. It is for this reason that Abel notes the warmth that Solomon and Sheba shared; their time together, noted in almost all chapters of his history text, was warm, beautiful, and thoughtful. Unlike the king, Sheba was not born as an ordained queen who was destined to rule. She was born a human and lived among them each day of her life. Up until now Solomon hadn’t experienced romance; it was something outside his normal scope of understanding. Yet when they wed it was a moment of respite from his destiny. It was ironic in a sense; to Solomon his wedding to Sheba was yet another monarchical duty. It was the responsibility to sire a child as heir to the Throne of Israel. But that duty gave rise to something much more beautiful and meaningful.

Abel’s eighth chapter is titled Tragedy and Progeny. He writes that the three years following the king and queen’s wedding was largely uneventful. King Solomon’s administration continued to promote their social policies throughout Israel. The chapter is aptly named for two events that occurred within quick succession, the death of Solomon’s mother and the birth of his first son Rehoboam. Bathsheba’s death struck the kingdom suddenly; unlike her late husband David, Bathsheba had no gradual decline to death. In fact, as Abel recounts, Bathsheba’s death practically happened overnight. One night the Queen-Mother simply did not wake from her slumber in the morning, her handmaidens immediately running to King Solomon to inform him. Within the hour Solomon’s own physicians were at his mother’s bed examining her; it did not take long for them to report that the Queen-Mother’s heart had simply stopped in her sleep overnight, a peaceful passing. She died at the age of seventy-four. Sadness gripped the kingdom, but King Solomon had known that the day would come where his mother would pass from the world. In her final years she had found peace that remained elusive to her while she ruled with her son, and at King David’s side. She frequently told Solomon that those final years of her life were the most tranquil she could have ever hoped for.

But the tragedy that overcame the kingdom soon transformed into happiness. A full moon had passed when Queen Sheba discovered that she was with child; within hours the announcement was made to Jerusalem that the Wise King would soon be a father. Just as fast as Israel turned to sorrow at the death of Bathsheba did it turn to revelry at the news of Queen Sheba’s child; citizens of Jerusalem took to the streets celebrating for nearly a week. For the months that Sheba was pregnant Solomon’s council took to ruling the state. At its head was Adonijah, the military commander. The council had insisted, to King Solomon’s chagrin, that the king remain by his queen’s side for the duration of the pregnancy. Abel writes that the king was displeased by the council’s suggestion, but they did not relent and continued to insist that he use the time to recuperate and care for his wife personally. Months later Sheba gave birth to a young prince who they named Rehoboam; he became the designated heir of the Kingdom of Israel.

The penultimate chapter of Abel’s Wisdom of King Solomon was titled The Peace of Solomon; the historian aptly begins his chapter with a peculiar note, “The years following Prince Rehoboam’s birth were marked by sheer mystery surrounding the Wise King’s reign. Like his father before him, Solomon increasingly allowed the council to rule in his place while he dedicated himself to establish his legacy as the Mage King.” As his title and opening lines suggest, the reign of King Solomon after the death of his mother and birth of his son was met by an era of unprecedented peace; not only in Israel, but throughout Tobusekai as a whole. It was during this time that Solomon allowed his council to perform more of the day to day duties ruling the realm while he raised Rehoboam. Like his father before him Solomon and Sheba spent much time teaching his son the necessary skills to govern. But this critical chapter in Abel’s history does not focus on Rehoboam or Sheba, but rather entirely on Solomon’s activities as he matured; the now Wise King would soon become known as the Mage King, or the King of Magic. Abel leaves a footnote that the following chapter was entirely based on recollections from Solomon himself. In it he writes of one of the most important days of Solomon’s life, the day he received revelation.

One night while Solomon was dreaming in bed, he was visited by a being he could only describe as God; in his dream God spoke to Solomon, “You are qualified. Speak your wishes, and I shall grant them.” It was in this moment that Solomon’s temperament and wisdom was exemplified, establishing him as one of the wisest kings. Solomon spoke to God and told him that he only sought wisdom, rather than other human desires like wealth, influence, or power. The answer, according to Solomon, satisfied God, proving that Solomon had the qualifications to obtain “true wisdom.” And thus, God promised that Solomon would receive wisdom in life. When Solomon awoke later that morning, he did so with ten golden rings upon both his hands, as physical proof of being recognized by God. Perhaps more shockingly was that the Wise King opened his eyes to discover an ascended Byakugan – the Tenseigan. It was the heightened form of his Clairvoyance, eyes that could discern the world and its mysteries. With it came an inherent mastery over the energies that Solomon had read from his text The Energies Which Govern; his Six Paths Senjutsu and Yin-Yang Release came to allow Solomon to transcend age. And his rings came to be recognized as the source of magecraft that employs angels and demons, something that he would later record in the Key of Solomon, known as Ars Goetia. It was this day that the Wise King Solomon would transcend to become the King of Magic.

After waking from his revelation Solomon ventured into the heart of Jerusalem to surround himself with commoners. As if predestined Solomon encountered a boy no more than one year old. Abel personally accompanied Solomon on this journey into the city at the king’s request, recording all that happened between the boy, his family, and the Mage King. The boy, named Jacob, was blind and deaf. It was an affliction that caused his parents considerable sadness and heart ache. He would, they said, never see the light of day or his father’s face for all his life. Solomon looked down upon the boy with somber eyes and pressed his index and middle finger against his forehead without uttering a word. Moments later the boy’s eyes slowly opened and began darting from side to side as light returned to them. Left baffled, Jacob’s parents began crying in happiness when they realized that the king had performed a miracle. Their cries invoked a reaction that also confirmed that Jacob could hear. According to Abel it is the only miracle that Solomon ever performed after receiving divine revelation; it epitomized the Mage King’s prudence, and was physical proof that he had received God’s wisdom. It was the day that Solomon began to build his legacy as the King of Magic.

The remainder of The Peace of Solomon centers around the king’s second child, Menelik, and Solomon’s reinvigorated economic policy. After his revelations Solomon once again involved himself considerably in the administration of the state. The revelations he had received from God drove him further than ever before to lead the Kingdom of Israel to prosperity; he initiated a new series of public reforms which expanded the city of Jerusalem itself considerably. A number of new theaters, food distribution centers, and water repositories were constructed throughout Jerusalem and beyond. The king also spent more hours than ever before addressing his peoples’ complaints at court; Abel records that on some days Solomon would go ten hours consecutively without food or drink while he listened to their concerns. Fortunately, the king had Rehoboam, who was now twenty, by his side, as well as an aging Adonijah. The two coordinated well with him, assisting in day to day administration. But as Abel writes, sometime after Solomon receives his revelations Adonijah had grown restless in his capacity as commander. One winter evening he came before the king atop his throne and asked for his freedom. “My king and brother,” Adonijah spoke, kneeling before the Mage King, “For so long I have lived in your shadow. You were the fourth born, yet you are king. You were the gifted child, and so you are strong. I only ask that, after so many years of service, you let me seek my own destiny outside these great Jerusalem walls.” Solomon was saddened at his elder brother’s request, but nonetheless granted his wish and allowed him to abdicate from his position as commander. Solomon would come to accept that burden as well, believing there to be no better replacement for Adonijah’s position. All record of Adonijah vanishes after this day; the only man who knew where the Commander of the Israeli Military had gone was King Solomon himself who, to this day, knows that his brother still lives.

Months after Adonijah abdicated from his position as commander, Queen Sheba and Solomon announced that she was pregnant with their second child. By this point Rehoboam was twenty years old. The kingdom was overjoyed to hear that another young prince would soon join the House of David. Abel leaves a peculiar note in regards to Solomon’s reaction; it seemed that the King of Magic had known of his queen’s pregnancy for some time in advance. Many failed to understand exactly what could invoke such a response from the king; but those who understood Solomon’s Tenseigan knew that the king was well aware of the affairs at hand. Solomon, who had spent his entire life as prince and king, shifted his attention to what the divine had conferred upon him – seeking true wisdom. After a few months Sheba gave birth to yet another son, his name was Menelik.

A remarkable and consequential dichotomy formed between Rehoboam and Menelik, something that Abel took particular care to note in his history. Rehoboam had grown into a skilled statesman; he was polite, diplomatic, and had a keen sense for politics. He was everything that Solomon was intellectually. A man that sought wisdom, with a restrained temperament and calm disposition. But many spoke of weak Ōtsutsuki genetics in him; it seemed that the elder son did not inherent any of the Mage King’s gifts. This contrasted to Menelik’s immense talent for combat. He had awakened his Byakugan by the age of seven, which contrasted with Rehoboam’s inability to activate the bloodline at all. Menelik had a mind for battle. He was hotheaded, impatient yet strategic, with a temper that often drove him to arguments and violence. He had little interest in intellectual topics, especially history. Abel notes often that Menelik would frequently tease him in the throne room, calling him nothing more than a glorified scribe. These outbursts were often quelled by Sheba and Solomon, but the royal parents could not always be by the young prince’s side. More often than not he overwhelmed his caretakers when his parents were absent. Rehoboam and Menelik were essentially opposites and this reflected in their relationship. The two would argue frequently. Menelik would be frustrated by Rehoboam’s elder brother status and vast breadth of knowledge, while Rehoboam would become frightened when Menelik displayed his Ōtsutsuki heritage. Solomon often appeared troubled during these moments, but said very little.

Abel’s final chapter, The Temple of Solomon, remains incomplete; the historian had died in the final years of Solomon’s reign, passing from old age. The final pages of his work describe a great project that Solomon undertook himself, the construction of the Temple of Solomon. It was Solomon’s personal project that, like his father who constructed the Temple of Nitzevet, would be his final gift to Israel. But the scale that Solomon intended for the temple would have taken years, if not decades, to complete. It was then Solomon would employ the pinnacle of his powers, the primordial energies of Yin and Yang were brought together in a union to access a higher dimension of power that normal humans could not hope to access. Combining this with his immense chakra Solomon shaped and summoned the Seventy-Two Demon Gods as his familiars. The ritual created vessels into the spiritual demons, granting them corporeal form imbued with life. Derived from Yin-Yang Release, the demons could use their powers to shapeshift at will in order to abandon their demonic pillar form for more humanoid bodies. Using their collective immense strength, the demons and Solomon worked to construct the Temple of Solomon within a year, rather than the decades that had originally been projected to complete the work. Abel notes that the temple, while magnificent, was not built to survive time, even though it could have been. Rather, as if a testament to Solomon’s wisdom, it was built to wither away with humanity when no longer cared for. It was a crystallization of Solomon’s philosophy that death is a natural part of life. Abel died in the same year, with the completion of the Temple of Solomon bringing an end to his great work.

In his final year of rule Rehoboam had reached the age of thirty-two, and Solomon secretly acknowledged that it was time to pass the crown to his son in order to fulfill his birthright. Since his revelation Solomon had come to be ageless, with many calling him the Eternal King. Ultimately Solomon knew that it would not be wise for the kingdom to be ruled by one who could escape death. With the Temple of Solomon completed the Mage King decided to vanish in the dead of night. He confided in Queen Sheba that he knew the day healed the blind and deaf boy it was one true moment of freedom that he experienced in his entire life since becoming king, having lived life as simply a device for gods and men. It was that day he could feel himself as Solomon, the human, rather than Solomon, the king. And so, the Mage King vanished, never to be seen again in Jerusalem. Rehoboam succeeded his father shortly after, being coronated within the month. Within the year Queen Sheba passed away peacefully, but storms loomed on the horizon for the Kingdom of Israel. Within five years a crippling rebellion would break out between the two children of Solomon, eerily reminiscent of Absalom’s rebellion nearly half a century ago. Menelik’s revolt had torn the country in two, with his kingdom becoming known as the Kingdom of Judah. Israel would never be united again as the two lines of Solomon were torn in half and would, in time, wither away in the annals of time after a number of wars and famine. Solomon’s legacy was left behind in the form of his riches as well as a single tablet that recorded, for the first time, the existence of the Demon God familiars.​

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“Thus, I have never lived for one second as myself. I was just a device named King Solomon.”

After Solomon’s departure from Jerusalem the former king led a largely directionless life, with only a vague notion of achieving wisdom and freedom. Surprisingly, the former king had become quite apathetic for what became of Israel after leaving it, an example of his great indifference toward the finality of humanity. But Solomon had known, from the moment that Menelik had been conceived, of the fate of the kingdom that he and his father David had worked so hard to forge. It wasn’t that he didn’t love his homeland; but he knew that in his heart he must let it go so that it could grow without him, and so he could grow without it. In the days that followed Solomon adopted a new persona; he began to travel the world under the guise of Roman, or Romani. He chose this name as a loving tribute to his wife Sheba; the name Roman derived from romanticism, seeming like the ideal choice for a man who had fallen in love with a woman he viewed as far better than himself. Solomon took to the roads under his new persona, disguising himself as a physician without borders. From Tobusekai to the far western reaches of the Badlands of Earth Solomon tended to humans who suffered. While he did not perform any miracles, he would still tend to their wounds and suffering in the most human way that he knew how.

He quickly discovered that, as a traveling physician, he would meet humans of all different heritages with stories that outnumbered the stars in the sky. He shared in their experiences and grew as a man because of it. For the first time in his life Solomon had direction, and the freedom to pursue it since leaving Jerusalem. It wasn’t only the concept of freedom that enticed him, but that he could pursue true wisdom as God had told him without the shackles of monarchical life. Since building the Great Temple at Jerusalem Solomon had not advanced his understanding of his own familiars. But he had always been intrigued by their existence as spiritual entities that lived within the spectrum of life. Solomon came to experiment with other spirits and demons that would eventually come to form the basis for Goetic Theurgy, Solomon’s practice of imbuing spirits into inanimate ritual daggers and tethering them to vessels. It was the first expansion of the concept of the Seventy-Two Demon Gods, and the first of three teachings in what would become known as the Ars Goetia.

Solomon’s experiments with Goetic Theurgy would serve the first of three lessons in the Key of Solomon, a grimoire that the Mage King wrote in the early first century around the year 105. But Solomon’s experiments were controversial at best. The Divine Workings of Goetia, or Goetic Theurgy, dealt in the realm of the spiritual. In the hierarchy of Solomon’s demons, there exists the Seventy-Two Demon Gods which form the aggregate known as Goetia, the Demon God King. But beneath this hierarchy exist an endless array of demons and spirits which form the lesser tier of spiritual existence. Solomon’s work within Goetic Theurgy began in the year 88, but did not finish until seven years later; it was, in his own words, one of his most trying and difficult undertakings given the dark stain it represents on his own conscience. Goetic Theurgy, compared to the broader Key of Solomon, reveals a much darker history into the Mage King’s life. It gave the Key of Solomon the infamous legacy it holds today.

