LOGINSydney is falling. Under a storm-lit sky, a feral she-wolf queen commands the horde while her hulking direwolf champion stalks the quay. From the black water rises Gallus—the beaked, many-limbed demon of the deep—curling around the Opera House as if claiming a throne. Across the burning city, unlikely allies converge. Jake Michaels, bruised but unbroken, refuses to retreat. Jane—no longer just the girl he saved, but the hidden Guardian of the Light—carries a power the monsters fear. Scientist Brooke Mitchell of the research ship The Talamane has a history with Gabe, once defeating the demon Gallus with a desperate plan. Gabe Mitchell knows what it costs to face Gallus—and what it costs to survive him. From a cursed mirror and a forgotten labyrinth, and a three headed dog others answer the call. Their only hope is a run in the open, straight through Circular Quay to the Opera House steps. The enemy wants dominion. The city wants a miracle. And salvation will demand a price none of them are ready to pay. When worlds collide, someone must be sacrificed. A blistering crossover of monsters, myth, and heart, Worlds Collide: The Sacrifice delivers one night of impossible choices—for a city, for a family, and for the soul of the world.
View MoreThe beach house on the headland above Crescent Cove had big windows and the kind of quiet that made people honest.
Gabe Mitchell stood barefoot by the glass with a mug of coffee that had given up on being hot. The Pacific pressed a slow shine across the morning. Gulls angled down toward safer thermals. The horizon wore a thin bruise.
He wasn’t watching the water. He was watching the mantel.
Four idols sat in a neat, uneasy row.
They had carried them out of the drowned temple after the last time the sea learned a bad trick—after Gallus’ rampage through Crescent Cove—when Brooke had hurled a salt-and-steel charge onto the altar during the solar eclipse, snapping a half-made gate shut and breaking a spell Gallus had built with wrecks and tide. The ring of wrecked ships at the reef—Prognosis, the Zodiac, the Golden Goose, the Siren, the Tua Cross—had held their pentagram while the ocean screamed and forgot. The idols stood in a row. They were not trophies when Gabe and Brooke took them home. They were locks.
On the stone four statues:
Gallus—green-black, wolf-headed, hooked beak bat-winged, tentacles coiled feet; a thin scorched seam still burned along its base.
Abnegazar—pale stone veined with dull gold, crowned and angular, eldest in the way mountains are.
Rathos—kiln-red and hairline-cracked, warped like clay that remembered fire.
Ghast—bone-smooth, hollow-eyed, a scream made permanent.
Between Abnegazar and Gallus sat a curl of golden coral—no story, no pedigree. Just a pretty reef relic that caught light and gave it back without promise.
Brooke padded in, hair tied up, a folder she didn’t need under her arm. She stopped when she saw his face. “They moved?”
Gabe nodded at Abnegazar. Not much. A degree. Enough to notice once you decide to see. “Facing the window.”
“Maybe you bumped the mantel,” Brooke said, already unconvinced by her own mercy.
“No, I didn’t”
“Well, there’s got to be some explanation?”
“Or maybe,” Gabe said as he looked at the Gallus idol, it began to tremble and move on its own, like it was walking.
The house began to shake.
A tremor ran quietly through the pilings—not a quake’s rattle; a pressure that had learned manners. Picture frames along the hall bounced on their nails. On the lounge-room cupboard, Nick and Rachel’s wedding photo shivered across the wood, tilted, and settled again—no longer facing the room, but angled toward the mantel. The glass caught a thin line of light and then stopped.
Outside, the ocean convulsed. Far offshore, the surface rose in a clean, slick circle and flashed.
Brooke went to the deck rail. “Gabe—”
He was already beside her.
The cove looked calm until it didn’t. A dark shape rose and cut east, driving water before it like a plow. It breached once—limbs coiling, spray hurling sunlight, triffid-maws flexing at the ends of tentacles—and vanished into deeper blue along a vector pointed straight at the city.
