A Dark Mythos of Bone, Weight, and the Throne Compelled Forth
Not a myth that begins with a god creating the world, but with a boundary being left, a circle being forced to close, and a throne emerging under the unbearable weight of traces.
The world was first established by its bones, then weighted by its history.
Core Axioms
The throne comes before the king.
The trace comes before the name.
And the most dangerous transgression begins as the wish to make the world better.
Part I · Before Silence Fully Closed
Naheryu does not begin with creation by a god. It begins with an anterior state, a slight deviation, and the lingering of a boundary that would one day force a circle to close.
The world was not born complete. It first became possible when the lingering edge finally closed into the Ourolos Circle — the first boundary capable of bearing itself.
Yet every formation carries its own remainder.
The Deep — is what the circle cannot fully gather inward.
The Infinite — is what the circle cannot fully keep outside.
These are not flaws in the world. They are the price of its truth.
A true world is never proven by perfection. It is proven by what it cannot completely absorb, completely name, or completely close.
The world is real not because it is whole,
but because it bears its own irreducible remainder.
This principle cannot be circumvented by later divine authority. The skeleton of the world precedes all gods.
The Schism of Fate
One circle could not bear both the inward abyss and the outward expanse beneath a single destiny. Fate was forced to divide.
The Six Positions were not originally gods. They were the six ways the world could endure.
The Fracture Laws
A true world is not marked by completeness, but by the fractures it cannot evade.
These are not curses laid upon the world. They are the structural signs that the world has truly come into being.
Part II · The Divine Chronicle
This is not the history of a kingdom. It is the history of how a world, once established in pure structure, became unbearably heavy through life, gods, and trace.
Dream begins to tether itself to name.
Pain begins to leave a record.
Death begins to become more than disappearance.
The world does not merely happen — it starts to remember.
The throne was not awarded.
It was not won by conquest, nor bestowed as a reward.
When the accumulated weight of traces could no longer remain dispersed, the center had to be borne.
Thus the first Tarakh was not crowned because he was ready. He was forced to bear the throne because the world had grown too heavy to have no bearer.
The most dangerous transgression did not begin as cruelty.
It began when the divine powers first imagined that the world did not only need to be guarded, but improved. And in that desire, the distinction between bearing the world and rewriting it began to blur.
Not all worlds are equally true to the primordial bone.
Some are merely tilted.
Some are fractured and held together by strain.
Some are remade into other structural forms.
And some become dangerous precisely because they resemble the primordial too well while no longer being true.
The tragedy of Naheryu is simple.
The more worlds are created, the more traces accumulate.
The more traces accumulate, the heavier the throne becomes.
And the heavier the throne becomes, the nearer the Traceless draws.
This is not a story moving toward perfection. It is the slow transformation of pure structure into unbearable history.
The Highest Taboos
These acts are not forbidden because they are evil. They are forbidden because they loosen the conditions under which anything can still remain true.
Not the attempt to undo an event, but the attempt to unmake the condition by which events can be said to have happened at all.
To reverse the world beyond its traces is not to restore innocence, but to loosen the bone of truth itself.
A false stillness forged by already-formed divine power. It appears like the condition before formation, but it is not true primordiality. It is determined power imitating the undetermined.
And because it resembles the trace-less state without being true, it opens the way for what cannot be named, bounded, or remembered.
THE SUPREME PROHIBITION
The most dangerous falsehood is not the lie that opposes the world,
but the one that imitates what came before the world.
Proliferated Worlds
Not all worlds are equally false. Not all worlds are equally true. Each world bears the mark of how far it has departed from the first circle — and what price that departure demands.
The Throne · Tarakh · The Weight of All Worlds
Tarakh is not the one who won the throne.
Tarakh is the one the world forced to bear it.
The throne is not a reward for strength. It is the structural answer to a world that has accumulated too much history to remain centerless.
The first Tarakh was not yet a reigning king. He was a learning king — a being born not into triumph, but into burden.
Every new world, every trace, every oath, every wound, every death adds weight to the center. The tragedy is not that the world failed. The tragedy is that the world became real.