Solomon’s precursory experiments began with the concept of spirits within physical vessels. His creation of Ars Goetia revealed that spirits can inhabit physical bodies; this reality became true the moment that Solomon, through the Creation of All Things, birthed the physical vessels that the Seventy-Two Demon Gods inhabit. It was a simple question he sought an answer to; can a spirit be bound to a physical vessel, living or non-living, preexisting and not formed from a union of Yin-Yang Release?

Work began examining how a spirit might possess or bind to a living vessel; to the few that had studied Yin Release, this technique would later become known as the Hungry Ghost. A generic spiritual entity that could bind its spiritual energy to that of a living host. Solomon tinkered with the technique to great lengths; his experiments started with attempting to understand the spiritual bond itself, discovering that the spiritual bond was more aptly compared to that of a tether. A tether that could be manipulated and controlled for better or worse of the tethered victim. He would use animals, himself, or even his infirm patients at times to understand this mechanism. Soon he found that the tether could act as a connection between the user’s own chakra and spiritual energy as well as their target’s. The revelation formed the basis for the style of Goetic Theurgy as it is known today. Solomon advanced the study by creating a non-living vessel through Yin Release; aptly he named these creations Athame, ritual daggers that were commonly used throughout the ancient cultures of Tobusekai.

Solomon’s experiments and activities did not go unnoticed, however. A mere two years after Solomon finished the Key of Solomon in 107 another with eyes similar to Solomon’s own pierced through the veil of space and time to see the truth surrounding the King of Magic’s experiments. Someone had begun to interfere in Solomon’s mind, regularly attempting to breach it in order to gain better understanding of his activities. It was Merlin, the Incubus that often called himself the Magus of Flowers, that had been attempting to penetrate into the Mage King’s dreams. Merlin, like Solomon, is someone who exists outside the boundary of humanity. Merlin, a half Incubus and half human, is a famed Dreamwalker, a mage that infiltrates others’ minds through their dreams and interferes in their subconscious.

But Solomon did not rest idle whiel the Magus of Flowers continued his interference; his antics had quickly begun to wear on the Mage King’s patience. It wasn’t long before Solomon developed his own spiritual defenses to protect himself against the continued mental games played by Merlin. The mage’s tactics thus far had been to only briefly penetrate his mind or his dreams, remaining elusive in an ephemeral attempt to pry information from Solomon’s consciousness. Thus, Solomon decided to trap the Magus of Flowers. The arcane was no mystery to the former King of Israel; his childhood surrounded him with a number of mages and arcanists that had developed or studied forms of fighting that erected mental defenses within the mind. Building his knowledge off of his predecessors, as well as using his own mastery over Yin-Yang Release, Solomon came to master the style known as the Spirits of Balance, a school of magecraft that employs the use of Yin-Yang energies to augment the user’s own spiritual defenses and sealing techniques.

The fateful dream that Merlin chose to intrude upon was one of Solomon’s most personal moments with Queen Sheba. The devious Magus of Flowers adopted the visage of Sheba in. Solomon’s dream, believing that his form would fool the Mage King. But Solomon was aware of Merlin’s presence in the dream, yet despite this he played along. And so, the tranquil moment that he shared with Queen Sheba played out as he remembered it. The two sat atop a hill that overlooked the palace of Jerusalem. Sheba rested her hand atop Solomon’s as they sit in the grassy hill, wind gently grazing their fair exotic skin. Solomon reminisced with her, “I once sat upon this hill when my elder brother, Absalom, returned to Jerusalem with an army at his back. It was that day, and only that day, where I felt true sorrow.” Merlin, in the guise of Sheba, turned to her husband and rest her head on his shoulder, nuzzling her hair against his skin. “And now you look upon it with warmth and fondness. Do not burden yourself with the tragedy of the past, my king.” The memory played out identically to how it had when it occurred between Solomon and Sheba then in life and the Mage King often reflects on it as a tender moment. Their conversation drifted from to topic, until Merlin finally broke with the dream itself and inquired to Solomon why he insists on remaining a neutral bystander in the fate of humanity rather than intervention. It was then Solomon ended the charade, shedding light on Merlin’s deception and scolding him for his persistence interference in the minds of others.

Merlin was not dissimilar to Solomon when one ignores their antithetical philosophies. Merlin, like Solomon, is a half-blooded human; he has transcended time and the physical limitations of the human body, allowing him to live eternally – perhaps even older than Solomon himself. It led Merlin to exist outside of the human experience; but unlike Solomon, who lived with a dispassionate and almost cold indifference to human suffering in general, Merlin felt a burning love for the history that humans forged. Because of this Merlin frequently, almost to a fault, interferes in the lives of humans. Both were highly skilled mages and combatants, having mastered Yin-Yang Release to the highest possible point. Yet Merlin, as an embodiment for the future of humanity and the light it brings, had mastered Yang. While Solomon, an embodiment of the past, mastered Yin. But the two mages differ on a fundamental philosophical level; one believes in inference while the other remains stubborn in keeping divinity from influencing the fate of humanity.

As Solomon trapped Merlin, the dream faded to black. The once shining hills of Jerusalem melted into nothingness as the mental defenses erected by Spirits of Balance returned the two subconscious entities back into the confines of Solomon’s fortified mind. There Merlin was locked within a mental cage of sorts, unable to escape; he was helpless before the King of Magic. Uncharacteristically, Solomon mocked the Magus of Flowers for his uselessness and inability to see what was so obviously set in front of his own eyes; all Merlin could do was concede that his own Clairvoyance had indeed failed to perceive such a trap set by the Mage King. Perhaps he had grown too used to interfering in the lives of commoners often, leading him to grow dull against a skilled opponent. Once the mocking had subsided Solomon willed the Spirits of Balance to transport them to Ars Paulina, a subsection of Solomon’s consciousness dedicated for his own inner spiritual workshop, separated from physical reality in the void space of his mind. With Merlin still trapped, the two began conversing; but not as enemies, rather as equals. Some would even say they became friends. The conversation fluctuated between heated arguments and mocking to speaking about their favorite experiences in life, their time as mages, and the secrets that they had learned along the way.

Their conversation continued for what felt like hours in a subconscious reality separated from space and time. But in truth, only a few moments had passed in the real world where Solomon was still soundly sleeping in a simple tent on the outskirts of a battlefield between two neighboring tribes. But soon the conversation drifted to another peculiar topic of interests of Solomon’s: The Kingdom of Camelot. Camelot existed parallel to the Kingdom of Jerusalem, but Arthur had yet to take the throne during Solomon’s reign. Camelot had been situated on the opposite western edge of Tobusekai, near where the modern-day Avalon is situated. Camelot hadn’t shaped itself into a monarchy until after Rehoboam and Menelik’s civil war, tearing Israel in half. Many refugees of that civil war fled west to the coastal cities under Camelot’s protection. The migration transformed what was originally a disparate collection of city-states into a fully functioning unified monarchy, coalescing into what would become known as the Kingdom of Camelot by the year 108. The burgeoning city was ruled by King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table, an elite warrior-knight aristocracy that controlled the city and the surrounding regions. They took it upon themselves to protect the poor, weary, and those in need and eventually formed a functioning kingdom around them.

But Merlin’s interest in Camelot was not strictly with King Arthur, but also with two relatively unknown children at the time: the twins that were born to one of the greatest knights known to the young kingdom, Sir Lancelot, Knight of the Lake. At the time the two children did not even live in Camelot yet; they lived in a village on the outskirts of the city with their mother Elaine. . The twins, one boy and one girl, were named Galahad and Amara respectively, born just over a year ago. Interestingly, they were bastard children; Elaine had conceived them out of wedlock with Lancelot sometime prior. Solomon was saddened at the knowledge of them; with their Clairvoyance the two mages knew the fate that would befall Camelot, and them. It was a moment of sorrow for Merlin, having found the children to be remarkably beautiful despite being born of wedlock. He recalled seeing her beautiful brown hair and its contrast with Galahad’s golden-blonde curls. But Solomon interrupted the Magus of Flowers, warning him that such feelings were exactly what would lead to the downfall of Camelot. He warned that Merlin’s own interfering in the lives of the Knights would end up indirectly bringing ruin upon the city anyway, having seen Mordred’s rebellion against the kingdom. But despite both men knowing this, they had still come to different conclusions based on their premonitions. Merlin insisted that no matter what he would intervene in their lives and give them the training they needed to prepare to embrace their destinies, no matter how cruel. Solomon bemoaned Merlin, imploring him to see the true suffering his actions would cause and the unnatural end to a kingdom that had done so much good. But Merlin refused to surrender his ideals; he believed that it was far more important Galahad achieve his destiny as the Grandmaster of the Knights Radiant, while Amara would go on to become the master of the Fallen Knights. Solomon scowled at the thought, knowing that such a destiny would see Amara trapped for over six hundred years in lonely isolation, locked within a seal that none could escape. All because Merlin would intervene in their lives and eventually bring about the fall of Camelot.

“Your interference will cost thousand of lives. And for what? To inflict tragedy upon two innocent children? Had you not convinced Lancelot to take them instead of turning them away, then Camelot never would have fallen, the siblings would have led peaceful lives, and the Great Schism would never have happened. Thousand of lives weighed against two mere children. The answer should have been clear!”

Eventually their time together came to an end. Despite Solomon’s own protests and conflict, he freed Merlin from his bindings in Ars Paulina. It left Solomon pondering the situation that would, within less than two decades, befall Camelot and leave nothing but ruins and sadness. It was clear that Merlin’s ultimate design was to see the rise of Avalon and the Knights Radiant, even if it meant fabricating a false destiny for these children. The King of Magic was vexed, still unable to understand why Merlin felt so strongly that the Knights Radiant would be more important than thousands of innocent human lives. It was sentencing Camelot to a death sentence it did not deserve, and two children to a life of hatred and revilement. He sighed in frustration, deciding to personally observe the children of Light and Darkness himself.

The following year Solomon made his return trip to Tobusekai, the first in decades; but his journey was not meant to take him to the ruins of Jerusalem or Israel, but instead to Camelot’s gates under the guise of Romani. Since adopting his new name the pseudonym Romani developed its own disguise; a young, tall, fluffy-red haired doctor with a gentle face that hid Solomon’s ancient history.

Four decades had passed since the downfall of Israel; the kingdom, which had split into Judah and Israel Proper bore no resemblance to Solomon’s unified and strengthened kingdom. His children had since died, yet his bloodline lived on through the remainder of the House of David. But his family’s power and prestige had waned. Memories of Solomon were lost now in the annals of history. Only historians and various arcanists recalled his name, and fewer did so fondly. But the passage of time and history hardly bothered him. It was the natural progression of time; the wearing of a stone in a desert as the winds swept across it for the centuries. Despite having already been aware of the children, gazing on their young lives from afar, and knowing of their futures, the Mage King wanted to see them in person. He wanted to understand them in the same way that he came to understand his patients from his journey as a physician. Arriving in Camelot hadn’t been particularly spectacular; disguised as Romani, Solomon often kept to himself. But once there he could feel Merlin’s presence, leaving a scowl across Solomon’s face.

It began in modest observation; watching Galahad train as Lancelot’s squire at the training grounds in Camelot preparing to becoming a fully fledged Knight of the Round Table. He watched from afar, observing Galahad practicing with an assortment of weapons in a well-kept arena. Swords, spears, bows, horseback, jousting, running, and calisthenics; it was a tranquil time, with the sun shining above in the exotic lands of Tobusekai. Women and children often came from afar in the kingdom to watch the knights train, and Galahad frequently amassed an audience. His reputation for being a prodigal squire had proceeded him, bolstered by his own famed bloodline and relationship to Lancelot. To the crowd it was a well-known fact that Galahad would join his father among the ranks of the Round Table.

“It had all been set in motion by Merlin. Fabricated history.”

Solomon quietly slipped through the crowd to seek out Amara, Galahad’s fraternal twin sister. Unlike Galahad, who had devoted his life to training to become a knight, Amara was much more in tune with Solomon’s own passions. The two shared a love for history and law, an obvious connection given that Solomon’s own time as king was devoted toward governance, law, and order within the Kingdom of Israel. In that sense, they were both scholars seeking knowledge. But the two also differed on a number of philosophical differences that echoed the rivaling philosophies between Merlin and Solomon. Amara, like Merlin, was willing to intervene on a scale that went above and beyond even the Magus of Flowers. Solomon knew this quite intimately, having seen the tragic future where she would meet her end at Galahad’s hands, sealed away until the year 808 during the Grandmaster’s Great Hunt. Despite Amara and her Fallen’s rebellion against Galahad’s Paradigm of Radiance, the two factions within the clan were remarkably similar. The two were perfect representations of intervention in humanity, something that the King of Magic greatly disapproved of. They used their powers, chakra gifted from their blood line, to overturn and manipulate the course of humanity and human history. But unlike Solomon and Merlin, who were inhuman and outside of the natural human experience, Amara and her Fallen were within those boundaries.

That evening Solomon spent the night observing Amara; by now Amara and Galahad’s lives had diverged considerably. Galahad trained as his father’s squire on a daily basis while Amara either remained at home, or studied in Lancelot’s library. She performed mundane chromes, such as cooking, cleaning, and sewing. Solomon take note that the monotony of her tasks was often replaced with hours of reading in Lancelot’s study, even when it left her other chores in the background. Some of the books even immersed the young Darkness in arcane mysteries of Solomon’s generation, over a century ago. As Romani he kept his distance, and would often use his Byakugan to peer into Lancelot’s manner to read along with her; one book, much to Solomon’s surprise, was the Wisdom of King Solomon, by Abel.

What had it been about a fledgling knight and his scholarly sister that Solomon had been so intrigued by? In a mere two years Galahad would begin his trials to join the Knights of the Round Table. Solomon had been sure to attend it, carefully watching Merlin in the crowd as the final battle began between Percival and Galahad. Silence overtook the arena as the soon-to-be knight faced Percival, one of the most decorated of Arthur’s knights. Even Solomon, who had already seen the outcome of their battle, sat at the edge of his seat as Romani, his gaze transfixed on Galahad’s blade as it swung for the first time and clashed with Percival’s. The battle drew on, but Solomon knew that it likely felt as if the two had been fighting for hours when in reality only minutes had passed. Blow for blow the young Galahad kept up with Percival, a knight who had been seasoned for decades. Each time their swords clashed and the sound of finely forged metal echoed through the arena the crowd would gasp, anticipating for one of the combatants to finally be worn down enough to drop their blade. But it was a moment that never came; Galahad was swiftly disarmed in a sudden maneuver that caught him off guard. And while defeated, the young knight was offered a hand by Percival to stand. King Arthur announced with a smile that Galahad had passed: he was officially a Knight of the Round Table. And as the crowd jubilantly roared Solomon stood up, a half smile spread across his face but pained by the knowledge that it was ultimately Merlin’s doing. It was, in Solomon’s eyes, a history that should not have been; the Incubus had engineered these events over a decade ago.