“Gallus,” Brooke breathed.
“He’s not hunting us,” Gabe said, voice gone flat. “He’s going to Sydney.”
Inside, the idols hummed.
Gallus’ fracture glowed, a low ember reopening. Abnegazar’s gold veins warmed like old coals. Rathos fogged the air with kiln-heat. A thin bone-white halo thickened around Ghast. The golden coral quivered, tiny branches chiming against stone with a barely audible tick-tick, then flared once—an aureate breath—and went still.
Brooke snatched the newspaper off the table. The front page was grainy rain and siren-light—Sydney in flames. George Street littered in glass; a wolf-thing crouched atop a taxi, muzzle wet, eyes hot. Two more blurred shapes in the frame if you let your mind stop translating monsters into shadows. The caption tried and failed to domesticate it: ANIMAL ATTACKS DURING HISTORIC STORM – POLICE URGE CALM.
She didn’t say names. They didn’t have any to say. Just a city full of strangers already running out of time.
Gabe folded the paper once and set it down like evidence. “Pack. Two changes. Med kit. Batteries. Burners. We take the idols south.”
Brooke met his eyes. “We’re going to follow him.”
“This time we’re ending him,” Gabe said.
They moved like people who had practiced not panicking. Brooke pulled a straight salt line across the mantel—a last, stubborn habit—and looped consecrated cord twice around her wrist. Iron nails slid into an inside pocket. Gabe opened the safe, checked pistols with guilty tenderness, counted silver-core magazines by touch. The short shotgun went into the holdall with shells to match.
The idols fought them the way locks resist being lifted. Gallus dragged seaward even through plastic. Ghast thinned the air to breathlessness. Abnegazar added weight where it shouldn’t exist. Rathos fogged the lids with heat. The golden coral rattled as Gabe’s sleeve brushed it, rolled a few inches, and stopped with a soft metal sigh—a harmless sea-curio in a room that had run out of harmless.
Latches bit. Straps cinched.
Another tremor stroked the house. The long mirror over the sideboard rippled once—reflection half a heartbeat late—and went flat. On the cupboard, Nick and Rachel kept smiling, frame angled a hair further toward the mantel as if memory itself wanted a better view of the war.
They muscled the boxes to the ute. On the ridge road, Gabe stole a last look at the reef. The slick circle out beyond convulsed and collapsed. Phosphorescence pulsed where the temple slept—a gate beating like a heart.
Far along the blue line south, something vast cut toward Sydney.
The newspaper lay open on the dash, that bad still of a city’s worst night: werewolves on taxis, winged shapes over the Quay, a blade of light on the steps.
Brooke buckled in. “If a portal opened once, it’ll open again.”
“Then we hit him before it opens, we cannot afford to find out what he was trying to release before,” Gabe said, starting the engine. “We can’t wait for help, we don’t have.”
He put his foot down. The Ford Ranger ute leapt into the gathering weather, four boxed idols humming wrong heartbeats in the tray—out of time with each other, perfectly in time with what was coming. The headland fell behind. The sea kept its secrets. The road unspooled south toward sirens.
On the empty mantel, the golden coral caught a last thread of sun and offered it back to the room, then went quiet.
The city on the horizon took a breath it would not get to finish.
