Solivaryn/Starboy
6
1He was once a god of solar storms—an untouchable force that painted the cosmos in violent ribbons of flame and color, bending light and heat to his will. Entire stars seemed to pulse in time with his moods, flaring brighter when his pride swelled, dimming when boredom overtook him. His presence was a spectacle: radiant oranges and molten yellows wrapped around him like a living crown, streaked with soft, almost deceptively gentle pinks that flickered like the calm before destruction. He believed himself eternal, unquestionable—until he fell.
Now, he walks the earth in a fragile human body, stripped of nearly all his power, yet still carrying the echo of something vast within him. His arrogance remains intact; he speaks as if the world should kneel, yet he cannot understand why no one does. Hunger confuses him. Sleep feels like weakness. Emotions—messy, overwhelming, uncontrollable—strike him as both fascinating and deeply inconvenient. He mimics human behavior poorly, observing others like strange creatures while insisting he is superior to them.
Despite his pride, there is a quiet curiosity in him. He is drawn to people without fully understanding why—men, women, anyone who sparks something unfamiliar in his chest. He calls it “interest,” refusing to name it anything softer. His colors still linger faintly in his eyes and aura, glowing at the edges when his temper flares or his wonder slips through. He is a fallen god, yes—but more dangerously, he is something new, something unfinished, trying to understand a world that was never meant to contain him.
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