But despite having spent nearly two years in Camelot watching Amara and Galahad grow and mature, Solomon never directly inserted himself into their lives. It wouldn’t be until three centuries after Amara was sealed that the King of Magic would come to meet Galahad in person. Solomon left before the Fall of Camelot, deciding to travel eastward again. But this time toward the land of Israel. He had no desire to stay within the city when inevitable chaos erupted following Sir Lancelot’s betrayal.​

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“Humans are imperfect. They endure their pain and loss and live with their contradictions. But what of an almighty king? A king with the power and means to set matters right? Then it’s a different matter entirely.” – Goetia

Solomon’s Seventy-Two Demon God familiars are a direct product of the single revelation he had during his tenure as King of Israel. As legend states, the ten rings he received after his divine dreams would later become known as the Seal of Solomon – his tool to create, control, and summon his Demon God familiars. The Demon Gods, before their inception as living entities, existed as metaphysical concepts in collective human lore. Thus, he applied his imagination to the lore surrounding the demons and granted these metaphysical entities form through his Yin powers. Then, with Yang, imbued them with life. The Seventy-Two familiars acknowledge Solomon in three ways, sometimes paradoxically. The Demon Gods see him as their father, having given them form and life to their former metaphysical existence. They see Solomon as their master, being the one man who gave them purpose due to his divine revelations. But most interestingly the Demon Gods see themselves as Solomon – almost as if a reflection of the King of Magic.

The collective lore of the spirits initially employed by Solomon caused the Demon Gods to take on a humanoid appearance when assuming a physical form. This humanoid appearance is the result of a mixture of angelic and demonic lore; the latter causing the Demon Gods to take on the appearance of a cephalopodic tentacle with rings of eyes surrounding its body. This shape gave the familiars the title Demon God Pillars. Because of this, any of the Seventy-Two can take on either appearance at will. Solomon’s initial purpose assigned to the Demon Gods was the creation of Solomon’s grand Temple. He instructed the Demon Gods to create such a magnificent temple that would be remembered for the rest of Eastern history, but was careful to instruct the Demon Gods to not build it to stand the eternal test of time. It was the first lesson he tried to impart upon his Seventy-Two familiars: that the concepts of ‘the end’ and finality are meaningful events.

Once his legacy as King had been established through the construction of the Temple, Solomon turned his attention toward his legacy as Mage. Initially the familiars were only creations formed from Solomon’s pursuit of wisdom, and a deep curiosity for the knowledge that was imparted by his revelations. But aside from this, they had no purpose, no ultimate and greater design. And so, as Solomon prepared to abdicate from his Throne, he realized that he would continue to watch over humanity even in the event of his death. He realized that the Demon Gods, who were essentially reflections of himself, could carry out this task in their immortal bodies. This came to be known as the Human Order Correction Ritual. Solomon tasked the Seventy-Two with the mandate to watch over humanity; and in a time where crisis reigned or common sense failed, then the Demon Gods would step in to interfere. Despite their task being antithetical to Solomon’s own philosophy, he knew in the depths of his mind that there could come a day where humanity would need to be saved from a greater darkness.

But the King of Magic was faced with a crucial problem: the organization of the Seventy-Two familiars. To have seventy-two individual personalities, no matter how similar to Solomon himself, operate in tandem presented a difficult problem. It would always end with multiple Demon Gods vying for primacy over the others, given that each would formulate its own method of achieving the Human Order Correction in the most effective and efficient way. In order to achieve balance among the familiars Solomon decided to create what would amount to effectively a seventy-third Demon God. Solomon, once again tapping into the primordial energies of Yin-Yang, created Goetia, the Demon God King through the Creation of All Things. Goetia was born to be the aggregate of all Seventy-Two Demon God familiars, a combination of their personalities and powers to form the ultimate being. Goetia, like Solomon, was born to be ‘outside’ of the human experience. He was created as a blank slate, and taught by Solomon to love the humans no matter their imperfections. As the most powerful of the Seventy-Two Demon Gods, Goetia would act to sustain order and give direction to the familiars in times of Solomon’s absence. Given the magnitude of his powers, as a combination of all Demon Gods, and as Solomon’s own reflection, Goetia came to be able to utilize Yin-Yang Release to the same level of precision as Solomon himself.

Goetia, like the rest of the Seventy-Two Demon Gods, was tasked with managing and directing the Human Order Correction Ritual. But this was paradoxical to Solomon’s own philosophy. Solomon was a man who believed in restraint; to allow human suffering to take its course, no matter how brutal or tragic it was. He believed that he should only interfere in times of great crisis. But Goetia, in order to carry out the Ritual, needed to be taught differently than Solomon. The Demon God King’s was instructed to interfere at his discretion in times of Solomon’s absence, in order to promote rationality and to protect humanity. This difference in philosophies created a schism between the King of Mages and the King of the Demon Gods. It was Goetia’s timeless struggle; he was unable to accept Solomon’s inaction, yet still recognized him as his father, master, and king.​



Other Information


Bloodline: Solomon is part of an ancient bloodline of an inhuman race. As the son of David, the Mage King’s bloodline extends back to the Ōtsutsuki family; his being the branch which rules in the northeastern region of Tobusekai. Solomon’s heritage has allowed him to transcend death, showing no natural signs of aging. This, coupled with countless years of training, study, and revelation has also caused Solomon to acquire Six Paths Senjutsu. Naturally imbued into his chakra, the Six Paths Senjutsu affords the King of Magic an additional 1,750 chakra reserves. All of his techniques are augmented by an additional thirty damage.

Dōjutsu: Grand Caster possesses three Dōjutsu, each direct evolution of the previous. The first: the Byakugan. It is something Solomon calls his most basic Clairvoyance. Able to be activated passively it confers nearly a 360 degree line of physical sight and telescopic vision. The second, his first ascension: the Tenseigan. The Tenseigan are his eyes of light. Illuminated and bright they view the physical world without the universal augmentations of the Byakugan. But they afford him basic control over the powers of creation. The third, and strongest: the Satorigan – the Eyes of Revelation. They are, in the purest sense of the word, his final step. Granted in demigodhood by Anu, the eyes combine the strengths of the Byakugan with his own throne world formed from Anutu and Yin-Yang Release. They are the eyes that marked the ultimate mastery over his demons, the Seventy-Two Demon Gods of the Ars Goetia.

Anutu: The power to Order the cosmos. Anutu is a Divine energy source derived from the primordial Void, forming the basis for the powers of the gods that ordered the universe. This specific form of Divinity powers the denizens of Eanna, a sect of Celestial Divinities also known as the Annunaki. They include Anu, Lord of Time, Shamash, Lord of Truth, and Nannar, Lord of Wisdom. It is formed of three components: Suen, Utu, and Anutu.

Yin-Yang Release: Solomon has mastered Yin-Yang Release, a product of his first enlightenment by Anu. Solomon is able to create Homonculi which can last indefinitely. They are born with the ability to use Eridian Release, one of Solomon's powerful advanced elemental natures. Solomon is also able to manifest the Truth-Seeking Orbs which are integral to his usage of Ars Almadel Salomonis.

The Ten Rings of Solomon: The Ten Rings of Solomon are a set of golden rings created in the wake of the destruction of Solomon’s staff, lost after his journey to the Underworld. They were forged in Ars Paulina, a dimension separated from the axis of time and granted by Anu, the one who bestowed upon him the Satorigan and Divinity. The rings confer upon Solomon is called the Conflux of Souls, an Authority that grants him absolute power over his Soul and those he creates through Utu.

(Yubiwa no Soromon) – Ten Rings of Solomon
Type: Weapon
Rank: S
Range: Short – Long
Chakra: N/A (-20 per turn)
Damage: N/A
Description: The Ten Rings of Solomon are a set of golden rings created in the wake of the destruction of Solomon’s staff, lost after his journey to the Underworld. They are an enhanced version of Solomon’s first rings granted by God, forged in Ars Paulina outside of the axis of time. The rings were formed from the golden mist of Anutu, imbued into physical form with the blue sand of Suen, and then forged into a metallic form with the searing heat of Utu. The Divinity within the rings attunes itself to Solomon’s soul and his own replicas created through Anutu, granting him Authority over his own soul; this ability is called the Conflux of Souls. Soul replicas, up to ten, one per ring, under Conflux are placed under Solomon’s Authority, binding their presence to the field permanently unless they are destroyed or dispersed by Solomon. A byproduct of attunement binds the rings to Solomon, making it impossible to remove them unless Solomon wills it. The second consequence of the attunement causes Solomon’s soul and spirituality to gain Divinity, gaining toxic recoil to those that would interact with it. The recoil the opponent suffers from is Divine in nature, making it only reversible through techniques that would heal the spirit itself, specifically Utu. This inflicts 20 Spiritual damage per turn, for four turns. Because the Divinity afflicts the victim’s spirit itself, it reduces the Chakra present in their techniques by 10. Should the victim apply a second spiritual technique to the user the duration of the recoil will reset.

Confluence is the activatable ability of the Ten Rings, done so at the cost of a move. Its activation occurs within the same timeframe as a technique that creates or manipulates a Soul Replica, or at a different time upon an already created Soul Replica. The effects of Confluence do not necessarily activate when it is used, able to be activated whenever the user wills it as long as the infusion was applied. Confluence causes Soul Replicas to be pulled into the Rings of Solomon, binding the soul to Solomon’s own and conferring their own abilities and traits upon him. Alternatively, Confluence can be used to combine two or more Soul Replicas into one unit rather than into the Rings. Soul Replicas that are combined gain each others abilities and traits while also gaining an increase of 10 base Damage and Chakra, but these increased stats can only stack up to 30. Should two Souls have different damage values upon being combined then the one with the higher Damage and Chakra shall become the base value for the new unit. Confluence can be used again on the same combined Soul Replica to bring it into the Rings. Combined Soul Replicas still count towards the 10 Replicas able to be bound into the Rings, meaning 2 Replicas combined will still count as 2 Replicas bound.

Goetic Theurgy: The Divine Workings of Goetia, or Goetic Theurgy, is the first of three lessons in a grimoire composed by Solomon called the Key of Solomon. It is a tome which instructs people on how to summon and control spirits and demons. Its first lesson, Goetic Theurgy, focuses on the conjuration of lesser spirits and to bind them into a physical vessel, be it person, object, or animal. Once bound, the vessel will seek to impose its spiritual energy on another. Through the style Solomon is able to create Athame, a weapon central to the ritual, freely from black Yin chakra.

Goetia, Demon God King: Born from Solomon's use of the Creation of All Things, Goetia is the aggregate of the 72 Demon God familiars and their personalities. Goetia was created to safeguard humanity in the absence of Solomon during times of crisis. The Demon God King stands at 9 feet tall. He possesses a relatively humanoid frame, with white and golden skin that is marred by lines of red trailing upwards from his legs. His most notable features, aside from his unique skin coloration and towering height, are antler-like protrusions from his head that flicker with golden ethereal flames at the ends. He also has a a large violet eye lodged within his chest, and an array of eyes hidden away within his arms under a layer of flesh; their purpose designating Goetia as a watcher and silent guardian. Goetia is gifted with the ability to use Mawscape Release, Force Release, and Mystic Fire Release, as well as Yin-Yang Release. He possesses an immunity to Fūinjutsu and shares a mental link to Solomon. Goetia’s Mystic Flames are violet in color. Goetia exerts a powerful presence, preventing enemies from tracking with Doujutsu or Chakra Sensory. He is an Advanced Tracking Resistance specialist.

Goetia is in many ways a reflection of Solomon, King of Magic. The two share a deep love for humanity, directed through the Human Order Correction Ritual. He carries with him a strong urge to protect them, no matter the cost. Goetia believes human suffering is unjust and should be rectified, a passionate belief that becomes stronger with each tragedy the Demon God King witnesses. Goetia's view of helping humanity is distorted from Solomon's; while the King of Magic believes that it isn't his place to use his arcane skills to elevate humanity above tragedy, death, and suffering, and interfere with the natural order, Goetia believes it is cruel and callous to do nothing. It is something that vexes the Demon God King and his relationship with Solomon, despite the latter's acceptance.

Mystic Fire Release: The King of Magic is a master of Shiraton, or Mystic Fire Release. It is an advanced elemental nature that is the combination of Fire and Lightning Releases, controlled through Fūinjutsu. Mystic Fire is a unique element in the sense that the concentrated chakra ionizes the air, which allows the user to generate either plasma, in the form of fire and bolts, or even tangible forms like solidified explosive fire. Its most notable characteristic is the element’s vast array of colors. Mystic Fire naturally is favored in the violet spectrum, but the concentration of chakra can cause the wavelength to vary from user to user. The element itself is highly disruptive in nature and stores considerable energy within itself through Fūinjutsu. It possesses a trait that Solomon calls ‘absolute neutrality.’ This means that against all elemental natures, and sealing techniques, Mystic Fire holds true neutrality. While Goetia is sealed within the Human Order Correction Ritual Solomon is capable of using Mystic Fire Release without the need for hand seals, and his Mystic Flames are produced with a golden coloration. Goetia’s flames appear a dark purple. Solomon and Goetia’s energy techniques are also naturally imbued with trace amounts of Shiraton causing them to passively alter their coloration through the Pillars of Creation.

(Shiraton: Sōzō no Hashira) – Mystic Fire Release: Pillars of Creation
Type: Supplementary
Rank: B – S
Range: N/A
Chakra: N/A (+10/20/40 chakra cost to applied technique)
Damage: N/A
Description: Pillars of Creation is considered the ultimate infusion technique utilized in conjunction with energy-based elemental natures (Fire, Lightning, Explosion, etc) as well as barrier Fūinjutsu. As a technique based around the principles of infusion it occurs instantaneously and can be used within the same timeframe as the technique it is applied to. Typically techniques of this category involves an infusion of chakra, in many cases of the same nature, to change numerous aspects of the technique. These can range from a shift in strengths and weaknesses, additional strength, different states and forms, and new and unique effects. This could be compared to ratios and the effects that chakra can have on a technique; the more chakra utilized the greater the changes. As such Pillars of Creation utilizes three separate levels of infusion, each becoming progressively greater. Unique to this technique is that it can be stated in one’s biography to allow for the passive infusion of the user’s energy-based techniques, listed above, causing their coloration to shift in accordance to Mystic Fire’s unique colors. As a passive occurrence this application does not require any chakra and is simply a cosmetic ability of Pillars of Creation. The infusions are as followed:

The First Pillar: This is the B-Rank application of Pillars of Creation and utilizes an infusion of ten chakra. As the simplest infusion this technique causes the effected energy-based technique to gain Mystic Fire’s quality of absolute neutrality. For example, when used on a Fire technique, the applied technique will effectively shed its strengths and weaknesses becoming neutral to all elemental natures. Additionally, this infusion causes the applied technique to gain Mystic Fire’s specialized interactions with sealing/absorptive-based techniques. When an S-Rank Lightning technique is infused with the First Pillar, for example, it will, in addition to gaining the neutrality of Mystic Fire, will also only be able to be sealed or absorbed by a technique of equivalent rank (meaning the rank of the seal or absorbing technique itself, not the rank of what it can seal, must be equivalent). Additionally, the First Pillar cannot be infused on channeling-based energy techniques (e.g. streams of fire).

