An android, a female humanoid, stands on a dark planet infected by the blight.
The Last Blight Prophet

The war is long over. The galaxies still remember.

The Forgotten Seals anthology is a collection of short stories set centuries after the events of The Primus Saga. These are stories of echoes of faith lost and found, of ruins and remnants, of fractured memory and stubborn light. The great wars have passed. The kingdoms have crumbled. But magic still whispers, and the seals, those old pacts, prophecies, and truths have not been forgotten.

What it is

Standalone, character-driven sci-fi stories
You don’t need to read Primus first, but if you have, you’ll catch the deeper echoes.

Themes of healing, grief, spiritual survival
These are stories about what remains when the empire falls. About rebuilding. About remembering.

Weird tech, ancient vaults, broken prophets
Expect fungi that hold memories. Doors that open on regret. Star maps drawn by the dead. Miracles. Blight. And people like you, just trying to keep going.

Included Short Stories (Coming Soon)

  • The Last Blight Prophet: A lone woman walks into a vault full of haunted tech—and must decide whether to sacrifice herself to stop the Blight once and for all.
  • The Fragment : A broken mind. A therapy station adrift. A man caught between memory and oblivion.
  • The Orchard of Sorrows: A sacred world, a corrupted ritual, and a dying girl who sees too much.
  • The Gateweavers: In an ancient monastery, a young Aldar discovers that to open a gate is to open yourself. And the Shadow does not knock.
  • …and more!
Timeline of the Forgotten Seals Era

The anthology is set across the late AA era, centuries after Revin’s reign in The Primus Saga:

  • 885 AA – “The Keeper’s Echo” (pre-era prologue)
  • 1620 AA – “The Last Blight Prophet”
  • 1680–1690 AA – “The Orchard of Sorrows”
  • 1700–1715 AA – “The Fragment”
  • 1721 AA – “Grit and Gears” / “Custodian of Relay Nine”
  • 1728 AA – “The Pilgrim of the Shattered Rings”
  • 1729 AA – “The Stone Sentinel” (Coming soon)

Why ‘Forgotten Seals’?

Because these are stories of covenant and collapse.
Of vows that were broken, and still matter.
Of truths buried in ruins, waiting to be remembered.
This is the quiet aftermath of galactic history, the sacred hush after the storm.