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I Became Mortal Because Eternity Was Lonely

Silent_Han
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Synopsis
Eternity was never cruel—only empty. Gale was a god who could create worlds with a thought, yet nothing within them could stay, change, or surprise him. While his divine siblings ruled their domains and bestowed blessings upon mortals, he made a forbidden choice: to abandon eternity and descend into the world of Malan as a mortal, sealing away his true power and erasing his divine trace. At the prestigious Magic Academy—where prodigies, blessed heroes, and hidden gods walk among humans—Gale lives quietly, refusing to use the power that could unravel reality itself. He wants nothing more than an ordinary life. Ordinary days. Ordinary emotions. Then he meets Elara Veyne. Elegant, distant, and feared by the gods themselves, Elara carries a dormant godslayer blessing—one that reacts violently to divine presence. The closer she draws to Gale, the more unstable her power becomes. The more she trusts him, the more dangerous the truth he hides grows. Unbeknownst to them both, other gods have also descended into mortality, disguising themselves as students and faculty, each with their own agendas. Some seek Gale’s return. Others seek his destruction. And some would gladly sacrifice Elara to force him back onto the throne he abandoned. Bound by longing, secrecy, and a fate that should never have intersected, Gale must choose between the love he has found and the godhood he forsook—while Elara must decide whether the man she is falling for is worth defying the heavens themselves. Because this time, eternity is not his enemy. Love is.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue: Eternity Was Not Silent

Eternity was never quiet.

It hummed—an endless, perfect resonance woven from creation itself. Stars formed and dissolved within it like thoughts briefly entertained. Time flowed without urgency. Existence obeyed without resistance.

At the center of it all, Gale watched.

He had created worlds with a gesture once. Galaxies with a thought. Life had spilled from him not as effort, but as inevitability. Where he passed, reality aligned itself out of respect.

And yet—

He was alone.

Not isolated. Not abandoned.

Alone in a way only the infinite could be.

His siblings gathered across the Astral Confluence, their thrones forged from concepts mortals could never name. Light refracted into Luxariel's form, radiant and unyielding. Pyrrhos burned with restless impatience. Zephryne drifted, laughter threaded through wind and distance. Others watched in silence—gods of law, decay, tides, memory.

They had always been here.

They would always be here.

That was the problem.

"Creation slows again," Luxariel said, voice echoing across infinity. "You've not forged a realm in centuries."

Gale did not answer immediately. He was watching a mortal world—small, flawed, and achingly brief. A farmer laughed as his child chased wind across a field. A city burned somewhere else. Both moments were equally temporary.

"Do you ever wonder," Gale said at last, "what it feels like to be necessary?"

Pyrrhos scoffed. "We are always necessary."

"No," Gale replied. "We are inevitable."

The distinction unsettled them.

Zephryne tilted her head. "You're thinking again."

"I'm tired of thinking," Gale said. "I want to live."

Silence fell—true silence this time. Even eternity seemed to pause.

Luxariel's light sharpened. "You speak nonsense."

"I want days that end," Gale continued calmly. "Choices that matter because they cannot be undone. Pain that cannot be erased by will alone."

"You want limitation," a god of order said slowly. "You want death."

Gale smiled—not sadly, but honestly.

"I want meaning."

The Confluence erupted.

"You would abandon us?" Pyrrhos roared.

"You would fracture the balance," Luxariel warned. "Creation cannot simply—"

"I am not abandoning creation," Gale interrupted. "I am trusting it."

He stood.

The act alone sent tremors through existence. Seals formed around him—self-woven, precise, merciless. His authority folded inward, bound so tightly that even he would bleed if he forced it open.

"Do not follow me," Gale said, voice gentle but final. "Do not search."

Zephryne whispered, almost pleading, "You don't know what mortals do to gods who fall."

Gale looked back once.

"I do," he said. "That's why I'm going."

And then—

He stepped out of eternity.

No thunder marked his departure. No prophecy recorded it. The Confluence closed like water over a stone.

But across the realms, unseen by gods and mortals alike, something fundamental shifted.

Eternity blinked.

And somewhere in the world of Malan, a mortal child took his first breath—unaware that the god who had shaped everything had chosen to bleed beside him.