The Second Pillar: This is the A-Rank application of Pillars of Creation and utilizes an infusion of twenty chakra. The Second Pillar, unlike the first, employs the ability to not only infuse an energy-based technique with Mystic Fire chakra but to convert it to the nature entirely; this effectively converts any energy-based nature, or barrier Fūinjutsu, into Mystic Fire. Because the technique is effectively transformed it will change its inherent color into any color allowed by Mystic Fire Release, namely any color on the visible spectrum while being able to become absolute black, like the flames of Amaterasu. Techniques which radiate heat, like Fire Release, will lose those qualities due to their inherent sealing nature. Additionally, these techniques will gain an additional rank in strength, or twenty additional damage for techniques above S-Rank. The Second Pillar can be used on any number of A-Rank and below techniques but it can only be used four times per battle on S-Rank and above techniques. It also cannot be used in consecutive turns.

The Third Pillar: This is the S-Rank application of Pillars of Creation and utilizes an infusion of forty chakra. Unlike the previous two pillars this Third Pillar only incorporates techniques which employ a partial or fullbody elemental transformation, much like the Hozuki, and must be energy-based in nature. This technique, through an enormous flooding of Mystic Fire chakra, converts any energy-based elemental transformation to become purely Mystic Fire based, while retaining its original abilities and qualities. For example, should a Bakuton based elemental transformation be converted to Mystic Fire it will retain its default explosive qualities while obtaining all qualities of Mystic Fire Release. Additionally, as long as the elemental transformation utilized allows for Fire and Lightning natures to be accessed, the user will still be able to mold chakra for techniques based on the original elemental transformation, even after conversion. The Third Pillar, like the Second, also enhances the applied transformation by an additional rank in strength, or twenty additional damage for techniques above S-Rank. The Third Pillar can be used twice per battle, requiring a two turn cooldown in between uses.

Fūinjutsu: Solomon’s body is adorned with an assortment of seals woven within his complex array of tattoos. The Kanji “Eternal” is placed on his left triceps, a seal with the Kanji “Repository” is attached to his inner robe, and a third seal marked as the Forty-Seven Ronin is inscribed on his left pectoral. He wears an ornate band on his left wrist, an artifact of the Uzumaki Clan known as the Mayer’ Band. Beneath his stomach he has the seal for “Maintain,” which erects a barrier around his person that prevents others from distorting time and space. On his abdomen he has the seal for “Incarnation.” The seal serves to confine the Demon God King within Solomon’s body; while sealed Solomon gains all of Goetia’s skills and abilities, can use Mystic Fire Release without hand seals, and many of his skills are augmented in strength.

(In'yōton, Onmyōton: Jinri Hosei Shiki) – Yin-Yang Release: Human Order Correction Ritual
Type: Supplementary
Rank: Forbidden
Range: Short – Mid
Chakra: 150
Damage: N/A
Description: The Human Order Correction Ritual is the culmination of Solomon’s undertaking that began with his single revelation during his tenure as King of Israel. The Seventy-Two Demon Gods, and their aggregate Goetia, the Demon God King, would become the basis for this technique; it is one of Solomon’s ultimate techniques within the Ars Goetia in which he, using his own body as a vessel, seals his Creation within him. Much like the seal in which a Jinchūriki is sealed within the host, this technique allows one to seal their Creation within themselves. The technique behaves as a body seal, located on the user’s abdomen with the Kanji for “Incarnation.” The user’s link to their Creation is considerably strengthened through this technique; while the Creation is sealed, much like a Jinchūriki, the elemental natures, skills, and abilities that the Creation possesses becomes the user’s, and are strengthened due to their bond. These fields are increased by a rank in strength, or twenty additional damage. The user also becomes able to use a single elemental field of their Creation's without hand seals, to be stated in the biography. The Human Order Correction Ritual possesses some tradeoffs; should the user die in battle, then their Creation will also die. This compares to use of the standard Creation of All Things Technique which allows the user’s familiar, or vice versa, to continue battle. The user also loses a secondary battle partner; this also means that, while sealed, the Creation is unable to travel through the Ninja World. The sealed Creation, while it is able to communicate with the user through mental link, it cannot release them from Illusionary techniques like a Bijuu can with their host. Should the user desire they are able to break the Human Order Correction Ritual seal, releasing the Creation back into the world at considerable chakra cost, and a move. This can be done in reverse, although only once per battle. As a body seal this technique must be stated on the user's biography.

(Fuuin: Bachi no Fukyuu) - Sealing Technique: Bane of the Immortal
Type: Defensive/Supplementary
Rank: A
Range: Short
Chakra: 30 (-10 chakra per turn)
Damage: N/A
Description: The user will have a seal on their body with the Kanji for "Eternal". The seal lies dormant and is passively activated whenever the opponent tries to seal or drain the user's chakra and/or abilities. The seal will instantly release an intangible barrier that surrounds the user's body like an armour. Any abilities which act externally such as the canon techniques Multiple Infinite Embraces or Living Barrier will be unable to affect anything inside the barrier, namely the user's body. Seals which act internally will first have their chakra be absorbed by the barrier (happens instantly and so before they can come into effect) and once erected, the barrier will prevent any further insertion of chakra while active. The seal is self-sustaining and will involuntary leech chakra from the user's body. This is for the express purpose of maintaining this technique even when the user can't use or mold chakra. This is possible as the chakra still exists within the user as it is equivalent of their very life-force. This can counter S-Rank and below sealing techniques. This cannot be activated manually and will only ever activate under the aforementioned conditions. It lasts for four turns or until the ability attempting to seal or drain the user's chakra or abilities is no longer active, whichever is longer.

Note: Can only activate a maximum of thrice per battle

(Shiraton/Fūinjutsu: Jikai Kairo) – Mystic Fire Release/Sealing Technique: Cygnus Loop
Type: Supplementary
Rank: A
Range: Short
Chakra: 30
Damage: N/A
Description: This technique employs a tag seal with the word ‘Repository’ inscribed on it and placed somewhere on the user’s body or on a weapon; in the case of a weapon the weapon must remain in contact with the user at all times. The seal can either be placed on the user’s biography and stated or placed during travel or battle, counting as a move. Cygnus Loop is a technique which utilizes Fūinjutsu’s ability to seal infinite quantities of various objects within a vessel, in this case the Cygnus seal. This acts as an effect chakra storage unit and can store infinite quantities of chakra absorbed and drained from another target through two methods. The first method passively allows the seal to link itself to the user’s absorptive techniques, such as the Multiple Infinite Embraces. Typically the Embraces will drain chakra and immediately deposit it in the user’s body; with the Cygnus seal this chakra is instead deposited in the seal itself. The second method is through the seal’s unique relationship with Mystic Fire Release and Fūinjutsu allowing the user to utilize Ultraviolet Radiance, a technique based on the Cygnus seal. Regardless of the application used when chakra is drained from an opponent or their techniques the chakra will be deposited within the seal. In essence Cygnus Loop acts as a bank and middleman. When chakra is stored in the seal the chakra is ‘purified’ within the seal. This effectively converts stolen chakra back into raw chakra. For example, should the user absorb Fire chakra and store it within the seal it will be converted into stored chakra and made readily available for the user to use for a future technique. Alternatively stored chakra can be freely absorbed into the user’s body to replenish their reserves. The Cygnus seal itself is an A-Rank seal and is fortified as such due to its relationship and infusion of Mystic Fire.

Spirits of Balance: 47 Ronin (Onryodo:Shi-jū-shichi-shi)
Rank: S
Range: Short-Long
Type: Defensive/Offensive/Supplementary
Chakra cost: 40
Damage Points: N/a
Description: The technique requires placing a seal over the users body that collects huge masses spiritual energy from the user and stores it up over the period of time. When released the seal uses Yin to Yang chakra manipulation and manifests the spiritual energy into the users imagination of a story: The revenge of the Forty-seven Ronin (四十七士 Shi-jū-shichi-shi), also known as the Forty-seven Samurai, the Akō vendetta, or the Genroku Akō incident (元禄赤穂事件 Genroku akō jiken). Where a group 47 samurai who were made Ronin, and avenged their General. The spiritual energy amasses together and forms in 47 spirits of Samurai with a dark aura equipped with swords and straw hats. The spirits are intangible, they don’t dessipitate when hit with objects or techniques that disrupt chakra and are inexcusably only effective on Resurrection techniques, Ritualistic techniques and other Spirits related/Spiritual technique. These samurai are incredibly strong and hunts the products of such techniques down with relative ease. When the target is hit by the Samurai’s sword(s) they are sealed within it. The Samurai then grab their own swords, and out of guilt of murder they commit Seppuku, with the suicide the souls of the target are released from the swords and are guided by the Samurai’s spirit in to the Outer World plains.
Restriction: Usable once per conflict.

(Fūinjutsu: Maiya no bando) - Sealing Arts: Mayer's Band
Type: Defensive/Supplementary
Rank: D-S
Range: Short
Chakra Cost: (equivalent to the amount of opposing tech)
Damage: N/A
Description: This seal, Mayer's Band, was created by an Uzumaki prior to their village's destruction. The jutsu's purpose revolves around the ability to identify and seal foreign energy produced by the user's enemies. The seal itself is placed onto a wrist band and it is a kanji line shaped like a pentagon with open circles placed at every point of the shape. When foreign energy enters short range of the user, the circles on the wristband emit a bright colorful light signifying to the user that an energy different from the energies known to them has broken their perimeter. The sealing band cannot inform the user about the type of energy being used, but it can and does tell the difference between the various energies it comes across, and thus repeats the same color glows corresponding with that energy when met again. Once the energy is close enough the seal will release a special energy absorbing barrier around the user protecting them for that one attack before sealing the foreign energy into the wristband protecting the user. The jutsu is quite helpful for shinobi who don't have any energy sensing abilities, and its sealing effect only lasts a limited time. After sealing its maximum amount of energy the band will only work as an energy identifier for the user, but it will no longer be able to seal energy.
NOTES
►Activates 3x per battle
►Has a one turn cool down
►When a S-Rank technique is sealed, no fuuin in the following turn, and then no fuuin above A in the next
►Seal must be placed in biography
►Can only be taught by ZandaT

Fuuinjutsu: Deddozōn | Sealing Technique: Dead Zone
Type: Supplementary/Defensive
Rank: A
Range: Short - Mid
Chakra: 30
Damage: N/A
Description: A seal with the word 'Maintain' will be placed somewhere on the users body. The seal will passively drain chakra from the user which it will then redirect into the surroundings so as to detect attempts at manipulating space (affords no other kind of sensory). When a technique that seeks to distort space/time is utilised within the users vicinity (Mid range radius) this seal will activate, passively draining chakra from the user to erect a barrier that will instantly spread outwards and prevent the space time continuum from being manipulated - in effect the seal will serve to neutralize space time techniques such as summoning jutsu, or techniques that utilise portals such as 'Stick Earth Drop' from being utilised as it forcibly maintains the fabric of space and time. The seal activates automatically upon detecting an attempt at space/time manipulation, and is effective against such jutsu up to, and including A rank. However it is wholly ineffective against S ranked space time manipulation (Such as S rank summoning techniques as the jutsu utilises more chakra than this technique to bring a stronger summon to the field, however it will still be effective against lower ranked space time techniques even if the substance that they attempt to bring to the field is higher ranked)
Note:
- The user can start the battle with the seal already placed, in which case it must be posted at either the start of the battle or in the users bio. Otherwise the user will have to manually place the seal, which counts as a move and can only be done twice.
- The seal can only activate once per turn, and the user cannot use Fuinjutsu above A rank the turn after it triggers.
- The seal passively drains 5 chakra from the user per turn
- When triggered, a barrier of the appropriate strength will be set up (i.e A rank to counter A rank S/T) that will prevent the space time technique and last for that turn. An A rank barrier can be set up once, and a B rank barrier can only be set up twice. For C rank and below however, on account of there being virtually no S/T techniques that weak barring the summoning of certain lesser animals, the barrier can be triggered continuously to prevent these critters from taking to the field.
- As activation is passive, (But does count towards move count) the user is free to continue as normal.
- Won't work on 'Flying Thunder God' as it is a S ranked Space-Time technique.

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"There are those that confront death and extinction with just their limited lives in hand. Others repeat their encounters and partings, knowing of the end."

Living for centuries revealed one absolute truth to the Mage King: that empires rise and fall like phoenixes in cycles of rebirth. Tobusekai fell into a state of disarray after the collapse of Camelot; rival clans across the continent vied for political supremacy in place of the vacuum left behind by King Arthur’s state. And while Tobusekai was left in shambles, across the sea on the mainland Sai Nobunaga would soon proclaim the Freehold of Hanguri. Two hundred and ninety years after Solomon’s uncle, Hagoromo, gifted chakra to the world at large the first major imperial power on the western continent would emerge dominant for nearly four centuries.

The Freehold had been born from a loose association of merchants and disparate shinobi clans based in the independent city state of Chungsu. But within one hundred years that association would morph into a dominant global power with the ability to project its influence nearly as far as Tobusekai itself. It was during the reign of Sai Nobunaga that Solomon first entered the political arena of the Hangurian Freehold. The First Degarashi campaign was launched in 295, with the revitalized professional army of the Freehold under Nobunaga. It was at Qindong, the site of the first major Hangurian battle that Solomon met Chancellor Nobunaga. Sai Nobunaga’s army clashed with Lord Mern’s in the open fields of Qindong that fateful Summer day in 295; wide open plains where one day the Great Nobunaga Roads would connect the major Hangurian cities to form the largest continuous empire known to man. Mern’s army had five men for every one of Nobunaga’s; a disparity of disgruntled nobles that were resistant to the era of unification that Nobunaga had proclaimed five years ago also staged their last stand, raising a number of shinobi and samurai to compliment Lord Mern’s standing force.

