A boy born between two worlds—war and healing, fate and choice—must survive the night that destroys everything he knows. In a land shaped by gods, bloodlines, and prophecy, Seoighe mac Danu is forced onto a path he never chose, where power comes at a cost and destiny is never certain.
This story begins with a question that echoes through Celtic myth: what does it mean to inherit a destiny you never asked for?
In Irish mythology, heroes are never simple. Power is not a gift freely given—it is a burden. Bloodlines carry memory, obligation, and consequence. The gods may interfere, but they do not protect. Fate exists, undeniable and ever-present… yet choice still matters.
Seoighe mac Danu is born from that tension. He does not seek glory, nor does he dream of legend. Yet the world refuses to let him remain ordinary. To the gods, he is a piece on the board. To mortal kings, he is a weapon waiting to be claimed. What he must decide is far more dangerous: whether legacy will define him—or whether he can redefine it.
This is not merely a story of battles and prophecy. It is a story about the cost of becoming who others need you to be. About power that can save and destroy in equal measure. And about the quiet, fragile moments where a single choice can alter the course of legend.
This is only the beginning—a first step into a longer saga shaped by myth, memory, and the enduring truth that even in a world ruled by prophecy, humanity still matters.