What if I told you the history you've learned is a half truth its brightest pages glowing, its darkest erased? What if I told you that once, among the marble pillars of Olympus, there walked a god of Dark Black skin and storm-gray eyes, and that his name was struck from every song, every tablet, every whispered prayer?
In the beginning, the Fates spun a tapestry of all that was to be, but when this shadow-bearer arose born of Nubian queen and sea-king he threatened the loom. They feared his power to bend hours as easily as others bend blades. So they cut him from the weave, leaving only a single frayed thread: a prophecy whispered under a solar eclipse, a promise scrawled on a black stele in Meroë.
Remember this, reader: History is a tapestry woven by victors, but some strands are severed so cleanly that you never know they existed. Truth is a wild grain that slips through the reaper's scythe. If you search with honest heart, you may still taste its bitterness on your tongue.
He called himself Eryx Mwamba "Champion of Shadows." In him lived the dual blood of Nile-dark mortals and Grecian immortals.
This is his Story.