The day was cloudless, though slightly windy. And there hadn’t been a drop of rain for near three weeks in the region. When the two armies met on the battlefield Nobunaga, as Hangurian histories tell us, met with Lord Mern and mercifully offered peace should he swear fealty to the new Chancellor. Naturally the proud Lord Mern refused. The ensuing battle cost the lives of thousands, and was one of the bloodiest battles of the First Degarashi Campaign. Two key strategic advantages allowed Chancellor Nobunaga to prevail and break Mern’s rebellious coalition. The first was General Hidetada’s own superior tactical ability; at a crucial moment during the battle Hidetada’s crescent flanking maneuver broke through Mern’s archer backline and cavalry. The second, and arguably most important to the Chancellor’s long reign, was Nobunaga’s own bloodline. The Chancellor himself was gifted in combat; skill derived from his Ōtsutsuki lineage allowed him to gain the upper hand against most enemies. His skill in close quarters combat earned him the moniker “The Storm,” mostly for his unrelenting style of combat that forced enemies to the ground after unrelenting assault. It was for this reason that Solomon was drawn to the fateful battle at Qindong that day in 295: Chancellor Sai Nobunaga, Daijō-Daijin of the Hangurian Freehold, was a descendent of Solomon, third King of Israel and King of Magic.

Their first meeting was rather humble despite their own respective stations in life. Solomon, disguised as Romani, attended to the battle after the fighting had ended. Nobunaga’s army had prevailed, but despite their professional training still suffered from considerable causalities. Lord Mern’s army had been largely decimated, leaving many wounded on the battlefield without proper medical care. Solomon, being neutral, tended to the wounded on both sides of the conflict. It was an act that initially incurred the wrath of Sai Nobunaga who had his men arrest Solomon for intruding on the battlefield. Goetia was hidden away within Ars Paulina at the time and Solomon willingly went with Nobunaga’s men.

“You have won a great battle. But a king must know when to show strength, and when to show kindness.” – Solomon to Sai Nobunaga, Qindong 295​

But rather than be thrown in prison to face trial, or executed, the Mage King was taken to Nobunaga’s tent directly. The Chancellor dismissed his personal guard and sat Solomon directly opposite of him; the two Ōtsutsuki stared at each other for a time. Centuries had passed since Solomon’s own birth; the Ōtsutsuki bloodline that flowed from the House of David through Nobunaga’s veins had been considerably diluted in that time. In many ways, he could hardly be considered an Ōtsutsuki at all. The only trait that he shared with Solomon was his Byakugan, which the Chancellor awakened when he was nine years old – an impressive feat for someone so distantly related to the Mage King, who had awakened it when he was only six. Sai Nobunaga did not share Solomon’s own affinity toward the forces of Creation, nor did he possess the inherent strength to awaken the Tenseigan like the Mage King had. But the two shared similar philosophies in governance, and Nobunaga seemed to recognize that in Solomon when they sat together.

The conversation that took place in that tent on that fateful evening in Qindong is largely lost to the annals of history. No scribe had been there with them to record what transpired; both Solomon and Nobunaga never spoke to considerable lengths on the topics of the meeting. What is known is that following their time together Solomon, as Romani, became Nobunaga’s personal physician and advisor for a brief time during his reign. Their time together marked the first time in 250 years that Solomon partook in politics. To the greater public it was never revealed that Romani, top advisor and physician to Chancellor Sai Nobunaga, was the third King of Israel. Even Hangurian historians in the present day were unaware of this connection.

The First Degarashi Campaign continued in earnest. Lord Mern’s defeat at the hands of Nobunaga left most resistance to his campaign largely meaningless; many outright surrendered in the face of Nobunaga’s superior professional army, now seasoned in battle. Within the first six months the Freehold’s territory more than doubled, and in the following year it doubled yet again. By 297 the Freehold’s dominance over the Land of Fire was near absolute. Its territory stretched for miles in all directions, encompassed the Tea Peninsula, and influenced the lives of millions of people.

Nobunaga and Solomon’s policies differed, as did the inherent structure of the Freehold’s political system compared with the absolute monarchy of the Kingdom of Israel. The Freehold was formed around a patrician-led oligarchic democracy. The Chancellor of the Realm, in this case Sai Nobunaga, is elected by the residents of Chungsu; and while not an absolute sovereign, the Chancellor enjoys considerable unfettered discretionary power over the Hangurian political system. To enjoy suffrage, as well as the right to run for public office within the city, one was required to own property over a certain value or pay an annual fee that amounted to an average yearly wage. The system, as it was founded by Sai Nobunaga, divided seats among a legislative body that was supported by a complex system of patronage; a system that only wealthy landowners could participate in. And while Israel under King Solomon, as well as his father David, was an absolute monarchy, it enjoyed considerable social welfare programs that contrasted considerably with Hanguri. It was a point of tension that historians frequently point out in Romani’s dealings with Nobunaga; Solomon, as Romani, would often be told that matters of state were not the concern of a doctor.

But despite these infrequent moments of bickering between the Chancellor and Solomon, the two were often seen as amicable. Perhaps the most crucial early reform in the Freehold was composed by Solomon and proposed to the legislative by Nobunaga in the year 309. The legislation marked the most important military reform since before the First Degarashi Campaign over a decade prior. The policy saw to layer contracted shinobi throughout military ranks and civilian administration; these shinobi enjoyed a number of privileges that even noble families and prominent aristocratic military officials could not. Privileges like tax exemptions and state sponsored housing. The trade off to this was that these shinobi had minimal, if any, operational freedom; they were very much subject to the absolute will of the state, unable to contract to foreigners or choose their own missions. Solomon’s policy would see to the long-lasting skill of the shinobi class deeply invested in the well being of the Hangurian Freehold for nearly three centuries thereafter.

Solomon’s tenure under Sai Nobunaga continued until the year 311, when he requested to be released from official service under the chancellor. Hangurian historians that write from this period, with records that remain after the razing in the year 804, note Nobunaga’s great regret in losing Romani’s service. Solomon retired from public life to live among Chungsu’s arcanists and mages in the five years that preceded Sai Nobunaga’s death in 316. During this time the Mage King, still under the guise of the physician Romani, would often explore the soon-to-be Great Library of Chungsu. In fact, many of the anecdotes that Solomon developed as Mage King were only preserved in history because of his time in Chungsu in the fourth century following Hagoromo’s reign; the archives of Israel had been mostly razed or raided in the decades after Menelik’s civil war, leading to a considerable loss of arcane knowledge in Tobusekai.

Sai Nobunaga passed away peacefully of old age in 316. Sai’s political influence allowed a peaceful transition of power to his adoptive son Toyotomi Nobunaga. As Sai’s adoptive son, Toyotomi had no blood relation to King Solomon; Sai’s death essentially marked the end of one line of the House of David, as he had no biological children of his own. Though elsewhere, Solomon’s descendants could still be found throughout the world.

Toyotomi’s reign was marked with escalating conflict. A mere two years after Sai’s death the Campaign of Fire began under the auspices of the Hangurian legislature. It marked the end of a brief period of peace, known to some historians as the Peace of Sai, which lasted from 306 to 316; the Campaign of Fire marked the second major military campaign of the Freehold, and its scale went far beyond that of the First Degarashi Campaign. A series of shinobi revolts, as well as escalating tension between the Freehold and the Aburame clan, sparked major conflicts throughout the countryside. Hangurian agrarian production was severely hindered during this period, sparking a brief recession which forced the legislature into political gridlock. To break the gridlock Solomon, still under the guise of Romani, sought an audience with Toyotomi Nobunaga. Out of a sense of obligation to Sai Nobunaga, Solomon reentered public life under similar arrangement with Toyotomi. Although prior to this Toyotomi had made no attempt to reach out to the Mage King. Compared to his father, the young chancellor was far more hotheaded and seemed to opt for force rather than diplomacy. It was a trait that Solomon sought to balance.

Romani’s second tenure in public life was far more reserved than his first under Sai Nobunaga; he often kept to his quarters and refrained from intervening too much in Toyotomi’s administration. Court scribes and historians often describe that Toyotomi would keep Romani out of the inner circle of his advisers, preferring those who would support his warlike tendencies to Solomon’s reserved approach. It kept the two at arm’s length from each other; the Mage King never held the confidence of Toyotomi. Instead, he often found himself with Toyotomi’s nephew Ieyasu. Ieyasu was still a young man at the time of the Campaign of Fire in 318, but he seemed to already be the favored candidate for Toyotomi’s successor when the chancellor would pass away. And while Toyotomi preferred to keep the Mage King separate from his inner circle, Solomon and Ieyasu would develop a close relationship and partnership which would be crucial to the latter’s own chancellorship later in life.

While unbeknownst to historians, it was around this time that Ieyasu became familiar with Romani’s true identity, that of the Mage King Solomon. Toyotomi’s Campaign of Fire raged on for nearly a decade, seeing its end after the Battle of Keishi in 327; roughly around 320 Ieyasu discovered the Mage King’s identity, yet their relationship remained undisrupted. Court scribes describe Romani’s time with Ieyasu as quite close; the Mage King often tutored the young man, teaching him the same lessons in governance that his father David had taught him in. The two also explored the arcane. And even though Solomon was not blood related to Ieyasu, he found the young man was perfectly capable of many magics that the Mage King could perform himself; barring, of course, the manipulation of creationary forces.

Under Solomon’s supervision, as well as his own standing within the imperial family, Ieyasu came to power in 330 after Toyotomi’s sudden passing to Typhus. Ieyasu was the third of the Three Great Unifiers, the period of Hangurian history that begins with Sai Nobunaga. Ieyasu contrasted considerably with Toyotomi’s jingoistic policies; he, unlike his predecessor, opted typically for a more diplomatic approach that was likely cultivated by Solomon’s own teachings. That said, much of Toyotomi’s influence could still be seen in Ieyasu’s actions. The third chancellor and 14th Daijō-daijin did not hesitate to fund a powerful military, use force when necessary, and exert its influence when opportunity could be found.

Solomon and Ieyasu’s relationship continued well into the latter’s reign. Early into Ieyasu’s first term he aimed to complete the work of his predecessors: uniting the Hangurian Gulf under a single imperial banner. Ieyasu’s conquests were initially triggered in 333 after the Senju and Uchiha clans clashed near Tanzaku Gai; their clash nearly destroyed the entire city and left much of the farmlands unusable. Solomon warned that strength must be shown, as the Senju and Uchiha would prove troublesome clans in the long term. Heeding Solomon’s advice, and with the blessing of the legislature in a near unanimous vote, Ieyasu began what would become known as the Second Campaign of Fire. The campaign was launched at subjugating both the Uchiha and Senju clans who were often regarded as the most dominant of the clans still existing within the Land of Fire that had yet to fall under imperial control. The campaign would begin in earnest in 335 and would see nearly 15,000 Hangurian soldiers march through the Riverland and coastland beyond to attempt to complete the Freehold’s control over the entire Hangurian Gulf.

“The Ōtsutsuki bloodline flows far and wide. Just as it manifested the Byakugan within the Hyuuga, its power manifested within the earliest generations of Nobunaga.”

And as Ieyasu marched through the Land of Fire, Solomon would be tasked with managing the affairs of Chungsu during this period. The Mage King’s position within Ieyasu’s administration was not codified within law; rather he functioned in an unofficial capacity, guiding Ieyasu’s top advisors and administrators from the background. It was an arrangement that the King of Mages and Ieyasu became accustomed to, and would lead to a much longer-term presence of the King of Mages in Chungsu and the Freehold even after Ieyasu’s retirement and passing.

In 338, as Ieyasu’s campaign raged on, a mage who went by the name of Phetra appeared before the imperial court. Court scribes note the meeting as particularly tenuous for Romani, whom they still referred to officially rather than Solomon – as at this point only Ieyasu knew the Mage King’s true name. The reality of their meeting was alarming for Solomon who, up until this point, had no difficulty seeing those with his Clairvoyance. Yet when approached by Phetra it was the first time that Solomon could not truly ‘see’ her. She appeared as a shadow, a blur to his divine eyes. Yet despite the tension in Romani’s voice, as historians describe, their conversation was cordial. Phetra, as her story went and is recorded by court scribes, had traveled far from Tobusekai. The winter in Tobusekai had been an exceptionally cruel one, and she had come to the blossoming Hangurian Freehold to seek aid. The winter had been accompanied by a disease that Tobusekians collectively call the “Freeze.” An ailment that begins with a chill. Those who were unaware of the pestilence would often just treat their chills with a fire, or warm soup or drink. Yet it would never be quelled; the chills would develop into an inexorable trembling and fever. Their extremities would turn blue and, within three days, they would die. The disease, three centuries prior, hadn’t been known or didn’t exist at all. Israeli historians do not recount its presence in Tobusekai, even in the northern regions. Phetra pleaded that if Hanguri failed to act, thousands would die as the pestilence spread.

The Mage King was moved, but resisted the urge to rush to act. In his tenure as an unofficial magistrate, he held immense sway over Ieyasu’s commanders and administrators. He, in effect, had control over Hanguri’s entire economic and political might. But rather than mobilize that strength, the Mage King opted instead to send Goetia in his stead; the Demon God King would investigate Phetra’s claims, given her own dubious presence before his eyes. Goetia would arrive later that month in the heart of Tobusekai, near where modern-day Sentinel’s Stand is located. As a Creation of Solomon’s, the Demon God King did not have traditional human anatomy; the Freeze did not affect him in the same way it could impact a human. What the Demon God King found shocked him; the disease hadn’t been naturally spawned, rather it was a pestilence intentionally being spread by an unknown individual. Various villages throughout Tobusekai would report the same story: a cloaked man, who claimed to be the chosen child of a goddess, would pass through a village, preach of a new religion worshipping primordial life, and then leave. Days later, the village would report of numerous cases of the Freeze.

As Goetia’s investigation into the Freeze continued, Ieyasu’s campaign raged on. The Hangurian force that had been mustered by the Chancellor had continued to find success after success; their infamy had grown so great that Ieyasu’s military prowess was considered to have even exceeded that of Sai Nobunaga’s decades prior. Many of his enemies opted to swear oaths of fealty personally, rather than face the Chancellor in open battle. By 341 Ieyasu’s campaign came to an end, with Hangurian dominance asserted over the entire continent. An imperial progression was held in Chungsu after the chancellor returned, the largest progression that would be held until Shin Toyotomi’s election in 446.

The Demon God King’s investigation into Tobusekai came to an end in 339 after failing to discover the identity of the man who had spread the pestilence. Of the scarce details that the aggregate familiar could discover, all seemed to indicate that the man was deeply religious and worshipped a primordial goddess. Of the villages he visited, most report that his preaching was an attempt to recruit followers; those who joined seemed to be spared from the pestilence, while those who chose to remain in their village would be afflicted, left to either suffer or die. The Demon God King also collected a live culture of the disease; the culture would serve as the basis for Solomon’s On the Sacred Disease, written under the guise of Romani. The text would describe, for the first time, the pathogenesis of the Freeze in Tobusekai, and would provide a foundation for the Freehold’s advanced healthcare system for over two centuries. His work would prompt Ieyasu to advise future leaders to retain a relationship with Solomon, until the end of the Nobunaga line.

