
Volume I
The Awakening of the Fragment
Published on 14 April 2026
Kael Ardyn is a cartographer. He draws maps of places he has never seen, in a small town no one notices.
He lives alone. Works alone. And he sees things he tells no one — golden lines running through the world like the veins of a living body.
Then a fragment of the sun falls from the sky.
In a single night, everything changes. An old scholar arrives at his door, carrying secrets Kael's father never revealed. An assassin sent to kill him lowers her blade. And a long-forgotten map reveals an eighth point that should not exist.
The Orders want the map destroyed. A general sees a weapon. And the shattered sun above Aeryndor — broken a thousand years ago — is still breaking.
Kael must flee, understand, and choose.
What he uncovers will overturn everything the world believes about the Breaking.
The Awakening of the Fragment is the first volume of The Chronicles of the Shattered Sun — an epic fantasy saga about a world living on the ruins of its sun, ancient machines buried beneath it, and the question of whether the truth is worth the cost of knowing.
Figures in this volume

Kael Ardyn
The Cartographer
Kael Ardyn would rather look at the world on paper than live in it. Maps give him what the world itself refuses to: order. The illusion that everything has its place, if only one looks closely enough. Since the death of his parents he has lived alone. He has neighbours, regular customers, an old man next door. But there is no one he truly confides in. The currents he has seen since childhood — energy drifting through the air, rising from the ground — he once described to his father. His father laughed. After that, Kael stopped talking about it. He asks questions, even when the answers are uncomfortable. He seldom lies. He reacts to the world; he does not shape it. That will have to change. What he does not yet know: he is not merely someone who can see the Solar Stones. He is connected to the sun. What that means will be the question that carries him through all ten volumes.

Lyra Veyne
The Night Blade
Lyra was not recruited into the Order of the Night Blades. She was raised there. That is a difference. She knows no life outside the training, no childhood that belonged to her. The Order taught her that feelings deceive and doubt is dangerous. She believed it. Part of her still does. But she has always asked questions. As a child she was given punishment drills for it. As an adult she learned to keep the questions to herself. That makes her the fastest thinker in the group — and the loneliest. In a danger she sees the way out before others have recognised the danger. No one truly gets close to her. Connection is a vulnerability to be exploited. What drives her is not compassion. It is distrust. The Order knows something it has not told her. That will not let her rest.

Edrin Thalos
The Scholar
Edrin Thalos has devoted his life to a single question: why did the sun break? He found the answer. That is the problem. Decades of searching, journeys through every region of Aeryndor, conversations with the dying who had seen things others refused to believe. Long ago he disappeared from the Academy in Solareth — not because he failed, but because he discovered something the Academy did not want to hear. The sun did not break by chance. Someone intended it. And the Solar Stones are not magic. They are parts of a machine. He is no kindly mentor. He is purposeful. He found Kael because he needed him. He is willing to put others in danger because he is convinced the goal justifies it. What makes him human: he doubts. Not the facts. But whether he is doing the right thing with them.

Tarek Valcor
The General
Valcor is the most difficult character in the series — because he might be right. He believes the world can only survive if the sun is restored. That is not a hunger for power. It is a conviction he has reached through his own observation. He has seen what the Solar Stones do to regions: the growing heat above Solareth, the temporal distortions of the Mistmarches, the increasing instability between the fragments. His conclusions are not wrong. The problem is the price he is willing to pay. He thinks in strategies, in resources, in objectives. People are both — means and obstacle. As a general he has learned that arithmetic sometimes looks cruel and is still correct. That conviction has carried him far. It makes him dangerous. What the encounter with Kael complicates: both want the same thing. The question is who has the right to make the final decision — and what that decision costs. He fights for the survival of the world and is willing to destroy it in the process.