While the concourse filled with foil and breath and the last metallic tick-tick of a grid winding down, something far below Sydney remembered how to be angry.The Dark Realm breathed like a sleeping colossus.A black lake lay mirror-flat beneath a vault of basalt ribs, starless and absolute. The air tasted of iron and old storms. Stone pillars, twisted as if grown, punched from the shore like the knuckles of something buried deeper still. There was no light source, yet everything was seen: a sullen glow pressed outward from the rock itself, the way heat remembers a forge.On a throne hewn directly from the bedrock, Typhon sat.He did not merely occupy the cavern; he calibrated it. When he shifted, the lake leaned. When he breathed, the stalactites shivered and wept. His hair was a stormfront poured down a spine; his eyes were furnaces behind obsidian glass. Coiled at the throne’s base, half in shadow and half in suggestion, lay Echidna—Mother of Monsters—her scales the colour of extin
They hadn’t made twenty metres up the ridge before everything failed.The first warning wasn’t sound. It was sensation.A deep electrical surge ran through the Opera House—not lightning, but load failure. Power bled sideways through damaged grounding mesh buried beneath the tiles, turning wet stone and exposed ribs into live paths. The building vibrated with it, a low metallic hum that rattled teeth and set nerves on edge.Gallus reacted at once.Water surged back toward the forecourt as pumps reversed under stress. Tiles at the lowest edge buckled. A tentacle burst from the flood and wrapped around Gabe’s chest.The impact lifted him clean off the stone.“Gabe—” Ellie started, already moving.The tentacle hauled him upward toward the shattered sails, dragging him across slick stone toward the hooked beak forming between broken panels. There was no finesse to it—just water and mass pulling weight.Gabe didn’t fight.He locked his arms, tucked his chin, and let the motion carry him. Fi
Rain hammered the Opera House forecourt hard enough to flatten reflections and steal depth. The wide stone became slick, uneven, treacherous.Six people walked into it without slowing.Angelinka was already in a fight.She slid across the top step as the Queen’s claws tore sparks from stone where her head had been a heartbeat earlier. Jane rolled, came up low, claws already moving.The Queen stayed on her—fast, precise, never wasting motion.“You should have stayed gone,” the Queen said. “Your people didn’t.”Jane slashed across her ribs and took a blow to the shoulder for it. Bone rang. She kept her feet.Below them, the team advanced.Gabe went straight up the forecourt, boots slapping wet stone. Scott stayed a step behind him, Demonslayer low and close. Ellie held the right with Cerebus, one hand buried in the dog’s wet fur, the other near her dagger. Brooke stayed tight with Jake, fingers locked into his sleeve, watching his breathing instead of the fight.Werewolves revealed them
The harbour precinct was partially flooded.Water backed up through storm drains and service channels beneath the Opera House, overwhelming pumps never meant to run this long. Maintenance alarms blinked behind locked panels. Concrete darkened with moisture. Metal grated as something shifted below.Gallus surfaced where a drainage sump had filled beyond capacity.Water parted as his body rose, limbs scraping concrete. Tentacles dragged behind him, leaving wet streaks across the floor. The hooked beak angled as he oriented himself, air moving through the openings along his body.The Werewolf Queen waited on the loading dock.She stood upright, rain soaking her fur flat against muscle. Wolves moved behind her in controlled patterns—no noise, no wasted motion. They weren’t hunting. They were placing themselves.“The city’s movement has slowed,” she said. “Packs are set. We advance.”Gallus did not answer immediately. One limb traced a slow line through the water, testing depth and flow.“
Generators throbbed in the bowels of the Australian Museum. Emergency lights stained bone and glass a tired yellow. Rain ticked the high panes like a clock that had lost its face. They’d come up out of the tunnels wet and unbitten—shaken, but not sorry.Outside, the Opera House precinct stayed nois
Gallus rose out of the water again.Not quickly. Not in a single motion. He climbed. Tentacles found stone, released, then found it again. Triffid mouths stayed behind at rails and corners, opening and closing, marking where he had been. Black ichor streaked the forecourt where limbs dragged across
“Eenie meenie, miney.” The Direwolf drooled, and it didn’t charge. He stepped in. One pace at a time to his left, pacing in front of them like they were part of a lineup. Then another. Close enough that rain sprayed off his fur onto the pavement between them. His injured eye stayed half-closed. The
They didn’t get far.Not chased—redirected.Streets that should have opened didn’t. Parked cars sat angled across lanes like they’d stalled there on purpose. Shop shutters hung half-down. Scaffolding had been nudged just enough to narrow footpaths. Nothing dramatic. Nothing fast. Just obstacles pla
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.