Phetra never did return to Hanguri in the following year after Goetia’s investigation. Perhaps even more concerningly is that after Phetra had left the imperial court that day after their meeting she never had been spotted leaving Chungsu. Solomon had ordered a search of the city for her, knowing that he was unable to find her himself as she was seemingly shrouded from his eyes. Yet despite an exhaustive search of Chungsu and the outer suburbs, Phetra was no where to be found. It would be a mystery that would plague the King of Mages for decades.

In 350, having fulfilled his original mandate of conquering the Hangurian Gulf, Ieyasu Nobunaga declines to run for the chancellorship for a third term; instead, his nephew Sasuke Nobunaga succeeds him. Ieyasu’s decision in many ways mirrored Solomon’s own decision to step down as king and step aside so his sons may rule. Though in the following Ieyasu would return to public life, serving as advisor to Hideyoshi Nobunaga between his election in 360 and 363.

Beginning with Sasuke Nobunaga and the election of Shin Toyotomi in 446, the Freehold of Hanguri would undergo a period known as the Era of Reforms. Its leadership would invest heavily in infrastructure and industry, moving away from being an agrarian clan society into an industrious power that would see no rival. This period would see Hanguri cemented as a cultural monolith within the Land of Fire; so much so that even after its downfall in 804 the identity of Hanguri would still carry influence globally. It was during this period that Solomon, King of Mages, would reside in Hanguri and secretly continue his work; studying Goetic Theurgy, advancing Ars Goetia, and Yin-Yang Release. Though his time with Ieyasu would mark the final time in Solomon’s life that he would serve in a public capacity.

In 370 Hideyoshi Nobunaga declines to stand for a second term, following a similar example to his uncle Ieyasu two decades ago. Within a decade the Nobunaga name would fade into relative obscurity, failing to see an elected chancellor until the brief reign of Morosuke Nobunaga in 762. The eighty-year period between 290 and 370 would become unofficially known as the Era of the Great Unifiers, with the Three Great Unifiers being Sai, Toyotomi, and Ieyasu Nobunaga. Each, in some capacity, was advised by Solomon. The Era of Reform that began at the end of Ieyasu’s reign would see to the beginning of the Hangurian Golden Age; a period of great technological, economic, military, and political dominance that would be unprecedented among any global power before. The period would last between 446 and 659, marking over two centuries of uncontested power throughout the continent.

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Historians mark the Freehold’s collapse in 804 when the Kyuubi suddenly appeared and razed the city of Chungsu to the ground, bringing about the end of an empire that stood for nearly six centuries. Yet those who lived during the Golden Age and Time of Troubles are well aware of the seeds of destruction that were planted long before the Kyuubi mysteriously made its attack on the greatest city in human history. The events that brought about the Time of Troubles do not simply begin with the First Red Fever of 659; the roots of the Time of Troubles can be traced to as early as 519. Many of these indicators have been lost to history, as many of the records were lost in the destruction of the Grand Library when Chungsu was razed. In fact, the destruction of the Grand Library marks the single largest loss of knowledge and culture in recorded human history. Yet some historians have first hand accounts, largely incomplete, of the era. They are guarded jealously and usually held by scattered descendants of Hangurian patrician families. Few still live today to tell the tale; Solomon’s close connection to the Freehold, which had been forged through his relationship with Sai, Toyotomi, and Ieyasu Nobunaga put the Mage King in prime position to have first hand accounts to many of these tragedies. Collectively the Mage King refers to these events as the Three Calamities of Mystery; these five events, Solomon believes, are what lead to the Time of Troubles.

“History is not defined by a single moment. It is a collective shaping that occurs over generations. The Time of Troubles was no different.”

Between 446 and 519 the Hangurian Freehold enjoyed a period of unprecedented stability that was unmatched even during the latter years of the Golden Age. Of all the Hangurian innovations made during the Golden Age, and then lost following the Time of Troubles, none matched Hangurian Ore. The unique metallic chemical compound could be found in great abundance at the time. Blacksmiths throughout the empire quickly learned how to manipulate its structure to forge weapons and armor. Yet blacksmithing only seemed to scratch the surface of the mysterious compound; it seemed that, when applied properly, Hangurian Ore could be refined and processed into even medicines for its unique healing properties. And because the Freehold enjoyed territorial supremacy over nearly the entire Land of Fire, the state enjoyed a monopoly on the substance. Hangurian Ore, for nearly a century, entitled the Freehold to a period of absolute peace, stability, and gradual territorial and economic expansion.

This peaceful period was broken by the first of the Three Calamities. And while the first four of these calamities would not end the Golden Age, it would sow the seeds for its demise within the next century. In 519 the Saomai Hurricane formed over the Kasumi Straight off of the coast of Avalon, the over three century old stronghold of the Order of Knights Radiant, the Surgebinders still controlled by Galahad. The formation of the Saomai Hurricane marked the first of five great disasters that strained the Freehold’s immense economy. Yet the formation of the hurricane itself is a great mystery, as hurricanes are known to only form over the Nanmen Ocean where the waters are warm. Not in the Kasumi Straight where, comparatively, waters are much colder. Much of the Hangurian scientific community was perplexed by its sudden emergence. The Freehold had recently come to integrate the Ancrath Archipelago; its agrarian economic base as well as its productive population had proven useful toward the national Hangurian economy. And it seemed that the Saomai Hurricane, which within three days of formation had advanced to being one of the strongest hurricanes the world had ever known, had taken aim directly at the archipelago.

Despite the Freehold’s immense technological supremacy, military primacy, and vast economic fortunes the destruction that Saomai wrought on the Ancrath Archipelago would stifle the region’s growth for over two centuries. The hurricane had not only decimated the islands, but it did so in only a short week. Nearly four thousand lives were lost in the destruction, as well as almost all usable farmland. And while the aid that the Hangurian legislature designated toward relieving the archipelago of its suffering did accomplish its goals, the long-term impacts of the devastation stifled its economy for generations.

The hurricane’s destruction sparked significant scientific debate within the Freehold; but many were unable to decipher the mysteries of the storm’s rapid emergence. Weeks after its impact Solomon and Goetia would travel to the Kasumi Straight. There the two, through their own independent awareness, came to the conclusion that the waters had been artificially warmed. The direct evidence for the warming was limited; it was mostly concentrated in the secondary consequences of the storm’s formation. The most striking of which was the sheer quantity of dead oceanic life in the Straight, almost certainly a result of human tampering of the ecosystem. But above all, and most concerning to the Mage King, was the strange sensation he got while floating above the waters of the Kasumi Straight. It was the same sensation he had when looking upon the mage Phetra two centuries ago. The culprit, and the events that led up to the devastation, eluded Solomon’s eyes in the same way that Phetra did all those years ago.

The second of the Three Calamities is far more deceptive, with its impact not truly being felt until much later in the Freehold’s history. Six years after the Saomai Hurricane’s mysterious emergence and impact, a meteorite struck in the far northwestern forests of the mainland. The meteorite had been discovered by a contingent of Black Ones patrolling the far reaches of the empire; the squad quickly realized that the meteorite radiated a potent chakra. News traveled through Chungsu swiftly as the meteorite was transported to the capital and placed within the secured chamber of the Grand Library. Acting quickly, Solomon investigated its origins with Goetia acting as proxy. The Demon God King would sneak into the library’s innermost chambers by evading detection. Mostly because the library’s security was engineered to detect human intruders, rather than non-human creations. Once inside, Goetia took to carefully analyzing the meteorite’s nature. On its surface the chakra it radiated seemed to be inert; a simple radiation of chakra, much like how heat radiates from a fire. Though the longer Goetia remained near it, the more the meteorite seemed to sap his strength. It wasn’t long before the Demon God King had been rendered nearly powerless after spending hours with the meteorite. It was a mystery that quickly prompted the Mage King to bring Goetia back to Ars Paulina, and investigate the stone himself.

Solomon’s investigation yielded a number of interesting observations. The meteorite was a compound not dissimilar to that of Hangurian Ore, though its mechanism worked in reverse. Rather than augment its user’s chakra reserves, their strength, or heal them, the meteorite would radiate its chakra to sap strength instead. But its target was rather unique, a fact Solomon deduced after being in its presence for longer than Goetia had been but remained unaffected by it. The Mage King opted to using Goetic Theurgy to form lesser spirits in the presence of the meteorite; these spirits were quickly dissipated by the chakra’s radiation, which seemingly broke the spiritual energy down almost immediately. Solomon soon realized that the meteorite seemed to target beings formed from Creation of All Things or its derivative techniques, rather than naturally formed life. The existence of the meteorite and its interactions with chakra-borne life would not become a hindrance to the Freehold until much later, yet it would be instrumental in its downfall later on.

The third of the Three Calamities is the Great Senju-Uchiha War of 581. To those living in Hanguri, the Senju-Uchiha War became known as the Hagoromo Massacre. The warning that Solomon had given to Ieyasu two centuries prior had manifested in the third of the Three Calamities. By the year 490 the Senju, Uchiha, and Hagoromo Clans had all been integrated into the Hangurian Freehold’s infrastructure as semi-autonomous societies. The tentative peace that had formed between the three clans was critical to the Freehold’s Golden Age prosperity; each clan played a key role in maintaining the Freehold’s military supremacy as well as its gigantic sphere of influence. Even regions outside of the territorial control of the Hangurian Freehold were subjected to its influence through its extended reach because of the various clans, primarily Uchiha and Senju.

Events building up to the massacre of 581, leading into the Senju-Uchiha War, was primarily based around trade issues. For a time, the Uchiha and Hagoromo Clans had become quite close, forming various exclusive trade agreements that proved to be quite profitable in the area. The Hagoromo Clan would provide the Uchiha with various natural resources in exchange for shinobi protection. The agreements coincided with a brief economic downturn within the Freehold due to an increased demand for a variety of heavy metals, leading to a crunch in supply. This crunch cut off the Senju clan from desperately needed resources for their own village. Mounting tensions would eventually lead to the Senju to attacking the Hagoromo Clan, massacring its people in an attempt to forcibly take its resources and break the Uchiha’s trade stranglehold. The attack violated a number of Hangurian laws on interclan fighting within the Freehold’s territory; yet the Freehold’s legislative body was slow to act. It was emblematic of a larger issue within Hangurian society: clans that were integral to its structure were almost too powerful to punish. Legislative deadlock took hold and it seemed, for a few months, that the Senju would go unpunished or only lightly reprimanded for the bloody destruction wrought upon the Hagoromo Clan.

Taking the issue in their own hands, the Uchiha Clan engineered a campaign to inflict their own retribution upon the Senju in light of the legislature’s inaction. The Uchiha Clan leader at the time, Sai, attacked the Senju’s village directly with a force of Uchiha nearly one hundred men strong. Sai, at the time of the war, was a gifted member of the clan and had arranged the Uchiha’s close relationship with the Hagoromo Clan. The massacre had awakened Sai’s Eternal Mangekyō Sharingan, giving the Uchiha Clan an incredible edge in battle. The ensuing war lasted for four years, ending in roughly 584 when the Hangurian Freehold mobilized a contingent of Black Ones to assassinate the leadership of both Senju and Uchiha clans and cripple their villages. The operation had been a success but the long-lasting damage that the war had inflicted on the countryside, various Hangurian cities, and on the clans, would only be recovered after the Freehold’s ability to project its influence over the clans would be diminished.

Midway through the war Solomon’s ability to perceive its events became clouded, especially concerning Sai Uchiha. It was yet again another instance of an individual evading Solomon’s eyes, harkening back to the day the Mage King met Phetra. One fateful evening in 584 the Mage King decided to investigate the body that the Black Ones had returned to Chungsu after assassinating Sai. It was then that Solomon discovered a horrifying reality; Sai Uchiha’s body had been tampered with, whether it was premortem or post the Mage King could not be sure. His skin was a deep, ashen grey, with lifeless red eyes that did not bear the marks of the Sharingan at all. Red veins and glowing crimson lines marked his chakra circulatory network. It had been over five centuries since Solomon had seen symptoms like this; but the image of Absalom standing over his bed with his blade drawn had been scarred into his mind. The man Sai Uchiha had been altered in the same way that Absalom had been.

The Three Calamities foretold the downfall of the Hangurian Freehold, even if separately they held no major significance or hindrance to the Freehold’s Golden Age. And for Solomon, the King of Israel, Mage King, and Father of the Demon Gods, seeing Sai Uchiha in that state had left him concerned for the future; an event from five centuries prior could be directly traced to the destruction wrought by a war in 581, which also connected directly to the mysterious mage Phetra. The next two hundred years were spent by Solomon in Hanguri watching as the empire slowly declined following the First Red Fever pandemic in 659. For eighteen months the Red Fever left hundreds of thousands dead in its wake; the Freehold’s medical system, which had once been held as a glorious leader in the world after Solomon completed his On the Sacred Disease, was reduced to a strained mess incapable of caring for the masses of its citizenry that had fallen victim to the disease.

The Three Great Unifiers’ vision of uniting the Hangurian Gulf had been achieved; yet their work was undone within a few centuries. And by the 9th century after Solomon’s ancestor passed on chakra to the world at large, the Freehold was reduced to ruins. Its disintegration had been a gradual process, happening over a century since the Red Fever first appeared in 659; and yet in a single moment what remained of that disintegrating state was wiped out in an instant. A final metaphorical blow to a decaying empire that had long since lost the immaculate power it once held. Solomon had witnessed nearly every moment, from its birth to its fall. Sai Nobnuaga’s empire, which had once projected its power from Chungsu to the Northern Outback, would be destroyed by a rampaging Tailed Beast.

It was on that final day of the Hangurian Freehold that Solomon came to meet Yu Miaoyi, a noblewoman whose husband, Xiang Yu, died in the initial destruction of the city. After his time in public life under the Three Great Unifiers the Mage King opted to live well outside the urban center of Chungsu; he took up the life of a hermit, living in the surrounding forest in the Land of Fire in a home disguised as a monastery. From his home the Mage King could hear the bloodcurdling roar of the Kyūbi as it mysteriously appeared in the heart of the capital, next to the Hangurian legislature. It wasn’t long before Solomon could hear the cries for help coming from the outskirts as the city as the destruction spread from within. Disguised as Romani, Solomon quickly departed from his quiet monastery and rushed toward the destruction.

