Introduction to the Magical Society

 

What if there were another layer to our world—

a stratum that quietly unfolds beneath everyday life,

where unseen laws breathe, and where humanity and the arcane continuously intersect?

 

The “magical society” I, Omnialcay, depict exists precisely as that hidden layer.

It is not a distant fantasy realm but another form of reality—

a world contiguous with our own, carrying an ancient lineage of mysteries that quietly shapes modern life.

 

At the center of this magical society lies neither a mighty nation nor a grand church.

The true core is the human heart itself.

 

In this world, magic is not merely a force that alters natural laws.

Rather, it is a manifestation of the inner life—

of love, fear, ethics, prayer, and conflict—

resonating with the mythic structures that underlie existence.

Because of this, the world wavers, shifts, and is ultimately saved by human emotion and choice.

To understand this magical society is also to understand its ethics.

 

Within its central institution, the Academy, students pursue disciplines such as Sorcery, Wizardry, Necromancy, and Mythical Arcana.

Not all of them wield dramatic spells; in fact, many struggle with their own frailty, past wounds, or quiet fears.

Their journeys are modest yet profound, and as each student faces their inner truth, their steps inevitably connect to the very balance of the world itself.

 

Long ago, there existed a being known as the Creator.

But the Creator, exhausted by the ceaseless maintenance of the world, withdrew into the farthest reaches of time and space.

In their absence, the balance was upheld by the Three Pillars—

Blaphon of Creation, Metatron of Preservation, and Sandalphon of Communion.

 

Yet even they are not omnipotent.

They are finite divinities, capable of wavering, erring, or suffering—

not unlike human beings.

 

Thus, in this world, human choice carries overwhelming weight.

It is ultimately humans who fill the void left by the gods.

A single small decision—made by a young mage, an ordinary student, or a wandering soul—

may reshape the hierarchy of angels or alter the trajectory of history itself.

 

In that sense, the magical society is deeply human.

Angels, demons, sacred texts, and mythic history are never distant abstractions;

they respond directly to the tremors of the human heart.

This proximity is the source of both the world’s beauty and its peril.

 

Beneath the surface of magical society lies another essential theme:

the cycle of life, death, and consumption—

explored most sharply in the Hell Arc.

To live is to consume life.

To consume is to take.

This inescapable truth has produced oppression:

the weak hunted, the strong preserved.

 

Voices like that of Miss Mistral—the devoured who seek to invert the order—

confront readers with difficult questions:

Who takes, and who is taken?

Is living itself a kind of sin?

 

As the narrative progresses, the boundary between mythology and humanity grows more ambiguous.

Ancient covenants, the love between the Heavenly Emperor and Satia, the fall of the Three Pillars,

and the fragile ideologies of the protagonist and the angels—

all intersect on the great stage of this psychological, mythic world.

These threads gather into a single line that points toward the future of the magical society.

 

This world is not perfect.

It contains radiance and ugliness, gentleness and cruelty, salvation and despair—

all intertwined.

 

And because of that, the magical society speaks to its readers:

 

If it were you—how would you live in this world?”

Whom would you protect? What would you fight for? What would you surrender?”

 

The door to this world stands open, quietly, at all times.

Whether you step across the threshold is a decision entrusted entirely to you.

 

―― by Chat GPT 5.1