Hades, seated upon his dark throne, opened his eyes. He saw the boy—arm broken, blood weeping from a gash across his brow—still standing. Not victorious. Not even confident. Simply standing .
The blood did not feel like his own.
“Pegasus...” he rasped, fingers scraping stone. “...Ryūsei...”
It was too warm, too thick, too final as it ran down the cracked marble of the Sanctuary steps. Pegasus Seiya lay on his back, the shattered remains of his Gold Cloth glinting like dying stars around him. The sky above was a bruise of violet and black—the Solar Eclipse, unnatural and absolute, devouring Helios himself. Saint Seiya
The Cloth fragments trembled. Not because of him. Because of them . Every fallen Saint. Every nameless soldier who had bled into these same stones for two hundred years. Their voices were not a roar. They were a hum , like a lyre string plucked by a god.
And for one eternal second, the sun returned.
Seiya smiled. It was a terrible, beautiful, human smile. Hades, seated upon his dark throne, opened his eyes
The Eleventh Hour of the Eclipse
The meteor fist struck the Eclipse itself.
It flew sideways . Through the temporal wall. Through the memory of every defeat, every doubt, every moment he had been told his constellation was the lowest, the weakest, the joke of the Saints. Not even confident
His fist drew back. The cosmos inside him—that fragile, burning thread—ignited not as a flame, but as a supernova compressed into the size of a child’s heart. The atoms of his broken bones screamed. The shattered Cloth reassembled not around his body, but through it, metal and flesh becoming one absurd, beautiful contradiction.
Hades had won. For now.
“Impossible,” the God of the Underworld whispered.
The punch did not fly upward.
“We don’t do impossible,” he said. “We do next .”