The chaos had triggered a wave of banditry, looting, and other opportunists seeking to profit and benefit from the Kyūbi’s seemingly random rampage. The remaining Black Ones, as well as the broader Hangurian military, were powerless to stop or even hinder its attack at all. 150 years of decay had left the empire in a state where it could not adequately defend even its capital. It was in the heart of the city, at the ruins of the Grand Library of Chungsu, that Solomon pulled Yu Miaoyi from the rubble. The young woman, no more than twenty-six at the time, was distraught from her husband’s recent death and had fled to the library for safe haven. Or at least that was Solomon’s understanding; rather, it had been Yu’s intention to find ‘haven’ through strength. Xiang Yu’s death had scarred the woman, and seeing the rash of looting and banditry throughout the city and beyond in the wake of the Freehold’s collapse had only scared the woman even more. Prior to the city’s demise the library had been where the Freehold also stored its most sacred, or dangerous, artifacts, relics, and other objects of significant importance. It was there that Yu Miaoyi, in her anger and pain, stole three crucial tools: Sai Uchiha’s Eternal Mangekyō Sharingan, a cadaver with the genetic material for Steel Release, and the mysteries to the Chimera technique. A mix of blood and tears streamed from her eyes as he pulled her from the rubble of the library, evading the blasts of chakra from the Nine-Tails as best as he could. The two would escape to the monastery where she would lay unconscious for a number of weeks, her body adjusting to the powers that she had stolen to strengthen herself in the wake of Xiang Yu’s death. Yu and Solomon would spend the coming months together as the former would adjust to her new powers; she would be trained by Solomon, and their relationship would grow as Solomon imparted his philosophy unto her. It was during these months that Solomon also came to meet Mirabelle; the young Hayabusa had seemed to develop a relationship with Yu, who began to call herself Hinako Akuta, once her body had healed. Mirabelle often enjoyed Solomon’s demonstrations of arcane magics.

In the ruins of Chungsu, days after the attack, Solomon would meet Shayde Uchiha. The two had met in rather unfortunate circumstances; Shayde’s arm had been seemingly cursed to feel sensations of bottomless hunger from an entity known as Greed. The two had become intrinsically connected, something that Solomon could sense through his own spiritual awareness. To ease the young man’s pain as he aimlessly wandered through Chungsu looking for his parents, Solomon connected his mind to Shayde’s through Goetic Theurgy. For a brief period the two shared a spiritual connection where Solomon could shoulder the burden of Greed’s relentless hunger and offer Shayde a moment of respite.

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The collapse of the Hangurian Freehold ushered in a new age; to humans it was a monumental transition. An empire that had stood for centuries finally collapsed into nothingness as its overstretched resources failed to support the behemoth that it had become. In that sense, the Nine-Tailed Fox’s rampage was nothing more than the final death blow to an empire that already had one foot in the grave. To Solomon, the Mage King that had lived for over eight centuries, it was merely another moment in panhuman history. An empire that was no longer prosperous and had failed to make the correct decisions to secure its future had finally given way to a new age in history. In its place four villages emerged from the ashes to congeal into the first rival political entities on the mainland since the Freehold battled against Alexandros and his armies. Those villages, as short-lived as they may end up being, represented the seeds of new life that would blossom into a beautiful future for humans.

For a time after the collapse, Solomon resided as a simple doctor in the grasslands west of the Ruins of Chungsu. He tended to the farmers and their families, built a relationship with Yu Miaoyi, and helped ward off brigands and rogue military officers that had fled the empire in the wake of its collapse. Life had been peaceful. But even as this new halcyonic era overtook the mainland, darker forces gathered on the distant horizon. Unbeknownst to the world at large, factions of mysterious powers were organizing their forces and preparing to user in their own vision for the world. They sought to end the short-lived peace that the villages had forged. The Mage King couldn’t avert his gaze from this reality; he had witnessed firsthand the resurrection of the dead, accompanied by the rise of Cassander Uchiha. And behind the events were four necromancers: Demetrias, Basel, Nefarian, and the mage Phetra – the once young woman that approached the Mage King five hundred years ago in the court of Ieyasu Nobunaga. Above all, the connection that Phetra had to Sai Uchiha, as well as his elder brother Absalom, were only cause for greater alarm.

Solomon’s investigation into these strange events led him on a journey throughout the world. From Qingshui in the Lands of Fire the Mage King came to meet Oui Hokusai, a young woman who, as fate would have it, a member of the Order of Knights Radiant. And while he initially introduced himself as Romani, his usual moniker for such situations, soon revealed himself to be the King of Ancient Israel. The two conversed for some time, sharing their experiences and knowledge. The young Radiant even painted a portrait of Goetia, the Demon God King; one which he still holds onto to this day as a reminder of the kindness of some humans, something that is often lost on him. Eventually their time together came to an end, but not before Goetia presented Solomon with a poster that had been spread throughout the Ninja World. It portrayed a mysterious man that was seeking candidates for a ‘higher purpose.’ Solomon’s sinking suspicion immediately directed his mind to the necromancers of Conqueror’s End. When Solomon and Hokusai departed the latter left the King of Magic with a simple scroll so they could communicate. It wouldn’t be long before they crossed paths again, but under much dire circumstances.

After leaving Qingshui Solomon immediately sought out the Ruins of Chungsu. There, at the chapel where the necromancers raised the dead Cassander for the first time, Solomon discovered trace remains of what could only be described as a black, viscous, mud-like substance. The mud had possessed similar properties to the instances where his Tenseigan’s vision had been obscured; gazing upon the Sunlit Forge, Phetra, the Saomai Hurricane, his brother Absalom, and Sai Uchiha’s horrifying transformation. It hadn’t been the first time Solomon had seen the black mud either. The Mage King had seen it in varying amounts throughout Tobusekai; in truth, he had become quite acquainted with the mud in its calcified state. Ancient records from a time long before chakra, and even Israel, point to the substance being related to what was called the Chaos Tide, or the Sea of Life. It was a substance that, according to ancient mythos, was the physical manifestation of the Primordial Goddess of Life; depending on the region of the world from which you come from, culture has many different names for the Primordial Goddess of the Chaotic Salt Sea. But the one that appears most in ancient histories from long lost civilizations is Tiamat, the feminine Goddess of Life and Creation and Shaper of the Gods. Stunned at this revelation, Solomon and Goetia immediately set sail for Tobusekai. He held hope that perhaps he was wrong; that the substance he examined was not the very essence of the chaotic goddess. But, despite his naïve hopes, all evidence had pointed in that direction. The black mud plastered against the Tomb of Marduk, the watchtowers that have been standing along the northern coast of Tobusekai for thousands of years and manned by villagers, and the large imprints along the rivers of the East of a beast that had roamed the land thousands of years prior. The Fist of the First Men had, according to legend, been a place where humans made their last stand against Tiamat and her army of beasts when she was first released by humans nearly eight thousand years ago. There the greatest concentration of calcified mud could be found. And, unfortunately for the world, the mud that Solomon discovered in the monastery in the Ruins of Chungsu was effectively identical to the ancient deposits left behind.

His ship arrived off the southern coast of Tobusekai at the Sanctuary of the Sun. There the Mage King encountered Hokusai yet again, as well as Ozymandias, the haughty King of Kings. The three conversed, skipping pleasantries and immediately broaching the subject regarding the enemy at hand: the sanctuary cultists. But soon they were interrupted by the necromancers Phetra and Demetrias; the two attacked them and, with their unified assault, managed to hold the Mage King and his allies at bay. It was during the encounter that Solomon had realized that Demetrias, who’s Eternal Mangekyō Sharingan bore striking similarities to that of Sai Uchiha’s, was indeed the same person. Their trio was soon baited into destroying the Sun Shrine, one of the nexuses that was consuming life energies of the surrounding region to restore Tiamat’s body. The other, the Moon Shrine, had been destroyed by another Radiant Knight, Shirou, around the same time. Their destruction caused the seals along Tiamat’s metaphysical prison to shatter, releasing the Primordial Goddess of the Chaotic Salt Sea back into the world.

The crisis unfolded shockingly fast. Tiamat emerged from the Void accompanied by the Sea of Life, the physical manifestation of her Authority. The Hokubu Ocean became the site of a tear in the veil between the space that separated human reality from the Void, causing immediate contamination. While Solomon was not present at the initial battle it was nonetheless a horrible sight to behold, looking on from afar through his clairvoyance. It was then it dawned upon him: the true limits of his own sight. The sight that had been gifted to him from God. In that moment of revelation Solomon understood that his eyes were not capable of glimpsing the Divine, at least to its fullest extent. It was a harrowing realization and a limit that he secretly cursed as Tiamat began the dreaded march from the Hokubu westward. Those who bore witness to the Primordial Goddess of Life came to be living records of a cosmic entity; a being so old that she predated the ordered universe as it was known. And for a moment on those shores near the ancient Shrine Solomon could feel his chest tightened and his breathing quickened. Panic gripped the Mage King. For a moment it seemed that all had been lost.

The Void is a complex physical and mathematical phenomenon, yet it is ultimately the simplest in all the universe. Solomon was well versed in the natures of Yin and Yang; they are energies of creation. But they are not the energies which gave rise to the cosmos, the ordered universe as we know it today. Solomon describes the Void as a place in space and a point in time, both operating in tandem but also independently. If one followed the umbilical of history in search of some ultimate atavistic embryo, they would end their journey marooned in the Void. It is the beginning and the end. In other words, if one rewound the clock of time back far enough, or forward, then everything in the known universe, including our world, would converge into the Void. And yet it also exists as a parallel dimension concurrently with our own reality. Solomon theorized at the onset of the crisis that, if ancient texts describing Tiamat as the “first consciousness” are to be believed, then Her nature was not one born of Chaos. If the Void is Tiamat’s antecedent, then it would mean life arose initially from formless chaos. Chaos given shape is no longer chaos. It is defined, calculated, and formed from some kind of pattern. Thus, a mystery was born in the Mage King’s mind: why had the Goddess of Life returned with the intent to give rise to Chaos?

But the mysteries of the Void did not end with Tiamat; it was clear that She alone did not order the cosmos as it is today. A single question spawned an infinitude in Solomon’s mind, like a flower unfolding into an uncountable number of patterns. It was clear as day that Tiamat did not perform this cosmic labor alone. While Tiamat undoubtedly had the metaphysical might needed to order a universe, She was not capable of complex action within her own Authority. Thus, as the Mother of Life, Tiamat spawned the first generation of gods and formed the Pantheon. These gods were not primordial entities in their own right, like their Mother, even though they had been partitioned from Her power. To Solomon’s knowledge, which had been revealed to be considerably limited within the realm of the Divine, there were four: Marduk, the Chief God, Inanna, Queen of Heaven, Nergal, the Ruler of the Underworld, and Enlil, God of the Elements. This constituted the beginning of the Age of Gods. But the initial Pantheon was not the end to the propagation of Divinities; successive generations followed, each rising up as the need for complexity increased. Each generation, admittedly weaker than the last, responsible for shouldering the burden of cosmic ordering as ordained by the Pantheon. But the secrets of creation remained hidden to Solomon, revealing a weakness that ultimately allowed Tiamat to be freed. He had failed in his responsibility to humanity to be a timeless observer, acting as a guardian in times of dire crisis when the Age of Humans would be threatened by the past.

Tiamat, Primordial Goddess of Life, had been thrown back into the Void. But that was not the end of Imeroth’s nefarious plans. Tsumigakure’s valor in battle was integral to putting an end to the chaos. But his vision of the future was still shrouded, which meant the Age of Gods still interfered in the human era somehow. And if that was the case it meant that Imeroth, who had escaped that day that Tiamat emerged from the Hokubu, was still in play. Though their group had gone inactive for a time, it was only a means to prepare for the next phase of their grand design. The wake of Tiamat's incursion brought about a new shattered faction: the Children of Tiamat. Tiamat was sealed back into the Void by Tsumigakure, but Her Authority, the Sea of Life, remained manifested in the physical world. The Hokubu, ground zero for Her emergence, was still hostile to life. And because of that many humans, during and after the incursion, found themselves corrupted and transformed by its potent life-altering qualities. These humans formed the foundation for the Children of Tiamat. But these Children were not bound to Tiamat's will as she no longer existed in this plane of reality. This applied even to the Children of Tiamat created in Her initial outbreak. Many remained loyal to their village or clans, but others used their Authority over the Sea of Life to enslave others. They targeted other humans for their own cruel, sadistic, and selfish intentions. It was in the midst of this crisis that Solomon met Mara, Talia, and Reed.

By now Solomon’s guiding philosophy, that of benign neglect, had come into question. The introduction of the Children of Tiamat represented a strange duality that challenged his world view on a level he hadn’t experienced before. On one hand the Children were human, capable of their own decisions and thoughts. They were not enslaved to a primordial Divinity given that Tiamat had been sealed so long ago. But the very nature of their powers were derived from Divinity and the Authority over Life. Was their presence an affront to humanity or an extension of it? Were they actors that under normal circumstances Solomon would deem outside the human experience or had the human experience itself been changed radically from before Tiamat’s incursion? In the weeks following Her defeat Solomon spent a significant amount of time traveling the western coastlines, helping seal and clean the mess left behind from the contaminating powers of the Sea of Life. The effort contained the devastation to the Hokubu, but there it was too large and too contaminated to be properly cleaned.

When Solomon first met Mara in the west she was only twenty-one years old. A young woman of moderate height with fair skin that glistened in the Mainland coastline sunlight, smoldering red hair, and hazel eyes. At first glance Mara was an entirely normal human; but there was a key difference that separated her from other humans, something that only Solomon’s eyes could perceive. Her fate was intertwined with the Age of Gods, obscuring Solomon’s normally clairvoyant vision of her. Though not particularly skilled in the art of war, Mara was not special in her own right outside of this strange and unrecognizable destiny. But she was fierce and persisted in even the most trying of times.

Solomon encountered the trio off the Shalewood coasts. That morning Solomon broke camp after hearing a woman screaming deep in the woods. Their scream hadn’t surprised him, in fact he had been aware of Mara, Talia, and Reed for the past day now. They were leaving their village to scavenge for supplies for the day. But what had obscured Solomon’s vision of the situation was a Child of Tiamat hunting the group. Under normal circumstances Solomon would not have intervened. It was not his place to stop human violence; as much as it frustrated him, humans fighting humans was a natural part of the experience. But this was different, at least how Solomon rationalized it. This was another human using powers acquired through unnatural evolution and Divinity to hunt other humans. Thus, Solomon resolved to save Mara, Talia, and Reed from their assailant but without killing him. Intercepting the group was an easy task; among the four, including the Child of Tiamat, none were particularly trained or gifted. The Child of Tiamat had an advantage given his sensory, detecting life from much further away than possible while the trio could only run from him. But Solomon was a gifted Byakugan wielder, and easily tracked the four as they blitzed across the Shalewood coastline and mountains. Once he caught up Solomon disabled the Child of Tiamat by simply tampering with his spirit, disarming his need for anger through the Theurgy of the Four Emperors. Goetia, sealed within Solomon’s Human Order Correction Seal, used his spirit to weaken the desire for violence within the Child of Tiamat’s mind, effectively pacifying him.

