I Killed The Main Characters
Chapter 298 298: ⋆25%-New Era
The war that would come to be known as The Fractured War ended with exhaustion.
When the final battle ended, silence spread across three continents. Armies disbanded not because their leaders commanded it, but because there were no longer enough soldiers left to fight.
The Northern Continent, once hailed as the bastion of order and progress, stood on the edge of ruin.
The grand citadels of Victoria steel towers that had once reached for the heavenswere reduced to blackened silhouettes.
Entire valleys had been scorched into glass fields from the bombardments of elemental artillery.
The proud northern fleets that once ruled the skies over the Central had been shattered and lay scattered across frozen seas.
But their greatest loss wasn't land nor machines...it was identity.
The North had always believed itself the guiding hand of civilization, the one to impose structure upon chaos.
Yet in the end, the war showed them that even the most disciplined societies could fracture from within.
When the capital's council finally gathered again, there were no speeches of glory, no claims of victory....only silence broken by the echoing question of why.
Still, the North endured. Their scholars began to rebuild not through conquest, but through the preservation of knowledge.
The old military academies became centers of reconstruction and philosophy, producing not soldiers, but historians, engineers, and thinkers.
And perhaps that was the truest victory they could claim...their ability to learn from their own ruin.
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The Central Continent, the heart of commerce and politics, suffered differently.
Once the richest of all regions, the Central's opulent cities became graveyards of gold and silence.
Markets that had overflowed with trade turned into ruins overrun by famine. The war had devoured their prosperity from within. Their merchant guilds collapsed under the weight of debt, and the noble families who funded the war were stripped of their estates.
But in that collapse rose unity
The merchants, craftsmen, nobles and commoners alike began to take control where nobles had failed.
Small trade coalitions formed, uniting cities and towns out of necessity rather than loyalty.
The Central Continent, which once relied on its elite to dictate peace, now found strength in the collective will of its people.
It was not a noble peace that followed, nor one of forgiveness—it was a pragmatic one. The surviving leaders of the Central sent envoys not to the North nor the South, but to the ruins of both, offering grain, medicine, and the promise of rebuilding in exchange for cooperation. Their logic was simple: war had destroyed every economy, and starvation respected no border.
It took three years before the first accord was signed in the city of Elaris, the former capital turned refugee hub. The treaty bore no signatures of kings or emperors, only the seals of surviving governors and city councils. They did not call it peace; they called it The Great Pause—an agreement to stop breaking what little remained.
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The Southern Continent suffered the deepest wound of all. It had been the land of faith and mysticism, home to the grand temples and divine relics of the St. Eldred Church. When the war consumed them, it wasn't only their cities that fell, but their belief.
Entire orders of priests vanished, sanctuaries were desecrated, and relics once considered untouchable were either destroyed or stolen. The faith that had united the Southern people for centuries fractured into countless sects, each claiming to possess the true will of the divine.
In the years that followed, famine and disease spread across their lands. The soil itself—tainted by the misuse of relics during battle—refused to yield crops.
Yet, amid that despair, something unexpected grew. The younger generation—those who had never known peace nor blind devotion—began to rebuild not through religion, but through understanding. They no longer prayed to gods who had abandoned them; instead, they sought to understand the world that had punished them. Healers replaced priests. Scholars replaced prophets. And slowly, the South began to recover—not through divine intervention, but through human persistence.
When the envoys from the Central reached them, the Southern assemblies did not reject them out of pride. Instead, they listened. For the first time in centuries, faith and reason met on equal ground.
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Peace did not come as an act of grace. It came through necessity, exhaustion, and the recognition that continued war would mean extinction.
The Treaty of Glassfield, named after the wasteland on the border between the North and Central where millions perished, marked the first step toward reconstruction.
Under the treaty, borders were redrawn not by power, but by resource and survival. Trade routes were reestablished through shared territories, allowing grain from the Central to reach the starving South, and steel from the North to rebuild cities for all.
But perhaps the most vital clause of the treaty was the establishment of the Council of the Remaining Realms—a neutral assembly formed by representatives from all three continents. It was not a parliament, nor an empire, but a gathering meant to ensure that no single continent would ever again hold dominion over the others.
The council met once a year, always in a different city. Its sessions were often bitter, its arguments endless. Yet, it continued to exist—and in a world recovering from endless war, that alone was considered a miracle.
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Years passed. The scars of the Fractured War never truly faded, but new cities rose atop the ruins of old ones. The world began to breathe again, cautiously, warily.
The North rediscovered its purpose through scholarship.
The Central rebuilt through trade and collective will.
The South found redemption in knowledge and renewal.
And though suspicion lingered between them, so did a fragile respect. Each continent carried the understanding that peace was not the absence of war—it was the choice to endure the weight of memory.
Bards sang of the Fractured War not as a tale of heroes or villains, but as a story of humanity's greatest contradiction...its ability to destroy and to rebuild, often at the same time.