The Fourth Crusade
As armies gather and banners rise, the great city of Constantinople shimmers like a crown between worlds. But beneath its golden domes and crumbling saints, something older than empires begins to stir.
The year is 1202. The West marches East under the banner of the cross-but faith is fractured, and loyalty is a currency too easily spent. Among the crusaders are the broken, the haunted, and the ambitious:
Relics begin to bleed. Statues weep flame. The vaults beneath Hagia Sophia hum with memory. Whispers echo through the marble: the Flame is waking.
But this is not a god. Not quite.
It is something older-buried beneath faith and empire-long sealed in relic and rite. A force not divine, but remembering.
As siege looms and betrayal coils through the ranks, a forgotten power prepares to speak again.
And when it does, it will not ask for worship.
It will ask for return.