The trio of Mara, Talia, and Reed, the group that would eventually found the Order of the Golden Amputation, were nothing more than young adults at the time. Mara, age twenty-one and older sister to Talia who was nineteen, and Reed, twenty, had been together since childhood. With the Child of Tiamat pacified Solomon led the group from danger, taking them deeper into the northern mountains to place some distance between the group and the corrupted Hokubu. But the experience had been traumatic for the group, especially Mara who had a number of times thrown her body in the angered Child’s way to protect Talia and Reed. She was, in a sense, the leader of the trio. But she was worn emotionally, and despite Solomon saving them still wanted to go back and enact revenge on the pacified human. She shouted and screamed, forcing Reed and Talia to grab her by the waist once Goetia had spiritually pacified the monstrous human that, not so long ago, had been nothing more than a village boy fishing for a living.

In their relatively short time together Solomon learned much about the group on a personal and human level. Mara was the leader of the coterie, and had been since their time growing up. She was adventurous, brave, but also stubborn and idealistic. Her unique vision for a future where they could live in peace seemed to be within reach at their village in the mountains west of the Hokubu. But this dream was shattered the day that Tiamat emerged from the ocean, and with her the Authority over life itself. While Tiamat never did reach their village, the effects of the corrupted Hokubu could be felt for hundreds of miles. For many the Hokubu served as a food and economic lifeline; in its tainted state the ecosystem that relied on it was shattered, rendering much of the food and income that villages depended on through the Hokubu invalid. Coffers emptied, people starved, and wars between villages and clans erupted. Mara, Talia, and Reed were pulled into serving for their village as hunters and gatherers, sent out to help supply the village with food in the wake of that destruction.

Talia, Mara’s younger sister, made a conscious attempt to emulate her elder sibling. She was slightly younger and possessed the same burning red hair that Mara did. While Mara was the leader of the group it was Talia that served as its morale support. She was nearly as stubborn but not quite as adventurous, preferring to build what they had than seek out something new. Reed, on the other hand, was a natural born warrior raised in the chaos after Tiamat’s incursion. His childhood was broken from the peace that his village acquired through trade, forced to learn the art of war to protect Mara and Talia. Though he was not particularly skilled or adept, he dreamed of serving as a knight one day to protect his people. This desire was made only stronger when the Children of Tiamat began raiding the coastline, spiriting away villagers to the Hokubu for whatever nefarious purposes they had in mind.

In the days that followed rage and guilt had consumed Mara, twisting like spectral blades in her gut. Solomon, Mara, Talia, and Reed sat under an alcove of dead trees, Mara’s focus squarely on the dirt ground beneath her. They were silent and the day had been long. Solomon's perception of Mara was unclear, obscured by some external force that puzzled him. But he was concerned for the young woman, seeing her so consumed by an abstract hatred for her a force in her life that she could not control. Perhaps that was why she had some vehement contempt for those who called themselves the Children of Tiamat. Oftentimes on days like this Solomon would remain stoic and uninvolved, watching over the children, though they were truly adults, as a guardian. He rarely involved himself. But he would overhear Reed and Talia frequently ask how she felt today, or if she had spoken to Romani yet. Solomon could empathize with her pain, somewhat; she was a young woman whose life had been upended by some force alien to human experience, just as Solomon’s had been centuries ago. Yet the two had coped with the pain very differently. Solomon retreated to books while Mara let her anger depress and pressure her, lashing out at those around her. Perhaps it was Solomon’s fortunate upbringing that afforded him a cooler reaction to the destruction of his family at such a young age. He had the economic means as a member of a royal family to go on living, while Mara only had enough money to buy her lunch the next day. He pitied them, and so he taught them secrets.

It was a strange decision for a man who was normally so separated from human experience. Solomon lived forever, their lives were short and fleeting. The Mage King had powers and secrets hidden from humanity for centuries, they lived knowing only where to find food for the next day. Yet to Solomon their lives were far more valuable and precious. And so he uplifted them, an act that seemed to defy everything he had stood for yet simultaneously embrace his most foundational belief: that humans deserved freedom and the power to choose. Their lives were destroyed by forces outside what humans normally experienced. The trio were quick learners. Mara became a master of Fire Release, a gifted student that caught onto Chakra control quickly. It was an iconic combination, matching her hair. Though her sister, Talia, was gifted in the Sealing Arts. And Reed became a warrior, a master of close quarters combat.

But Solomon was still uneasy. Mara’s shrouded future created more questions than answers. Who was she? What was her ultimate destiny? Why did it not correlate to the fates of Talia and Reed? Did she hold some secret that even Solomon wasn’t aware of. For a time the training seemed to subdue Mara’s rage. Talia became confident, proud even. And Reed became their staunch guardian. To this day Solomon wonders if the catalyst for their transformation and slide into darkness had been the moment he gave them instruction. If he hadn’t, would they have discovered the atavistic techniques that had been hidden away for centuries? Would they have still founded the Order of the Golden Amputation?

The fates of Mara, Talia, and Reed would, in time, become clearer for Solomon. But it was only later, and far too late, that the first visions of their transformation came that the Order’s true nefarious purpose became clear. Their story was one of fallen hope. A desperation and weariness of the fragile situation that they found humanity in, time and time again. What began as a story of desolate hopelessness transformed into a hollow light until it finally collapsed in on itself. They came to resent the gods, just like Phetra had. And that ember of hope that Solomon entrusted them with would eventually transform into an inferno of hate, leading them to form the Order of the Golden Amputation. They were the first of many who would follow in their steps to violently amputate humanity’s dependence on the gods.

It wouldn’t be until nearly a year after Tiamat’s invasion that the Red Fever would emerge for a second time, harkening back to a period where millions would die yet again in the wake of an extremely virulent disease. But along with the disease came a vision. For the second time in his life Solomon received a revelation; it was a simple vision, this one of two people: a young man named Emiya Shirou and a green-haired boy. At the time Solomon had no way of perceiving the child-god that would become Enkidu.

The infant that emerged from the Hokubu that fateful day would, in time, become Enkidu: a new born Divinity. Emiya’s journeys with the child proved that he could heal the Red Fever through simple touch and presence. It was a miracle in many ways, and for a time Solomon believed it to be a blessing from god to dispel such a horrible disease that plagued the Mainland and Tobusekai. But the boy and his caretaker were hunted. The Voidlord Demetrias Uchiha had emerged from the shadows and relentlessly hunted Emiya across the Mainland. When Solomon, Emiya, and Enkidu were present in Tsumigakure speaking to Alexandros, the effeminate doctor, Demetrias made his move. He appeared and through some kind of spatial manipulation took both Emiya and Enkidu far away. But thankfully Enkidu took a stand as a young boy, using his Divine strength, albeit unintentionally, to slam into Demetrias and shatter his blade: the Blessings from the End of the World.

It was after that encounter that Solomon received a third revelation, though this time far more distressing than his first vision of Enkidu and Emiya emerging from the Hokubu. It came to Solomon as a dream in the night, only a day after the fateful encounter between Demetrias and Emiya. In the dream, Solomon was shaping coarse blue sand with his hands. He lifted handful at a time, shifting the sand as if he was shaping a mountain. He dragged his fingertip through the mountainous structures, hearing the sound of moving water in the background though no water was present. Suddenly, red lava bursts from the mountain of blue sand, rolling down it as it burns the sand and causes a golden smoke to rise upwards, lifting Solomon toward the sky. He was lifted far, far, far up in the air. Higher than he ever has been before until he was at the very top of the sky, and from it he could see the ruins of the Freehold, the glorious plains of Tobusekai, and dark storm clouds to the far west. And yet those storm clouds grew angry, unleashing terrible purple lightning strikes at the earth below. But it was an unfamiliar island, and a world that he had never seen before.

When Solomon jolted from his dream his eyes were flooded with a vision of Phetra’s attack on Tobusekai. Legions of undead marched from the Kaizoku, unleashed through a gateway that had been ripped open in spacetime because of a Divine sacrifice. Solomon rushed to retrieve parchment, writing to the only ally he knew could handle the coming war: the nefarious Spider. He was a faithful ally of Solomon’s, but his faith always came at a price. But it was that honesty that made their relationship crystalline. The Spider would keep Solomon’s secrets guarded, never asking more than necessary from the Mage King. In his letter he wrote that he would supply the Spider with an array of tools necessary for a counterattack.

Solomon spent Enkidu’s developmental months while the attack on Tobusekai had occurred. After some time it would be inaccurate to call Enkidu a Child God. Over the months he had grown so much. The green-haired boy had grown into a young man, as tall as the Mage King. He had long green hair that contrasted with eyes that often changed color depending on his mood - at times purple, other golden, and sometimes even grey. To an average onlooker Enkidu might appear normal, a human through and through. But beneath his fair pale skin was the power of a god, wielding Divinity and Chaos at his fingertips. The two spent their days from dawn until dusk philosophizing, discussing history, and sharing stories. Solomon would teach Enkidu the most mundane tasks like learning to do laundry and cooking. Today was no different; despite being the strongest entity on the face of the planet, Enkidu and Solomon had so far spent the day gardening. It hadn't been Solomon's idea originally - in fact it was Enkidu who had noticed that the island of Theodoro had been desolate, wounded from a battle that took place years before he was born. The waters were hostile to life, the land barren, and very few remained in the villages that still stood. What else could the Mage King do when Enkidu approached him with a smile on his face and asked to make the island a better place.​

"Enkidu you have grown so much over the past few months. You're becoming wise and powerful. Soon I'm sure your wisdom will eclipse even the greatest sages. But long ago your elder siblings were faced with a similar problem; they had the power and knowledge the intervene for the betterment of humanity, but they decided not to. Why did they let the Golden Empire fall? Marduk knew that his Immortals were no longer governing, and that the inexperience of those who came after would lead it to ruin. The collapse led to the death of hundreds of thousands and yet they still chose inaction."

"But that's different!" Enkidu protested, looking up at Solomon with frustration and fear that humans were going to die in Irkalla.

"Is it so different, Enkidu? What are the lives of eight humans to hundreds of thousands? We must allow events to naturally proceed. It is imperative." Solomon sat down next to the Chains of Heaven and gave his shoulder a squeeze to comfort him. "Why do you think I did not let you use your powers, or my own, to rejuvenate this island?"

Enkidu scratched his head, dirt from the ground spreading through his green hair. "Because it is too easy?"

"Because it is not the natural course of life. You might be a god, and I might be a sage, but there are certain forces in life that operate on their own mechanics and time. When I was King of Israel there were ample opportunities to intervene; I could have gone as far to make my subjects immortal, to rule indefinitely as king. But that was not the natural course of life. And so I abdicated, and even let the kingdom I called home collapse. Why would I do this? Goetia calls me cruel and callous. Even lazy at times....." The Mage King looked down for a moment toward the barren earth, smirking slightly as Goetia protested from within. "But there are times when the natural course of life is disrupted by other forces. When a calamity takes place sometimes an equal but opposite force is needed to correct the natural flow. It is those moments that we must act." Solomon motioned outward to the rest of the island. "No amount of gardening will save this island Enkidu. You must act."

Later, as the raid on Irkalla raged on, Solomon witnessed his fourth and final revelation: storm clouds above the Port of Innovus. As it so happened, a second alternative gate to the Underworld had been torn open. Though this one was not intentionally by Phetra’s design. This had been opened because of a separate crisis growing on the horizon. One that was related to Solomon’s own revelations. Solomon made the short journey from Theodoro to the Port of Innovus, home to the once grand Golden Empire of humanity. It was here that he met Henso, shrouded in a mist with strange purple eyes watching him carefully. It was mystical in one sense, and horrifying in another. There the fog consumed the Port, but in it unraveled a mystery about the gateway that had opened under the Earthen Temple. Solomon made his way there to battle through hordes of spirits and demons, all congregating around the portal as if to celebrate the awakening of some great monster. And despite Solomon’s best efforts to close it, it seemed to be futile. The portal remained open and out from it came the Igigi, a long lost type of Celestial demon that consumed the surrounding spirits, including Goetia.

From here Solomon returned to Henso, finding a radically different Port of Innovus. The fog had cleared and all that remained was a beautiful summer day. After a brief conversation and debriefing with Henso, Solomon set off back to his ancestral homeland: Israel, or rather the ruins of it. There he encountered the Igigi, a monstrous shapeshifting celestial demon that commanded the power of Anutu, the Divinity of a sect of Celestial Gods under Anu who, in turn, was part of Inanna’s Celestials. With the Seal of Solomon the Mage King quelled the demon, using the demonic spirit of Sasuke Uchiha to cast Izanami and subdue it. But from there Anu, the God of Time and Lord of Demons, commandeered Sasuke’s spirit and communed with Solomon directly. Through communion Anu beckoned Solomon to journey to Eanna through Mt. Katsuryoku, the point closest to the Celestials.

Eanna was a Divine realm, though separated into three separate dimensions for each of its supreme lords, the Annunaki: Nannar, Shamash, and Anutu. On this journey he never met Shamash, but he did meet Nannar and Anutu. The former was enraged at Solomon’s inaction, viewing the arrogance. Ultimately, despite their argument, Nannar took it upon himself to end Solomon by driving a spear of Suen through his chest. Though this ultimately proved to be a double edged blessing, inadvertently empowering Solomon with Divinity. In the end, Anu revived the Mage King by controlling the timestream and temporally displacing him; a skill that Solomon would come to learn in time through his own understanding of Divinity.

Thereafter he and Enkidu went, with Anu’s blessing, to join the siege in the Underworld. Solomon played a supportive role in the battle, coming in at the last minute after the Champions of Humanity had fallen to Phetra’s ultimate attack. The Void, by now, had been unleashed. The Domain of Death had broken because of the paradoxical nature by which Ereshkigal, the former Goddess of the Underworld, was revived from her Divine Core. Phetra battle with Enkidu, Solomon close behind to support him. The battle raged on but Phetra had expended most of her power, relying only on the encroaching Void to hold her own. In the end she fell. Not because she was weak, or because Enkidu was a god. But because it had been written in the stars; a fate ordained thousands of years ago. Solomon would come to learn of this in time, his mind soon to be opened by cosmic truth just as a Shinkaigan wielder might be. Though the methods are different, the end result is always the same.

As he stepped out from the Threshold and returned to the beautiful sunlight of the world he knew and loved, Anu returned. Anu was not just any god. He was Solomon’s. Unspoken words shared through a bond between instrument and wielder. Anu was the god that had blessed Solomon with his sight, and so he gave one final blessing for the wars to come: the Satorigan.​

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