dec 13, 12 BC - Hercules Blackwood is created out of a boulder from his father Luxarion Blackwood
Description:
Hercules Blackwood was created on December 13th, 12 BCE upon the desert world of Lucogawa, a harsh but majestic planet of endless dunes, stone canyons, ancient winds, and twin moons that illuminated the sands in shades of ocean-blue and forest-green. Among all of the children of Luxarion Blackwood, Hercules possessed the most unusual creation.
Rather than shaping him directly from celestial light, Luxarion descended onto Lucogawa and selected an enormous desert boulder from the heart of a canyon shaped by centuries of storms. With his own hands, the Aetherian god carefully carved the stone into the form of a young boy. For days, cosmic winds howled around the unfinished figure while lightning gathered silently above the desert sky.
When the form was complete, Luxarion placed his hand against the stone and summoned divine electricity from the heavens.
Lightning struck the boulder.
The stone cracked.
And Hercules opened his eyes for the very first time.
Unlike many immortal beings born in brilliance and ceremony, Hercules entered existence surrounded by dust, thunder, and desert winds. Yet from the beginning, he possessed a deeply compassionate spirit that contrasted with his rugged creation. Though physically powerful even as a child, Hercules rarely used his strength selfishly. Instead, he instinctively protected smaller creatures, repaired damaged structures throughout Lucogawa, and defended travelers crossing dangerous regions of the desert planet.
His appearance reflected the world from which he had been born. Hercules possessed unruly desert-brown hair, determined brown eyes, and a strong physique that resembled weathered stone brought to life. On his forearm rested the blue sun mark of the Aetheria Galaxy, symbolizing his connection to the Blackwood lineage and the ancient power tied to Grikonis Island.
Hercules inherited many divine abilities from Luxarion, including immortality, photokinesis, cosmic flight, enhanced durability, and survival in outer space. However, he also developed powers uniquely tied to his own creation. Because divine lightning had awakened him from stone, Hercules became capable of wielding immense electrokinesis alongside extraordinary superhuman strength. Across the Aetheria Galaxy, storms often intensified around him during moments of powerful emotion.
Despite his celestial nature, Hercules quietly carried one emotional absence throughout his early existence:
he had no mother.
Emma and Maya had been created directly from celestial light. Morgan would eventually be born naturally through the mortal woman Emily Weaver. But Hercules himself had emerged from a lifeless boulder shaped by Luxarion’s hands.
For many years, Hercules struggled to understand what motherhood truly meant.
That changed when he met Emily Weaver.
Emily treated Hercules with warmth and affection from the moment they met, never viewing him as strange despite his divine origins. She cooked for him, worried about his safety, listened when he spoke, and welcomed him into her home without hesitation. To Emily, Hercules was never simply Luxarion’s son.
He was family.
Over time, Hercules began referring to Emily as his mother in private conversations, not because anyone asked him to, but because emotionally, that was who she had become to him. Emily never corrected him. In her eyes, Hercules was one of her children just as much as Morgan was.
This bond profoundly shaped Hercules’ personality. Though powerful enough to shatter mountains and summon lightning storms, he remained gentle and emotionally grounded because of the love he received from Emily and his siblings.
Among all his family members, Hercules formed an especially protective bond with Morgan Weaver.
When Morgan was born naturally on Xaotura rather than directly created through divine power, Hercules never once considered her lesser than the others. He rejected the idea that she was merely a “half-sister.” To him, Morgan was fully and completely his little sister.
He often watched over her quietly during childhood, standing protectively nearby during dangerous situations and encouraging her whenever she doubted herself. Morgan admired Hercules deeply because despite his immense strength, he never used it to intimidate others.
When Morgan eventually fell under the influence of the Obsidian Spire and transformed into Morwenna Voidweaver, Hercules experienced a kind of helplessness he had never known before. His strength could move stone, command storms, and protect entire worlds — but it could not simply restore the identity his sister was losing.
This inability haunted him for centuries.
Even during the darkest periods of Morwenna’s reign, Hercules refused to abandon hope entirely. Beneath the shadows and erased memories, he believed Morgan still existed somewhere within her.
Across the Aetheria Galaxy, Hercules Blackwood eventually became remembered as more than a celestial warrior. He became known as a guardian figure — a being of immense physical power whose greatest strength was not his lightning or his ability to break mountains, but his unwavering loyalty to the people he loved.
To many worlds, Hercules Blackwood symbolized an ancient truth:
that gentleness and strength were never opposites.
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